Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

A mysterious black gable frames two new bedrooms on the roof of a house in the outskirts of Paris.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Designed by French studio THE Architectes, the black-painted timber extension contrasts with the clay tiles and white render of the house’s walls and roof.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

The slope of the gable matches the angle of the existing pitched roof.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Skylights bring daylight into each of the new bedrooms and wooden beams are exposed on the ceilings.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Horizontal louvres shade the window on the southern side, while the window on the northern side is left exposed.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

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Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Photography is by Nicolas Fussler.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Below is a project description from THE Architectes:


This project in La Varenne Saint Hilaire by French office THE Architectes consists of a rooftop house extension to add two new bedrooms.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

The idea of the project was to put a new object over the existing house.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

All cladded in wood, the materiality of the extension really stands out from the masonry and the tiles of the existing house.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Still the iconic pitched roof of the extension recalls the architecture of the existing house. Thus the project is clearly contemporary but is in relation with the existing architecture in a rather subtle way.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

The house is made in timber frame and all cladded in black wood.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

The southern facade is protected from overheating by horizontal wooden sun breakers also painted in black.

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

South elevation- click above for larger image

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

East elevation- click above for larger image

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

North elevation- click above for larger image

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

West elevation- click above for larger image

Une Maison sur la Maison by THE Architectes

Axonometric – click above for larger image

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by THE Architectes
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Capsule: Men’s Spring/Summer 2013

Global themes from the Parisian trade show

On our visit to the menswear portion of the Capsule show in Paris last week, we noticed several emerging themes—while vintage and customization hold a place of honor, along with knitwear, the most significant newsflash seems to be the return of prints (in color!), and a resurgence of short-hemmed pants for summer 2013.

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Beyond basic customization are the silkscreen-processed pieces made by the audacious Sangue, our most thrilling discovery. Backed by a subversive artist based in southern Italy, Angelo, Sangue employs a unique technique to make chameleon-like T-shirts and shorts. Patterns range from traditionally painted ceramic tiling on houses and stone walls to natural scenery and plants, leaves and wood details. His clothes work like the pieces of a puzzle, constructed by putting a cut pattern on a surface, taking a picture of it and printing it on the T-shirt pulled taut over a hand-made canvas on which the screen process is applied.

The process as intriguing as the results, the effect is stunning and the shirts really look like they could seamlessly blend right back in with the background they were inspired by. Started only a couple of months ago, Sangue met a great success at Capsule, attracting distributors from all over the world.

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Japan brought many young designers and interesting newcomers, most of them working with natural fibers. Among them, No No Yes, the “leather tailor laboratory” based in Tokyo, presented delightful printed, bleached and tie-dyed leathers, as well as artistic, half-erased patterns blending black letters, animals figures and exploding yellow sunflowers. Along with the leather jackets the line comprises unisex tunics treated and destroyed with an all-over wash for a semi-transparent finish (the women’s version has a thin, knotted elastic belt). Spring/Summer 2013 will also include a sleeveless vest in ultra-smooth leather which can be used as a scarf or turned into a shoulder bag or whatever the wearer feels like.

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Also washed and distorted was the natural, casually elegant monochromatic-gray line by the Kobe-based Ryu. Working only with natural fibers like linen and cotton, the designer processes them for an aged look. His line features towel-like cotton T-shirts and graceful, almost-threadbare cardigans as well as beautiful jacquards for hoodies. Each pieces showcases Ryu’s impeccable attention to detail and finishing, from the cut of the lapels of the sport vests to the thumb holes on sweater sleeves.

The new line of crafted clothes by ALF in Kojima—the birthplace of Japanese jeans—is also made with natural material. In this case, however, the designer works them in order to obtain beautiful, shiny finishes, ultra-soft indigos or structured roughness for a series that evokes Asian work suits, all in blue.

