APRIL 2019
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041.9 CONTENTS APRIL 2019
VOLUME 90 NUMBER 5
ON THE COVER Moncler’s fall 2019 presentation during Milan Fashion Week was held at the Villa Arconati, where models wore nylon puffer coats designed by Pierpaolo Piccioli and Liya Kebede for the label’s Genius collection. Photography: courtesy of Moncler.
FEATURES 126 ONE OF A KIND by Ian Phillips
Dimore Studio fashions One-Off, a unique womenswear emporium outside of Milan. 134 SHARING THE STAGE by Wilson Barlow
Fashion and fantasy marched side by side at the Paris and Milan fall-winter runway shows. 146 CHANNELING CHANEL by Edie Cohen
In Istanbul, Tokyo, and beyond, Peter Marino explores the essence of the brand. 164
156 THE LINE OF BEAUTY by Becky Sunshine
A graceful curve, used as a recurring motif, helps Sybarite unify the sprawling SKP luxury department store in Xi’an, China. 164 CLICKS INTO BRICKS by Rebecca Lo
Online retailer By brings its edgy attitude to a Shanghai store by Spacemen. 170 GREAT EXPECTATIONS by Georgina McWhirter
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CONTENTS APRIL 2019
VOLUME 90 NUMBER 5
walk-through 69 MOOD BOARD by Michael Lassell
hospitality supplement 79 STANDING TALL by Annie Block
Designers, manufacturers, and students banded together for New York’s Dining by Design benefitting DIFFA: Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS.
departments 35 DESIGNWIRE by Annie Block 42 BLIPS by Annie Block and Athena Waligore 42
45 CROSSLINES by Jane Margolies Dress Code
Gisue and Mojgan Hariri’s San Francisco museum exhibition shone a new light on Muslim fashion. 56 PINUPS by Wilson Barlow 95 MARKET by Rebecca Thienes, Mark McMenamin, and Colleen Curry
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110 SKETCHBOOK by Tim Simpson 121 CENTERFOLD by Athena Waligore Attractive Reuse
Numen/For Use refashions a previous installation for handbag designer Anya Hindmarch in London. 182 BOOKS by Stanley Abercrombie 184 CONTACTS 191 INTERVENTION by Wilson Barlow
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e d i t o r ’ s welcome
the
fashion equation While riffling through the issue—from our mail slot to your boudoir— are you getting a first impression that design for fashion looks très, très intéressant? Well, that would not only be quite appropriate but also right on the money. Contrary to what’s commonly assumed about this highend-leading (and -looking) sector, lots of folks haven’t gotten the “brick and mortar is dead” memo...or they gleefully made a paper plane out of it. At the very least, I can say this of the designers we assign to the fashion industry. All the stories in our April portfolio bear that out and provide irrefutable evidence of being a)mazingly original; b)eyond-the-pale innovative; c)ustomarily grand, as only our magazine will have it; and d)ulcis in fundo, Latin for sweetest at last. And moola-lavish! Here’s the gist: Investing in high design is still a must for high fashion, and the combination of the two is still on a roll—and will be for the fore seeable future. Yes, for sure, the venues are very different from the past; use and time have changed (think pop-ups, etc.), demographics and geographics are in constant flux, and all those factors severely test any interior designer or team or firm. No, it’s not a space for the faint of heart. But if you want to consider this arena for your creative growth or finishing polish, let’s put it this way: You could do a whole lot worse elsewhere. And the traffic is not by any means one way, because fashion is using the synergies and symmetries of interior design for its own takeovers and land acquisitions, too. That ability to bottle fleeting mo ments that ensnare by seduction; that intent to vanquish sense with indulgence; that je ne sais quoi…they have produced winning leaders, some of the most glamorous of which are now running some of the most august design brands and bureaus. And you know what? Ça va with moi, the more the merrier. #goforthwithfashion, Cindy
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h e a d l i n e rs “Our practice was founded on the principle that the best, rather than most senior, idea wins”
Sybarite “The Line of Beauty,” page 156
principal, co-founder: Torquil McIntosh. office site: London. office size: 50 architects and designers. current projects: Drop store in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; Borsellino store concept. honors: Queen’s Award for Enterprise: International Trade. role model: The late movie-production designer Ken Adam for his ability to adapt to different film genres. home: McIntosh, a passionate cook, has built a commercial-scale barbecue in the kitchen of his U.K. home. away: Co-founder Simon Mitchell and he share a love of fly-fishing and have planned a trip to Montana’s Little Blackfoot River. sybarite.com
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H E A D L I N E Rs
Spacemen “Clicks Into Bricks,” page 164 founder: Edward Tan. firm location: Shanghai. firm size: 10 architects and designers. current projects: Inspire Tea House, Citrix headquarters, and the National Exhibition and Convention Centre sales and marketing office, all in Shanghai. honors: Asia Pacific Interior Design Award. role model: Interior Design Hall of Fame members Lyndon Neri and Rossana Hu for paving the way for Chinese designers. nurture: At 15 years old, Tan was the youngest Boy Scout troop leader in his hometown of Penang, Malaysia. nature: He and his wife will vacation at Japan’s Kawaguchi Lake in a cabin overlooking Mount Fuji. spacemen-studio.com
Peter Marino Architect “Channeling Chanel,” page 146 principal:
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Dimore Studio “One of a Kind,” page 126 co-founder: Britt Moran. co-founder: Emiliano Salci. firm site: Milan. firm size: 40 architects and designers. current projects: Residences in Milan, Florence, Turin, Paris, London, and Zurich; stores in Rome, Miami, and New York; pieces for Dimore Milano. role model: Gio Ponti for his dream of a “living, silent house.” origins: Moran is from Asheboro, North Carolina, and Salci from Arezzo, Italy. beginnings: Moran was a graphic designer and Salci an art director at Cappellini before they founded Dimore Studio in 2003. dimorestudio.eu
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BOTTOM, FROM LEFT: MANOLO YLLERA; SILVIA RIVOLTELLA
Peter Marino, FAIA. firm site: New York. firm size: 160 architects and designers. current projects: Bulgari and the Cheval Blanc hotel in Paris; Louis Vuitton in London and Seoul, South Korea; residences worldwide. honors: Interior Design Best of Year Awards; Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Lifetime Achievement Award; AIA New York and New York State Design Awards; Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.
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Colors are vivid. Angles are sharp. But the boundaries in “Gender Bending Fashion” are blurry. The exhibition, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, reveals that people have been disrupting the division between men’s and women’s clothing not just in recent decades but for more than a century. The show’s design by MFA in-house architect Chelsea Garunay features lit triangular displays in pinks, oranges, and blues set against black-painted walls, yielding a “retro-futurism, connecting the current moment in fashion to historical prece dents,” the museum notes. The over 60 gar ments range from an 1895 bicycling corset and a tuxedo worn by Marlene Dietrich in 1930 to a 2012 men’s floral blazer and kilt ensemble by Comme des Garçons and Christian Siriano’s pantsuit with skirt overlay worn by Janelle Monáe in 2018. They’re joined by paintings, photographs, and runway-footage pro jections by creative agency Black Math.
they’ve got the look
GIOCONDA & AUGUST/COURTESY OF THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON
A men’s ensemble from Alessandro Trincone’s spring/summer 2017 Annodami collection is at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, through August 25.
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D E S I G N w ire
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shoes and the city You can almost hear Douglas Cuomo’s opening soundtrack “do-do-do-do” and see Carrie Bradshaw in her tutu. But since her Sex and the City days, Sarah Jessica Parker now has a different starring role: shoe designer. Launched in 2014, SJP by Sarah Jessica Parker is her collection of accessible luxury footwear in classic silhouettes, and the brand has just opened its second shop in New York. Cass Calder Smith Architecture, which has completed three projects in the South Street Seaport neighborhood, being redeveloped by the Howard Hughes Corporation, outfitted the 1,100 square feet like a casual yet sophisticated downtown apartment. Comfortable vintage and new upholstered furniture mingles with residentially scaled artwork, all either in or complementing SJP’s signature blush palette. A custom unit showcases 48 pairs of pumps in tidy, colorful rows. Charlotte, Miranda, and Samantha would be proud. From top: Cass Calder Smith Architecture employed white oak for the custom millwork at the SJP by Sarah Jessica Parker boutique in downtown New York. Fawn pumps lining the custom acrylic display.
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Dame Mary Quant is having a moment—rather, another moment. The British fashion designer who has been credited with inventing the miniskirt in the 1960’s is now, at age 85, the subject, along with Terence Conran, of the just-released pop culture book Swinging London, which coincides with an exhibition at the city’s Fashion and Textile Museum. But the spotlight’s just on her in “Mary Quant,” across town at the Victoria and Albert Museum. The first international retrospective on the multihyphenate (she is also an illustrator and owned Bazaar, her London shop) features more than 120 garments plus photographs and her sketches from 1955 to 1975, when Quant utilized new mass-production techniques and simple, spirited styles to revolutionize how English women dressed. “We didn’t realize,” Quant says, “that what we were creating was pioneering.” 38
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CLOCKWISE FROM BOTTOM: RONALD DUMONT/STRINGER/GETTY IMAGES; DUFFY ARCHIVE; GUNNAR LARSEN; PA PRINTS 2008; JOHN COWAN ARCHIVE/COURTESY OF TERENCE PEPPER COLLECTION
Clockwise from bottom: Mary Quant, photographed in 1967, is having a retrospective at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London through February 16, 2020. A 1966 satin minidress and shorts by Quant. Model Kellie Wilson in a ’60’s dress by Ginger Group, the designer’s diffusion line. The Quant Afoot footwear collection launch, 1967. Quant with husband and business partner Alexander Plunket Greene in 1961 outside Bazaar, her London shop.
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They form outdoor seating‌ But the polyolefin cords used in Paola Lenti furniture are now also being made into necklaces. After her sister and business partner Anna met the founder of Il Nodo, an Italian NGO operating in Cambodia, teaching underprivileged youth skills so they can someday support their families, the manufacturer joined the mission, donating silver- or copper-accented cords. Cambodian girls have learned how to transform the ropes into 24and 27-inch-long double-strands. The necklaces debuted at the Milan showroom during Salone del Mobile, selling for $113 and $135, all of which goes back to Il Nodo.
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Sisters Gisue and Mojgan Hariri have designed build ings, furniture, and even jewelry. But they had yet to conceive an installation as large and impactful as “Contemporary Muslim Fashions,” which occupied 12,000 square feet of the de Young Museum in San Fran cisco and had 105,000 visi tors during its 3½-month run. But, having been born and raised in Iran and recently completing an office tower and a hotel there, the Interior Design Hall of Fame members and partners at Hariri & Hariri Architecture in New York were the perfect fit for the job.
dress code Gisue and Mojgan Hariri’s San Francisco museum exhibition shone a new light on Muslim fashion
Educated at Cornell University, they have long straddled old and new worlds—and that duality was on display at the exhibition, a contemporary, black-and-white environment infused with traditional Islamic elements. The photography and women’s garments represented an international interpretation of Muslim culture and fashion by such known names as Yves Saint Laurent and Oscar de la Renta as well as by emerging designers and artists from Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the U.S. The result revealed modest dress is not something simply imposed on Muslim women but also a means with which they can empower themselves.
From top: Mojgan and Gisue Hariri of Hariri & Hariri Architecture. A silk outfit by Bernard Chandran of Malaysia in “Contemporary Muslim Fashions” at the de Young Museum in San Francisco.
