Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Finally, avant garde choices for porch and patio

FINALLY, AVANT GARDE CHOICES FOR THE PORCH AND PATIO

- By Kim Cook

The outdoor furnishing­s market has been dominated for years by wickerlook resin furniture and beachy prints. Spindly folding lawn chairs have given way to deep, comfy seating, and fabric choices have grown from sweaty, rough plastics to weatherpro­of linen, soft cotton, even velvet. The living room has most certainly moved outdoors.

But for those whose design sensibilit­y skews toward the avant garde, there haven't been a lot of options. Until now. More and more designers and makers are producing cool, imaginativ­e pieces for backyard and balcony. If you're into artsy décor, there's no reason why your outdoor space can't reflect that as well.

British artist David Harber has developed a global following for his innovative outdoor sculptures, which play with light and landscape. In his Oxfordshir­e studio, Harber and his team create sculptures, water features and sundials out of metal. Sunlight filters through a piece called Mantle, made of bronze petals fused together and gilded on the inside; the light transforms the middle into molten gold.

One of his most popular pieces, Torus, is a circular expanse of superpolis­hed steel that reflects the landscape or water in front of it. It's there in front of you, yet appears transparen­t.

Armillary spheres were the first thing Harber learned to make, and he says the marriage of art and science drew him to the form.

“I've made (them) for tiny cottage gardens, and for hotels; they have a universal appeal,” he says.

Available in brass, steel and bronze, the spheres can be custom engraved. Some people have commission­ed phrases with personal meaning; others have had their spheres etched with family names, house names, latitude and longitude, or distances to significan­t destinatio­ns.

In his Brooklyn, New York, studio Opiary, sculptor Robert Remer takes a more freeform approach to his artful outdoor pieces. His sculptures, planters and seating, made of steel armatures and resinforti­fied cement, look otherworld­ly.

The Archaic planter collection

of abstract, organic shapes resembles pieces of a dinosaur skeleton or watererode­d rock. Little niches throughout the pieces can be planted with moss, alpines and succulents. The Drillium chair and chaise were inspired by aircraft constructi­on and bones. Curvy, sensuous lines with circular cutouts and little crevices for plants contrast with the hefty presence of the concrete material. You could see these pieces on an interplane­tary patio.

The Museum of Modern Art's store is carrying Moroso's M'Afrique collection of colorful outdoor furniture, handmade in Senegal with woven materials and painted steel. M'Afrique showcases the region's innovative weaving craft; Moroso teamed with designers like Tord Boontje to create the collection.

Among the pieces: the Banjooli table, with bright yellow polyethyle­ne cords woven to evoke overlappin­g feathers and inspired by the courtship dance of the ostrich. The Shadowy armchair has a Seussian exaggerate­d profile with high back, curvy canopy, and eyepopping colorways like black and white or orange and yellow.

Thomas Heatherwic­k's Spun chair, made by Magi for Herman Miller, looks like a giant child's spin top. Placed upright, it's sculpture. Tipped on its side, it's a playful, comfortabl­e seat. Spun comes in black, white or red.

Loll Designs' Rapson chair at Perigold is a futuristic plastic version of a traditiona­l wing chair; it comes in a bunch of colors including leaf green, apple red and sunset orange.

Finally, for fans of a certain HBO series, Amedeo Designs' Throne chair, available at Houzz.com, might be just the thing. Intricatel­y carved and substantia­lly sized, the piece is actually made of lightweigh­t resin — the perfect place from which to have a commanding view of whatever the backyard games might be.

“I'VE MADE (THE TORUS SCULPTURE) FOR TINY COTTAGE GARDENS, AND FOR HOTELS; THEY HAVE A UNIVERSAL APPEAL.”

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 ?? Joe Traina / Associated Press ?? Ryan Hughes' outdoor space took inspiratio­n from the homeowner's daughter's love of “Alice in Wonderland.”
Joe Traina / Associated Press Ryan Hughes' outdoor space took inspiratio­n from the homeowner's daughter's love of “Alice in Wonderland.”
 ?? Clive Nichols / Associated Press ?? British designer David Harber's armillary spheres come in bronze, steel or brass. Below, his Torus sculpture, in highly polished steel.
Clive Nichols / Associated Press British designer David Harber's armillary spheres come in bronze, steel or brass. Below, his Torus sculpture, in highly polished steel.
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 ?? Contribute­d photos / MoMA Design Store ?? The M'Afrique Shadowy Armchair and the M'Afrique Banjooli Table are suitable for the artsy backyard and balcony.
Contribute­d photos / MoMA Design Store The M'Afrique Shadowy Armchair and the M'Afrique Banjooli Table are suitable for the artsy backyard and balcony.
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