http://www.julialohmann.co.uk

Julia Lohmann

German-born designer and researcher Julia Lohmann investigates and critiques the ethical and material value systems underpinning our relationship with flora and fauna. She is Professor of Practice in Contemporary Design at Aalto University, Helsinki, where she also lives. Julia studied at the Royal College of Art, where she has also taught and completed an AHRC-funded collaborative PhD scholarship between the RCA and the Victoria & Albert Museum. As designer in residence at the V&A in 2013, she founded the Department of Seaweed, an interdisciplinary community of practice exploring the sustainable development of seaweed as a design material. She has been external examiner on the Central Saint Martins MA Material Futures. Julia Lohmann’s work is part of major public and private collections worldwide and has received awards, bursaries and support from the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, the British Council, Jerwood Contemporary Makers, D&AD, Stanley Picker Gallery, Arts Foundation, Wellcome Trust and Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum.

Department Projects

Bending the Curve Exhibition at Frankfurter Kunstverein

Hidaka Ohmu and Corpus Maris II in the 'Bending the Curve' exhibition at the Frankfurter Kunstverein. 2023/2024

Corpus Maris I, 23rd Biennale of Sydney: Rivus

Corpus Maris II, Climate & Art – Alternative Approaches, Chappe Art House

Department of Seaweed at Critical Tide, Design Museum Helsinki

Echoes of Undercurrents, Sleepy Islands, Iceland

Hidaka Ohmu seaweed pavilion, 50th World Economic Forum

Installation Talk Prof. Julia Lohmann, Aalto University, February 2024

Knowing, Acting and Caring: On Algae and Ocean Literacy, IOC/UNESCO

Kombu Ahtola

Kombu Nudibranch, First Light Festival, Lowestoft, UK

Kombu Nudibranch, Tidelines, Messums West

Laminarium Bench, Stanley Picker Research Fellowship

Oki Naganode

Kristineberg, Sweden

Seaweed workshop, 50th World Economic Forum

The Department of Seaweed – Algae encounters, Domaine de Boisbuchet

Tinted Tangle a Biocolour – Exploring Sustainable Colour, Arktikum, Rovaniemi

We know too much and do too little

More Projects