FROM TOP: PAYAM; ERIC LAIGNEL
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How did you achieve that? Mojgan Hariri: Islam is often presented as resistant to modernity. But it’s actually a multi cultural faith. True, the dress of its practitioners is influenced by religious principles but also by local customs and tradi tions as well as global fashion trends. So we showcased that diversity. We highlighted that what Muslim women wear in Malaysia or the Philip pines is so different than in Saudi Arabia or Iran. All the mannequins were
displayed on pedestals. Visitors had to look up to see them, showing the power and beauty of the women in the Muslim world. Were there traditional Arabic architectural elements? MH: Yes. To explore the interplay between the seen and the unseen, we designed two MDF screens with CNC cut geometric patterns. In Arabic they are called mashrabiya, which are commonly used in the region as windows to look out of without being seen, mainly for women. There was one screen at the show’s entrance. Fur ther in, there was a pho tograph of a traditional Muslim woman in a black veil behind the other -
identity. We strove for the exhibition to foster a positive examination of a community that’s often talked about but rarely given the chance to speak for itself.
screen. And we also had geometric patterns pro jected on to surfaces. Did your design draw parallels between Muslim dress and Muslim architecture? GH: We took inspiration from the veil, or “gaze,” in organizing the spatial configuration, allowing visitors to see and be seen through various openings and portals. The “gaze” in this con text became a charged signifier of sexuality and power. Our interpreta tion of what outsiders see as this dark, impen etrable environment be came the existing walls of the galleries, which we painted black. But once visitors entered, they experienced a new, modern world which we
achieved with the arch, an archetypal element in Islamic architecture. But we deconstructed and reinterpreted it in various ways. There were tall, white, partitionlike arches throughout. Then, the exhibition ended in a pair of transparent, tubu lar arches reminiscent of Muslim vaulted masonry spaces. The arch is pro tective, like a veil but, in the way we used it, also contemporary. What did you wear growing up in Iran? MH: Mostly T-shirts and blue jeans. The Iran we grew up in was rapidly becoming a modern country, and the empha sis on education, art, and fashion was part of our upbringing. At that time, state and religion
ERIC LAIGNEL
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How did the commis sion come about? Gisue Hariri: Then director and CEO of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Max Hollein had been looking for women architects from the Middle East, so the exhibition wouldn’t be a Westernized interpre tation of Islamic fashion and architecture. He knew us already, having seen our Jewels of Salz burg mixed use devel opment in Austria. We were both thrilled and concerned by the pros pect. To be the architects of a mega exhibition was truly exciting. How ever, it had a political nature. Muslim women are being increasingly targeted for using their fashion choices to assert their independence and
c r o s s l i n es
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: SEBASTIAN KIM/COURTESY OF THE FINE ARTS MUSEUMS OF SAN FRANCISCO; ERIC LAIGNEL (4)
Opposite: Archlike displays in bendable wood paneling. Clockwise from top left: An ensemble by Dian Pelangi of Indonesia. A mashrabiya-style screen in CNC-cut MDF at the entry. One of two fabric and metal piping structures at the end of the exhibition. A wedding ensemble by designer Shakeel of Pakistan. LED projections on the floor. APRIL.19
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Clockwise from top left: A cotton, silk, and neoprene head-scarf outfit by Malaysia’s Haslinda Rahim. A rockshape platform in painted plywood. Arches reaching 15 feet high. A dress and hijab from the Verona Collection, a modest clothing brand sold at Macy’s and founded by an American fashion photographer who converted to Islam in 2011.
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Why were some platforms in the exhibition angular? MH: Since the whole show was sensual in form and fluid in space, the platforms follow the organic look of desert rocks, which has been a through line in our work. From early on, we’ve collected rocks and studied geological
formations, fascinated by nature’s abstract, asym metrical patterns. Is that why there’s a sensual nature to your work generally? GH: When we founded our practice, we realized that the whole education of architecture is based on male thinking, with a lack of the intuitive and
the poetic. The result was often banal grid structures and pragmatic boxes. We learned to look within ourselves and find a way to express our own ideas and experiences. Good design is when sensuality, beauty, functionality, technology, and philosophy connect the body and mind. —Jane Margolies
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: HASLINDA RAHIM; ERIC LAIGNEL (3)
were separate. All reli gions were respected even though the majority of people were Muslim. But we were and still are familiar with how the more conservative and religious people dress, because we’d see them on the streets and in the bazars, mosques, and rural areas.
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Serena Williams and Lady Gaga… They are two of the co-chairs of the Met Gala, May 6 at New York’s Met Fifth Avenue. This year’s theme? Camp, the exaggerated style coined by Susan Sontag in 1964 that often fuses elements of high and pop culture. From May 9 to September 8, the museum hosts “Camp: Notes on Fashion,” an exhibition featuring some 200 objects, from modern men’s and women’s ensembles to sculptures, paintings, and drawings from the 17th century. 54
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CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: JOHNNY DUFORT/COURTESY OF MOSCHINO AND THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART (2); JOHNNY DUFORT/COURTESY OF GUCCI HISTORICAL ARCHIVE AND THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART; JOHNNY DUFORT/COURTESY OF SCHIAPARELLI AND THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART; JOHNNY DUFORT/COURTESY OF THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
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Š 2019 Crypton, Inc. Crypton and the red planet logo are registered trademarks of Crypton, Inc. U.S. patent 5,565,265 and other U.S. and global patents issued and pending.
We never stop working. On a molecular level, Crypton permanently resists stains, liquids, germs and more. From commercial, hospitality, healthcare and even maritime settings, we keep fabrics clean, beautiful, sustainable.
crypton.com
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line dance Aiden Bowman and Josh Metersky arrange colorful rods in a graceful ensemble 1. Triple Elma Chandelier in
LAUREN COLEMAN
brushed brass, handblown glass, and borosilicate sandblasted pink, amber, and topaz yellow by Trueing Studio. trueing.co
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innovationsusa.com Wallcoverings Mazarin, Spalt, Campello
Modular Mixology Experience well-appointed modular lounge infused with the kind of all-day comfort and support you expect from task chair experts – for the ultimate blend of easy, modern and versatile. Learn more about our Nano™, Cameo™ and Paséa™ collections at www.ideondesign.com.
Made in California. Designed by you.
Links to make design ideas come true Play with our colored aluminum links to create shapes, volumes, reproduction of high definition images... At Kriskadecor we customize projects to the taste of our client.
Landgasthof Löwen Restaurant - Simone Wagner | CC Sorli Emocions - DYD interiorismo Chelo Alcañiz - Photo: Marcela Grassi | Canalla Discoteque Vaillo+Irigaray - Photo: Rubén Pérez Bescós | Kriska chain - Brilliant apricot - Photo: Pere Queralt
[Daisycake]
HD Expo Las Vegas May 15 – 17 Visit us at booth 4027
info@kriskadecor.us · www.kriskadecor.us
B+N IN SITU: INSTALLATION INSPIRATIONS
SYSTEM 1224 ª
©2019 B&N Industries, Inc. Shop design: Leong Leong
Photography: Naho Kubota
with perforated steel panels
Modular, wall-suspended panels, shelves, casework and hangrails, all with integrated LED lighting. Seen here at Everlane’s first-ever brick-and-mortar shop. Discover the versatility of System 1224 for Retail, Hospitality, Offices, Healthcare and Homes at bnind.com.
He danced and designed…
BL IPs
NATURALLY MODERN Kuvio Dimensional Wall Tile by Lumicor | www.lumicor.com
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WILLIAM CLAXTON/COURTESY OF DEMONT PHOTO MANAGEMENT & FAHEY/KLEIN GALLERY LOS ANGELES, WITH PERMISSION OF THE RUDI GERNREICH TRADEMARK
But he was perhaps best-known for inventing the monokini, or topless swimsuit. “Fearless Fashion: Rudi Gernreich,” running May 9 to September 1 at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles, explores his progressive, liberating women’s clothing. Among the 80 ensembles are images of frequent collaborator, model Peggy Moffitt, photographed by her husband, William Claxton. As an ode to Gernreich’s desire for women to be comfortable, the exhibition’s mannequins were custom produced with flat feet, since he dressed his models in low heels or simply left them barefoot.
Farrah™... tranquil and serene
wall+covering
A Colour & Design Inc. Company
1.866.556.9255 colouranddesign.com
National Wallcovering Koroseal Interior Products Metro Wallcoverings Design Resource Midwest Fashion Architectural Designs
Expormim USA LLC —— (212) 204-8572 usa@expormim.com www.expormim.com
Nido. Hand-woven dining chair. Javier Pastor —— Photographer: Mauricio Fuertes ©
AD Beatrice Rossetti - Photo Federico Cedrone
CAMPIELLO SECTIONAL SOFA Antonio Citterio Design
www.flexform.it
FLEXFORM NEW YORK Tel. 212 355 2328 FLEXFORM LOS ANGELES Tel. 310 424 5460 FLEXFORM SAN FRANCISCO Tel. 415 800 6576
Also available at selected dealers in Austin, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Houston, La Jolla, Miami, Seattle
AGENT FOR USA Antonella Cremonesi Tel. 312 265 1181 antonella@alphaonestudio.com
wa l k through firm: groves and co. site: new york
TIM WILLIAMS
Inside the executive suite at the Michael Kors headquarters, a Mart Stam chair stands on a wool rug in the office of creative director Lance Le Pere.
mood board
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TIM WILLIAMS
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A fast pace and high pressure are mainstays in the world of fashion superstar Michael Kors and his husband, fashion designer Lance Le Pere. But they like their surroundings understated and serene. For years, they have been drawn to the layered modernism of Groves & Co., which designed their three residences in New York and Florida. When it came time to renovate the 2,000-square-foot executive suite where Kors and Le Pere work, they asked Russell Groves to bring his subtle luxury there as well. In the same building as the Manhattan headquarters of Michael Kors, the clothing and accessories company, which recently acquired Versace for approximately $2 billion, the office consists of four main areas arranged in an enfilade: reception, conference room, and an office each for Kors and Le Pere, who is the creative director of the women’s collection. “Unlike his public persona, Michael’s personal aesthetic is quite pulled back,” Groves begins. “He works with color all day long, so he requested a neutral space.” The walls and ceiling are painted white; black and grays appear in flooring and furniture, Groves playing with textures and finishes for visual interest. Walnut, oak, Italian marble, glass, and stainless steel compose the materials palette,
FROM TOP: TIM WILLIAMS; COURTESY OF MICHAEL KORS/RICHARD PHIBBS
Clockwise from top left: Custom walnut desks outfit reception. La Pere works at a custom marbletopped table. Kors poses before the Hans Wegner desk in his office. Pieces by Florence Knoll, Paul McCobb, and Warren Platner furnish reception.
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From top: Kors’s office also includes a Charles and Ray Eames task chair and an ebonized-oak credenza by Knoll. The conference room is visible from reception through a series of pocket doors. Fabricius + Kastholm chairs face each other in Kors’s office, where flooring is oak.
with faux fur blankets and pillows from the Michael Kors Collection and wool and leather details adding softness. Classic furnishings by the likes of Charles and Ray Eames and Florence Knoll are rooted in mid-century modernism. The result is a calculated visual palate cleanser. “Russell immediately understood the combination of efficiency, elegance, comfort, and personality that are so important for our work environment,” Kors states. But simplicity, Groves suggests, is actually hard to engineer. “It’s like a fashion show,” he says. “Behind the screen it’s utter chaos. But when the model walks down the runway, it looks effortless.” —Michael Lassell FROM FRONT GORDON INTERNATIONAL: CHAIRS (OFFICES, RECEPTION, CONFERENCE ROOM). RESTORATION HARDWARE: LAMPS (RECEPTION). ROOM & BOARD: DESK (OFFICE). RICH BRILLIANT WILLING: BLACK FLOOR LAMP (RECEPTION). KASTHALL: RUG (RECEPTION, OFFICE). KNOLL: COFFEE TABLE, SOFA, SIDE TABLE (RECEPTION), CREDENZA, COFFEE TABLE (OFFICE). CARL HANSEN & SON: DESK (OFFICE). JOHN SALADINO: LAMP. HERMAN MILLER: TASK CHAIRS (OFFICE, CONFERENCE ROOM). RUCKSTUHL: RUG (CONFERENCE ROOM). CHARLES PFISTER: SOFA (OFFICE). GRETA GROSSMAN: LAMP. EDELMAN LEATHER: RUG. THROUGHOUT BENJAMIN MOORE & CO.: PAINT. GENSLER: ARCHITECT. LIGHTING WORKSHOP: LIGHTING CONSULTANT. THORNTON TOMASETTI: STRUCTURAL ENGINEER. WSP: MEP. CERAMI & ASSOCIATES: ACOUSTICAL CON SULTANT. CJS BUILDERS: GENERAL CONTRACTOR.
