0
Skip to Content
Your Site Title
Your Site Title

Knife Fork Spoon 3.0

Los Angeles and curator Dung Ngo are proud to present Knife, Fork, Spoon 3.0, an ambitious new project commissioning twelve contemporary flatware designs produced through 3D-printing, realized by some of today’s leading artists and designers, presented with generous support from Design Within Reach (DWR).

The participants represent a curated group of established and emerging talents—artists, architects, and designers ranging from Misha Kahn and Jolie Ngo’s playful, idiosyncratic aesthetics to the research-driven approaches of architectural practices Johnston Marklee and Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu (SO–IL). The project also highlights global dining cultures through designers such as Nifemi Marcus-Bello of Lagos, Nigeria, and Minjae Kim of Seoul, South Korea.

Cutlery is an intimate part of daily life: a universal touchpoint that transcends culture and generations. Since the early 20th century, modern flatware has evolved far beyond utility; it embodies how design, technology, and culture reflect and shape our everyday experiences. Yet, the manner in which flatware is made has barely changed in 150 years. Since the Industrial Revolution, production has depended on heavy industrial tooling and costly machinery that often limits innovation.

The 21st century introduces 3D-printing as a transformative alternative. This technology enables rapid prototyping, design freedom, and creative customization while allowing complex geometries impossible to achieve through traditional methods. Additive manufacturing reduces material waste, supports localized and on-demand production, and simplifies supply chains. These innovations were captured by the avant-garde architect Greg Lynn's 3D-printed flatware commissioned by Alessi in 2007, but they were produced in very limited quantity due to the limited technical capabilities at the time. Two decades later, Lynn's design will be part of this launch.

"If handmade flatware represents ‘Version 1.0,’ and industrial manufacturing marks ‘Version 2.0,’ then 3D-printing heralds Version 3.0," says curator Dung Ngo. “These twelve designs are forward-thinking in both form and production technique, demonstrating that—like its social function—flatware is constantly evolving.”

Knife, Fork, Spoon 3.0

Knife Fork Spoon

Everyday Tools, Extraordinary Design

Now On View at the Denver Art Museum

What stories lie within a knife’s balanced blade, a fork’s tapering tines, or a spoon’s gentle curve?

Flatware is more than a set of tools for eating. It reflects the lives, values, and artistry of the societies that shape and use it. Knife Fork Spoon: Everyday Tools, Extraordinary Design features approximately 150 flatware sets spanning over a century from 1900 to 2026. The exhibition reveals how designers reimagined these objects to meet new needs while influencing how we approach mealtimes. From hand-finished silver gracing Gilded Age dining rooms to stainless steel streamlined for midcentury kitchens to digitally printed utensils reshaping today's tables, flatware tells a story of creativity that spans generations.

Knife Fork Spoon brings together works from the Denver Art Museum’s collection with significant loans from collector Dung Ngo. The exhibition features historic and recent designs by Eliel Saarinen, Jean Puiforcat, Russel Wright, Gio Ponti, Jens Quistgaard, Isamu Noguchi, Lella and Massimo Vignelli, Philippe Starck, and Zaha Hadid, alongside newly commissioned works by Rafael de Cardenas, Johnston Marklee, SO–IL, and other contemporary architects and designers.