Not currently on display at the V&A

Fruit Bowl

ca. 1957 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Martyn Rowlands trained at the Central School in London. He specialised in plastics. He was one of the first trained industrial designers to work with British industry after the Second World War. He worked first for Bakelite Ltd, then set up the design department at Ekco Plastics, where his products won a number of design awards. In 1959 he left Ekco to work as an independent design consultant. This was at a time when the idea of the design consultancy in Britain was still in its infancy. One important commission in 1966 was the popular telephone known as the ‘Trimphone’, which won a Design Council Award.

Rowlands's products for Ekco included tableware, nursery products, a baby bath with stand and a watering can. He developed products specifically to suit the qualities of plastic materials. He did this rather than simply carry across traditional forms.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Moulded Melaware (Melmex) plastic
Brief description
Round red fruit bowl, moulded Melaware (Melmex) plastic, designed by Martyn Rowlands about 1957 and made by Ekco Plastics Ltd., England
Physical description
Round red fruit bowl in moulded Melaware (Melmex) plastic.
Dimensions
  • Height: 10.2cm
  • Width: 22.9cm
  • Depth: 22.9cm
Credit line
Given by the designer
Summary
Martyn Rowlands trained at the Central School in London. He specialised in plastics. He was one of the first trained industrial designers to work with British industry after the Second World War. He worked first for Bakelite Ltd, then set up the design department at Ekco Plastics, where his products won a number of design awards. In 1959 he left Ekco to work as an independent design consultant. This was at a time when the idea of the design consultancy in Britain was still in its infancy. One important commission in 1966 was the popular telephone known as the ‘Trimphone’, which won a Design Council Award.

Rowlands's products for Ekco included tableware, nursery products, a baby bath with stand and a watering can. He developed products specifically to suit the qualities of plastic materials. He did this rather than simply carry across traditional forms.
Bibliographic reference
Penny Sparke: "Consultant Design: The History and Practice of the Designer in Industry", Pembridge Press, 1983
Collection
Accession number
C.63-2003

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Record createdMarch 15, 2004
Record URL
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