TIM WILLIAMS
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www.andreuworld.com
Chicago New York San Francisco Washington, D.C. Boston Denver
Visit our showrooms
Flex Corporate by Piergiorgio Cazzaniga
ethimo.com
Nicolette Collection design by Patrick Norguet walters wiCker, iNC info@walterswicker.com www.walterswicker.com
US Distributor for ethimo
©2019 The Container Store Inc. 43236
Will you settle for the space you were given? Or discover the space unseen? The closet space you seek lies within the one you already have – no matter the size, budget or style. Open your closet and we’ll show you the space that’s waiting to be discovered, free of charge and without delay. The future of your closet begins today. 855-827-5623
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C O N TA I N E R S T O R E . C O M
Member of the trade? Learn more about our Trade Program and discounts at containerstore.com/trade-program.
h o s p i ta l i t y diffa dining by design
standing tall Designers, manufacturers, and students banded together for New York’s Dining by Design benefitting DIFFA: Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS text: annie block photography: eric laignel
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h o s p i ta l i t y diffa
dining by design
Interior Design theme Amid a Formica table setting produced by Reis Contracting, ceramic glove molds and our signature bold wall graphic encouraged visitors to join as one.
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Black Artists + Designers Guild theme Led by Malene Barnett, Sheila Bridges, and Leyden Lewis, the curated setting backdropped by Shawn Theodore’s photomural To Govern or to Love represented the silent hope bonding us all.
h o s p i ta l i t y diffa
dining by design
Studios Architecture hosts Herman Miller and WB Wood. theme An atypical table shape that fostered conversation was accompanied by the natural and the technological in an exami nation of what makes for an authentic experience.
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Pratt Institute theme Gold accents riffed on kintsugi, the Japanese technique of repairing broken pottery with metallic lacquer, to illustrate the strength in working together. mentor Marks & Frantz.
Gensler hosts Knoll and EvensonBest. theme CNC-routed maple-veneered panels flanking a celebratory environment illustrated that individuals living with HIV/AIDS are equally deserving of happiness and beauty.
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h o s p i ta l i t y diffa dining by design
Rockwell Group theme Custom wallpaper and a tablecloth of 6,000 actual feathers was a reinterpretation of James McNeill Whistler’s Peacock Room and a metaphor for those with HIV/AIDS to be seen and accepted.
IA Interior Architects theme Awareness posters produced by nonprofits, activist organizations, and health departments from the 1980’s and ’90’s signified the discovery of AIDS 35 years ago and how far we’ve come— and how much more there’s left to do.
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Setting oneself apart from the masses. Gratifying the need for uniqueness. Striking out in a new direction. This is the mission statement of AXOR MyEdition. A personal statement. In perfection. Admire the newest AXOR collection at ICFF (Booth #1881). axor-design.com
Maiarelli Studio host Novità Communications. theme Awash in Yves Klein blue, used clothbound books supported the tabletop and spelled out Malorie Black man’s quote reminding of the importance of being kind to one another.
h o s p i ta l i t y diffa
dining by design
David Scott Interiors host Roche Bobois. theme Splashes of sea blue anchored by Zaria Forman’s video artwork Ode to an Iceberg transported guests to a luxury ocean-liner dining experience. 86
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Taking care of light Marset USA Inc. 20 West 22nd Street – Suite 903 New York, NY 10010 T +1 646 727 4250 I F +1 646 304 6959 marsetusa@marset.com
Felderman Keatinge + Associates theme Enclosed by Stanley Felderman’s futuristic drawings, a lunar setting celebrated the upcoming 50th anniversary of the first moon landing—and the human ability to dream big and achieve greatness.
h o s p i ta l i t y diffa dining by design
Huntsman Architectural Group hosts Teknion, Studio TK, Luum, and Tarkett. theme Illustrating “Diversity Has No Boundaries” were austere driftwood branches against a vast landscape rendered in vinyl wall covering, encouraging guests to consider the meaning of inclusivity. 88
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ARCHITECTURAL TEXTURES COLLECTION
me m osamp les . c o m
Patrick Mele host Benjamin Moore & Co. theme Old-world glamour came to Pier 92 in the form of a berry, cream, and gold palette and grand papier-mâché floral centerpieces.
h o s p i ta l i t y diffa interiordesign.net/diffa19 for more coverage of the event
dining by design
INC Architecture & Design theme MDF, paint, dried flowers—on their own, they are unremarkable materials but layered together, with the help of Mehovic Painting, they can be dramatic, exemplifying the “Us Is More” table theme.
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KENMORE COLLECTION
A mesh dome hangs from a single rod, shaping dazzling light patterns across your walls. Quietly unwind with added cozy ambiance thanks to its retro design elements.
INC.
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www.eurofase.com
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1.800.660.5391
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Redefining Surfaces. Redefining Kitchens.
Homes evolve by becoming social spaces in which we do not only cook, but we live in. We have created a resistant and durable material with unlimited designs to create spaces without boundaries.
New Dekton X-Gloss
Flooring Dekton Industrial Lunar Kitchen Island Dekton Stonika Bergen
COSENTINO NORTH AMERICA 355 Alhambra Circle, Suite 1000 | Coral Gables, FL 33134 | 786.686.5060
Find out more about the 25 years transferable Dekton warranty. Look for inspiration and find resources at cosentino.com
A R C H I T E X- L J H . C O M
R X P R I VACY C U RTA I N S F E AT U R I N G / R X 2 0 1 3 I N L AG O O N
market
special lighting section
edited by Rebecca Thienes text by Mark McMenamin and Colleen Curry
train to tabletop Eager to outfit its new TGV trains in style, French railway operator SNCF asked Ionna Vautrin to supply reading lights. The Parisian designer envisioned a lamp evoking the solace of home, a foil for the forced fellowship implicit in public transportation. “It reformulates traveling space as an extension of habitat,” she says. So it’s fitting that Moustache is now offering a tablelamp version for home or office in Khaki, White, or Anthracite, as well as the original Red or Blue. Made of injected aluminum with polycarbonate diffusers shading LEDs, the TGV lamp is identical to the train version, save for the added ballast for stability. moustache.fr
TGV
MICHEL GIESBRECHT
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Alex Selma and Clara del Portillo for Axolight
Jean-Philippe Nuel for MLE
David Chipperfield for Wästberg
Marie Burgos of Marie Burgos Design
product Jewel. standout The Yonoh Creative Studio co-founders named this suspension light for the lacquered-aluminum “gem” shade at the end of its recycled ABS “necklace.” axolight.it
product Abac. standout Touch sensors activate the Studio Jean-Philippe Nuel president’s sconce in die-cast aluminum, brass, and dimmable LEDs. mlelighting.com
product W102 Chipperfield. standout Looks can be deceiving, just ask the David Chipperfield Architects founder, whose oxidizedsteel table lamp is adjustable yet has no visible joints. wastberg.com
product Queen. standout The industrial designer and fêng shui expert plated the floor lamp’s inner shells in 24-karat gold, while exteriors are corroding steel.
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marieburgosdesign.com
PRODUCT 3: SIMON MENGES; PORTRAIT 3: INGRID VON KRUSE
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Tom Dixon of Tom Dixon
Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance for Saint-Louis
David Weeks of David Weeks Studio
Sebastian Herkner for Pulpo
product Opal. standout The British multihyphenate’s sculptural carbon-fiber floor lamps are topped by tinted polycarbonate orbs that emit a gentle glow.
product Folia. standout A branchlike sconce in varnished ash with cut-crystal shades is the interior architect’s nod to the forest around the manufacturer’s factory. saint-louis.com
product Treble Single. standout Cursive penmanship inspired the brass arms of the designer’s pendant fixture, its powder-coated shade paired with a slump-molded glass diffuser. davidweeksstudio.com
product Stellar Grape. standout Handblown rippled and frosted glass spheres cluster around a stem of powder-coated steel in a floor lamp by the Maison & Objet Designer of the Year. pulpoproducts.com
tomdixon.net
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“I could immediately see the print produced in glass” M A R K E T COL L E C T ION lighting
In 1944, Viennese architect Josef Frank designed a textile print for Svenskt Tenn. It was called Terrazzo and, naturally, evoked the appearance of the stone composite. Seven decades later, the brand’s marketing and creative director Thommy Bindefeld met Nichetto Studio founder Luca Nichetto, a native of Italy’s Murano island, at the latter’s glass exhibition. The connection spawned Fusa, a totemic lamp series developed by cutting and layering Frank’s fabric into collages, and then replicating the effect in Murano glass using leftover dye reprocessed from glassmakers. Mounted on brass and lit by LEDs, Fusa sparks an interplay between refraction, opacity, and transparency. The four floor and table versions range from 18 to 46 inches tall; there’s also a 6½-inch-high candle holder. svenskttenn.se
multiculti blend
LUCA NICHETTO
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FUSA
TWO-STORY-HIGH EDGE-LIT EXTERIOR FINS PROJECT: 2187 ATLANTIC ST., STAMFORD, CT // DESIGN: MKDA LLC. GENERAL CONTRACTOR: MAGNA CONSTRUCTION LTD // PHOTOGRAPHY: ALEXANDER SEVERIN BUILT BY: EVENTSCAPE // SEE MORE AT EVENTSCAPE.COM
WONDER
M A R K E T COL L E C T ION lighting
“It brings a touch of comfort and nostalgia” ÉMILE CATHELINEAU
all grown up
TOP LEFT: GARNIER STUDIO; BOTTOM RIGHT: VINCENT POINAS
During childhood camping trips with her family in France, Émile Cathelineau fondly remembers using flashlights during the night. Now a member of the design and product-development department at CVL Luminaires, she builds on those memories with Wonder, her table-lamp and sconce series. The textured polymethacrylate diffuser is surrounded by a brass frame finished in polished brass, graphite, nickel, or copper. The steel body comes in the same options as well as six paint colors including Mango, Dark Blue, Dark Red, and Vintage Green. cvl-luminaires.fr
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“Our unexpected objects can put a smile on people’s faces” lighting M A R K E T C O L L E C T I O N
SNAKE OKAY
JAKOB WETH, JONAS LANG, JAN KÖNIG
EGG
three cheers Art direction, product design, and photography are the respective specialties of Jan König, Jonas Lang, and Jakob Weth. But the trio has found common ground as Rrudi, shorthand for “rudimentary,” an allusion to starting from scratch. Among their first lines is Get Lit, a limited edition of illuminated wall sculptures informed by pop art illustrations and neon signage. The quirky graphics are printed on polymethacrylate that is CNC-milled. An aluminum profile outlines the contour, and then LEDs dimmable by remote control are mounted on MDF and slid inside. Each is self-descriptive: Banana, Egg, Cheesy, Snake, and Okay. rrudi.com
CHEESY
BANANA
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FRENCH OUTDOOR FURNITURE FOR FRESH PROJECTS An elegant chair that is practical yet comfortable. Patrick Jouin and Fermob created this chair with a stunning silhouette and made from a single material: soft sheet steel to achieve a technical and designer dream.
KATE COLLECTION BY PATRICK JOUIN
NYDC Suite 414 200 Lexington Avenue, NY nydc@fermobusa.com
fermobusa.com
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whimsy illuminated Fantastical fixtures light the way 5
1. Wink sconce in rayon and iron plated
in 24-karat gold by Houtique. 2. Lapilla magnetic wall lamp in powder4
coated aluminum by Ronda Design. 3. Glenn, Ted, and Bert sconces in ceramic and aluminum by Moooi. 4. Stalagmite table lamp trio in glazed ceramic by Roche Bobois. 5. Conduit Incline table lamp in stoneware and brass by John Sheppard. 6. Owl lamp in aluminum and braided nylon by Jamie Wolfond. See page 106 for sources.
lighting M A R K E T
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Dornbracht VAIA Create a new balance
dornbracht.com/vaia #createanewbalance
m a r k e t sources
whimsy illuminated
1. Houtique, houtique.es. 2. Ronda Design, rondadesign.it. 3. Moooi, moooi.com. 4. Roche Bobois, roche-bobois.com. 5. John Sheppard, johnsheppard.net. 6. Jamie Wolfond, jamiewolfond.com.
