Wednesday 11 October 2023 - Monocle Minute | Monocle

Wednesday. 11/10/2023

The Monocle Minute
On Design

Image: Peter Flude

Main event

The tent is up and the autumn sun is shining as the latest edition of Pad London kicks off in Mayfair. Nic Monisse brings us the latest, from conversation-making tableware to party-proof furniture. Plus: we dial in on a 1960s device that has a ring to it and meet with an architecture studio that’s using nature’s teachings to inform its approach to design.

Opinion / Nic Monisse

Fun of the fair

“I don’t think that I’ve ever seen it this busy,” said one harried PR agent dashing between client booths at Pad London’s opening day yesterday in Mayfair. Running until Sunday, under a marquee in Berkeley Square, the fair is dedicated to 20th- and 21st-century furniture and art. Its calendar overlap with Frieze is helping to cement its status as an essential entry in the diary of collectors, interior specialists and design enthusiasts. It’s a combination that is, no doubt, contributing to its increasing popularity and making for an event that appeals to gallerists and homemakers alike. Here are Monocle’s five takeaways from the fair.

Compact is best: With 62 galleries from 16 countries setting up shop, the event is compact – and that’s a good thing. It lets you easily browse the entire offering in an hour and then return at a leisurely pace to the booths that are most interesting.

Talk furniture to me: Placement of your furniture, artwork and other accoutrements is as important as its selection. “I try to put my pieces in conversation with one another,” says Nina Yashar, founder of Milan-based Nilufar Gallery. At Pad London, she arranged new pieces by contemporary designers, such as Objects of Common Interest, alongside vintage pieces by the likes of mid-century Italian creative Osvaldo Borsani. “I worried that it was too colourful before we opened but everything has now come together.”

Tell a story: “Our gallery’s name explains our ethos,” says Robbe Vandewyngaerde, co-founder of Objects With Narratives. “Style doesn’t matter to us, we just want a good story behind every piece.” At Pad London, the emerging Swiss-based gallery is showing gravity-defying wooden furniture by Mircea Anghel and bronze lighting pieces by Vladimir Slavov – a combination that has seen them pick up an award for best booth.

Dress the part: Furniture fairs aren’t known for their fashion – and while the crowds aren’t necessarily runway-ready like those at recent fashion weeks, they’re certainly gearing up to give them a run for their money. Suits were sharply tailored and a smattering of streetwear looked to suggest that a younger generation of buyers are making their way into the market.

Go cold: “There’s a trend towards colder materials, such as steel,” says Fréderic Ormond, founder of Geneva-based gallery Ormond Editions, whose showpiece at Pad London was a brushed stainless-steel table by Garnier & Linker. “People have been working with warm finishes, such as bronze, for a few years but there has been a movement back towards steel.” Expect more metal tables in homes – a welcome addition for dinner parties that need a sturdy surface to dance on come night’s end.

For more reports on the latest from Pad London, continue reading below.

Nic Monisse is Monocle’s design editor. For more news, insight and analysis subscribe to Monocle today.

The project / ‘Commune Shows’, US

Material success

The line between art and design can often be blurred. You only have to look at Frieze and Pad London this week for proof. Further blurring is taking place near San Francisco at Blunk Space, a gallery and research centre dedicated to celebrating the legacy of JB Blunk, a 20th-century American sculptor who worked primarily in wood and clay. Here, the exhibition Commune Shows is on until 15 October. It features art and design works by Steven Johanknecht (pictured), co-founder of Los Angeles-based studio Commune, and Niles Wertz, a local woodturner and longtime Commune collaborator.

Image: Rich Stapleton, Molly Haas
Image: Rich Stapleton, Molly Haas

Johanknecht’s paintings, inspired by abstract movements such as constructivism, are on display alongside a line of rugs and blankets that was created in collaboration with Christopher Farr and R+D Lab. This work is complemented by a collection of more than 30 wooden bowls and platters, a large walnut coffee table and a stool, designed by Wertz. To create continuity with Johanknecht’s approach, the bowls are designed to be nested, ensuring a visual flow from one to another. “Steven and Niles are both part of a conversation through different mediums and craft techniques,” says Roman Alonso, the Commune Shows curator. “Steven applies patterns to materials, while Niles makes them using the material itself.”
blunkspace.com

Design news / Portuondo Gallery at Pad London, UK

Show and sell

At Pad London, Portuondo Gallery provided a masterclass in mixing. Established by brothers Diego and Hugo Portuondo, with outposts in Madrid, London and New York, the gallery fearlessly blended materials and eras – an effect that made their booth appear more like a playful living room than a point of sale. “We want to show that you don’t have to have a showroom home with only new furniture,” says Diego. “Our range includes everything from contemporary pieces to works from the 1940s. It’s a whacky, eclectic mix, such the work of English interior decorator and designer David Hicks.”

