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Jonathan Ive Designer of the Year

Jonathan Ive: Designer of the Year

October 29, 2004  |  Levent OZLER

The winner of the Design Museum's inaugural Designer of the Year award was Jonathan Ive, vice-president of industrial design at Apple whose innovations include the iPod and iMac.

As vice-president of industrial design at Apple, Jonathan Ive has combined what he describes as “fanatical care beyond the obvious stuff” with relentless experiments into new tools, materials and production processes, to design such ground-breaking products as the iMAC, iBook, the PowerBook G4 and the iPod MP3 player. He is the winner of the Design Museum's first Designer of the Year prize for the 2002 iMac and iPod.

Born in London in 1967, Ive studied art and design at Newcastle Polytechnic before co-founding Tangerine, a design consultancy where he developed everything from power tools to televisions. In 1992, one of his clients – Apple – offered him a job at its headquarters in Cupertino, California. Working closesly with Apple’s co-founder, Steve Jobs, Ive developed the iMac. As well as selling more than 2m units in its first year, the iMac transformed product design by introducing colour and light to the drab world of computing where, until its arrival, new products were encased in opaque grey or beige plastic.

Ive and his close-knit team of designers at Apple have since applied the same lateral thinking and passionate attention to detail

more: designmuseum.org/designerex/jonathan-ive.htm (507)

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