Fine Solid Bronze Architectural Hardware 866.788.3631 • www.sunvalleybronze.com Made in the USA
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KINGSLEY BATE
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ELEGANT OUTDOOR FURNITURE
© Kingsley Bate. Find dealers online. T: 703-361-7000 F: 703-361-7001 www.kingsleybate.com [KB1280C]
OUE Skyspace LA l US Bank Tower l Architect: Gensler l Kurt Jordan Photography
SCULPTING open space create WAVES add VIBRANCY
Artistic Elements • Ceilings • Outdoor Dividers • Shower Dividers • Solar Shading • Wall Coverings • Water Features • Window Treatments
800.999.2645 fabricoil.com cascadearchitectural.com
s k e t c h book
“At our firm Glithero, co-founder Sarah van Gameren and I draw across the table from each other. It’s the most efficient way for us to get out ideas and avoid miscom munication. When we received the commission by the Musée de Design et d’Arts Appliqués Contemporains in Lausanne, Switzerland, to design “Nez-à-Nez, Contemporary Perfumers,” a six-room exhibition on perfumemaking trends that is on view through June 16, we were given a fairly open brief. So, after the 39 featured scents were shipped to our studio in London and we sampled them, I made these watercolors on 9-by-12-inch paper. I was developing ideas on how to make the immateriality of the perfumes tangible. The result was a series of interactive experiences in each room with rewards for interaction. For the room with a stained-glass window, for instance, patches of colored light land at the points where
visitors can test a scent. In another space, they access a fragrance by pulling down on a string tethered to a large helium balloon. I chose watercolor as the medium because it conveys an atmosphere and depicts the essence of light, which was our conceptual starting point. The paints have a will of their own but also allow for transparency and overlay.”
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FROM LEFT: DANIELA DROZ/TONATIUH AMBROSETTI (2); TIM SIMPSON (2)
paints and perfumes
Designer Tim Simpson’s watercolors illustrate a Swiss fragrance exhibition
GANDIABLASCO
SOLANAS
by Daniel Germani
NEW YORK T. 212-421-6701 info-usa@gandiablasco.com MIAMI T. 305-576-8181 miami@gandiablasco.com LOS ANGELEST. 310-271-2172 losangeles@gandiablasco.com
www.gandiablasco.com
Smart Design. Exemplary Craftsmanship. Newport Brass is the recognized brand for quality constructed bathroom and kitchen products. Carrying the distinction of flawless beauty and extended durability, our products are available in a full range of finishes and contemporary, transitional and traditional styles.
2001 CARNEGIE AVENUE SANTA ANA, CA 92705 949.417.5207 NEWPORTBRASS.COM
What’s next is what’s here
The world’s leading platform for commercial design NeoCon.com
NeoCon® is a registered trademark of Merchandise Mart Properties, Inc.
June 10–12 theMART, Chicago
What's next is what's here
The forefront of design Visit NeoCon.com for exhibitor updates.
NeoCon is the world’s leading platform and most important event of the year for the commercial design industry. Held every June at The Mart in Chicago since 1969, NeoCon serves as the commercial design world’s launch pad for innovation—offering ideas and introductions that shape the built environment today and into the future. The 51st edition, June 10-12, will offer unparalleled resources, expertise and inspiration for the design of space across a spectrum of use: Workplace, Healthcare, Hospitality, Retail, Residential, Education, Public Space and Government 8 floors and more than 1 million square feet will showcase the latest products and design possibilities from more than 500 brands including industry leaders and talented upstarts.
→ June 10-12 → theMART, Chicago → Register online by June 7 → NeoCon.com
↓ 123 2/90 Sign Systems 2020 3form 9to5 Seating ↓A A. Rudin Aceray LLC Actiu USA Corp. Aircharge AIS Allermuir Allsteel ALUR Amazing Magnets American Biltrite AMQ Solutions, LLC Amtico Anacara Company Andreu World Ann Sacks Antoniolupi and Ernestomeda Chicago by Luca Lanzetta Group APCO Sign Systems Aquafil USA Arc-Com Arcadia Architectural Elementz by Axium Architex Arper Artisan Electronics Group Artistic Tile ASA International ASM Modular Systems Inc. Aspecta North America, LLC ASSA ABLOY Atelier Gary Lee Atlas Carpet AVA by Novalis Innovative Flooring Avonite Surfaces® and STUDIO Collection® ↓B Baker Furniture Barbican Architectural Products BARESQUE Barlow Tyrie BAST Surfaces BBF BEAUFURN LLC Behr Process Corporation Bellow Press Belwith-Keeler Benithem Sdn. Bhd. Benjamin Moore Benjamin Moore & Co. Bentley Bentwood of Chicago Bestcase BESTVIEW INTERNATIONAL BIFMA Bobrick Washroom Equipment Boero USA, Inc. Booth & Williams (DBA of AmeriFolio, LLC) Borgo Contract Seating Boss Design Boss Office Products Inc. BRADLEY Bradley Corporation Brado S.p.A. Brentano Brizo and Delta Chicago Broome + Greene Brown Jordan Burgeree BuzziSpace ↓C CabanaCoast by Actiwin Cabot Wrenn CAI Designs Calligaris Cambridge Sound Management Camira Fabrics Carlisle Wide Plank Floors Carnegie Carolina CARVART Cast Classics Castelle CBC Flooring Centennial Woods LLC Century Furniture Century Tile Distributors CF Stinson CFGroup / Falcon / Thonet / Shelby Williams Changzhou Tianan Nikoda Electronic Company, LTD Chemetal Chen-Source Inc. CHIEF Chilewich
Introducing the NeoCon Plaza
Connect, work, dine, unwind, recharge and enjoy the outdoors throughout each day and evening at the new NeoCon Plaza, located on the South River Drive of The Mart. Summer in Chicago along the river provides the perfect backdrop to experience this year’s design concept, The Urban Boardwalk. Designed by
Sponsored by FORWARD FRUIT
BRANDED E N V I RONME N TS
Introducing Insidesign
An exclusive look inside the best of Chicago design
New this year, NeoCon in partnership with IIDA, will offer NeoCon attendees a selection of designer-led tours featuring some of the latest and most innovative spaces in Chicago. Visit NeoCon.com for tour details and registration
Christopher Peacock Cixi Mingye Communicating & Electronic Co., Ltd Claridge Products Clarus CMS Electracom CO.FE.MO Industrie S.R.L. Coalesse Comfordy Enterprises Corporation Community Comp Sit Inc. Compatico Composite Panel Association Concertex Concrete Collaborative Configura, Inc. Congoleum Corporation Connectrac ConSet America Construction Specialties Inc Contract Wall Solutions Corona Group Inc Cowtan & Tout Created Hardwood Crossville, Inc. Cumberland ↓D D.L. Couch DACASSO DACO CORPORATION / Achaia Group Dacor Kitchen Theater DARRAN Furniture Dataflex Dauphin David Edward David Sutherland Showroom Davis Furniture Dawon Chairs Co. de Giulio kitchen design De Vorm deAurora Decca Contract DEDON Inc. Designers Linen Source, Inc Designtex Devon&Devon Dfm Diesco Digilock Dinoflex Group LP Direct Rug Import/Pouya Antique Rug Gallery Divano Lounge USA Divine Flooring DOM Interiors Dorel Business Doug Mockett & Co. DUOBACK Co., Ltd DuPont DVO USA Dyson ↓E E Ink Eastern Global Corporation Ebanista Ebel, Inc. ECA/Dekko ECi Software Solutions ECONYL Edelman Leather EF Contract Egan Visual Elaine Smith Electro-LuminX Lighting Corp / Light Tape Emeco emuamericas, llc Encore Seating Enscape GmbH Enwork ERGOCHIEF Ergotron, Inc. ESI Eugene Stoltzfus Furniture Design Eureka Ergonomic Eurotech/Raynor Everform Molded Products EVOline Evolve Furniture Group Experience & Design Center Exquisite Surfaces Eykon Design Resources ezoBord ↓F Fabricut, Inc. Falcon FANTINI | THE GALLEY Ferrell Mittman/Avery Boardman Fitnice Flooring, a Summit International Flooring Line Flash Furniture FLEXCO Flexsteel Fluidconcepts & Design Inc. / Inline Systems Formaspace LP Formica Corporation
2019 Programming
The NeoCon exhibition is complemented by world-class programming featuring some of the most creative minds and productive talents in the industry. Three keynote presentations and 100 CEU-accredited seminars offer expertise and insight into the most relevant topics in the industry today. Keynote presentations Monday, June 10, 8am
Tuesday, June 11, 8am
The Familiar and Unusual: An Investigation of Balance and Experience in Design Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch, Founders, Roman and Williams Buildings and Interiors
Stuff Matters: The Material World We Make Ilse Crawford, Creative Director and Founder, StudioIlse
Having first worked together for a decade designing sets for Hollywood films, Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch founded Roman and Williams Buildings and Interiors in 2002. The pair have forged an ability to create projects without boundaries or borders, employing a range of materials, objects and references— from the unexpected to the pedigreed to the
Presented by: Presented by:
mundane. They are designers of interiors, buildings, furniture and objects whose philosophy has spearheaded a movement in the industry against corporate modernism. The spaces they create reflect the narrative of the people who occupy them as well as the couple’s singular vision which gives their design a sense of power and cohesion.
June 10–12 • theMART, Chicago • NeoCon.com
Ilse Crawford is a designer, academic and creative director with a simple mission: to put human needs and desires at the center of all she does. As founder of Studioilse, together with her multi-disciplinary, London-based team, she brings her philosophy to life. This means creating environments where humans feel comfortable;
public spaces that make people feel at home; and homes that are habitable and make sense for the people who live in them. It means designing furniture and products that support and enhance human behavior and actions in everyday life. It means restoring the human balance in brands and businesses that have lost their way.
Forward Space : Studio Framery Frasch FreeAxez, LLC FSorb FSR Inc. Fuego Furniture FurnitureLab Futrus Solutions ↓G Gantner Technologies Garrett Leather Corp. Gauzy LTD Geiger International George Smith Ghent GLOBAL FURNITURE GROUP GLOBALcare Gloster GMi Companies GRAFF- art of bath design center Grassoler Great Openings / Sparkeology Green Furniture Concept Green Hides Leather Studio Gressco Gross Stabil Corp. Groupe Lacasse Gunlocke
Wednesday, June 12, 11am
↓H H Contract HALCON Halumm International GmbH Hanamint | Alu-Mont Harvest Link International Pte. Ltd. Haworth Haworth Health Environments HBF & HBF Textiles Heller Herman Miller Herman Miller Healthcare / Nemschoff Hickory Chair Hightower Hirsh Industries HNI Holland & Sherry Holland Bar Stool Holly Hunt Homecrest Outdoor Living HON Company, The House of Rohl Studio HOWE HPD Collaborative HPFI Humanscale
Do No Harm: The Role of Design in Complicated Times Liz Ogbu, Founder and Principal, Studio O Presented by:
A designer, urbanist and spatial justice advocate, Liz Ogbu is founder and principal of Studio O, a multidisciplinary consultancy working to innovate challenged urban environments globally. From designing shelters for immigrant day laborers in the US to a water and health social enterprise for lowincome Kenyans, Liz has
a long history of working with communities in need to leverage the power of design to catalyze sustained social impact. Her work blends human-centered design research methodologies, architecture and equitable development principles, crossdisciplinary design thinking frameworks and social agendas.
