the whole story - Carolyn Quartermaine
Transcription
the whole story - Carolyn Quartermaine
the whole story Photographer: james merrell text: fiona m ccarthy After almost 30 years of design projects, Carolyn Quartermaine – artist, stylist and textile designer – returns to her roots as a painter. Carolyn Quartermaine in her London studio, surrounded by her latest works in all colours blue. In the foreground is a 1960s ‘Pallu’ wicker chair by Vittorio Bonacina. “A good word to describe me is chercheuse: someone who looks and thinks and investigates their work and their world,” she explains. “It is all about going deeper into your love and passions.” Vogue Living Sep/Oct 12 33 as carolyn quartermaine drapes her barefooted frame across a white wicker chair on her studio f loor in London, swathes of fabric into which she has pushed endless swirls of turquoise and indigo paint stretch across canvas frames, lie strewn over chairs and laid out on the f loor like rugs, seemingly immersing her in a meadow full of wild blooms. “It’s a lucky thing, as an artist, to be able to come full circle in one’s career,” she explains. Artist, stylist, designer – Anglo-Swiss Quartermaine has worn all three caps, often simultaneously, for almost 30 years, working on textile collections, curating exhibitions, designing interiors and furniture for homes, restaurants and hotels, collaborating with global brands such as Donna Karan, Joseph, Fortnum & Mason and Baccarat, and styling some of the most desirable images for the world’s leading magazines, Vogue Living among them. Her romantically inspired fabrics, imbued with whimsical designs such as 19th-century poetry scripted across silk, sheer cotton and velvet, and which now also encompass cascading flowers, bold retro swirls and lace patterns blown large, were a breath of fresh air during the mid 1980s and ’90s, a time of all-white minimalism in interiors. Yet it is only now, she says, on the back of the success of her collaboration on The Glade bar at Sketch in London (featured in May/June 2012 Vogue Living), where she helped create a dream-like interior within decoupage forest walls, that she feels she can return to her roots as a painter. Her current work is inspired much more by the abstract – heroes include Pierre Bonnard and American artists Cy Twombly and Helen Frankenthaler – but often it’s the simple process of making which brings the most ideas. Flowers are a recurring theme. “I’m more drawn to the petals falling to the floor than the flowers themselves,” says Quartermaine. With fabric as her canvas, she pours paint, and herself, into every piece, “moving it around with my hands and body, which is immensely satisfying,” she says. “I love working in factories too – I’m always happiest in the mess. It’s where you see the accidental mixes which then spark an idea; finding the story within the story.” Future projects will involve collaborations with chef Pierre Gagnaire in Paris and fragrance house Fragonard, and Quartermaine will undoubtedly lend them her eye for the unexpected. “I use things that others would throw away – like a pot covered in paint or the reverse of a rug,” she says. “I’m very hands on – I don’t think there are too many designers who work like I do, standing in the space and transforming it with paint and collage then overseeing everything, right down to what salt will go into the salt cellar,” she says. “I’m there to the bitter end.” fiona mccarthy For more information, visit carolynquartermaine.com. 34 Vogue Living Sep/Oct 12 Photographer: james merrell Opposite, from top left: in the studio, Quartermaine’s iron is always poised – a key implement in her design process, it helps her to adjust paint stains on fabric; a chair by late artist and friend Craigie Aitchison, bought at auction this year; a tiny cobalt knitted baby’s jumper, bought for colour inspiration; further inspiration comes from Quartermaine’s collection of statement jewellery and a 19th-century girandole, below left. On a studio wall, this page, hangs a dress painted for the Carte Blanche exhibition at the Museum of Toile de Jouy in France. Quartermaine was the only non‑French designer to be invited to participate. Vogue Living Sep/Oct 12 35