Out of Africa | 1stdibs Introspective

Transcription

Out of Africa | 1stdibs Introspective
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OUT OF AFRICA
by Andrew Sessa
April 13, 2015
Through his work for the luxury lodge company Singita, South African
designer Boyd Ferguson of Cécile and Boyd has almost single-handedly
determined what the 21st-century top-flight safari experience looks and
feels like. His design vision goes well beyond the bush, however, to include
residences in the U.K. and around his native country, where he also has two
impeccably curated home and decor shops.
South African designer Boyd Ferguson lends his aesthetic eye to hotels, residences and his two Cécile &
Boyd home and lifestyle shops in Cape Town and Durban (photo by Anton de Sousa Costa) Top: The fourbedroom Serengeti House villa, Ferguson’s latest addition to the Singita Grumeti safari lodge, in Tanzania
(all Singita photos courtesy of the company).
B
oyd Ferguson was practically born in the bush.
“We used to do a lot of safaris with my father,” recalls the Cape Town–based
designer, who was born and raised in South Africa. “We’d set up camp in really
remote areas.” This kindled in Ferguson not only a reverence for Africa’s most pristine
landscapes but also a profound interest in space-making: “It was so exciting to me
because we were creating an entire residence for just a short while. I used to love
deciding where all the tents would go, all the functional aspects, and then how it all
looked, too.”
This early aesthetic awakening has proved quite a boon to Ferguson, who has created all
12 of the properties for the luxury African lodge outfit Singita — which has conservationminded operations across five nature reserves in three countries — since the company’s
establishment in the 1990s. Working closely with Singita founder Luke Bailes, Ferguson
creative directed not only the unique architecture and design of each lodge but also its
very specific spirit and guest experience. In so doing, he’s defined what a high-end safari
should look and feel like in the 21st-century.
Before Singita launched, “safari was very simple, and not simple in the nice way,” Ferguson
says, noting that this was in the mid-’90s, around the time of the hip-hotel boom
spearheaded by the likes of Philippe Starck (https://www.1stdibs.com/creators/philippestarck/furniture/) and Ian Schrager. “We thought, ‘Why can’t extraordinary boutique luxury
happen in the bush?’ That just hadn’t been done yet.”
And so, with the company’s first outpost — the 12-suite Singita Ebony, which opened in
1993 in South Africa’s Sabi Sand reserve — Bailes set out to create what Ferguson calls “a
real sort of rustic luxury,” with impeccably crafted campaign furniture both antique and
custom made; baggy swags of canvas, netting and linen slipcovers and curtains; handpainted walls; and animal skins and tribal artifacts, plus carved-wood fireplace mantels,
stone-covered bathrooms and private plunge pools. “Now you might not be able to
imagine it,” he says with a laugh, “but this was unique at the time.”
Like many of Ferguson’s high-flying residential clients, Singita’s Bailes had found the
designer through his decor shop, Cécile & Boyd, in Durban, a city on South Africa’s
Since Ferguson founded it 20 years ago with his late business partner Cécile Tilley, the Cécile & Boyd shop
in Durban has become a decorating landmark, showcasing furniture, art and accessories, all in a home-like
setting. Photo courtesy Cécile & Boyd
southeast coast. Ferguson had founded the store with his late business partner, Cécile
Tilley, with whom he’d launched a line of home goods shortly after he finished school in
the late ’80s.
At that time, he says, interior design didn’t quite exist in South Africa: “You had architects
and you had decorators, but that middle space hadn’t yet been defined.”
Following his education, he explains, “I didn’t want to take the traditional route of finding
an apprenticeship, and I really didn’t want to do my mother’s neighbor’s bathroom’s
curtains and climb up that way.” A product line seemed like a third alternative.
Soon, designing items for wholesale led to selling the products themselves, and that begat
the duo’s Cécile & Boyd lifestyle shops, of which there are now two: a seven-year-old
location in a historic, four-story Arts & Crafts residence in Cape Town, and the original,
decades-old store in Durban.
The first shop, says Ferguson, “always looked great, and eventually clients came along and
asked, ‘Can you do our house, our safari lodge?’ ” So that’s exactly what they did. Today,
his two design studios led by his partners, designers Geordi De Sousa Costa and Paul van
den Berg, both have 15 employees and each work on four houses a year plus a hotel every
two years, mostly in Africa but also around the world, especially in the U.K. (Tilley, twice
Ferguson’s age and long retired, died last year. “She was a style and design guru,” he
recalls, “a grand dame who did things in the most wonderful, unique way.”)