Register and find more details including CEU programming and design tours at neocon.com
↓I ICF ICF Group IDEON IGUS Inc. INCISEON Indiana Furniture Innovant Innovations Innovative InPro Inscape Integra Intensa Interface Interior Crafts, Inc. Interior Felt Interiors+Sources Materials Pavilion Interstuhl INTO the Nordic Silence Invision IOPC Modular Millwork Italcer ITOKI Corporation IVARS USA ↓J J. Marshall Design J+J Flooring Group JANUS et Cie Jasper Group Jean de Merry Jensen Leisure Furniture John Rosselli & Associates JSI JumpSport Junckers Hardwood ↓K K&B Galleries, Ltd. KAIDI LLC Kannoa Karndean Designflooring Katonah Architectural Hardware KEHONG Keilhauer KFI Seating Khameleon Software KI Kinetex Kingsley Bate
Knú Contract | La-Z-Boy Contract Furniture Koleksiyon Koncept Inc. Kore Design, LLC Kravet Inc. Krug ↓L La-Z-Boy Contract Furniture Lanark Wallcoverings Lane Venture Lapchi Rug Design Studio Lee Jofa | Brunschwig & Fils Lefroy Brooks | Cooper & Graham LeftbankArt Lesro Industries LEVOLOR LG Electronics LINAK Lloyd Flanders Inc. Loctek Ergonomics LOFTwall LOGICDATA North America, Inc. Logiflex LogiSon Acoustic Network Lonseal Flooring LoomSource Loop Phonebooths Luna Textiles LUUM Luxxbox ↓M m.a.d. FURNITURE DESIGN Made Goods Magnuson Group Maharam Mallin MAMAGREEN Mannington Commercial Marshall Furniture, Inc. Martin Brattrud Masland Contract Material Bank Material Design Group / Sophie Mallebranche Matrex - A Leggett & Platt Company / Knitmasters Maya Romanoff Mayer Fabrics Meadows Workflow Measure Square Meco International Merkt GmbH Merryfair Chair System Sdn Bhd. Metal Work Internacional SA De CV Metroflor Michael - Cleary Michael Taylor Collections Middleby Residential | Viking Range | La Cornue Miele Experience Center MiEN Environments Mikodam LLC Mikomax Smart Office Milliken Minted-Art Moen Design Center Mohawk Group Momentum Group Momentum Textiles Monogram Design Center Montisa Moore & Giles Mortarr MTContract Muraflex Murals Your Way Muro Blanco Concreto ↓N Naava Inc. NappaTile Narbutas USA, Inc National Lighting Corp. Naughtone NEFF of Chicago Nemschoff Nevers Industries, Inc. New Style Cabinets Nienkämper Nightingale Corp. Nook Pod Noure's Oriental Rugs, Inc. Novus - More Space Systems Nucraft NxtWall Architectural Walls ↓O Oasis Berco OBJECT CARPET, a Summit International Flooring Line OFDA Office Star Products / Compatico Offices To Go OfficeSource OFM OFS
What’s next is what’s here June 10–12 theMART, Chicago Visit NeoCon.com
Register and find details about exhibitors, partners, programming, features, industry events and travel. Registration is required to attend NeoCon.
Design Organization Partners
Ojmar Okamura OKIN - A Phoenix Mecano Company Olee Creative OM OMT-Veyhl Osborne & Little Ottlite Technologies, Inc. OW Lee ↓P Pallas Textiles Paris Ceramics Patcraft Patio Renaissance by Sunlord Leisure Products Patra Paul Ferrante Pavilion Furniture Pedrali Peerhatch Pella Windows & Doors Peter Pepper Products Philips Lighting North America Corporation Pindler Platinum Visual Systems Poggenpohl Pollmeier Poly-Wood, LLC. Poppy Porcelanosa Tile/ Kitchen/ Bath/ Hardwood PPG Prismatique Designs Ltd. Procedo Flooring ProjectMatrix PS Furniture PS locks GmbH Pulse Design ↓Q Quadrille Wallpapers and Fabrics Inc. ↓R Radford University Department of Design Rakks RATANA International Regency, Inc Richard Norton Gallery, LLC Richlite Company Rigidized Metals Corporation Riviera ROMO ROOM Roppe Corporation Rouillard RT London ↓S Safco® SAMHONGSA Samuel & Sons Passementerie Sandler Seating SAOSEN FURNITURE SBFI Scalamandré Scandinavian Spaces Scavolini Store Chicago Schluter Systems L.P. Schumacher / Patterson, Flynn & Martin Schwinn Hardware, Inc. Scott Group Studio Seatply Products Inc. Sectis Design Sedia Systems Segis-USA Senator Seradex Web Services Inc. Series Seating SF Collection Shaw Contract Shelby Williams Sherwin Williams Color Studio Sherwin-Williams Sileather Silen Space SilentLab s.r.o. SiS Ergo Sitmatic SitOnIt Seating/IDEON Six Degrees Flooring Surfaces SIXINCH SKYFOLD Skyline Design Skyline Design-Architectural Glass SLALOM S.r.L. Sloan SMEG USA Smith & Fong Co. Plyboo Smith Graphics, Inc. Smith System SnapCab SNOWSOUND Sossego | Modern Brazilian Design Source International Source One South Sea Outdoor Living Spacesaver Corporation
Spec Furniture Speech Privacy Systems Stabilus Inc. Stacy Garcia Fabric Stacy Garcia Wallcovering Stance Healthcare Stark Carpet Corp. Steelcase Steelcase Education Steelcase Health Stikwood Studio Ethnicraft LLC Studio Snaidero Chicago Studio Source Wallcovering Studio TK StudioCraft Style Library Stylex Sub-Zero, Wolf, and Cove Showroom Summer Classics Sunbrella Contract Sunset West sur4ces SurfaceWorks Surya Swiftspace Inc. SWISS KRONO AG Symbiote, Inc. ↓T Tai Ping | Edward Fields | La Manufacture Cogolin TAJ Flooring, Inc. Takeform Tarkett TECSOM USA Teknion Teknoflor Telescope Casual Furniture Textus The Big Picture Machine The Bright Group The Chopping Block The Shade Store Thonet Three Birds Casual Three H TIGER Drylac U.S.A., Inc. TiMOTION TIS The Italian Space Tonik Tonon TOOU LTD Tower Wallcovering Tred-MOR /Leggett & Platt TRI-KES Trinity Furniture Tropitone Furniture Co. Inc. True Residential Tuohy Furniture Turnstone TUUCI ↓U Unika Vaev Upofloor & Kahrs ↓V Valo VERSA CONCEPT LLC Versa Wallcovering Versteel via seating Vicostone Virco, Inc. Vitra VividBoard VS America ↓W Waddell Waterworks Watson Watson Smith - Chilewich - Doris Leslie Blau Wayfair Professional Wexel Art WIELAND Wilsonart Winston Furniture Wintex Co. Ltd. Wired Wolf-Gordon Wood-Mode Lifestyle Design Center Woodard/Mallin Woodlook Workrite Ergonomics ↓X X Chair Xtreme Interior Architectural Solutions ↓Z Zenbooth Zhejiang Jiecang Linear Motion Technology Co., Ltd. ZUO Modern
WALL AND FLOOR TILES PRADA ACERO MIRRORS PURE SINKS ARQUITECT FAUCETS ROUND
TILE
MOSAICS
KITCHEN
BATH
New Porcelanosa Showrooms - Now Open | Chestnut Hill, MA | Toronto, ON CALIFORNIA | COLORADO | CONNECTICUT | DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA | FLORIDA | GEORGIA | ILLINOIS MARYLAND | MASSACHUSETTS | NEW JERSEY | NEW YORK } PENNSYLVANIA | TEXAS | WASHINGTON 1.877.PORSA.US | www.porcelanosa-usa.com | info@porcelanosa-usa.com
LAMINATE & HARDWOOD
ph. Davide Lovatti Styling Beatrice Rossetti
collezione GHOST design PAOLA NAVONE www.gervasoni1882.com
North American Agent imoderni llc — 305.865.8577 — piera@imoderni.com Austin: Scott&Cooner - 512.480.0436 Boston: Showroom - 617.482.4805 Birmingham AL: Design Supply - 205.910.5369 Los Angeles: Diva - 310.278.3191 Cincinnati: Voltage - 513.871.5483 Dallas: Scott&Cooner - 214.748.9838 Houston: Arka Living - 832.815.0201 Los Angeles: Niche - 310.855.1755 Malibu: Malibu Market and Design - 310.317.9922 Miami: Illimit - 786.558.7176 New York: Walters - 212.758.0472 Sag Harbor: JANGEORGe - 631.899.4848 Santa Fe: Moss Outdoor - 505.989.7300 Toronto: Interior Elements - 416.928.0222 South Hill Home - 416.924.7224
attractive reuse
Numen/For Use refashions a previous installation for handbag designer Anya Hindmarch in London
1. The art collective Numen/For Use began by manually hanging The Tube, which debuted in Austria in 2015, in Brewer Street Car Park, in advance of London Fashion Week’s fall/winter 2019 previews. 2. Riggers stretched the woven-polyester netting into position with polyester suspension ropes and aerial work platforms. 3. The immersive installation celebrated the launch of Anya Hindmarch’s Neeson line of woven leather totes. 4. Called the “Weave Project,” the Brewer Street space also included product displays alongside embroiderers who could personalize Neeson bags with handwoven symbols or initials.
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DESIGNERS AND FABRICATORS LED BY NUMEN/FOR USE ARTISTS SVEN JONKE AND NIKOLA RADELJKOVIĆ
COURTESY OF NUMEN/FOR USE AND ANYA HINDMARCH
“When people walked through, it oscillated and pulsated” —Nikola Radeljković
4,500 SQUARE FEET of netting
ONE THOUSAND
SUSPENSION ROPES
300 LONG FEET
FOUR DAYS of installation
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1. The original color of The Tube netting was black, but Hindmarch specified royal blue. 2. The installation’s highest point was 23 feet. 3. Ropes were either tied with fisherman’s knots to the ceiling’s steel armature or to half-ton concrete blocks. 4. Over 2,000 visitors climbed through The Tube during its fourday run.
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MY TRUE SCALE FIX #mytruescaleďŹ x
neapolitan stone 7404-11
Gather around for the chicest interiors
april19
COURTESY OF MONCLER
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one of a kind Dimore Studio fashions One-Off, a unique womenswear emporium outside of Milan text: ian phillips photography: paola pansini
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Over the past decade, Dimore Studio has become one of the design world’s buzziest practices. “Everything we do is about creating a sense of surprise,” declares co-founder and the more creative half of the duo, Emiliano Salci. “I think we’re very orthodox but in a positive way,” adds business partner and co-founder Britt Moran. Their interiors often bring together unusual color combinations, a wistful nostalgia, and striking originality. In fact, the firm name is derived from the Italian word for dwellings because, to Moran and Salci, it conjures a classical aesthetic, which corresponds to their work always being rooted in tradition. It’s a look that has gained them an impressive list of global commissions including the hip Ceresio7 restaurant in Milan, a Fendi boutique in Monaco, a London town house for Dan and Dean Caten of DSquared, and an Oliver Peoples shop in Miami. Unveiled last month, Dimore Studio’s latest project is One-Off, a 6,500-squarefoot luxury womenswear boutique in Brescia, about an hour east of Milan. It’s one of two stores that are part of a joint venture between local retail group G&B Negozio and Greek behemoth Folli Follie. The men’s counterpart, designed by Baciocchi Associati, the Tuscan firm best known for its Prada shops worldwide, opened a few doors down in October. As the name suggests, the One-Off stores have the express aim of creating an exclusive shopping experience, both in merchandise and environment—the tag line is “Avant-garde. Ultra-creative. Curated.” It’s a response to the upsurge in online shopping, the idea being that to drag customers away from their computers, something new and unexpected must be offered. “Online shopping involves the concept of speed,” Folli Follie co-owner Francesco Galli says. “Physical shopping involves the concept of pleasure.” The women’s boutique stretches over five floors of what used to be two separate buildings dating to circa 1800. Moran and Salci linked them together and placed a central staircase clad entirely in a white linoleum that mimics ceramic tile at the core of the newly joined space. Aesthetically, Dimore Studio was given an open brief—a directive that proved particularly inspiring to Salci. “Emiliano gets bored easily,” Moran notes. “So whenever a client says, ‘Let’s just have fun,’ he begins his own voyage.”
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Previous spread: For a ready-to-wear floor at One-Off, a five-level women’s boutique in Brescia, Italy, Dimore Studio paired Man Ray’s Le Temoin stool from 1971 with a lacquered-wood display. Opposite: On the floor below, transparent cubes store clothing behind a pair of vintage Gae Aulenti tables, while accessories stand on custom iron shelves.
Top: Cushions upholstered in velvet, leather, or corduroy furnish the shoe department, paneled in steel with a 1960’s Angelo Mangiarotti chandelier. Bottom, from left: Nearby, a vintage table stands before a steel display system. Outerwear is joined by a ’60’s bamboo chair at the store’s entry. APRIL.19
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They were, however, asked to introduce the notion of modularity into the design of the store. The top floor has been devised as a pop-up space, and elsewhere the plans are to make changes to the displays every six months or so. “The idea was to create a beautiful shell, but then to have elements you can either take away or add to,” Salci explains. One of the more striking features, a freestanding cash-wrap desk covered in dozens of blond wigs, is a perfect case in point: It’s framework is pegboard, so the hairpieces can be easily removed and replaced by something maybe even wackier.