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Demonstrating a sense of French chic, Monsieur Lacenaire revisits the classic men’s wardrobe with knitwear techniques and luxurious Egyptian cotton. The brand specializes in what they call “knot tricks,” playing with matching its knit cardigans with the knotted wool belt of its chino pants. Upon closer inspection you realize that the belts aren’t actually removable accessories, but are part of the waistband on the trousers. This season Monsieur Lacenaire is mostly focused on the revival of the old “k-way” set-up on hoodies, allowing them to be folded into a reversible pocket on the back so it can be carried as a purse, instead of the deigned drape over the shoulders.

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Another example of French hipster chic is Tigersushi Furs which was launched with the success of the famous Tigersushi electro music record label with the purpose to dress that sound. In the concept store in the Parisian Marais, unisex tops, navy striped shirts and short-hemmed pants are displayed along with vinyl records.

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At the shoe booth we fell for the lovely, original and colorful sneakers from Topman, which go well with the new eccentric line of garments comprising painted-like printed flowers bombers and long knotted sweaters. Also noteworthy were Mark McNairy‘s UK-made dress shoes with colored soles and animal-hair and leather uppers.


Assassin’s Creed 3 – Rise

Sid Lee Paris a réalisé pour Ubisoft cette vidéo publicitaire très réussie pour la sortie du 3ème volet de la série de jeux vidéo Assassin’s Creed, prévu pour le 31 octobre. Le spot intitulé « Rise » nous montre que chaque petit acte de rébellion peut amener à une révolution et un soulèvement. Plus d’images dans la suite.

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Escale Numérique by Mathieu Lehanneur

French designer Mathieu Lehanneur has created a series of Wi-Fi stations in Paris where people can sit down to use their laptops or access local information via a large screen.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

Named Escale Numérique, which translates as Digital Break, the proposal won a competition to design street furniture that links with the underground fibre-optic network so residents and visitors without mobile internet access can connect on the move.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

Concrete swivel chairs with attached tables for laptops sit underneath a foliage-covered shelter and a large digital billboard provides city information and news for those who don’t have a laptop or smartphone with them.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

A cluster of wooden legs like tree trunks support the green roof, which is designed to look like a garden when viewed from balconies above.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

The project was realised in collaboration with outdoor advertising company JCDecaux.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

See more stories about Mathieu Lehanneur »
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Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

Photography is by Felipe Ribon.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

Here’s some more information from the designer:


JCDecaux and Mathieu Lehanneur won the call for projects by the Mairie de Paris devoted to intelligent furniture with Escale Numérique, a connected haven of peace available to everyone.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

Set up on the Rond Point des Champs-Elysées, Escale Numérique is a revival of the underground fibre optic network which is now supplying the capital, ‘Like the Wallace fountains, which since the end of the 19th century have offered Parisian the free drinking water which was circulating beneath their feet, Escale Numérique allows everyone to benefit, like a real public service, from a high-speed WIFI connection by raising it from beneath the ground.’

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

For his first urban development project, Mathieu Lehanneur devised a protective shelter with a plant covered roof, like ‘A garden placed on a few tree trunks’ and designed to be as attractive when viewed from the ground as from a balcony.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

The hard-wearing concrete swivel seats are equipped with plugs and have mini tables attached to rest an elbow, a book or a computer.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

A large touch screen provides updated information about services in the city: guides, news and augmented reality for tourists and visitors who are not online.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

Escale Numérique is a forerunner for a new range of urban architecture where virtual reality dictates the shape of what is real in order to live with even greater fluidity.

