Simon Johns designs furniture to resemble Appalachian rock formations

Under the umbrella of the VDF x Sight Unseen collaboration, designer Simon Johns is unveiling a collection of furniture and homeware from his studio in the Appalachian mountains, which mirrors the unique materiality of his surroundings.

The four-piece Outcrop collection features two tables, a mirror and a bar, each of which embodies the contradictory qualities of rock as being organic yet structural, solid yet fragile.

Simon Johns designs furniture to resemble Appalachian rock formations
The Dolomite coffee table is made to resemble outcrops of sedimentary stone

“Sedimentary stone has its own imperfect structural system, outside the norms of rigid construction,” says Johns. “To me, it inspires a sweet spot between organic forms and geometry.”

The Ledge dry bar, for example, is modelled after the crumbling facades of cliff formations.

Made from blackened ash, the monolithic cabinet clings to the wall, with an artificial crack down the centre suggesting where its doors can be opened.

Simon Johns designs furniture to resemble Appalachian rock formations
Ledge is a dry bar made from blackened ash

Angular chunks of bleached ash are arranged to frame the sand-cast aluminium base of the Dolomite coffee table. This jagged assemblage is designed to mimic outcrops of sedimentary stone jutting out from the ground.

The Hex diamond table is more pared-back take on the same theme, featuring simple white oak slabs that are asymmetric and yet neatly organised around its aluminium base.

Under the umbrella of the VDF x Sight Unseen collaboration, designer Simon Johns is unveiling a collection of furniture and homeware from his studio in the Appalachian mountains, that mirrors the unique materiality of his surroundings.
Bleached ash and aluminium make up the Dolomite coffee table

As the only homeware piece in the collection, the Fracture mirror features shards of glass interspersed with cement protrusions.

The facetted surface of these gypsum strips is a reference to the structured way that stones break under impact.

Under the umbrella of the VDF x Sight Unseen collaboration, designer Simon Johns is unveiling a collection of furniture and homeware from his studio in the Appalachian mountains, that mirrors the unique materiality of his surroundings.
The Hex diamond table features an asymmetric top made from white oak

“I try to illustrate a conversation between the fabricated and the elemental,” explained Johns.

He describes his process as based largely on trial-and-error, closer to hands-on sculpting rather than rigidly pre-planned design.

Under the umbrella of the VDF x Sight Unseen collaboration, designer Simon Johns is unveiling a collection of furniture and homeware from his studio in the Appalachian mountains, that mirrors the unique materiality of his surroundings.
Gypsum cement strips break up the Fracture mirror

Originally trained in fine art, Johns works from his secluded studio in the woods in southern Quebec, Canada.

From here, he creates one-off, limited edition pieces that focus largely on capturing the geology that makes this area unique.

Under the umbrella of the VDF x Sight Unseen collaboration, designer Simon Johns is unveiling a collection of furniture and homeware from his studio in the Appalachian mountains, that mirrors the unique materiality of his surroundings.
Johns designed the collection from his secluded studio in the Appalachian mountains

His Outcrop collection is currently on show as part of the Offsite Online showcase by New York design magazine Sight Unseen, which has this year moved to a digital platform due to the pandemic.

VDF x Sight Unseen
Exhibitor:
Simon Johns
Project title: Outcrop
Website: simonjohns.com
Email: info@simonjohns.com


Until 30 June 2020, Dezeen is playing host to Virtual Design Festival – the world’s first online design festival.

Sight Unseen covers design and visual arts as well as curating exhibitions such as the annual Sight Unseen Offsite showcase.

The VDF x Sight Unseen collaboration presents projects by 51 international designers as an extension of this year’s digital version of the showcase, called Offsite Online.

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