A host of gatherings have been taking place across the French capital over the past week, with fashion designers, retailers and journalists attending Paris Fashion Week. It’s now increasingly common for the event, however, to extend beyond the fashion realm and spill over into other industries – and this year was no exception.
Take new design salon Matter and Shape, which made its Paris debut this year at the Jardin des Tuileries. Over the course of the four-day event, 33 exhibitors from the fields of design, fashion and craft gathered to showcase their latest objects and collaborations. There were established brands, such as Alessi, Rick Owens and Lobmeyr (pictured, on right) and emerging names, including jeweller Charlotte Chesnais (pictured, on left) silversmith Natalia Criado and homeware designer Sophie Lou Jacobsen. These were complemented by a series of talks that involved the likes of Milan-based studio Formafantasma and Dutch designer Sabine Marcelis, who shared their views about the industry today. Guest accreditation was free and open to all, resulting in an eclectic mix of visitors, with design enthusiasts rubbing shoulders with fashion-week attendees.
“Many people in the French capital and in fashion will have never been to the [world’s biggest furniture fair] Salone del Mobile in Milan,” says Matter and Shape’s artistic director Dan Thawley. “We felt that the designers who we were exhibiting deserved to have a bigger platform. We wanted to be more democratic as a space and speak to a wider audience, not just industry insiders.” Initiatives such as Matter and Shape are a welcome break from the feeling of exclusivity that is often associated with fairs and fashion weeks – and a testament to the unique energy that comes out of cities during these creative fixtures. Everywhere you look, Paris is abuzz with pop-up boutiques, new exhibitions and temporary art installations. It’s a sign that perhaps the most relevant trends emerge not in insider circles but beyond their confines, in spaces such as these.
Annick Weber is Monocle’s Luxembourg correspondent. For more news and analysis, subscribe to Monocle today.