INSPIRE / NEWS & ARTICLES

Ping pong

Posted on July 26th 2010

Troika have created a set of playful ping pong bats in recognition of Ron Arad's life, work and love of table tennis.


Design trio Troika were invited by the Barbican Art Gallery to create an event in celebration of Ron Arad’s retrospective Ron Arad: Restless.

They decided to draw on Arad’s long standing love of and association with table tennis. The result was a ping pong tournament with a twist. Five sets of custom bats were designed, all taking their cue from some of Arad’s most classic designs.

Rover Bats speak to the ping pong potential of the Rover P6 V8 3500 car parts, using opposing ashtrays, a gear lever and seat side panels. The Ping Pong bats have cleverly intergrated LED lights that are direction-sensitive and spell “ping” and “pong” in mid-air. Lolita is named after Arad’s famous chandelier, while Lost States depicts the map of the US with the lost states of Hawaii and Alaska as a set of paddles. The Concrete Bats complete the set, paying homage to Arad’s concrete studio.

The tournament had 32 contestants playing on four tables for three hours. The super final saw Arad compete against Huag Shu, refereed by Olympic table tennis umpire Richard Scruton. Arad, playing the P6 Rover Ashtray bat, was the winner of Troika’s Restless Table Tennis Tournament Trophy!

 

Troika

Troika is a multi-disciplinary art and design practice founded in 2003 by Conny Freyer, Eva Rucki and Sebastien Noel, who met while studying at the Royal College of Art in London.

Ron Arad

Ron Arad was born in Tel Aviv in 1951, the son of a photographer and a painter. Before moving to London in 1973, he studied for three years at the Jerusalem Academy of Art.

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