Every week, Mateo Kries commutes between the hectic streets of Berlin and the idyllic scenery of Weil am Rhein. Here, in the far southwest of Germany, you will find one of the world’s leading design museums: the Vitra Design Museum. Kries, an art historian, curator and author, has worked for the design institution for more than half of his life – today he acts as director of the museum. So, it’s quite natural that he looks at everything from a design perspective, not least when it comes to cars: “It’s my professional deformation that I perceive cars as sculptures, and all other everyday objects as well”, Kries admits, laughing. In Weil am Rhein he drives the Audi Q4 e-tron, and in his private life he gets behind the wheel of the Audi Q8 e-tron.
When it comes to design and colours, Kries is a fan of minimalism. He certainly does not miss all the buttons and switches that once used to be in the vehicles. On the contrary. “The responsiveness of the touch screens in the e-tron models is great, everything works at the touch of a finger – it’s a really neat combination of digital and haptic technology.” Less design is more, according to Kries. “A delicate, angular and square design offers more clarity in today’s world of high visual stimulation,” he explains as he walks through the Schaudepot at the Vitra Design Museum. For its annual presentation, which will be on display until May 2024, the Schaudepot has enlisted Dutch designer Sabine Marcelis to create an installation entirely devoted to colour – which also plays a significant role in the design of vehicles.