The Independent

RIOT OF COLOUR

Designers and homeware brands are rebelling against all things orderly and symmetrica­l, letting rip with spontaneou­s, painterly effects, writes Dominic Lutyens

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Take Habitat’s new Splatter cushions and throws bearing prints of flicked paint. Perhaps designers have caught the bug for let-it-all-hang-out colour and line from the Royal Academy’s current exhibition on abstract expression­ist art of the Forties and Fifties, exponents of which included Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko.

The terrazzo revival is another strand of the trend. The technique was invented in the 15th-century by Venetian builders who couldn’t afford to use solid marble, so they mixed discarded marble chips with clay, then polished it up to create a decorative, hardwearin­g surface.

Spot the speckles

In the 20th-century, terrazzo was appreciate­d more for its durability and relegated to ordinary public

spaces – from municipal buildings to American diners – while today the rubber flooring of London’s tube trains has a speckled terrazzo effect that goes almost unnoticed.

Designers and architects now seem fascinated by the unpredicta­ble, random patterns of terrazzo and terrazzo-like surfaces – so much more captivatin­g than plain concrete.

Terrazzo now usually blends fragments of marble, quartz or granite with concrete or epoxy resin. It can also contain recycled glass, giving it an eco quality. Alternativ­ely, designers are creating terrazzo-like effects using rubber, mottled paintwork, and resins or cement combined with pigments.

Highly adaptable and versatile, these surfaces can work on anything from monumental furniture to accessible accessorie­s. And they come in limitless colourways – from multicolou­red flecks reminiscen­t of tutti-frutti ice cream to elegantly muted neutrals.

Architect David Chipperfie­ld helped pave the way with his pearl grey terrazzo-lined interior for Valentino’s flagship store in New York, designed in 2014. A similar look can be created in the home with Bisazza’s grit floor tiles by Tom Dixon, which, though made of cement, mimic marble-based terrazzo.

“Terrazzo effects suit both contempora­ry and classical interiors but look particular­ly effective in minimalist spaces, adding a retro vibe,” says Rossella Bisazza, the company’s head of communicat­ions.

Lindsey Lang’s terrazzo floor tiles have striking geometric patterns, while on the furniture front, architects Holland Harvey have created the Erno kitchen, handmade by Goldfinger Factory in W10, and Hay has produced a table with a terrazzo base, available from Viaduct.

Designer Max Lamb makes the boldest statement with terrazzo to date with furniture from baths to bookshelve­s, for Dzek of Camden.

The Italian jobs

Lamb’s pieces are made of marmoreal – an engineered marble incorporat­ing large marble chips in hues such as forest green and ochre, sourced from quarries in Italy. Chunky chopping boards, also in marmoreal, are sold by e-commerce site Makers & Brothers.

Other accessorie­s include bowls by Sevak Zargarian in toothpaste-white clay animated by orange and electric blue chips, and Loris & Livia’s Wondergrou­nd rubber table mats. Made in collaborat­ion with Transport for London, they are inspired by tube train floors, their turquoise and navy blue specks referencin­g the Victoria and Piccadilly lines on the tube map.

Designed to dazzle

Design duo Chen Chen and Kai Williams celebrate terrazzo in a resin-based desk and fruit bowls made of travertine stone, its crevices aglow with brightly coloured pigments. And Nick Parker’s vases are made with layers of cement dyed different, dazzling hues, the outer layers shaved to expose lively, painterly surfaces.

Will Yates Johnson has created an equally vibrant composite material called Polyspolia – a mix of polyester resin, powdered limestone, sawdust and pigments. He calls it “a cross between stone and plastic” and shapes it into clocks and lamps.

 ??  ?? Inspired by tube train floors, Loris & Livia Piccadilly mat, £21.50, and coaster, £7.50
Inspired by tube train floors, Loris & Livia Piccadilly mat, £21.50, and coaster, £7.50
 ??  ?? Tom Dixon Grit tiles from his Cementiles for Bisazza are £146 per square metre
Tom Dixon Grit tiles from his Cementiles for Bisazza are £146 per square metre
 ??  ?? This unit from the Erno kitchen costs £15,000 and is handmade by the Goldfinger Factory in W10
This unit from the Erno kitchen costs £15,000 and is handmade by the Goldfinger Factory in W10
 ??  ?? White clay bowls with electric blue, orange and red chips by Sevak Zargarian are £60 each at The Maker Place
White clay bowls with electric blue, orange and red chips by Sevak Zargarian are £60 each at The Maker Place
 ??  ?? Marmoreal library shelves, £10,800 from Dzek
Marmoreal library shelves, £10,800 from Dzek

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