Interieurs 2011
While in Paris last week visiting Le Manach, our wonderful host mentioned that we should make a point of seeing the Interieurs 2011 showhouse held just off the Champs Elysse at Hôtel Dassault This is the second edition of the showcase organized by Architectural Digest( FR) and Artcurial and this year’s theme - The art of living with art-certainly lives up to its press.
Twelve top French interior designers were invited to illustrate his/her relationship to art, from collaborations with artists to art-inspired sets to the staging of collections. The goal of the producers was to show today’s diversity in interior design and the decorative arts and to reveal future design trends. This was a not- to- be missed event and we were so excited to be able to see it.
The cherry on top was lunch at Café Artcurial after viewing the exhibit, as I got to check the Café off my list to eat at in Paris. ( Basically, I wanted to see the restaurant’s interiors designed by Gilles et Boissier.)
The rooms and designers:
- The Japanese Office by François-Joseph Graf
- The Caesar Salon by Alain Demachy
- The Mark Rothko Styled Bedroom by India Mahdavi
- The Living-room in Optical Illusion by Olivia Putman
- The Dream-like Library and Bedroom by Roxane Rodriguez
- The Sculptural Dining-room by Chahan Minassian
- The Private Art Gallery by Jean-Louis Deniot
- The “other” Kitchen by Tristan Auer
- The Porcelain Office-Dining-room by Laurent Buttazzoni & Associés
- The Cocoon to contemplate a video by Pierre Yovanovitch
- The Three-dimensional Living Room by Thierry Lemaire
Interieurs 2011 – Artcurial by aucoindumondedeco
French showhouses are conceptual as U.S. showhouses are literal. You have to walk through the rooms with an open mind and read between the lines of what the designer was trying to express. My favorites were:
The room as Mark Rothko to India Mahdavi
The project. The designer uses the palette of painter Mark Rothko in a patchwork of squares of velvet wool, cotton and silk that lines the walls and extends into curtains. The multicolored geometric print carpet with animal skin contrasts the walls.
The decorator. An architect trained in Fine Arts and then at Christian Liaigre, India Mahdavi founded her agency in 1999. She has been exploring different areas ranging from design to interior design, through set design, and master the art of the bold stylistic juxtapositions
The most outrageous and fabulous!
The Sculptural Dining-room by Chahan Minassian
The project. The decorator showcased the Belgian artist Arne Quinze, famous for upcycled wooden buildings. A sculpture of wooden beams juxtaposed against gilded and paneled walls that is reflected on a mirrored floor.
The decorator. Chahan Minassian excels in art since 1993 atmospheric sets, mixing subtle shades, textures and game style agreementsFor this Parisian-Armenian, furniture, fabrics, ceramics and works of art are part of the same story.
The “other” Kitchen by Tristan Auer
The room is an architecturial synthesis inspired by the artistic currents of the 20th century such as surrealiasm, arte povera, minimalism and artists that embody these movements like Rene Margitte The “HABITATION CELL” combines all the functions of the kitchen into a mirrored brass monolith and explores light and space as if in a darkroom with an image projected onto a sensitizied surface.
The Three-dimensional Living Room by Thierry Lemaire
The project. Parquet Versailles goes from floor to on the walls. A piece of aluminum sculpture by artist Christophe Raynal, is a kind of metal springs of a chair. Her simple furniture – sofa taupe, buffet and coffee table composed of three modules lacquered white, turquoise and beige – play it down and remember that it is in a salon.
The decorator. Elegance and simplicity define the style of Thierry Lemaire. This Parisian architect made a debut in the building before going in the decoration of private projects, and appreciates the authentic raw materials he works with modernity.
The Private Art Gallery by Jean-Louis Deniot
The project. The hallway, staircase and gallery suggest the atmosphere of a collector. Jean-Louis Deniot reinterprets, combines and stylizes in neutral tones patterns borrowed from the paintings of Bernard Frize, Sol LeWitt and Peter Zimmermann for murals, printed carpets and wall fabrics as wispy graphics.
The decorator. Deniot is second to none since 2000 to relax the French classicism. At his best in the total look, this thirty graduate of the Ecole Camondo prefer the mix of styles in muted silky shades.
The Porcelain Office-Dining-room by Laurent Buttazzoni & Associés
The project. The cubicles of BSM office furniture welcome a collection of china – pieces by contemporary artists like Klara Kristalova, as well as chinoiserie of the eighteenth century. In the center of the room, a flesh pink banquet table drawn close, the seats high time. Curtains and portieres in buttercup provide the key to the pop scene.