Mathieu Lehanneur Escale Numerique

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Mathieu Lehanneur
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Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

French designer Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance has fitted out a restaurant at the top of the tallest skyscraper in central Paris.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Named Ciel de Paris, the new restaurant is located on the 56th floor of the Montparnasse Tower, which at 210-metres-high is taller than everything else around it bar the Eiffel Tower.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Warm lighting glows out from behind the circular mirrors covering the ceiling, as well as around the edges of the room and from beneath the curved central bar.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Chairs designed by Duchaufour-Lawrance feature smooth grey resin and fibreglass shells with orange leather linings.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

This week Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance also revealed a spiralling bookcase inspired by the shape of a fossil.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

See all our stories about restaurants »

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Photography is by Vincent Leroux/Temps Machine.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Here’s the full press release:


Ciel de Paris

Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance has designed a soft and profound amber bubble of light on the 56th floor of the Montparnasse Tower: the new Ciel de Paris restaurant interior design and furniture.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

From the bay windows to the central bar, depending on the aura of the mirrors, the skilled composition of the sombre reflections strengthens and transforms perspectives. The view becomes space; space becomes the view.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

The golden glints of the City of Light bounce off the sensual curves and materials. Paris is sparkling and all of a sudden the tower is more desirable.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

This primarily touristic venue has become welcoming and ethereal, a pleasurable experience designed for everyone.

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Furniture + Lights – Bespoke design by Noé Duchaufour- Lawrance

Bar: wood fibre and resin structure, Corian interior with Stopsol extra white glass top, golden interior
Lights produced with Artemide
Ceiling light dimensions: 300x200cm
Ceiling light and suspended illuminating mirrors: made of Stopsol glass (colourless mirror) + honeycomb + gold painted dome
Bar Stools: resin composite materials + glass fibre exterior, grey satin-finish colour, Stolz leather interior, grey satin-finish coated steel base

Furniture – Bespoke design by Noé Duchaufour- Lawrance

Armchairs: resin composite materials + glass fibre exterior, satin-finish grey colour, Stolz leather interior, grey satin-finish coated steel base
Tables: Corian top, lacquered MDF below and resin composite materials + glass fibre, grey satin-finish coated steel base

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Description of Materials and Furniture

Lighting: tailor-designed, in partnership with Artemide
275 lights suspended from the platform comprising:
– direct honeycomb lighting fittings creating graduated light from the outside to the inside
– backlit indirect lighting fittings creating a halo of light projecting onto the ceiling
Acoustic Ceiling: OWAcoustic premium system – Owaplan
Bar: wood fibre and resin structure, Corian interior with Stopsol extra white glass top, golden interior
Main Walls: grey velvet paint
Entracne Wall: curved staff
Back Wall: curved staff
Column Trim: bronze mirror with transparent degradation
Woodwork: lacquered metal
Floor: made-to-measure Taî Ping carpet for the restaurant area and Royal Mosa ceramic sandstone for the entrance hall and sanitary area
Seat: resin composite materials + glass fibre exterior, grey satin-finish colour, Stolz leather interior, grey satin-finish coated steel base.
Benches: wooden structure + upholstered with Stolz leather
Tables: Corian top, lacquered MDF underneath and resin composite materials + glass fibre, grey satin-finish coated steel base

Ciel de Paris by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Total area: 400 m2, 160 seats
Interior design – Designer: Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance
Project Leader: Lluc Giros
Team: Laetitia Leinartz, Grégoire de Lafforest and Alfredo DaSilva
Lighting designer: L’Observatoire International
Visual identity: Yorgo Tloupas

Installer: Chantiers Baudet
Furniture production: Tabisso
Lighting production: Artemide
Carpet production: Tai Ping

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

French architects ECDM have completed a nursery in Paris with rippling concrete walls.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

The billowing curves of the facade were created using a series of prefabricated panels, which wrap around three sides of the Crèche Rue Pierre Budin but are only interrupted by windows on one elevation.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

A central courtyard is located at the heart of the two-storey building, surrounded by nursery rooms that accommodate up to 66 children.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

A tree-like metal umbrella shades this courtyard and can be seen hovering above the rooftop from the street.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

Other projects we’ve featured by ECDM include a spotty bus station and a residence for students and women in distress.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

See all our stories about ECDM »

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

See all our stories about nurseries and kindergartens »