Throughout, the duo created a number of distinct atmospheres. “It’s really as if there are five stores in one,” G&B Negozio founder Gianni Peroni remarks. The basement is largely devoted to the shoe department, the ground level to accessories, and the second and third floors to ready-to-wear. In each, Dimore Studio’s use of materials is particularly strong. There are exposed plasterboard walls and others paneled in silver film, display columns clad in pink latex, white acrylic floors and ceilings, and touches of bamboo. The latter, explains Moran, is a nod to iconic Italian designer Gabriella Crespi, who often incorporated it into her furniture. One of her Tavolo Scultura tables can be found near a cashwrap. Additional vintage furniture appears in other areas, too. There’s a silvery Angelo Mangiarotti chandelier in the shoe department, Gae Aulenti’s pastel-painted tables and chairs in ready-to-wear, and even a stool in the form of an eye designed by photographer Man Ray in 1971. 130
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Opposite: A Fulvio Raboni chair faces an installation of mannequin legs in the shoe department. This page: Pegboard fitted with dozens of wigs composes a cash-wrap desk.
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There are myriad other wonderfully whimsical touches. Back in the shoe department, rows of mannequin legs appear to pop out of a wall; another area has been furnished with a series of oversize cushions, practically inviting customers to recline. “It’s like a 21stcentury harem,” Moran quips. One level up, clothes and accessories hang from poetic treelike structures made from real walnut branches. On the third floor, one of the rooms looks like it could be straight out of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: Space Odyssey. The designers’ version brings together a backlit platform and ceiling of white acrylic printed with a black grid pattern, dotted with a few classical-style plaster columns. Everywhere, merchandise is displayed with extreme restraint. A single pair of Gucci loafers stands near a column. A Balmain dress hangs along on a simple tangerine-painted open frame. A half dozen clutches all in a rose-colored palette ring the pink column. Early visitors to the store were given further insight into the world of Dimore Studio in the pop-up-style top floor, where the firm’s own furniture creations are displayed. In June, the space will be devoted to ephemeral presentations of limited-edition fashion. And a collaboration with Prada for the room is already afoot. But Galli is coy to divulge anything further. “To discover more,” he says teasingly, “we invite you to visit the boutique.”
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Opposite top: Custom linoleum surrounds the floor styled like a pop-up space, with chairs and table by Dimore Studio’s Dimore Milano product arm. Opposite bottom: Aulenti’s chairs stand outside a fiberglass-enclosed fitting room. Top, from left: Part of a ready-to-wear floor features a platform and dropped ceiling of acrylic and a plaster column. Acrylic shelves surround a latex-and-LED display column beyond the entry. Opposite bottom: To the side, a Verner Panton chair rests on a rug by Pierre Gonalons Studio.
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sharing the stage Fashion and fantasy marched side by side at the Paris and Milan fall-winter runway shows text: wilson barlow 134
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There was snow and there were tears during Paris Fashion Week last month. Yes, at Chanel, models in vivid puffer coats, part of the last ready-to-wear collection by the late Karl Lagerfeld, strode through an elaborate alpine-village setting as they mourned the loss of the label’s legendary creative director. The fall and winter runway presentations for the likes of Louis Vuitton, Moncler, and Vetements were equally captivating. From a menagerie of giraffes and zebras to a cadre of mid-century gray office desks, drama is proving to be particularly au courant. LOUIS VUITTON Scaffolding and ductwork inspired by the bright industriousness of the Centre Pompidou backdropping artistic director Nicolas Ghesquière’s collection in the courtyard of the Musée du Louvre. Photography: courtesy of Louis Vuitton.
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TATRAS In a Paris garage, creative director Masanaka Sakao’s monoliths of aluminum-composite mirrors simulating reflective icebergs amid a stream of puffer coats and moon boots. Photography: Shoji Fuji.
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MONCLER The baroque style of the 18th-century Villa Arconati contrasting with the futuristic Moncler Genius collection. Photography: courtesy of Moncler.
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THOM BROWNE At the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, a glassed-in office featuring women instead of men working at desks and portraits of Una Vincenzo, Lady Troubridge—a 10th-anniversary nod to a similar set done for Pitti Uomo. Photography: clockwise from top left: Francois Guillot/AFP/Getty Images; Dan Lecca (2); Thomas Goldblum (2).
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VETEMENTS Head designer Demna Gvasalia alluding to the evolution of human beings with nonprofessional models and taxidermic giraffes, zebras, and elephants at the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle. Photography: Kristy Sparow/Getty Images.
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CHANEL La Grand Palais transformed into a wintery village of “snow”-covered mountains and chalets for Karl Lagerfeld’s final ready-to-wear collection. Photography: from left: Olivier Saillant/Chanel; Francois Mori/Associated Press.
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Talk about a banner year. . .and a half. That’s what it’s been for Interior Design Hall of Fame member Peter Marino and his longtime client Chanel—a collaboration that’s a quarter century old, so far. Peter Marino Architect has just completed a renovation of the Paris flagship, near Coco Chanel’s original boutique, atelier, and apartment, and a renovation of a Chanel boutique in New York. And there’s more. “We received commissions for four buildings, all ground-up,” Marino begins. “That’s powerful.” A Chanel building in Seoul, South Korea, is imminent and another in Chicago has debuted. Also recently opened are Istanbul and Tokyo, both projects extraordinary for their approach, he notes: “The numberone goal was not high-volume sales but image creation.” He therefore worked outside-in, starting with facades that are real showstoppers. Was Chanel creative director Karl Lagerfeld involved in generating any of the store designs before his death? “No,” Marino responds, “but he reviewed them all.”
channeling chanel
In Istanbul, Tokyo, and beyond, Peter Marino explores the essence of the brand
text: edie cohen photography: manolo yllera This page: Marble panels, framed by blackened steel, dominate the facade of the Istanbul building. Opposite: The Tokyo tower’s facade juxtaposes aluminum panels and fritted glass windows.
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little black dress and pearls
It takes but a glance to get the unmistakable allusion to high fashion: Angled panels of shimmery white marble, framed by blackened steel on the facade of Chanel in Istanbul, are the architectural equivalent of Coco Chanel’s white pleated blouses. This five-story beacon, set back behind an entry plaza of gray marble pavers with a black granite reflecting pool, is sited on the city’s less touristy Asian side, but there’s a purely New York reference at play, too. “It’s me imitating the Seagram Building, with its most elegant entry,” Peter Marino says. At Chanel, the glass doors and immense window are surrounded by more white marble panels, this time applied flat. Inside, the look is less retail emporium, more gallery. Marino “dressed” the interior in crackled lacquer, textured plaster, ebonized oak, and additional gleaming marble. Bespoke luxury—enriched by the motifs of pearls, folding screens, and mirrors—pervades the three levels devoted to sales. The top two levels accommodate offices, bringing the total to 8,800 square feet. A roof garden hosts VIP events. About those pearls and screens. Spiraling halfway down from the ceiling of the double-height ready-to-wear salon, Jean-Michel Othoniel’s sculpture of black and mirrored spheres, flecked with gold, resembles an enormous pearland-onyx necklace. It descends just to the height of the top of an eight-panel screen painted gold with scribbles of crackled lacquer. Standing in front of a wall of textured ivory plaster, the screen backdrops a then-and-now seating vignette, where a quartet of Louis XV gilt-wood armchairs meet a custom sofa in ebony and gold metallic silk.
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site: istanbul
Opposite: The front plaza’s marble pavers surround a reflecting pool lined in granite. Left, from top: Panels in paint and lacquer compose Alasdair Cooke’s screen for the ready-to-wear salon. Louis Ellis abstracted a photograph of Coco Chanel for the triptych in a corridor. Right, from top: Glass fragments, backed by mirror, surround the fragrance niche. Above Cooke’s screen hangs a blown-glass sculpture commissioned from Jean-Michel Othoniel.
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Back to the art component, omnipresent in Marino’s oeuvre—we discover more in unexpected places. How about the elevator lobby where a photographic portrait of Mademoiselle Chanel adorns a black plaster wall? En route to a terrace, there’s a triptych that a contemporary artist created from vintage photos of her. A Curtis Jeré sunburst glows in a corridor off the shoe section. The fragrance display practically counts as a work of art, with a wall treatment in fragmented glass and mirror surrounding the product niche. Speaking of mirror, nothing says “Chanel” more than the mirrored stairwell, Marino’s homage to that of the original headquarters. Reflected in the accordion panels, the white marble steps are topped by a caramel-colored silk-wool runner with a black “necklace” pattern knotted into the field off-center. Overlooking this mise-en-scène sits the shoe salon, where the mirrored ceiling combines with the stair’s mirrors to an effect that’s positively kaleidoscopic. To welcome the well-heeled clientele, Marino provided slipper chairs upholstered in tweed in coral, ivory, gold, and black. Think a covetable Chanel jacket. PROJECT TEAM TOBIAS LUNDQUIST; DARREN NOLAN; PAOLA PRETTO; GLENN STEVENS; AMY RAITER: PETER MARINO ARCHITECT. ORAL ARCHITECTURE & ENGINEERING: ARCHITECT OF RECORD. FRONT: FACADE CONSULTANT. FISHER MARANTZ STONE: LIGHTING CONSULTANT. ERK PROJE: MECHANICAL ENGINEER. CENACCHI INTERNATIONAL: MILLWORK. ALTINSOY INSAAT CONSTRUCTION: GENERAL CONTRACTOR. PRODUCT SOURCES FROM FRONT ATELIERS BERNARD PICTET: CUSTOM PANELING (FRAGRANCE). GOOSSENS: LAMPS (SALON). THROUGHOUT PIETRO SEMINELLI: CUSTOM WINDOW SHADES.
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“The look is less retail emporium, more gallery”
Opposite left: A corridor’s brass sunburst is by Curtis Jeré, circa 1960. Opposite right: The mirrored stairwell recalls a similar feature at Chanel’s original Paris headquarters. Top, from left: In an elevator lobby, Chanel’s portrait by Ellis hangs above a custom console in blackened steel, stone, and glass. A custom runner in hand-knotted silk and wool climbs the stairs up from the ground level. Bottom: Woven wool tweed upholsters the shoe salon’s slipper chairs, also custom.
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site: tokyo
Left: Shuji Mukai’s artwork, printed on film, graced the facade in honor of the opening. Photography: Jimmy Cohrssen. Right: A stair case in Thassos marble and blackened steel rises from the ground level’s granite floor.
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dressed to the nines Standing tall amid the posh Ginza shopping district, Tokyo’s latest Chanel location is assured superstar status. First, this is Chanel. Second, it’s a groundup project signed by Peter Marino. Who could miss the slender nine-story tower’s black-and-white facade, with its rhythmic composition of matte panels and fritted glass? As Marino explains, “The windows of varying dimensions intentionally cause the building to appear
as more of a sculptural object than a series of floors atop one another.” To absolutely solidify the art reference, he invited the participation of a renowned artist, Shuji Mukai, a member of the radical Gutai move ment, which is a precursor to arte povera. Mukai embellished the windows to create an abstract composition that stayed in place for the shop’s first two months. Marino’s take? “They were scribbles resembling Japanese calligraphy.” “We designed the shop specifically for the Japanese customer, not tourists,” he continues—the latter can patronize another Chanel boutique just two blocks away. “Customers have to go up four levels to see the entire collection.” Apparently, they don’t mind. The verticality is due to the building’s minuscule footprint, barely 40 by 50 feet. Each level is basically only one room. “In Tokyo, there is respect for every bit of space,” Marino interjects. “They practically sell real estate by the square centimeter.” (In American reckoning, square footage here totals 10,500.) APRIL.19
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Top, from left: Chairs by Laurence Montano accompany another ready-to-wear salon’s custom suede-covered sofa. Hand-textured plaster backdrops accessories. Commissioned for a ready-to-wear salon, Nancy Lorenz’s screen combines gold leaf, moon gold, and lacquer. Opposite left: Onyx lines a restroom. Opposite right: A Hiroshi Sugimoto photograph hangs in a spa treatment room lit by LEDs.
