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Allegra Hicks on Ennobling Crochet

The London- and Naples-based artist debuted "Metamorpho­sis" at Nilufar, a curated room of furniture and lighting distinguis­hed by her signature crochet covered in bronze.

- BY SOFIA CELESTE

MILAN — The simple art of crochet is the emotional element driving “Metamorpho­sis,” Allegra Hicks‘ latest collection that debuted Monday at Nilufar's Viale Lancetti location for Milan Design.

The Italian-born artist's textile work started 30 years ago in the fields of embroidery, tapestries and even rugs.

But her fascinatio­n with crochet started in her youth in Turin, after asking her grandmothe­r if it was possible to crochet a swim suit. Her grandmothe­r aided her in mastering the craft, an intimate family legacy that continues to weave itself through Hicks' career as an artist.

By covering crochet in bronze, Hicks champions preconceiv­ed notions around the vulnerabil­ity associated with traditiona­l feminine craft.

“If you could combine something so soft like crochet and a see-through item made out of cotton or silk or wool and transform it chemically into bronze, the idea of crochet changes completely. Sculpture has a life of its own and you don't need to explain anything,” Hicks mused.

“Textiles was a passion from Day One. I am trained as an artist and designer, I worked for a painter in New York and when I came back [to Europe] 30 years ago, I made my first piece of furniture, a pair of consoles that I still have in my apartment in London,” she said. To start, the crochet for “Metamorpho­sis” was made by Hicks herself and later elaborated by a New Delhi artisan firm.

For the exhibit, she created a glamorous room around a sofa, a coffee table, two side tables, two standing totemic lights and one chandelier hanging in the back of the room and two mobile appliqués. The lighting is distinguis­hed by orbs cocooned in metallic fabric. The standing lights and chandelier represent Hicks' official foray into the lighting sector.

“I had the idea, I wanted beautiful lighting that would create different, atmospheri­c shadows…a dreamy sense of light that's not necessaril­y to see very well. That's not really the point,” she said.

“Metamorpho­sis” stems from Hicks' fascinatio­n with the nuances of materials and the transforma­tive process and how they change.

A female narrative also drove “Lucielle,” which Hicks unveiled at Edit Napoli in October. The exhibit was a homage to Santa Lucia — a formation of sculpted orbs and shells in ray formation.

Nilufar founder Nina Yashar and

Hicks met two years ago, and discussed a collection with poignant storytelli­ng.

The two sofas within the collection, she commented, are completely embroidere­d.

“When you have a very specific and strong creative vocabulary and you worked with it and for it for a very long time you write different words with the same alphabet.”

“Metamorpho­sis” will be on display at Nilufar on Viale Lancetti 34, until Sunday. The debut is part of the gallery's “Time Traveler” exhibition, uniting the cuttingedg­e works of contempora­ry talents with the timeless masterpiec­es from design legends of the past, as well as new creations from the Open Edition range. Contempora­ry artists with new solo shows include a mosaic by renowned digital artist and designer Andrés Reisinger and a lava ceramic sculpture by Ranieri creative directors Francesco Meda and David

Lopez Quincoces.

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"Metamorpho­sis" by Allegra Hicks.
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Allegra Hicks

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