Mandi Keighran talks to Marc Newson, Creative Director of the Sydney New Year celebrations, about his approach to design and future directions.
January 16th, 2012
As one of Australia’s biggest design exports and poster boy of the ’art design’ movement in the early nineties, Marc Newson has a wildly varied portfolio of design work. Yet, his recent role as Creative Director for the Sydney New Year celebrations still managed to present a new challenge.
“I do a really broad range of things, but this is really so far outside of what I normally do,” says Newson.

Newson collaborated with Sydney-based creative agency, Imagination, on the direction of the New Year celebrations, which achieved worldwide acclaim. His primary role was to give the series of events a sense of coherence and consistency – he describes it as a “creative umbrella” – that has not existed in previous years.


“It was very much a collaborative effort with Imagination,” says Newson of the Time to Dream concept. “It was trying to identify something that was succinct and cohesive and meant something to most people.”
This was achieved through the Time to Dream theme and a rainbow circle graphic. It was recognisably Newson in its style – simple, clear, coherent and quickly embedded in people’s memories.

“There is a significance to the colours,” says Newson of the circle graphic. “For me, it’s all about the colours of Sydney.”
Despite having moved away from Australia in the early 1980s – first to Tokyo, then Paris and London – Newson remains connected to the Australian design industry. In addition to the recent New Year celebrations, his biggest client is Qantas, for whom he is Creative Director, and mid-this year, he is launching a range of bathroom products in collaboration with Australian company Caroma.
“It’s a fantastic collaboration that I’m really excited about,” says Newson. “It’s very commercial in a really positive way. It’s what I’d spend my money on and what I’d buy for my house. I’m not saying my stuff is going to be god’s gift to the world of sanitary ware, but I think it will offer a really legitimate choice. It’s cool, it’s modern, but not so modern that it’s too much of a statement.”
This kind of industrial, mass-produced design is where Newson’s real passion lies. The limited edition works for which he is widely known – his ’Lockheed Lounge’ set a world record in 2009, selling at auction for £1,100,000 – he describes as more of a hobby. “My real focus is on the industrial, designing products like cameras, watches, mobile phones or bathroom fittings. That’s the kind of shit I really love because it’s the stuff I always wanted to do.”

Lockheed Lounge.

Embryo Chair.
Newson trained as a jewellery designer in Sydney before moving to industrial design. His eye for detail and finish and interest in materiality comes from this background.
“I really don’t think I would have been able to do what I do if I trained as an architect,” he says. “Precision and quality are major preoccupations for me. It’s much easier to get bigger than it is to get smaller.”
For Newson, it’s the challenges associated with each project that he finds exciting, and he describes his role as a designer as ’trouble shooting’. It’s an approach that has ensured his continued success, and his influence continues to grow. This year, his achievements were recognised with a CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the Queen’s New Years Honours list.
“Ultimately, what I love is being able to design good things that I’d want to go and buy, that I’d want to spend my money on. And, there are a precious few of those things.”
Marc Newson
marc-newson.com
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
The Geelong College’s Sport and Wellbeing Centre ‘Belerren’ designed by Wardle is designed around bringing in natural light. But Shade Factor’s job was to help modulate and precisely control it for the most important competitive moments.
The newest brand to emerge from Cosentino’s creative crucible is Ēclos, a next-generation mineral surface that embodies the organic beauty and tactility of marble in a precision-mineral surface or material.
Blending versatile cooking with smart performance, Bosch AccentLine appliances bring a quieter sense of order and simplicity to the modern kitchen.
In the first instalment of our three-part series exploring what it means to sit your best, we pose the question to Gray Puksand’s Dale O’Brien, who discusses the importance of ease and majority rule when it comes to sitting and reveals why specifying a task chair is not unlike choosing a Volvo.
Marking the 20th anniversary of his Powerhouse Museum exhibition ‘Design Works’, Marc Newson reflects with creative director Stephen Todd on his archive of iconic designs and why his deep fascination with how things work drives him to create the impossible.
Sydney Design Week will present six free digital sessions on hyperconnectivity – a theme that creative director Stephen Todd says is about remembering what we learnt in 2020.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
As a significant renewal of an established social housing project, JPW’s recently completed Cowper Street Housing in Glebe, Sydney aims to bring sustainable and community-focused density to an inner city suburb.
With a plethora of talks, installations, exhibitions and happenings responding to this year’s theme (Design The World You Want), the eleven-day festival was the largest to date and arguably the most accomplished since inception.