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The lower levels, constituting the retail component, pretty much adhere to the Chanel standard: handbags and other accessories on one, shoes on two, ready-to-wear collections on three and four. Five through seven are offices. Eight, however, introduces a new development in the world of Chanel. A spa, the Salon Beauté, consists of two treatment rooms and a full-on glam makeup center, so the elite clientele emerges relaxed and camera-ready for a night on the town. When VIPs need to explore fashion options for the next event, the Salon Privé on nine stands at the ready. Marino characterizes the interior overall as “even more gallerylike, with a higher level of art, serious furniture, and more precious carpets and fabrics,”
“We designed the shop specifically for the Japanese customer, not tourists” the rationale being that traffic is lighter and the clientele more respectful. The international art cache includes Agnes Martin limited-edition lithographs on vellum, lending a contemplative effect to a reception area, and a Hiroshi Sugimoto photograph of the Aegean Sea, setting a soothing tone for a spa treatment room. For the ne plus ultra of artful furnishings in ready-to-wear, Marino chose a pair of bronze armchairs by Laurence Montano and upholstered them in customwoven navy-and-gold leather. Marino also commissioned Nancy Lorenz for an eight-panel screen combining gold leaf, moon gold, and lacquer. He loves folding screens, as did Coco Chanel, particularly of the Coromandel variety. PROJECT TEAM STAN JONES; JACQUELYN VAN ECK; PAOLA PRETTO; SIMON WUTHERICH; GLENN STEVENS; SOOJUNG RHEE: PETER MARINO ARCHITECT. FISHER MARANTZ STONE: LIGHTING CONSULTANT. J.FRONT DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION CO.: WOODWORK. TAISEI CORPORATION: STRUCTURAL ENGINEER, MEP, GENERAL CONTRACTOR. PRODUCT SOURCES FROM FRONT PHILIPS LIGHTING: LEDS (SPA). 3M: WINDOW FILM (EXTERIOR).
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the line of beauty A graceful curve, used as a recurring motif, helps Sybarite unify the sprawling SKP luxury department store in Xi’an, China text: becky sunshine photography: kristen pelou
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Having created stores and boutiques for such high-end fashion brands as Marni, Joseph, and Alberta Ferretti, Sybarite is well versed in designing for the international luxury retail sector. But a recent foray into the booming Chinese market has seen much larger emporiums become the particular forte of the Londonbased architecture and branding practice, co-founded in 2002 by Torquil McIntosh and Simon Mitchell. “We have more than 10 million square feet of projects around the world,” McIntosh states. “Nearly twothirds of that is in China.” Sybarite launched its China venture by helping Shin Kong Place, a 12-yearold shopping mall in the nation’s capital, rebrand itself as a world-class luxury department store with a much punchier moniker: SKP Beijing. The studio then redesigned the flagship, which opened in 2017 and has since been reported the world’s most successful department store by revenue after Harrods in London. Sybarite has
now completed its second SKP store, this one a 20-story behemoth in the northwestern city of Xi’an. At 2,690,000 square feet, SKP Xi’an is almost twice the size of its Beijing sibling, and nearly three times as big as Harrods. “Its site is pretty spectacular,” McIntosh notes. Xi’an, the oldest of the Four Great Ancient Capitals of China, was not only the starting point of the fabled Silk Road but is also home to the much-visited Terracotta Army of Emperor Qin Shi Huang. “It’s one of the few places where the 20th-century Chinese didn’t demolish the old city wall,” the designer says. “In fact, they actually preserved it.” The SKP building, which Sybarite inherited as an uncompleted convention center built about a decade ago, is sandwiched between the monumental South Gate in the city’s Mingdynasty wall and the adjacent regional parliament building. “It’s culture and government versus commerce,” McIntosh says with a wry
Previous spread: SKP Xi’an, a 20-story luxury department store in northwestern China by Sybarite, includes Love Hall, one of 10 color-coded theaters in the project’s multiplex cinema. Top: A custom acrylic chandelier hangs outside Louis Vuitton on the ground floor. Bottom: The building, formerly an uncompleted convention center, is clad in a laminated-glass curtain wall with brushed bronzed-brass detailing. Opposite top: An atrium ceiling features a constellation of translucent PVC circles backlit with LEDs. Opposite bottom: A custom brushed bronzed-brass birdcage encircles display stands in the women’s shoe department.
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smile. “The stipulation was our building be somewhat humble in scale, with simple detailing, so that it didn’t overshadow the South Gate at all or imply that in some way SKP was more important than parliament. The
merely commercial buildings mustn’t shine too much.” In concrete terms, that means the two low-rise plinths comprising the bulk of the building appear to be wrapped in an opaque-glass curtain 160
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wall in three tones of gray. (A highrise tower, also sheathed in dark glass, rises behind the five-story pediment.) Look closer, however, and you’ll see that the laminated glass is interlayered with a honeycomb pattern inspired by the intricate ornamentation found in Beijing’s Forbidden City. At night, instead of looking like a brightly illuminated lantern as a conventional store might, the building resembles a block of softly gleaming polished obsidian. “That’s because the permissible level of exterior illumination was controlled, too,” McIntosh explains. “We were delighted about that. In the cityscape, where everything is often over-lit, it’s nice to have something more subtle, so that it stands out by default.” Some portions of the facade are clad in bas-relief panels of brushed bronzed-brass CNC-cut with a tracery of sinuous lines that echo an elongated S-shape found in the company’s new Sybarite-designed logo. Dubbed the “SKP curve,” this serpentine motif appears throughout the project, worked into elevator buttons,
door handles, carved columns, molded ceilings, wayfinding iconography, and even lighting fixtures such as the elegant clear-acrylic chandeliers that punctuate some of the shopping aisles. But if the signature curve is everywhere, it, too, is applied with subtlety. “One thing we didn’t want to do was to have the SKP brand overshadow the 1,000 or so luxury labels the store sells,” McIntosh says. “They are the stars. So, while it’s important to know you’re in a branded environment, it never dominates.” In fact, Sybarite’s predominant focus at SKP Xi’an has been on experiential design—something that China’s wealthy and savvy middle-class shoppers demand. “They expect newness, experience, curation, and a strong edit and discovery of brands,” McIntosh reports. “Yet they also want a heritage aura, like that of Harrods, Le Bon Marché, or Selfridges.” Those legendary forbears are evoked through the lavish use of marbles, metals, textiles, and other luxe finishes not generally found in everyday department stores. And space has
Opposite top: A staircase of brushed bronzed-brass, granite, and glass links a terrace to a fourth-floor event space. Opposite bottom: On the street-level facade, custom bronzed-brass panels are CNC-cut with a pattern derived from the “SKP curve,” the company’s signature motif. Top: Stained-oak custom paneling brings warmth to the fifth floor’s Costa Café. Bottom: A typically broad marble-floored shopping avenue separates beauty-product counters from high-end jewelry boutiques.
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been treated with similar open-wallet generosity: Wide, boutique-lined shopping avenues flow into expansive common circulation areas, and vast swaths of real estate are given over to often short-changed departments such as kids wear. “It’s meant to be inviting, so you can meander painlessly,” the designer says. Other grand spaces include the ground-floor beauty hall, adjacent to which sit such super-brand boutiques as Gucci, Dior, Hermès, and Chanel. This level also houses a bustling food court with multiple markets and cafés, supplemented by others like the fifth floor’s wood-paneled Café Costa. High-end restaurants, such as the polished Beijing Kitchen, are found in the tower, as are more lifestyle stores, numerous flexible event spaces, a garden terrace, and the SKP Cinema multiplex. There’s also an ex-
panded version of the Rendez-Vous— an SKP umbrella-concept department that includes a wine bar, art gallery, tea salon, artisanal fromagerie, and bookstore—and SKP Select, a rigorously curated collection of high fashion clothing and accessories. Anything else? “We’re adding an Olympic-size ice-skating rink at this very moment,” McIntosh marvels. “Plus, two further SKP locations are due to open in the next couple of years. It’s bonkers.” PROJECT TEAM SIMON MITCHELL; IAN SLOVER; ENRICO FALCHETTI; ALDO SANZO; IAIN MACKAY; ADAM FREESTONE; GIUSEPPE MONTANARO; BORJA NUNEZ; ANYA YANG; ALESSIO BRUNI; NATALIE CHELLIAH; XIN DU; ADRIANA GIALDINI; ANNA GRIESI; EDITH YEUNG; LUDOVIC BOISSONNAT; FLORA MARTINET; LIV PEARSON; ELLA SEO; KONSTANTINA FALTAKA; ANDRÉ MARIANI; MAUD SANCIAUME: SYBARITE. LDPI: LIGHTING CONSULTANT. ARUP: STRUCTURAL ENGINEER. BSD: MEP.
Top: Custom fiberglass pendant fixtures enliven the multiplex elevator lobby. Bottom: To preserve its low-key presence at night, the building does not light up lantern-style but gleams softly thanks to LEDs. Opposite top: Like all the movie theaters, Blue Hall’s ceiling and walls resemble an armadillo’s shell. Opposite bottom: Wool-felt ceiling discs absorb sound in Beijing Kitchen.
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clicks into bricks Online retailer By brings its edgy attitude to a Shanghai store by Spacemen text: rebecca lo photography: min chen xuan
Millennials may prefer online shopping. “With the rise of giants like Alibaba, Taobao, and WeChat, a lot of retailers in China are converting to e-commerce,” architect Edward Tan concedes. But there’s a concurrent movement toward brickand-mortar establishments, he adds: “Some online retailers are doing the exact opposite by building large experience stores. Customers go off-line to explore activation spaces that are fun, further boosting brand awareness.” When a mutual friend introduced Tan to fashion aficionado Warren Wang, an engineer turned private investor, Wang already had a good thing going. His online store, By, was well-known as a pioneer for bringing avantgarde labels including Neil Barrett and Rick Owens to China’s booming e-commerce arena. To seal the deal, Wang hired Spacemen, Tan’s firm, to design a Shanghai store for By that would also carry the handbags and watches sold online at sister site Moore. “As an in-store visual merchandizer, Warren is eccentric—I think that also shows in the way he runs the brand,” Tan says. “He never actually gave us an official brief. We had to scribble down notes and bits of his ideas during every meeting. One day, it would be an exhibition platform with limited-edition furniture pieces. The next meeting, he would want to collaborate with independent labels for a private fashion show. Part of our job was to help him narrow things down while coming up with a concept that worked for all scenarios.” Another challenge was By’s location, an underground space at Soho Fuxing, a diningoriented shopping mall. “A pair of escalators
In a corner of the sales floor, Be@rbricks toys stand on plastic shipping pallets outlined by LED battens, a combination that repeats for the canopy. APRIL.19
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Top, from left: Fluorescent tubes glow against the painted wall of a fitting room. Stools by Konstantin Grcic Industrial Design pull up to the cash-wrap desk. Inside a tunnel earmarked for multi-brand displays, flooring changes to terrazzo from epoxy-finished concrete. Bottom: Be@rbricks greet customers as they enter from the lower level of the Soho Fuxing mall.
completely hides the entrance to By. If you don’t go looking for it, you won’t be able to spot it— which, in fact, attracted our client, as he didn’t see By as a conventional retail store,” Tan notes. “Also, a lot of the mall’s mechanicals run through the space. The exposed pipes and ductwork near the back left just 7-plus feet for headroom, and we found water leakage. Then there’s a massive 4-foot-high concrete block that runs the length of the back. We converted that into tiered seating that doubles as display.” Despite all the negatives, both Tan and Wang saw the potential for a retail experiment. “We felt that the height change and the oddly shaped layout could be something fun,” Tan says. With almost 8,800 square feet to play with, he programmed the front of the sales floor as a cluster of triangular display islands, each surrounding a structural column. The angled sides of these islands are mirror polished. “Customers glimpse the products reflected and are curious to meander deeper in to get a closer look,” he explains. The islands have triangle-patterned flooring in six different types of marble, while overhead light filters through a stretched ceiling system, likewise triangular. “As the products on display don’t always have a correlation to the products offered at By and Moore online, we designed the front of the shop to be inviting to anyone walking by,” Tan says. “The islands are meant to display anything and everything—not just fashion but also furniture, sculpture, and collectible toys.” So you might find Japanese toy figures called Be@rbricks positioned like bowling pins on the marble triangles, greeting customers as they enter.
