When Job Smeets founded his studio in 1998, the new norm was Dutch Design: smart, sleek, and industrial. It was all about products with a great story that could be quickly and easily produced in large quantities. Yet Smeets did not follow that trend: “I believed that design in particular should be about unique pieces. Crafts were not allowed into the upper echelon of the design world. Such a shame.”
As a fledgling designer, Smeets visited the Salone del Mobile furniture fair in Milan and saw the most beautiful prototypes on display there. However, he could never find these pieces when he later visited stores looking for them. “So it’s better to make unique pieces; it gives you a lot more freedom and opportunity for expression.”
That is how Smeets filled what he likes to call ‘a niche in design culture’. “It’s about expressive freedom,” he says. That freedom led from bronze sculptures to fashion shows and from digital graphic art to fully furnished apartments filled with unique pieces. The studio collaborates with famous brands such as Viktor & Rolf and Range Rover, and it was also responsible for Hema’s cheerful beach collection.
In an interview with the New York Times, Job Smeets once described his work as ‘high-end kitsch’, but in retrospect he thinks that was a bit too modest. “It is excellent kitsch because it was excellently crafted. However, if it were really kitsch, it wouldn’t be on display in so many museums.”