NY Post-Alexa - April 13, 2016
Transcription
NY Post-Alexa - April 13, 2016
April 13, 2016 · New York Post · alexa · 1 tRiBUte Zaha’s last bow D i s pat C h From Dubai with love PAGE 6 DÉCOR Lighting theway PAGE 14 PAGE 2 D i s pat C h Paris! Milan! London! favO R i t e t h i n g s The director’s chair alexa FROM THE NEW YORK POST APRIL 13, 2016 PHOTO BY JOSHUA JORDAN PAGE 8 The Best of Everything tHe DeSIGN ISSUe Home • Style • Art • trAvel 6 · alexa · New York Post · April 13, 2016 news & notes from dubai CLiCk baiT withlove THE gLObE’s HOTTEsTdEsigNERs This Carlo Puccini carved-wood mirror ($730) can be snagged on italian-focused design site artemest.com. Photo CourTesy of ArTeMesT. dazzLE iN THE dEsERT site seeing By CaRRie seim By Jason CHen t HE world of high design can be overwhelming, even for the most sophisticated tastemakers. But these five Web sites curate the best of the best, helping the interiors-obsessed capture that exact je ne sais quoi — for home, work or holiday. 1 2 ‘t THE power of ambition here is really high — I think it’s beautiful.” That’s how Marcel Wanders (the renowned Dutch designer whose work is part of MoMA’s permanent collection and whose solo show just wowed NYC’s Friedman Benda gallery) kicked off the fifth edition of Design Days Dubai in March. Alexa joined him in the glittering desert to explore the most diverse design fair in the world, with creators from more than 37 countries (including several with NYC roots) showing off their vibrant and edgy contemporary pieces. Wanders’ iconic “Golden Blossom” was on display next to work from emerging young female talents, like 26-year-old Lebanese-Syrian-American designer Zuleika Penniman and her alluring “Coral 1” room partition (made of coral rock reclaimed from demolished Emirati homes), as well as 24-year-old Saudi designer Ayah Al Bitar, whose clever “Wisada” floor cushions — shaped like gigantic bicycle seats — were originally part of her 2014 thesis project at NYC’s Parsons School of Design. “I decided to reinvent my heritage in a modern, comfortable way,” Al Bitar tells Alexa of her orthopedic cushions, which were among the hits of the fair. “They deal with the social issue of transportation for women — they’re very approachable and positive and they create a dialogue, which is key for any social change.” Meanwhile, Carpenters Workshop Gallery (based in New York, Paris and London) was at the fair for the fifth time, displaying “Sushi Cabinet” from the famed Campana brothers (Brazilians Humberto and Fernando) as well as the sculptural “Askance” lamp from Aussie Charles Trevelyan. And the Fatima Bint Mohammed Initiative unfurled elaborate, handknotted rugs (whose sales benefit Afghan women), along with plans to open an NYC showroom later this year. Across town at Alserkal Avenue — the beyondcool warehouse arts district where prominent Chelsea gallerist Leila Heller has now set up shop — New York conceptual artist Mary Ellen Carroll (whose work has been shown at the Whitney Museum) erected her grand “The Circle Game” installation, including a five-story climbable platform and two LED signs in the sky that demand to know: “When did you arrive” and “When will you return.” Very soon, we hope. theapartment.dk Tina Seidenfaden Busck may run this limited-edition home-furnishings site from an apartment-cum-showroom in Copenhagen, but her aesthetic isn’t all Danish modern. Think bright rugs (from $2,500), vintage benches ($3,360) and Ilse Crawford specialties (plus design consultation services). daraartisans.com After working NYC media jobs and traveling extensively, Dan and Dara Brewster launched DARA, which gathers homemade creations from global artisans. You can snag woven throws from India ($300), pillows from Nepal ($380), vases from Nicaragua ($75) — and help communities around the world. interiorarchive.com If you need a glossy photo for your uber-cool lifestyle blog, the Interior Archive offers some of the world’s most beautiful destination and architecture photography (from $125) by masters like Miguel Flores-Vianna and Simon Upton. artemest.com Spotlighting home objects and baubles by Italian artisans, like mirrors from Florentine carver Carlo Puccini ($760) and earrings by Venetian goldsmith Sigfrido Cipolato ($1,290), Artemest is the brainchild of Ippolita Rostagno, a NYCbased and Florence-born jewelry designer. themodernhouse.com Want to try a new home design without hiring a demolition crew? Rent a gem from the Modern House, a British site that specializes in “letting” architecturally significant homes. Choose from a modernist getaway in Barbados (from $8,400/ week), a series of cattle sheds in Norfolk, England (from $2,600/week) or a countryside cottage in southern France ($2,500/week). Vive la difference! 3 4 1 1. Ayah Al bitar (left) created her “Wisada” orthopedic floor cushions (above) for her senior thesis at NyC’s Parsons school of Design. 2. “Coral 1” room partition was imagined by 26-year-old Zuleika Penniman (pictured), who has American, syrian and lebanese roots. 3.“Golden blossom” by keynote speaker and acclaimed Dutch designer Marcel Wanders. 2 5 ConneCtiCut by design 3 Architect Philip Johnson’s iconic Glass House (above), in New Canaan, Conn., will celebrate its May 1 reopening with a slew of festivities. Photo by robiN Hill. By Hana R.alBeRts W 4. This“When Will you return” sign, part of “The Circle Game” installation by New york artist Mary ellen Carroll (right), towered over Dubai’s Alserkal Avenue. 5.“sushi Cabinet” by Humberto and fernando Campana was displayed by NyC’s Carpenters Workshop Gallery. 4 Photos by roybeesoN. CourTesy of DesiGN DAys DubAi. AlserkAlAveNue . [ 33,000 5 galleries 1. saudi DesignWeek, supported by kingAbdulaziz Center forWorld Culture 2. Tashkeel 3. Marcel Wanders 4. Alserkal Avenue 5. Carpenters Workshop Gallery ITH several stunning building debuts and revamps of classic gems in the last year, the Nutmeg State has become a top architectural destination within day-trip distance of New York City. For design with a dose of springtime sun, head to Grace Farms — a New Canaan community center with 80 acres of outdoor space that opened its doors last October. The pièce de résistance here is the striking River Building (courtesy of Pritzker Prize-winning Japanese architecture firm SANAA), which winds through the greenery like a snake. The complex, which includes an amphitheater, library, dining room and tea pavilion, also programs poetry readings, films and classes (gracefarms.org). Also in New Canaan, not far from Grace Farms, are several modernist-design homes by masters Philip Johnson, Marcel Breuer and Eliot Noyes. Queen among them is Johnson’s iconic 1949 Glass House, which will reopen on May 1 following its winter hibernation. To honor its 10th year as a public museum, the transparent, angular house will play host to a swath of special events. Most exciting, Japanese pop-art doyenne Yayoi Kusama will scatter her “Narcissus Garden” installation, made of 1,400 mirrored balls, on the house’s landscaped grounds (theglasshouse.org). Further east, the Yale Center for British Art will relaunch in New Haven on May 11 after a painstaking eight-year conservation and restoration project. Built by modernist great Louis I. Kahn in the ’70s, the concrete, steel and glass icon — which is centered on two courtyards — will reopen with an exhibition of 500 British paintings, sculptures and paper works (britishart.yale.edu). T H E C U LT U R E CO U N T The number of designers, architects, retailers and other creative types who will take part in the ICFF contemporary design fair from May 14 to 17 at NYC’s Javits Center. Roughly 750 exhibitors will show off furniture, lighting and accessories from around the world. Take a tour during the public peek on May 17. ]