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Top: The 600 pallets can be stacked for seating. Center: A display counter is mirror-polished stainless steel. Bottom: Fitting rooms have no mirrors inside. Opposite: A steel-wrapped concrete column rises from the marble floor to the stretched ceiling system of a display island.
With the premium quality of the goods in mind, Tan kept the materials palette rich and sleek. A terrazzo counter, lined with spiky black stools, reads more like a swanky bar than a cash-wrap desk, and terrazzo flooring in the rear half of the sales floor is accented with brass strips. Gray full-height drapery softens and contrasts with the textured graytinted plaster of the walls while hiding unsightly fire exits and other services. At the corner where the front and rear zones meet, hundreds of plastic shipping pallets, some rimmed with LED battens, offer maximum flexibility. “The pallets can be reconfigured like Legos,” Tan explains. “They can be stacked one way to display sneakers or another to seat 100 people for a fashion launch.” Special consideration went to the Instagram phenomenon Outfit Of The Day. “Social media– savvy shoppers are so infatuated with #OOTD— we realized that everyone takes a photo of themselves in the fitting rooms as they try on clothes,” Tan observes. “We celebrated this culture by giving each of the three rooms a unique light installation, encouraging customers to discover a different effect even with the same outfit.” The trendy street-wear kids snapping selfies can’t get enough. PROJECT TEAM RAYMOND TANG; SIMON LIU; HOIYEE LIM: SPACEMEN. SWJSW METAL: METALWORK. TWH CONSTRUCTION & ENGINEERING: GENERAL CONTRACTOR PRODUCT SOURCES FROM FRONT FLOS: PENDANT FIXTURE (SALES FLOOR). MAGIS: STOOLS. GAINKER: POLYCARBONATE PANELS. THROUGHOUT LARBENE: DRAPERY FABRIC. SIGNIFY: LINEAR FIXTURES, TRACK LIGHTS. DOER TECHNOLOGY: CUSTOM FLOORING.
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great expectations Follow the path to a world of retail wonderlands
See page 174 for Gray Matters in Brooklyn, New York, by Bower Studios. Photography: Charlie Schuck. 170
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text: georgina mcwhirter
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Envelope Architecture + Design project North, Brooklyn, New York. standout Ceiling-hung holographic screens and capsule-themed booths offering advanced scanning technology are appropriately futuristic for this space selling Focals, or smart eyeglasses. photographer Juliana Sohn.
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“We conceived the store as a beautifully crafted kit of parts adaptable to diverse locations�
“The pleasing compositions of the shoes were our inspiration”
Bower Studios project Gray Matters, Brooklyn, New York. standout Riffing on the brand’s Mildred Egg mule, table bases are ovoids of painted resin composite, but the mirror is a customized Bower production piece. photography Charlie Schuck.
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“Displaying each item individually brings more attention to the product”
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Kengo Kuma & Associates project Camper, Barcelona, Spain. standout Interlocking niches of unglazed iron oxide–tinted stoneware contain shoes and nod to the region’s Catalan vault, a fixture in the architecture of hometown hero Antoni Gaudí. photography Imagen Subliminal.
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“The surprising color and material palettes lend a postmodern edge”
Alberto Caiola Studio project Harbook, Hangzhou, China. standout In this digital age, it’s fitting that the bookstore-housewares hybrid melds the old (classic Italian porticos) with the new (Instagram-worthy Memphisesque displays and hues). photography Dirk Weiblen.
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Marcante-Testa project Imarika, Milan. standout The womenswear boutique’s renovationexpansion features elements in clay, burled briar, copper, and acrylic, creating a milieu referencing midcentury projects by Franco Albini and Carlo Scarpa. photography Carola Ripamonti.
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“The aim was to create an architectural landscape”
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BOOKs edited by Stanley Abercrombie
“Although mutable The Bauhaus, perhaps the most important school—and movement—in design history, was founded in April 1919 with the and imperfect, its aspiration merging of two older art academies in Weimar, Germany. Relocated to Dessau in 1925, it flourished until 1932 when it has remained compelling” moved to Berlin; a year later it was closed by the Nazis for being “Bolshevist” and “degenerate.” Publisher Thames & Hudson delivers two standout reads from the current crop of books and exhibitions commemorating this seminal centenary. Bauhaus Goes West follows founder Walter Gropius from Berlin to London, where he calls on his star pupil and future partner Marcel Breuer to join him. After a couple of years, they both cross the Atlantic to the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, after which they open a joint firm before each establishes his own practice. László Moholy-Nagy also goes to London but then to Chicago where he transforms an existing art school into a New Bauhaus (although he comes to shun that term as too “German”). We also see Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, the last director of the Bauhaus, going to Chicago to head the architecture school of the Illinois Institute of Technology. Farther south, artist Josef Albers, his wife, weaver Anni Albers, and theater pioneer Xanti Schawinsky use their Bauhaus experience to turn a North Carolina college called Black Mountain into a magnet for American talents such as composer John Cage, choreographer Merce Cunningham, and painters Kenneth Noland and Robert Rauschenberg. Alan Powers tells these colorful histories with a happy combination of scholarship and readability. Bauhaus Imaginista accompanies an exhibition of the same name running until June 10 at Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin. Other exhibitions are planned for Moscow and Tokyo, the Bauhaus-Museum Weimar just bowed, and another opens later this year in Dessau. But this book takes us farther afield. It offers 33 essays divided into four sections. The first, “Corresponding With,” examines examples of art and design schools founded in Asia at the time of the Bauhaus. The second, “Learning From,” considers, among other things, African carpets influencing Bauhaus painter Paul Klee and African chairs influencing Breuer. “Moving Away” looks beyond the original concepts of the “unity of art and craft” and of “art and industry” toward a view of design as “a tool for improving life,” and concern for goals such as freedom and democracy. And Bauhaus Goes West: Modern Art the final section, “Still Undead,” asks how the ideas of a century ago, because of their international connections, remain and Design in Britain and America influential today in both the Western and non-Western worlds. These essays expand our image of the Bauhaus to include not only the story of ideas coming “from all points of the by Alan Powers compass” to Weimar, Dessau, and Berlin but also the story of “unknown New York: Thames & Hudson, $40 304 pages, 120 illustrations (59 color) artistic impulses worldwide for which the Bauhaus served as catalyst.” It links Bauhaus concepts to those in Mexico, Morocco, Tunisia, Nigeria, Brazil, China, Japan, Russia, India, and even to some earlier civilizations. Bauhaus Imaginista: Both books tell us much about the Bauhaus’s 13 years in Germany, but A School in the World together they also provide a new and broader context than generally edited by Marion von Osten and appreciated for that school’s still shining example.
Grant Watson New York: Thames & Hudson, $60 312 pages, 206 illustrations (96 color)
“Our existence today, like that of the Bauhauslers, is a global one”
What They’re Reading... Double Vision: The Unerring Eye of Art World Avatars Dominique and John De Menil
David Mann Founding partner of MR Architecture + Decor 182
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At the intersection of fashion and art stands David Mann, designer of projects ranging from shops for Dior and Lanvin to the private Warehouse Gallery (in a mystery location on the West Coast) and countless artfilled New York apartments. His partner Fritz Karch, the longtime editorial director of collecting at Martha Stewart Living, gave him this weighty volume beautifully designed by the legendary Chip Kidd. “I have long known that the De Menils were great patrons of extraordinary architecture and art; I wanted to know more about why they were driven to do what they did in their lifetime,” Mann says. “This is not just about people with fine aesthetics. It’s about having great curiosity, true originality, and courage and resources to live life to the fullest. These are the qualities I seek for my own life and my work.” That work includes a house in Claverack, New York, “and this book is having a lot of influence on how I am approaching the project,” Mann says. When that wraps, his curiosity is leading him on a two-week exploration of Italy, where he plans to catch up on his reading. —Nicholas Tamarin
BOTTOM LEFT: BJÖRN WALLANDER
by William Middleton New York: Alfred A. Knopf, $40 760 pages, 192 illustrations (58 color)
c o n ta c t s DESIGNERS IN SPECIAL FEATURE Bower Studios (“Great Expectations,” page 170), bower-studios.com. Alberto Caiola Studio (“Great Expectations,” page 170), albertocaiola.com. Envelope Architecture + Design (“Great Expectations,” page 170), envelopead.com. Kengo Kuma & Associates (“Great Expectations,” page 170), kkaa.co.jp. Marcante-Testa (“Great Expectations,” page 170), marcante-testa.it.
PHOTOGRAPHERS IN FEATURES Jimmy Cohrssen Photography (“Channeling Chanel,” page 146), jimmycohrssen.com. Paola Pansini (“One of a Kind,” page 126), paolapansini.com.
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PHOTOGRAPHER IN CROSSLINES Eric Laignel Photography (“Dress Code,” page 45), ericlaignel.com.
DESIGNER IN WALK-THROUGH Groves & Co (“Mood Board,” page 69), grovesandco.com.
PHOTOGRAPHER IN WALK-THROUGH Tim Williams Photography (“Mood Board,” page 69), timwilliamsphoto.com.
DESIGNER IN CENTERFOLD Numen/For Use (“Attractive Reuse,” page 121), numen.eu. Interior Design (USPS#520-210, ISSN 0020-5508) is published 18 times a year, monthly except semimonthly in March, May, June, and August, and thrice-monthly in October by Interior Design Media Group. Interior Design Media Group, 101 Park Avenue, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10178, is a division of Sandow, 3651 NW 8th Avenue, Boca Raton, FL 33431. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and additional mailing offices. Subscriptions: U.S., 1 Year: $69.95; Canada and Mexico, 1 year: $99.99; all other countries: $199.99 U.S. funds. Single copies (prepaid in U.S. funds): $8.95 shipped within U.S. ADDRESS ALL SUBSCRIPTION REQUESTS AND CORRESPONDENCE TO: Interior Design, P.O. Box 16479, North Hollywood, CA 91615-6479. TELEPHONE TOLL-FREE: 800-900-0804 (continental U.S. only), 818-487-2014 (all others), or email: subscriptions@interiordesign.net. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: INTERIOR DESIGN, P.O. Box 16479, North Hollywood, CA 91615-6479. Publications Mail Agreement No. 40624074.
CHARLIE SCHUCK
Kristen Pelou Photography (“The Line of Beauty,” page 156), kristenpelou.com.
Manolo Yllera (“Channeling Chanel,” page 146), manoloyllera.com.
APRIL.19
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ThinkLab Webinar Series impactful information meets meaningful application
MAY 31 | 11 EDT
INDUSTRY 101 Exploring the Tangled Web of Contract Interiors
If you are new to the industry and want a fast-forward button of industry knowledge at your fingertips (or if you’re an oldie who wants a fresh look at the state of the game), this webinar is for you. JUNE 28 | 11 EDT
NEOCON 2019 Evidence and Implications of Top Trends
NeoCon is full of inspiration, but taking it all in, or even making it past a single floor is a challenge! In this webinar, our team of design natives break down this year’s important trends, evidence of them at the show, and how to employ them effectively. JULY 26 | 11 EDT
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thank you to our 2019 Giants of Design conference partners for helping us celebrate at the Perry Lane Hotel Andreu World
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i n t e r vention
material splendor
A temple of luxury. It’s a concept a designer may have in the back of their mind when conceiving a retail space. Various Associates took the idea a step further at an outpost of SND, a clothing and jewelry boutique inside the upscale Shin Kong Place shopping center in Chongqing, China. Confronted with a long and narrow 3,100-square-foot plan surrounded by a glass facade on three sides, co-founder Yang Dongzi utilized mirrors to create a funhouse effect as customers meander through narrow corridors. “We stretched the obvious walking route,” he says, “so you can see the products in an interesting way.” At the end of one 90-foot-long passageway, symmetry rules what is an inner sanctum of sorts, which the designer describes as “churchlike.” International clothing brands are displayed in a monochrome setting lit by LEDs. “The design creates a sense of sacredness and ceremony,” Yang continues. With such little ornamentation, materials and textures really shine. A tuft of fluffy faux wool contrasts sharply with the portal’s cool terrazzo. A mirror wall seems to add depth. The pristine shrine is divine. —Wilson Barlow
SHAO FENG
APRIL.19
INTERIOR DESIGN
191
Cameron Design House, Kuulas, hand-blown glass pearls and gold-plated chains
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