Image: Peter Flude
Image: Peter Flude
Image: Peter Flude

Highlights of Portuondo Gallery’s booth include boxy white armchairs from the 1960s by Maison Leleu and a new brass coffee table by Jean Yves Lanvin, upon which a ceramic pitcher by Pablo Picasso has been carefully placed. A curving green sofa from 1975 by Germany’s Burkhard Vogtherr (pictured, middle) feels like it could have been newly designed or created at the height of postmodernism. “We only buy and sell items that we would put in our own homes,” says Diego. “We’re selling a taste and an atmosphere rather than individual pieces.”
portuondo.com

Image: Rafael Soldi

Words with... / Hemanshu Parwani, USA

Reduce, reuse, regenerate

Hemanshu Parwani is CEO of American architectural firm Olson Kundig, which was founded in Seattle in 1966. It has since grown into an award-winning practice that has constructed museums, churches, offices and homes around the world. After a decades-long career in management, Parwani joined Olson Kundig in 2018 and now oversees the firm’s daily operations and strategy, ensuring that it stays true to its philosophy of design-first, regenerative architecture and harmony with nature. Monocle spoke with Parwani at last month’s Find – Design Fair Asia in Singapore.

What are the founding principles of Olson Kundig?
A respect for nature and an understanding of the projects that we take on. We always start with a site visit and never design remotely. It’s important for us to draw inspiration from the surroundings. The practice focuses on regenerative architecture, leveraging what nature can provide. We want to leave as light a footprint as possible on the land. Attention to detail is also essential.

How has Olson Kundig’s approach to sustainability evolved since its founding?
We have always been aware of our effect on the environment. Now there are better measuring tools available for monitoring our energy consumption but adaptive reuse is also important, whether it takes the form of a repurposed power plant or a salvaged commercial building. We look at regenerative architecture in the context of human interaction and how we can bring a community back into a space.

What are some of the challenges that crop up when designing a building?
It’s our role and our responsibility to make sustainability affordable. We examine material choices, how the sun moves from one end of a building to the other and what winds blow through the site. In a house that we constructed in California, which won the 2018 Cote Top Ten award for sustainability, the water is warmed by thermal heating in the ground. If the owners use their fireplace, then that heat also is repurposed. Finding ways to reuse materials is essential.

For more insights from Find – Design Fair Asia, tune in to ‘Monocle on Design’ on Monocle Radio.

Image: Anje Jager

From the archive / Grillo, Italy

Into the fold

When Marco Zanuso and Richard Sapper designed the Grillo in the mid-1960s, the Milan-based duo hardly knew just how influential this little telephone would become. Designed for state-owned company Italtel, the phone featured two innovations: its dial had buttons for each number in place of the rotary system and it folded up to be the size and shape of a computer mouse. The name Grillo, meaning cricket in Italian, was inspired by the sound of its ringer.

The phone became an instant classic and remained in production until 1979. Later versions featured the redesigned keyboard with which we are familiar today. More than 10 years later, the Grillo’s clamshell design provided the inspiration for the first Motorola flip phones in the 1990s. And today, anyone who uses a computer that can be folded down and toted around ultimately owes the convenience, in part, to Sapper and Zanuso.

Around the house / Thomas Fritsch – Atrium, France

Ware it’s at

While much of Pad London focuses on large furniture items, there’s still plenty of room for accoutrements and artwork. Case in point is the showcase by Paris-based gallerist Thomas Fristch. A specialist in French decorative arts from the 1940s to the 1970s, his showcase in the UK capital includes a silver-black enamelled ceramic jug by Pol Chambost from 1956 (pictured, bottom) and a collection of orange, enamelled ceramic bottles by Jacquest and Dani Ruelland from 1960.

Image: Peter Flude
Image: Peter Flude

For buyers at the fair, Fritsch’s presence offers a chance to purchase wares that complement statement pieces, such as sofas and dining tables. It’s also a reminder that while the rooms in our home might be defined by the largest items, they’re not complete until they’re furnished with smaller pieces that help build the atmosphere.
thomasfritsch.fr

In the picture / ‘Machann Pannié’, France

Common threads

As part of their exhibition at the DS Galerie for Paris Design Week last month, Florian Dach and Dimitri Zephir, the duo behind design studio Dach & Zephir, published their own newspaper to accompany the show. Titled Machann Pannié, the showcase is a research project and dialogue about the art of basket weaving between the Caribbean and mainland France. “We made a newspaper to give context to the exhibition,” says Zephir. “Basketweavers from France to Guadeloupe were interviewed about reimagining their craft – and the necessity of transmission.”

Machann Pannié is the third part of Dach & Zephir’s investigation into the legacy of design in the French West Indies and the need to keep craft know-how, such as basket weaving, alive. The newspaper also includes theory-driven essays and visuals to illustrate the subject. “We asked basketweavers about the realities of their work and where they see themselves going in the future,” adds Dach. Elegantly rendered and presented in a palette of emerald green and sandy brown, Dach & Zephir’s newspaper is upping the ante for showcases and exhibitions worldwide – all while contributing to the preservation of rare crafts.
dachzephir.com; dsgalerie.com

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