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

Above: photograph is by ECDM

Photography is by Luc Boegly, apart from where otherwise stated.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

The text below is from ECDM:


Day Nursery in Paris

The project takes place into a heterogeneous district made of buildings of any sizes, of any styles, any periods. It’s an environment slightly old-fashioned, hybrid and disintegrated, typical of the heterogeneous architecture which characterizes the Parisian peri-urban zones.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

Above: photograph is by ECDM

Modernity came to complete this disorder : Adjacent to the site, an out of size construction, built in derogation of the property limits (adding a supplementary urban intention parameter), forbids any common denominator, any possibility of creating a homogeneous composition.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

Above: photograph is by Benoît Fougeirol

The day-nursery is thus an attempt, for a tiny building of public utility, to exist in an unfavorable relationship in the shade of a twelve story construction which takes light, overhangs and crushes everything.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

The program of the day-nursery introduces a small size, a small scale. If the volume comes from the requirements of the project concerning surfaces and scale, the writing of the building results from its specificity. The day-nursery is a horizontal. Protective and introverted, it occupies the ground, interacts with the outside spaces. Developed on two levels, it is organized to get the maximum of light and sunshine, and to by-pass the shade of the giant nearby building.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

The project mixes the outside and internal spaces, organizes around a walk the 2 levels in a buckle of small paths and terraces, altering green and mineral areas. From the requirements of the program, it results a monolithic and protective facade. The building is in prefabricated concrete, long-lasting and resistant to the torments of the urban life. The surrounding wall is drilled by translucent and colored windows. These windows have various heights, for a place thought as much for the children than¬¬ for the adults, the parents or the staff.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

The housing part is treated as entity. The matter is to propose an autonomous writing to an additional element, both complementary and exterior to the program of the nursery itself, to propose to the future inhabitant a living environment desynchronized from his workplace.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

This volume lays on the nursery, slightly out of the building line, in order to give a specific urban writing to this residential space.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

The project is a setting of a living place, with its specificities, its needs and also its poetic dimension, the goal is to propose for this tiny program a frame of living that generates as much an emotion with the future occupants (children, parents, staff) than the local residents.

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

Program: Day Nursery for 66 children and 1 service apartment
Client: Ville de Paris
Architect: Emmanuel Combarel Dominique Marrec architectes (ECDM)
Engineering: C&E ingenierie, Cotracoop (mandataire du groupement d’entreprises), Bonna Sabla et Il Cantiere, Lafranque
Location: 15 Rue Pierre Budin, PARIS XVIII
Site area: 875 m² SHON / 1937 m² SHOB
Cost: 3.1 M€ HT
Finished: 2012
Photographers: Luc Boegly, Benoît Fougeirol

Crèche Rue Pierre Budin by ECDM

Maison Escalier by Moussafir Architectes

Steps connecting the gradually rising floors of this Paris house by Moussafir Architectes can be glimpsed through the cut-out shutters on its glazed facade (+ slideshow).

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Located in Paris’ 6th arrondissement, the house has been fitted into the three original stone walls of the site’s previous building.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

The steel structure comprises cantilevered floors supported by a central core that’s largely independent of the three outer walls.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

The south facade is entirely glazed and fitted with electrically operated steel shutters.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

With the exception of the bathroom, there are no partitions between the rooms.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Wooden stairs wrap around the core of the house and each level leading off from the stairs becomes its own room.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

The central core, staircase, floors and ceilings are all clad in black locust wood. Concrete boxes have been fitted into the walls to provide built-in shelving.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

We recently featured a house in Japan with a courtyard staircase that climbs over a roof – see it here.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

See more stories about Moussafir Architectes »

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

See more stories about houses »

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Photographs are by Hervé Abbadie.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Here’s more information from the architects:


Wooden window frames within old masonry walls and steel window frames by Forster within new steel structure; lacquered steel electrically operated shutters, iroko roof terrace, steel roof planters.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Architects: Jacques Moussafir with Alexis Duquennoy, project manager, and Na An.
Consultants: Jean-Marc Weill and Malishev Wilson Engineers (structural engineers)

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Contractors: Microsol (deep foundations), Lisandre (structural work, plumbing, fittings), Général Métal (metal frame),

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

MGN (exterior door and windowframes), B2E (electricity), Tischlerei Bereuter (interior woodwork and panelling).

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Maison Escalier (Step House)

Built on the site of an old house set between two buildings in the heart of a very well-preserved block in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, this house is designed as a tree-like structure delimited on three sides by the original walls.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Only the entirely glazed south façade belies the almost total reconstruction of the building and provides a glimpse of the volumetric complexity of its interior spaces.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Even more than that of a tree, the most effective metaphor for the project might be that of a Cyclopean stairway: the house is a stair whose core houses the wet rooms, whose stairwell is defined by the gables of the neighbouring buildings, and whose steps and landings form the various living spaces.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

The fact that there was no need to partition the rooms (except the bathrooms) means that there is a sense of total spatial continuity from basement to roof terrace.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

The structure, entirely of steel, is made up of cantilevered floors borne by the central core and partly dissociated from the three outer walls onto which have been grafted concrete boxes that act as built-in furniture.

Maison Escalier by Moussafir Architectes

The choice of materials reinforces the architectural design: the partitions of the central core, the floors and the ceilings are all clad in locust tree, whose colour and pattern contrast with the texture and whiteness of the outer walls.

Maison Escalier by Moussafir Architectes

Step House (Maison Escalier) – Paris – 2008-2011
Completed December 2011

Maison Escalier by Moussafir Architectes

Client: Eric de Rugy
Address: 22, rue Jacob, 75006 PARIS

Maison Escalier by Moussafir Architectes

Brief: house reconstruction
Budget: 850 000€ excl. VAT

Maison Escalier by Moussafir Architectes

Surface area: 153 sq.m. + 15 sq.m. roof terrace.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Materials: pile foundations, concrete basement liner, steel superstructure, wooden floors with built-in low temperature heating; ceilings and panelling laid on plasterboard; panelling. Ceilings and floors on upper levels made of locust tree boards by Admonter; floors on lower levels of resinous concrete by Ardex; sheet steel and stainless steel mesh guardrails by Jakob.

Step House by Moussafir Architectes

Suriani

Animal-human hybrid stickers invading Parisian streets and a gallery

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While marketing and mainstream communications campaigns have derived branding inspiration in the comic-like cartoon style of street art, and the values attached to its culture—freedom, community, transgression—the paradox still exists to see it framed and sold through traditional art channels.

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We caught up with street artist Rafael Suriani at his recent show, “Collages Urbains”, at Cabinet d’amateur gallery in Paris, where he told us more about street art and his relationship with the medium.

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Suriani’s mark features animals, surviving and thriving in the streets for its powerful and highly recognizable aesthetic. In his half-human-half-animal figures, the animal faces act as liberating masks, allowing the artist to express social criticism in an elegant way. The vibrant, seemingly playful creatures refrain from getting too serious and maintain a suggestive tone that avoids the obvious.

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The stickers are the result of a double-binding process that first assembles man and animal, then adheres the resulting figure to the wall. In the past, Suriani has drawn from his Latin-American heritage, playing with shamanic mythology figures such as toucan or jaguar. In his recent series, on the other hand, he is more interested in urban domestic animals such as cats and dogs—according to the artist, the convention that they tend to resemble their owners offers a metaphoric way to talk about us people. Recently Suriani made a series of French “Bulldogs” as a special dedication on London walls, using this breed to cartoon and make fun of some French characteristics. Each dog expresses a different state of mind—humor, spirituality, criticism or beauty.

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Suriani uses the rare technique of hand-painting every poster he sticks on the streets. Making each sticker is the result of a process involving selecting photos from the Internet, cutting them in Photoshop, then screening and painting before cutting the final product. Such repetition lies at the heart of street art practice, which is often based on plastering as many spots as possible, invasion-style.

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When considering the ephemeral fate of the piece of work destined for degradation of the elements, police destruction or theft from passers-by, the time and effort for such little reward seems remarkable. Suriani explains, however, that the fleeting nature of his work is freeing and allows him to be audacious with both subject and technique. To him, because there is no pressure or constraint, that achievement is rarely a failure.

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In the end, the piece of art is not the only sticker by itself, it is the sticker in its context, seen as a whole on the wall with the daylight shining on it, the motorbikes parked against it or the branch of a tree creeping across. Rarely is the work’s time spent on the wall its only life, after all, with the rise of dedicated photographers immortalizing the scenes for the Internet.

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Suriani claims his intention to step into the city’s landscape by bringing much-needed beauty comes with a positive message. Rather than being aggressive or controversial, Suriani takes pleasure in having people on the street enjoy his figures. His work is bound to the city—physically, geographically and socially—compelling the public to refresh their view of their surroundings and drawing their eyes to the places that typically go unnoticed. As an architect, Suriani has found a way to unveil the city and change people’s perception of the scenes they see everyday without truly seeing them. The choice of venue is very important, based on aesthetic consideration with attention to the context and surroundings like the location.

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Hailing from Brazil, home to a strong and lively street-art culture, Suriani’s passion makes sense. In his native Sao Paolo, a young city constantly changing and under construction, street art is welcome and considered as a positive contribution to embellish the city. Far from being forbidden, stickers can last as long as two years years. There, the practice is often connected to a more political involvement such as a protest against real estate speculation or to support immigration, and Suriani has brought a bit of this spirit to France, where he participated in a campaign by the French Aids support league Act Up as part of a collective huge fresco.

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In fact, Suriani reflects on his practice as a means to get to know Paris and socialize within the community when he moved from Brazil—one bound by a lifestyle of taking risks, celebrating fragile achievements and maintaining that cherished sense of freedom. The community has certain rules about never judging the quality of others’ work and paying the proper respect to the established know-how. Contrary to Brazil where street art involves only young artists, in France people from all ages work on the walls. While collective projects sometimes happen when a whole group invades a venue, one-to-one interactions are more common. Stickers posted in response to others have been known to spark a friendly dialog and lead to real-life meetings.

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As for the transgressive aspect of the street stickering, Suriani sees it more like a tricky game, avoiding the police and trying not to get caught—even though he always works during the day, his favorite being Sunday. He also notes the difference between temporary, removable stickers and permanent paintings on walls and surfaces. For Suriani, the key to street art is freedom—no diploma is needed, anybody is welcome to participate regardless of means or resources, and artists are at liberty to experiment and constantly change their style.

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The idea of presenting a gallery, then, presents that paradox. But, Suriani explains, in the end it’s not about street art in a gallery. Having been painting, drawing and cutting since he was a child, he brings his authentic artistic process to this show. A mix of original and existing pieces, the series simply presents the language of street art in a different venue.


Skullcandy and The Supreme Sound Of…

Skullcandy ha lanciato un nuovo progetto in collaborazione con alcuni dei migliori deejay producer europei. Prima release è dedicata a Parigi con ONRA.

Skullcandy and The Supreme Sound Of...

Designer’s Days in Paris

Innovation takes over the City of Light
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The 12th edition of Designer’s Days decorated Paris inside and out last weekend. The celebration brought a varied bunch of innovative creations all over the city, involving a blend of venues and actors, famous design brands, exclusive creators, art schools, designers’ studios and workshops, embassies and outdoor installations. Every branch of design was part of the feast, including industrial design, interior decoration, homeware, furniture and more.

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The festival marked an occasion for brands to debut innovations like the decorative “Add-on” heaters designed by Satyendra Pakhalé for the Italian company Tubes Radiatori, which was shown at Centre Pompidou museum. Trying to convert utilitarian heaters into decorative pieces, “Add-on” utilizes an enlarged surface area to spread heat, and the system’s polyhedric modules can be freely assembled to create infinite decorations. The lattice-style form makes this piece ideal for a room divider, resembling an Arabic Mashrabiya.

Exclusive rug company Dedar commissioned the New York-based Stephan Burks for an artistic performance around rope and fabrics. The artist invented seats with large bunches of tough rope partly covered with caoutchouc and wrapped with zipped corsets inspired by African textile culture and patterns.

The famous inventor of the bag-free vacuum cleaner, Dyson, exhibited prototypes made by fresh design graduates as part of its sponsorship program, with all projects reflecting the brand’s focus on air. Dyson gave an award last year to the “Airdrop“, an innovative system able to produce water for irrigation by capturing moisture from the atmosphere, and the utility of the low-tech device for drought-ridden countries is quite promising. “Kerio” is a home dry cleaner that implements air technologies to replace a washing machine, steaming clothes in a low-water, eco-friendly system. The “Wind Up” lamp, which is turned on and off in the manner of a candle by simply blowing on the bulb, is as simple as it is poetic.

Recent graduates from the prestigious École Boulle design and interior architecture school were also given the opportunity to show their achievements and allow the public to discover this up-and-coming generation. One creation, the “Mister T” table by Antoine Lesur smartly embeds in the piece a ready-to-use set of table, tray, basket and cushions. The light shape of the armchair by Eric Naveteur has also been selected along with the “Pouff” by Norman Bouzidi, a table and seat designed for snack and improvised parties, with storage spaces in the locks.

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Italian brand Poltrona Frau asked the French designer Noé Duchaufour Lawrance to create a scenography for its store. The result is an organic chain of leather that emerges from armchairs and spreads all over the showroom, featuring gigantic arms or roots that connect all the pieces of the collection. The piece communicates both the appealing power of leather as well as the brand’s superior level of creative execution.

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Many other leading brands on the market commissioned famous or new designers to produce something for the occasion. Silvera-Poliform exhibited the new line “Plia” of side tables designed by Victoria Wilmotte in wood and stainless steel, which reflect light through their beveled edges.

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Jean-Michel Wilmotte displayed bushes of street lamps on the famous Ponts des Arts of front of the Louvre, evoking connections between architectural heritage and contemporary design.

We discovered work by the textile designer Tzuri Gueta, who makes a unique line of silicone jewelry evoking blood vessels and anatomic desiccations, as well as weird shellfish and a motorbike helmet, all in sexy silicone lace or in a “rain pearls” curtain trying to marry rain, water and light.

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The 1.5 km long promenade “viaduc des arts”, gathering designers and craftsmen workshops, provided a large scope of pieces made for the event like a rocking hobby-horse that brayed like a galloping horse and could imitate sounds of smooth and tough surfaces.

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Plenty of other interesting and intelligent ideas for small urban places were on show, such as mini mobile plant pots hung on folded hard plastic maps and planted tables as interior gardens. A clock in a blown-glass bulb recalled Napoleonic clocks under their glassy globe, and we were taken by a poetic variety of lamps: candy-like love-apple lamps in red blown glass and melted sugar sat alongside flower and feather lamps.

The Italian Embassy opened its doors to the public for a tour through the past decades of major achievements in Italian design—all displayed in the golden apartments of an 18th-century palace, such as the famous “Him” chair by Fabiola Novembre for Casamania.

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The studio of Jean Nouvel, one of the most famous French architects, was open to the public to show a beautiful play on wood, featuring a line of seven wooden tables and their accessories with sober lines made out of seven varieties of woods. With the purpose of going back to the essentials and basics, the display paid tribute to both plain natural wood and to ancient assembling techniques by avoiding any metallic element such as nails. Their minimalist, elegant aesthetics proved to be the most contemporary.

Images by Isabelle Doal