The Decorators. Colorists Fins, Laurent and Frederic Lavaud Buttazzoni boost their rigorous architectures shots by keeping solids alive. The pair met on the banks of ESAG Penninghen before collaborating with Andree Putman, and in 1995 founded their agency, known for its retro-modern achievements.
September 27, 2011 No Comments
Now that’s a Curtain!
Austrian architecture firm hertl architekten recently finished this project- ‘aichinger house’, a multi-story apartment building consisting of two flats in Kronstorf, Austria. The structure, which once housed a restaurant, is treated to a textile skin which lends the building a light, curtain effect by applying a material which is normally reserved for the indoors. The project inspired by today’s use of skins for everything from phones to website design, it explores the flexibility of facades and skins.
The facade appears almost metallic from a distance, the design wraps the whole exterior of the building in the light grey fabric, rendering the layout and form of the interior hidden from the outside viewer.

Iron embraces strategically placed part the curtain at the window to allow daylight into the apartments. Much like interior draperies, the skin can be drawn closed to provide shade and diffusion of light. During the night, the fabric provides a paper lantern effect, distributing the glow from the building to the exterior.
I have to say this gives new meaning to tab tops or even rod pocket tops and bottoms!
January 30, 2011 No Comments
M&O Designer of the Year- Edouard Francois
With a humoristic touch, Edouard François manages to put across essential messages. His architecture, easily described as ecological, is a response reinvented by its context. Architecture that cultivates the art of being seen while remaining concealed- focusing on simple forms, natural materials and poetic creativity.
“If in 20 or 30 years time, we observe our era and become aware of the major evolutions of these times, I want to be part of it.I would find it terrible not to have noticed, not seen, certain trends. I want to live at the heart of the present moment.”
Francois is a multidisciplinary master whose work is hailed by the most prestigious cultural institutions. This year is has been named M&O’s Designer of the Year and an International Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects for his decisive contribution to “green architecture”.
Francois’ creativity spans a wide range of contemporary topics: recycling and recyclable, usage and humanity, fair trading, economy as a means of accessibility to all, health and well-being, the seasons and organic…
Born in Paris in 1957, he is one of the major players in “green architecture” in the world. His work focuses on matter, context, usage, economy and ecology according to sustainable development principles.
The architect’s breakout building was his Château de Lez in Montpellier (2000): “the building that grows”. The outside walls are covered with stones held with stainless steel mesh covered with plants and watered by an automatic irrigation system.
He then designed the Tower Flower in Paris on the edge of a park. The tower is covered in white bamboo and perfectly characterizes his contextual approach to architecture. The walls have been cast in a haphazard way: grey concrete then white concrete, in order to give the structure a misty feel. The balustrades are decorated with giant light concrete flower pots planted with bamboo.
Each of his projects responds to its environment. The maze he designed in a corn field next to Colmar ,later became the “moquette-maquette”: a carpet in the same style and color.
Edouard François has recently been chosen to design the first housing tower block since the 70’s: a vegetal building over 50 m high in the thirteenth arrondissement and for the conversion of the Sauvage building of La Samaritaine for the LVMH group.
Tomorrow: Bouroullec Brothers
Photos Courtesy of Maison et Objet
January 7, 2011 No Comments
11+ Resolutions for 2011
Thanks to 1st Dibs, we get a peek into the future musings of some of today’s great designers. ( Click on the image for a larger view.) Happy New Year! 
January 4, 2011 No Comments
Blow up Sheet Metal
Architect Oscar Zieta has developed an incredible new technology (FIDU) that was used to create a series of inflated sheet steel furniture.. The pieces look more like balloon art than furniture, but in fact can take the weight of human. One of those pieces- Plopp- is being marketed thru HAY. “We completely transformed the way material is processed. In architecture there is a great need for the facility of designing free forms – take blob architecture, for example. The engineers who have the job of constructing these organic forms designed by architects are always looking for the technology which will make this possible and which will give a completely new meaning to the term ’standard”,” says Zieta.
Check out Architonic’s interview with Zieta.
See more images of his work in the Inspiration and Innovation sidebar.
January 6, 2009 No Comments






























