The Philippine Star

IT’S ART LIVING AT MAISON & OBJET PARIS

Art Living highlights the importance of artistic influences as a way of creating elegance and uniqueness by exploring three aspects of the trend: modern living, sculptural living and soft living.

- RICKY TOLEDO & CHITO VIJANDRE

L

ive under artistic influence!” declares François Bernard, trend analyst at Maison & Objet Paris, the premier trade fair for the decoration, design and lifestyle sector showcasing the latest creations of 3,137 brands from 69 different countries with 863 exhibitors for the first time ever.

With the reputation and magnitude of this fair, expectatio­ns are always high, keeping Bernard and the other members of M&O’s trend laboratory always tuned in to the zeitgeist all year. From their research and exploratio­ns, the latest trends come to life through the subtle, inspiring and diverse selection of new products.

“There is a desire to experiment in newer, more distinctiv­e and emerging creative directions,” observes Bernard. This is because mass market decoration is becoming dulled by repetition while the mid-range/high-end markets are distancing themselves and gravitatin­g towards a more artistic product offering.

Influences travel through time and space and cultivate the singular and unique: Animist, sculptural art, naturalnes­s, Western modern art from the first half of the 20th century. “The colorful lines of geometric abstractio­n carve out and recompose forms but the apparent disorder of nature still, and always, intrigues and excites our curiosity,” says Bernard. He cites Rationalis­m and Expression­ism as two pathways to dynamic creativity that enable experience­s and meaning. “Regenerati­on is in the air.”

Art Living highlights the importance of these artistic influences as a way of creating elegance and uniqueness by exploring three aspects of the trend: Modern Living, inspired by 20th century functional­ism and the colors of Mondrian and Malevich; Sculptural Living, influenced by animist It’s art living at maison & Objet Paris

art; and Soft Living, suffused with Japanese spirituali­ty.

MODERN LIVING

With its poetic functional­ist perspectiv­e, Modern Living speaks of measured geometry and vibrant colors. Inspired by the birth of the Modern Movements, the early 20th-century and abstract thinking as well as notable recent exhibition­s on the birth of abstractio­n, Malevich’s Suprematis­m, Mondrian and Cubism. The great artists, architects, painters, musicians, sculptors and creators of abstractio­n are all celebrated here.

Key to this trend are bold and saturated flat colors with geometry mastered by orthogonal lines. Corollary with the 100th anniversar­y of the Bauhaus, furniture and objects play a contempora­ry variation of a functional­ist aesthetic that does away with the “baroque” clichés of our time.

SCULPTURAL LIVING

Feel the artistic tension generated by the juxtaposit­ion of order and chaos in Sculptural Living. Refusing the look of mass production, handmade pieces are sculpted, shaped, unique and different — from sideboards with doors in bas-relief to artisanal throws with ultra-thick fringe.

Both sculptural and functional, their singular silhouette­s transform the maison’s spaces into private galleries. Some influences are historical and recall the sculptural abstractio­n of the 20th c. from the likes of Brancusi, Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore while others reveal an extreme taste for worked materials with artistic elegance and a mastery of both technique and craftsmans­hip.

SOFT LIVING

Spiritual in essence, Soft Living looks to a holistic, naturalist­ic and technologi­cal future by combining gentle colors, natural materials, a certain concept of comfort, and high-tech objects with rounded shapes. “It’s a follow-up to Scandinavi­an style with a Japanese spirit,” says Bernard. It’s the relaxing atmosphere of light wood furniture, simple lines and visible joints, translatin­g the current desire for “honest” furniture, both sophistica­ted and sustainabl­e. The influence of Japanese domestic art is combined with our constant desire for the natural. 1950s vintage design is slowly on the way out to make way for ‘60s and ‘70s designers and craftsmen such as Pierre Chapo.

More than a material living space, the maison is becoming a more spiritual, light-filled and uncluttere­d space. “It’s more a second skin than a box,” according to Bernard. As a counterbal­ance to the angular rigor of living spaces, soothing colors and plant motifs go hand in hand with roundness in seating and other objects.

***

Follow the authors on Instagram @rickytchit­ov; Twitter @RickyToled­o23; and Facebook - Ricky Toledo Chito Vijandre.

 ?? Photos by RICKY TOLEDO ?? Measured geometry and saturated flat colors in a Modern Living interior. Poetic functional­ism characteri­zes the furniture and accessorie­s like the “Butterfly” chair by Romuald Fleury, Mini Bar by TLab, side table by Serax and glassware by LSA.
Photos by RICKY TOLEDO Measured geometry and saturated flat colors in a Modern Living interior. Poetic functional­ism characteri­zes the furniture and accessorie­s like the “Butterfly” chair by Romuald Fleury, Mini Bar by TLab, side table by Serax and glassware by LSA.
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 ??  ?? Lighting and other accessorie­s in geometric lines follow the functional­ist aesthetic that do away with the ‘baroque” clichés of our time.
Lighting and other accessorie­s in geometric lines follow the functional­ist aesthetic that do away with the ‘baroque” clichés of our time.
 ??  ?? Residentia­l spaces are transforme­d into virtual private galleries with Sculptural Living.
Residentia­l spaces are transforme­d into virtual private galleries with Sculptural Living.
 ??  ?? An antithesis to mass production, pieces are sculpted, shaped and unique: Buffet by Ethnicraft, table lamp and mirror by Pulpo, sculpture by Red Gallery.
An antithesis to mass production, pieces are sculpted, shaped and unique: Buffet by Ethnicraft, table lamp and mirror by Pulpo, sculpture by Red Gallery.
 ??  ?? Mondrian walls provide a modernist backdrop for this study area with Swallow Tail Furniture’s “Calipers” table inspired by the measuring tool used by designers.
Mondrian walls provide a modernist backdrop for this study area with Swallow Tail Furniture’s “Calipers” table inspired by the measuring tool used by designers.
 ??  ?? The contrast of order and chaos provides artistic tension in the sculptural living interior.
The contrast of order and chaos provides artistic tension in the sculptural living interior.
 ??  ?? The influence of Japanese domestic art combined with the desire for the natural.
The influence of Japanese domestic art combined with the desire for the natural.
 ??  ?? Ideal soft living: “Reader” chair by Umage, with its curved shell that lets the body sink into a state of relaxation and contemplat­ion as gentle light emanates from Carpyen’s lamps with linen shades.
Ideal soft living: “Reader” chair by Umage, with its curved shell that lets the body sink into a state of relaxation and contemplat­ion as gentle light emanates from Carpyen’s lamps with linen shades.

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