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Fairs
10 coups de cœur NYCxDesign 2024
Quelques semaines après la Milan Design Week, c’est au tour du design américain de s’imposer, de la East Coast à la West Coast, avec, d’un côté du pays, la New York Design Week, et de l’autre, DESIGN MIAMI/LA.
La preuve que la Grosse Pomme ne compte pas pour une prune : du 16 au 23 mai, les créatifs du monde entier ont mis le cap sur la ville qui ne dort jamais pour célébrer les arts décoratifs, à la fois dans les showrooms, studios et galeries de Manhattan et Brooklyn pour le festival NYCxDESIGN 2024, et à Hudson Yards pour le salon ICFF.
Loin du bling-bling ostentatoire, les expositions et collections présentées témoignent d’une scène américaine plus pointue et pertinente que jamais. Le thème de cette année, « Le design est tout autour de nous », met l’accent sur l’histoire, la communauté, l’inclusivité et l’interdisciplinarité.
Pour preuve, le mysticisme était invoqué par Lee Broom et Lindsey Adelman dans leurs collections de luminaires ; le passé colonial de la ville, réincarné par l’artiste néerlandais Floris Wubben dans sa série « BRICK » présentée chez The Future Perfect ; ou encore l’œuvre architecturale d’Eileen Gray, ressuscitée chez Egg Collective… Retour sur les 10 coups de cœur de la rédaction.
Floris Wubben x The Future Perfect
The new "Brick" collection by Dutch designer Floris Wubben makes its debut at The Future Perfect gallery in New York for NYCxDESIGN. The construction brick, as historically significant in the Netherlands as in New York, takes on new and unique applications: benches, chandeliers, mirror frames, wall decorations... But also new, unprecedented forms created using an extrusion technique he experimented with on clay extracted from the Dollard (a bay in the Wadden Sea between the Netherlands and Germany), resulting in elongated, curved, and wavy lines. This serves as a reminder that 400 years ago, Dutch settlers arrived on Manhattan Island with their bricks to create New Amsterdam, renamed New York in 1664 by the English.
Lee Broom
In 2022, in Milan, to celebrate the 15th anniversary of his brand, Lee Broom focused on ecclesiastical architecture. This year, the British designer explores an other spiritual theme with his new collection "Alchemist". Inspired by astrology, mythology, and folklore, this serie of chandeliers, pendant lights, and wall sconces draws from the universe of Paulo Coelho's famous novel, mystically set in his New York penthouse.
Konekt
Founded in 2015, Konekt is a family-run studio established by Eric, Helena, and Natasha Sultan. Drawing on the senses and a multitude of influences, Konekt creates pieces rich in materiality. For the New York festival, the studio unveils two new collections that continue its exploration of contrasts between strength and fragility, soft curves and sharp lines, ornamentation and restraint. The first, "Silo," is a series of solid wood tables supported by cylindrical legs made of latten or stainless steel, inspired by the shape and function of grain silos, establishing a balance between functionality and aesthetics. The second, "Rib," consists of lighting fixtures made of hand-blown glass in Italy, delicately framed with thin ribs of brass, leather, or suede.
Colony
Ten years after co-organizing the charity auction Reclaim NYC and founding her cooperative gallery Colony, Jean Lin is leaving her dilapidated loft on Canal Street to establish a new pied-à-terre in Tribeca, where she will now showcase emerging American designers. Last year, for the inaugural presentation of her artist residency, she notably launched Marmar Studio and Alexis & Ginger. This year, she is celebrating the release of her new book: What We Keep at NYCxDESIGN.
Egg Collective
Aware of the male dominance in architecture, the three co-founders of Egg Collective (Stephanie Beamer, Crystal Ellis, and Hillary Petrie), each holding a degree in this field, celebrate women architects worldwide with their exhibition series "Designing Women." The latest exhibition pays homage to the "House for Two Sculptors," an architectural work by Eileen Gray designed in 1933, which never progressed beyond the pencil-on-paper stage. Through highly realistic 3D renderings and an installation presented in Tribeca, Egg Collective immerses visitors in the atmosphere of this imagined architecture to unveil its sculptural pieces alongside creations by two contemporary sculptor friends: Taylor Kibby and Molly Haynes.
Uchronia x Prelle New York
Uchronia's Candy Box has traveled across the continent to join the Prelle showroom in New York. Presented in Paris during Paris Déco Off 2024, the collaboration between Univers Uchronia and the Prelle Manufacture continues in the New York flagship of the French silk house, inviting a colorful dialogue between the pop universe of the brand founded by Julien Sebban and Prelle's historical expertise. The "Waving Flower," developed in the form of a three-dimensional flower, sets the tone for the space.
Micah Rosenblatt
Brooklyn-based American designer-metallurgist Micah Rosenblatt made his debut at NYCxDESIGN with his first solo show "City Block". Presented at the Front Gallery in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, his collection consists of sixteen pieces made from glass bricks, steel wrought iron, aluminum, copper, and household linens. Blending forms from antiquity with those of modernity, it reflects his sustainable, intuitive, and experimental approach to design.
Quarters by In Common With
Over more than 8,000-square-foot-space of a 19th-century loft in Tribeca, In Common With, a Brooklyn-based lighting publisher, has established a new living and evolving space. There: a shop, wine bar, event space, gallery, showroom, and showcase for the design studio. During the day, visitors are invited to explore its lighting collections and an eclectic selection of design pieces. In the evening, the space hosts temporary installations, dinners, and other immersive events.
Lindsey Adelman Studio x TIWA Gallery
Since 1996, Lindsey Adelman has been illuminating every floor. She founded her studio in New York in 2006 before establishing a site in Los Angeles. Her blown glass pieces explore the immaterial essence of light and its relationship with emptiness. For the American gallery TIWA, the designer returns to the foundations of her philosophical interest in light through 32 oil lamps that play with perceptions of time and space, inspired by ancient spiritual rituals, and engage in a dialogue with the patchwork creations of Nigerian-American textile artist Sarah Nsikak.
RISD Furniture Design x WantedDesign
Presented by the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) at WantedDesign Manhattan, the "Material Opulence" exhibition is a reinvention of luxury and grandeur through a collection of chairs and domestic objects using common materials: aluminum, indigo, paper, and ceramics. In their ability to recognize and engage critically, the showcased designers envision a present and future that prioritize generativity, equity, solidarity, and sustainability over extraction and competition.