In both the shops and the properties he creates, Ferguson firmly roots his look in southern
Africa — not only its tribal, immigrant and colonial pasts but its exciting contemporary
present. This aesthetic owes much to his youth spent on South Africa’s east coast, in the
province of KwaZulu-Natal, a place with strong Zulu and Indian influences, which mixed
with his family’s own European heritage.
“WE THOUGHT, ‘WHY CAN’T
EXTRAORDINARY BOUTIQUE
LUXURY HAPPEN IN THE BUSH?’
THAT JUST HADN’T BEEN DONE
YET.”
Another sort of hereditary connection helped form Ferguson, too: His lawyer father
dabbled in architecture and, as a result, the family moved seven times as he grew up, into
homes his dad designed and built. “We went through rustic Sardinian bungalows and
The beaten-copper tiles of the Cape Town waterfront apartment’s bedroom reflect light from the windows
opposite. The untitled painting above the bed is by Ulrich Binedell, while the bed and nightstands are
custom Cécile & Boyd designs. Photo by Frank Features/Elsa Young
contemporary white Miami-style houses with circular swimming pools — a whole spectacle
of styles,” he recalls. “That’s part of the reason I haven’t chosen a single one. For me, it’s
the essence of the place that’s more important than the literal style detail.”
And, indeed, Ferguson’s projects always exhibit a profound connection to their particular
setting.
In a recently completed waterfront penthouse in Cape Town, for example, which features
360-degree views of the sea, sky, mountains and city from its large windows, he
incorporated elements both urban and rural, engineered and organic. “We brought in the
natural elements,” he says, “but worked them in an industrial, man-made way.” Here, matte
natural woods combine with highly reflective glass and polished metal; extremely textured
textiles sit beside sleekly smooth surfaces; and the illumination scheme at night, says
Ferguson, “feels as if the lights of the city come right through the whole environment.”
For the gut renovation of a historic five-story town house in London’s Chelsea, meanwhile,
he’s embracing glamour and color to create something of a clubhouse for a young, funloving Italian family. “They don’t live in London permanently, so it’s really just a
playground,” he says of the project, which he wants to embrace the fullness of London’s
energy but simultaneously also serve as a retreat from it. “It should both excite and
protect,” he says, going on to explain the specifics of the look and feel: “It will be superclean contemporary, with a dark moody palette, freshened with white, jewel-toned color
and oversized art and sculpture — not retro not antique not futuristic, but really sort of
now design.”
His most recent hospitality project was a redesign of Sabi Sand’s Singita Boulders, which
he first created in 1996 in what was then considered a rather contemporary style. In
developing his plan for that update, he began to rethink what travelers would like to
Although currently hard at work on residential and hotel projects in London, the Scottish countryside and
around Africa, Ferguson finds a moment to relax at his Cape Town home with his fox terriers. Photo by
Mickey Hoyle
experience on African safari.
“Maybe they want to be connected to the earth and filled with soul, to be reminded,
perhaps, of their primitive background,” he recalls wondering. “How can we take city
people, suppressed and wound up, and immerse them in this space that could potentially
heal them through a reconnection to their origins?”
The solution he devised combines the elements of fire, water and earth — represented
here by hand-beaten copper, molten glass and charcoal black — with pieces that to him
make manifest the power of the hotel’s location: “Incredible rocks that have beautiful
energy, stumps and roots that were just pulled out of the ground as is, not messed with by
man.”
Everything at Boulders hasn’t simply been handmade, says Ferguson, but what he calls
heart-made: “We wouldn’t just chose anyone to create objects; the actual maker has to put
soul into them.”
In the end, channeling the soul of an entire setting seems key for Ferguson.
“For me, it’s not about style and color and pattern and numbers,” he concludes, “but the
idea of collecting all the influences of a location to really deliver a sense of place.”
Boyd Ferguson’s Quick Picks on
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A RARE REED
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(http://www.1stdibs.com/introspective-magazine/tag/hotels/), Rustic
(http://www.1stdibs.com/introspective-magazine/tag/rustic/), Safari
(http://www.1stdibs.com/introspective-magazine/tag/safari/), Singita
(http://www.1stdibs.com/introspective-magazine/tag/singita/), South Africa
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(http://www.1stdibs.com/introspective-magazine/tag/travel/)
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