Wallpaper

Modern love

Berluti’s Pierre Jeanneret revival

- PHOTOGRAPH­Y: FRANÇOIS COQUEREL WRITER: NICK VINSON

For this year’s Design Miami fair, Kris Van Assche, creative director of the luxury leather brand Berluti, and François Laffanour, founder of Paris’ Laffanour Galerie Downtown, have joined forces to present a collection of original Pierre Jeanneret furniture pieces, restored by Laffanour and upholstere­d with Berluti’s emblematic Venezia leather.

The series consists of 17 pieces, all created by the Swiss architect in the 1950s to furnish the administra­tive buildings of Chandigarh’s Capitol Complex, the vast compound masterplan­ned by his cousin and long-term collaborat­or Le Corbusier (see W*147).

Included are a ‘Base Building’ desk, an ‘Easy’ armchair, a pair of ‘Cinéma’ armchairs, a ‘Judge’ armchair, a folding screen and a writing chair. The furniture is a reflection of Jeanneret’s ethos: solidly constructe­d, designed along rudimentar­y principles, and capitalisi­ng on the skills of local craftsmen and regional materials. Made in solid teak, the chairs are recognisab­le by their V-, U- and X-shaped legs, and originally featured seats in finishes including rattan, leather and vinyl.

As is typical with pieces of this pedigree, the hardwood has outlived the 1950s upholstery. The furniture has been restored by Laffanour to conservati­on standards, but with the patina of its framework intact; holes and marks are left unfilled to celebrate its origins, use and age. Meanwhile, elements such as panels and cushions have been given a new lease of life with leather in various hues.

Le Corbusier was commission­ed by India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, to head up the Chandigarh project in 1951. The planned city was one of the newly independen­t country’s flagship projects,

and Le Corbusier’s largest, most ambitious creation: the very model of modernism.

Jeanneret, who had already built a solid career as a furniture designer thanks to the tubular chrome pieces he created with Le Corbusier and Charlotte Perriand in the late 1920s, was tasked with designing all the furniture for Chandigarh’s government buildings, as well as supervisin­g their constructi­on. When Le Corbusier left the project midway, Jeanneret became chief architect, living in Chandigarh for 15 years.

The Capitol Complex was selected by Van Assche as a location for Berluti’s A/W19 campaign, photograph­ed by Ronan Gallagher this spring. The colours Van Assche came across there, alongside the two colour systems Le Corbusier created in 1931 and 1959, became a starting point for the palate of the restored Jeanneret furniture collection.

Van Assche decided ‘to twist it a little’, using a bold mix of 18 shades across the 17 pieces – no two items are the same colour. Pairs of seats, such as the ‘Cinéma’ armchairs, have been mismatched, one in Sukhna Sunset purple and the other in Simal red, while the folding screen features two shades of blue, in a chequerboa­rd pattern. The only piece upholstere­d in Berluti’s classic, brown-hued Tobacco leather is the writing chair – where there was already bold colour in the frame. Although constructe­d in teak, the chair was later painted blue, to identify its use for the university in Chandigarh. For Laffanour, this was an important historical interventi­on that should be left visible.

The task of upholsteri­ng the chairs was entrusted to Domeau & Pérès, the Paris-based upholstery and leather workshop founded 25 years ago by Bruno Domeau and Philippe Pérès, both ‘crazy about Jeanneret’, notes Van Assche. They came up with the idea of using magnetic fixings so as not to compromise the integrity of some of the originals. As per Berluti tradition, they used specially tanned leather from calves raised in northern France.

A patina was hand-applied in their workshop, enhancing the look of the pieces and emphasisin­g the curves of their padding.

Van Assche and Laffanour’s friendship is built on a shared passion for 20th-century design; Van Assche is a keen collector of Jeanneret and Jean Prouvé pieces, so much so that his 2018 debut collection as creative director of Berluti was shown at Paris’ Place de la Concorde, inside Prouvé’s 1958 prefab classroom for the Institut Fénélon high school in Clermont-ferrand, which had been restored by Laffanour Galerie Downtown.

Wallpaper* photograph­ed Van Assche with some of his favourite pieces from the restored furniture collection. He already owns a pair of Jeanneret’s ‘Cinéma’ armchairs, one in black, one in red (bought previously from Laffanour Galerie Downtown), and has a soft spot for the daybed – ‘an ideal think bed’ – and the ‘Judge’ armchair, both of which would fit seamlessly into the new office he is furnishing at Berluti’s Paris HQ. * See the collection from 2-8 December, at Berluti, 151 NE 41st Street, Unit PP123, Miami, berluti.com; galeriedow­ntown.com

Van Assche used a bold mix of 18 shades across the 17 pieces – no two items are the same colour

 ??  ?? KRIS VAN ASSCHE, BERLUTI CREATIVE DIRECTOR, WITH SOME OF THE PIERRE JEANNERET PIECES, RESTORED BY FRANÇOIS LAFFANOUR OF PARIS’ LAFFANOUR GALERIE DOWNTOWN, AND UPHOLSTERE­D IN BERLUTI LEATHER. CLOCKWISE FROM FRONT, ‘BASE BUILDING’ DESK IN NEELAM BLUE; DAYBED IN NESPOLA ORANGE; AND ‘CINÉMA’ ARMCHAIRS IN SIMAL RED AND SUKHNA SUNSET PURPLE, ALL PRICE ON REQUEST, FROM LAFFANOUR GALERIE DOWNTOWN
KRIS VAN ASSCHE, BERLUTI CREATIVE DIRECTOR, WITH SOME OF THE PIERRE JEANNERET PIECES, RESTORED BY FRANÇOIS LAFFANOUR OF PARIS’ LAFFANOUR GALERIE DOWNTOWN, AND UPHOLSTERE­D IN BERLUTI LEATHER. CLOCKWISE FROM FRONT, ‘BASE BUILDING’ DESK IN NEELAM BLUE; DAYBED IN NESPOLA ORANGE; AND ‘CINÉMA’ ARMCHAIRS IN SIMAL RED AND SUKHNA SUNSET PURPLE, ALL PRICE ON REQUEST, FROM LAFFANOUR GALERIE DOWNTOWN
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE, ‘BASE BUILDING’ DESK, AS BEFORE; FOLDING SCREEN IN BLUE HILLS AND UTOPIA BLUE; ‘CINÉMA’ ARMCHAIRS; DAYBED, ALL AS BEFORE; ‘JUDGE’ ARMCHAIR IN PINJORE GARDEN GREEN
ABOVE, ‘BASE BUILDING’ DESK, AS BEFORE; FOLDING SCREEN IN BLUE HILLS AND UTOPIA BLUE; ‘CINÉMA’ ARMCHAIRS; DAYBED, ALL AS BEFORE; ‘JUDGE’ ARMCHAIR IN PINJORE GARDEN GREEN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom