Regina Leader-Post

CALM, COOL AND COLLECTED DECOR

On trend with New York City’s Architectu­ral Digest Design Show

- KIM COOK

Last month’s Architectu­ral NEW YORK Digest Design Show offered cold weather-weary attendees a breath of fresh air with many design ideas. Some highlights:

CALM

Brooklyn textile design firm Eskayel put founder Shanan Campanaro’s painterly watercolou­rs of Moroccan rooftops on its Mural collection of fabrics and wallpapers, in a soothing palette with blue, grey and cream.

Stockholm-based textile designer Akane Moriyama’s Draped Flowers curtain was popular with the Instagram crowd at the show. The limited-edition curtain is made of spun washi-paper thread in small factories in Japan. The strong, washable thread is knit into curtains with over 100 pockets where fresh flowers can be placed. The curtain’s floral tableau can be constantly changed for different looks or scents, “blurring the line between still and living objects,” Moriyama says.

The Bride pendant lamp, designed by Mammalampa’s Latvian creative director, Ieva Kaleja, and available through Marie Burgos Design, is woven by hand, so no two are alike. The fixture’s plaited paper is meant to evoke a bride’s dress. “As light shines through,” says Kaleja, “you will find yourself infused by an aura of airy lightness — almost as if the lamp were not subject to the law of gravity.”

Vermont Modern by Hubbardton Forge added to its collection of innovative lighting with the More Cowbell pendant. Glass cowbells hung from Vermont maple dowels, creating a playful fixture with a Scandinavi­an design vibe.

COOL

Transparen­t and opaque materials like clear or brushed glass and plastic can be a nice foil to energetic wallpaper prints, wild rugs or upholstery. Dallas-based studio Scout showed their Orleans side table, a chic play of contrasts with shiny brass legs supporting a slice of clear Lucite. Also in the booth was a modern take on the rocking chair, with looping acrylic and brass arms.

Patterned rondels in latte, grey, tobacco and clear glass are crafted by Rhode Island artist Tracy Glover, and then mounted with brass arms to create a constellat­ion-shaped fixture that can be mounted on the ceiling or wall. Glover honed her craft in a 13th-century Belgian convent’s crystal factory and at Dale Chihuly’s Pilchuck School, where she was mentored by Venetian masters-in-residence.

New York architect and engineer Rachel Robinson showed her Purl Lounge Chair. Brushed brass connectors cradled an ash wood frame within a pair of satin-finished glass legs. The frame is a loom onto which a wool roving seat cushion is woven. The mix of materials makes a surprising­ly comfy chair.

COLLECTED

Amy Astley, Architectu­ral Digest’s editor-in-chief, says, “We’re seeing a shift back to collecting. Handicraft is a big trend — design where you can appreciate the hand of the artist, and the quality of how things are made.”

The MADE section of the show is always one of its strongest. This year, it showcased lighting, furniture and art from more than 160 emerging artisans and internatio­nal studios.

Canadian studio Norquay Co. brought some of its soft wool blankets and a selection of lithe, cherrywood paddles, its otter tails painted with striking graphics. Some are water-ready; others purely decorative.

The company was started in Montreal in 2013 by artist and avid canoeist Natasha Wittke. She once took a month-long canoe trip through northern Ontario. “I spent so much time with a paddle in my hand that I suppose it was inevitable I would make it my canvas one day,” says Wittke, who moved the studio to Toronto in 2015.

Ben Watkins had come down from Rhode Island to display an array of spare cast-plaster artworks in which patterns emerged from the pristine white material: an egg, antlers, the linear planes of a minimalist landscape.

“I’m always looking for the moment when something changes or shifts,” says Watkins, who works in plaster, wood and metal. “I’m fascinated by the fluidity and possibilit­y of one thing becoming another, and the movement inherent in that transition.”

 ?? STEPHEN KARLISCH/SCOUT DESIGN STUDIO ?? Scout Design Studio displayed the Orleans table at the Architectu­ral Digest Design Show in New York. The slice of Lucite braced between two brass legs, the interplay of heavy metal and transparen­t materials, was one of the eye-catching trends at this...
STEPHEN KARLISCH/SCOUT DESIGN STUDIO Scout Design Studio displayed the Orleans table at the Architectu­ral Digest Design Show in New York. The slice of Lucite braced between two brass legs, the interplay of heavy metal and transparen­t materials, was one of the eye-catching trends at this...
 ?? DURODECO ?? Architect and engineer Rachel Robinson’s Purl Lounge Chair is surprising­ly comfy.
DURODECO Architect and engineer Rachel Robinson’s Purl Lounge Chair is surprising­ly comfy.
 ?? MARIE BURGOS DESIGN/MAMMALAMPA ?? The Bride paper pendant lamp, designed by Ieva Kaleja for Mammalampa and available through Marie Burgos Design, is woven by hand, so no two are alike. Decorative accessorie­s that play with light and weight were an interestin­g trend at New York City’s...
MARIE BURGOS DESIGN/MAMMALAMPA The Bride paper pendant lamp, designed by Ieva Kaleja for Mammalampa and available through Marie Burgos Design, is woven by hand, so no two are alike. Decorative accessorie­s that play with light and weight were an interestin­g trend at New York City’s...
 ?? KIM COOK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Scout Studio showcases a reinterpre­ted rocking chair with modern acrylic and brass hoop arms.
KIM COOK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Scout Studio showcases a reinterpre­ted rocking chair with modern acrylic and brass hoop arms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada