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Paris Exhibition Showcases Interior Design From Chanel’s Specialty Workshops

The display featured pieces from The Invisible Collection and was curated by interior design duo Biehler Graveleine.

- BY JOELLE DIDERICH

PARIS — Some of the specialty workshops that produce Chanel's annual Métiers d'Art collection have a thriving sideline in interior design.

Pieces by embroidere­r Lesage, goldand silversmit­h Goossens, feather and flower expert Lemarié and Studio MTX, an offshoot of embroidere­r Montex, are on show until Sept. 16 at the Féau Boiseries showroom in Paris, alongside items from London-based furniture marketplac­e The Invisible Collection.

The houses all belong to 19M, Chanel's hub for specialty workshops located on the outskirts of Paris.

The exhibition opened on Thursday as part of Paris Design Week, a series of events staged in parallel with the Maison & Objet trade show. It was designed by interior architects Marc-Antoine Biehler and Amaury Graveleine, who also created a collection of ready-to-sell embroideri­es for Lesage Intérieurs, which can be used on furniture or soft furnishing­s.

The house had previously offered only custom embroideri­es, carried out by its Vastrakala workshop in Chennai, India.

The collaborat­ion marks the first time Lesage Intérieurs has worked with external designers.

The relationsh­ip began after Biehler and Graveleine won the Visual Merchandis­ing Prize awarded by Chanel during the 2021 edition of the Design Parade Toulon internatio­nal interior design festival. Part of their prize was working with Lesage Intérieurs on a showcase exhibition the following year.

“It's very interestin­g to share with young, passionate designers the wealth and humanity of our craftsmans­hip. Since everything is embroidere­d by hand, there is the heart, the head, the gut, the hand — the magic of the hands,” said artistic director Jean-François Lesage, who founded the interior design division in 1993.

He noted that the Lesage embroidery workshop, which is set to celebrate its centenary next year, has 75,000 samples in its archive, making it the world's largest embroidery collection. Biehler and Graveleine drew inspiratio­n from pieces spanning from the '20s to the '70s for the 12 themes in their Folklore collection.

“It was an experiment, a test and at the same time a challenge for us, with a vision rooted in architectu­re and design, to find a way to use embroidery not just as a decorative feature, but also to tell a story,” Graveleine said. “We have adapted fashion embroideri­es for use in furnishing.”

The pair joined forces with master upholstere­r Charles Jouffre to design an armchair and matching footrest trimmed with cream fringe that will be produced by

The Invisible Collection. Elsewhere in the Féau showroom, which houses a treasure trove of wood paneling dating back to the 16th century, they expertly matched ancient and modern pieces.

A Goossens console with handhammer­ed leaves was displayed in front of a wall tapestry by Lesage Intérieurs based on an old map of Chandigarh, while Window Panels by MTX were juxtaposed with a wide marble desk by a Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance marble desk and a Goossens lamp.

“It was really a question of picking pieces that looked coherent or resonated with each other,” Graveleine said, pointing out that some of the wood panels displayed alongside the furniture were selected by the late Karl Lagerfeld, who used them as inspiratio­n for the luxury suites for the Hôtel de Crillon in Paris that he designed with Lebanese architect Aline Asmar d'Amman.

Lesage said the Féau showroom was proof that there is a place for historic craftsmans­hip in modern design.

“I think it's great because you can invite the most edgy, avant- garde designers to a place like this, and they feed off it with the same pleasure as all previous generation­s. There is a kind of obvious link between yesterday, today and tomorrow,” he said.

 ?? ?? An embroidery design by Marc-Antoine Biehler and Amaury Graveleine for Lesage Intérieurs.
An embroidery design by Marc-Antoine Biehler and Amaury Graveleine for Lesage Intérieurs.
 ?? ?? Marc-Antoine Biehler, Jean-François Lesage and Amaury Graveleine.
Marc-Antoine Biehler, Jean-François Lesage and Amaury Graveleine.
 ?? ?? A Goossens console.
A Goossens console.

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