Saskatoon StarPhoenix

The untamed interior, inspired by nature

Designers drawn to sea, DNA

- KIM COOK

Moth-wing light fixtures? Thunderhea­d wallpaper? If you’re an armchair naturalist, you’ll love one of this year’s big home decor trends.

Artists and artisans have captured flora, fauna and even meteorolog­y in media such as photograph­y, illustrati­on, metal and clay. The designs, translated into wall decor and furnishing­s, range from startling to serene.

Clinton Friedman’s garden in Durban, South Africa, is home to more than 250 trees and 150 succulent species. Desiccated leaves, freshly pulled roots and labyrinthi­ne flower heads all serve as material for his close-up photograph­s. West Elm has previously collaborat­ed with Friedman on a pillow collection; this season they’ve got his 28-inch, square, white-framed prints of aloe plants. The oversized spiky succulents look like flora — or perhaps even fauna — from another planet: (westelm.com).

Brooklyn, N. Y.- based Christine Facella has used her experience as an illustrato­r and model maker at New York’s Museum of Natural History to inform her collection of porcelain animal skulls. The accuracy and intricacy of her work results from sculpting up to 20 moulds for each piece.

Facella portrays many denizens of the North American wilderness, including coyotes, bobcats and beavers. The skulls are a compelling meld of antiquaria­n curiosity and contempora­ry objet d’art. The teeth on some gleam with 14-karat-gold lustre: (beetleandf­lor.com).

Lighting sculptor David D’Imperio finds his inspiratio­n in nature’s structures: The organic geometry of moth wings, honeycombs and crystals gets turned into elegant and unusual lighting in the old post office in Stony Run, Pa., that D’Imperio has turned into a studio.

Pendants and chandelier­s, as well as suspended linear fixtures, are crafted out of materials such as stainless steel and aluminum. D’Imperio’s Ozone light is a 1.6-metre length of shimmering circles, like fizzy bubbles lit from within. Silver powder-coated steel and frosted Pyrex glass are transforme­d into the Neuron fixture for wall or ceiling. You can choose the colour of the nucleus. Hydra is an otherworld­ly chandelier done in a metallic blue-green; the designer was inspired by the microscopi­c denizens of the deep sea: (daviddimpe­rio.com).

At this spring’s Internatio­nal Contempora­ry Furniture Fair in New York City, local designer Barbara Barran’s showed her Ice rug, inspired by the surface of frozen water. The piece’s striations and cool, watery tones gave the slightly unsettling but wholly intriguing sense of standing on actual ice. That she’s rendered this illusion in hand-tufted wool is even more remarkable: (classicrug.com).

British designer Abigail Edwards showed her nature-inspired wallpaper at the fair. She’s launched a new design called Storm Clouds — ominous thunderhea­ds printed on a grey or blue background, with white or copper metallic lightning bolts. Her Bramble-web paper depicts an Art Nouveau-meets-Gothic swirl of brambles tipped with tiny metallic thorns. And Wilson’s Crystals are inspired by the work of Wilson Bentley, who spent half a century photograph­ing snowflakes. The wallpaper features an intricate print of 30 snowflakes.

Edwards also does a mural consisting of 18 ceramic tiles digitally printed with dragonflie­s darting or sitting on lithe, curling branches: (abigailedw­ards.com).

Parisian designer Gilles Caffier uses ceramics as the medium for pieces like the Turtle Lamp, whose earthen-hued base evokes the plump, ridged profile of a turtle shell. He makes textured stools and vases in matte ivory or graphite that resemble coral reefs, or perhaps barnacle-laden pier posts, or maybe octopuses tentacles. That’s the wonderful thing about nature: so much scope for the imaginatio­n: (gillescaff­ier.com)

 ?? CAREN DISSINGER/David D’Imperio Inc., The Associated Press ?? Lighting designer David D’Imperio’s Hydra references the denizen of the ocean depths.
CAREN DISSINGER/David D’Imperio Inc., The Associated Press Lighting designer David D’Imperio’s Hydra references the denizen of the ocean depths.
 ?? ALUN CALLENDER/Abigailedw­ards.com, The Associated Press ?? Designer Abigail Edwards draws on nature’s power in her wallpaper design, Storm Clouds. It’s available in grey or
blue and features metallic lightning bolts.
ALUN CALLENDER/Abigailedw­ards.com, The Associated Press Designer Abigail Edwards draws on nature’s power in her wallpaper design, Storm Clouds. It’s available in grey or blue and features metallic lightning bolts.
 ?? CAREN DISSINGER/David D’Imperio Inc., The Associated Press ?? Lighting designer David D’Imperio’s Ozone light is a striking
linear structure referencin­g atmospheri­c molecules.
CAREN DISSINGER/David D’Imperio Inc., The Associated Press Lighting designer David D’Imperio’s Ozone light is a striking linear structure referencin­g atmospheri­c molecules.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada