Stockholm-based audio model Clear has a little bit of a behavior of constructing wi-fi audio system that look moderately completely different to the remainder of the market. However its newest daring tackle speaker design is one thing of a departure from its extra well-known and, properly, clear roots, and a enterprise into new shapes and supplies for the model.
The Brutalist Speaker takes its reference from a method of structure that originated within the UK within the Fifties, recognized for its easy, geometric traces and championing of uncooked supplies over ornamental extra.
As an alternative of the tempered glass utilized in quite a lot of its different merchandise, Clear’s Brutalist Speaker is constituted of 70 % post-consumer recycled aluminum. With its 6.5-inch side-mounted woofer, alongside twin 3-inch tweeters, positioned moderately strikingly at elevated 90-degree angles, it laughs within the face of conventional speaker design.
“Although we’re most recognized for our clear assortment of merchandise, that’s not the reasoning behind our title,” Per Brickstad, artistic director at Clear, tells WIRED. “It’s about our general strategy to honesty in design, and the way we need to be seen by our clients. So we have now been exploring varied supplies and the alternative ways we are able to manifest that design philosophy in new initiatives.
“We had completed a earlier mission on a restricted launch referred to as the Acoustic Sculpture, which is an natural sculptural speaker that is impressed by the human ear. We had been eager to do one other speaker on this class, however one which relates extra carefully to our minimalistic design strategy.
“We had been taking a look at Brutalism fairly a bit as a result of it is such a mesmerizing architectural fashion—you do not know if these buildings are from one other planet or from Earth. But it surely additionally lends itself properly to positioning parts for acoustic efficiency too.”