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Home » News » A New York Design Week Show Spotlights Furniture With a Story

A New York Design Week Show Spotlights Furniture With a Story

Robert WilsonBy Robert Wilson Realtor
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The New York Design Week always flooded the city with sumptuous materials and individual marmon margin tables in its type made of imported marble, custom lamps with brass hardware and wool upholstered sofas. But “outside/in”, a show in Lyle Gallery in the Lower East Side, offers something else, with pieces that are inclined in the inheritance and funds of the manufacturers. Lighting accessories are inspired by the Indian tradition of hair greaseing, a chair moves to calm anxiety and wall art is made of construction materials linked to child memory. Here, stories are what matters.

“Everything has some kind of history, or has layers and guts. It is not living only to be an elegant chair for rich people,” said Lin Tyrpien, who cooked the program with the Jenny Heller’s Human company.

Now in its 13th year, the NYCXDESign Annual Festival brings together designers and manufacturers to exhibit new furniture and household decoration, with events that take place throughout the city. In view until June 1, the show in Lyle Gallery presents 12 designers, most of which are emerging. The gallery made an open call for furniture and artists manufacturers, who resorted to more than 200 presentations, through which Mrs. Tyrpien and Mrs. Nguyen selected the works that will appear. Designers come from all over the world, including Senegal, Nigeria, India and more.

Mrs. Tyrpien, who is co-owner of the gallery, said that anti-dei movements recently have another impetus for the show. “Since the financing disappeared from many initiatives ofi, what so timely to fight that,” he said.

Here is a look at some of the designers of the program and the stories behind their work.

The interviews below have a slightly edited leg to obtain length and clarity.


Utharaa Zacharias and Palaash Chaudhary

Study: Soft geometry

Location: Los Angeles

Work: “Long Hair Dino” made with hemp and lime

How do your pieces of hair importance speak in their culture?

Utharaa Zacharias: Palaash and I grew up in India, and we have this shared memory. My mother and my two sisters would like to align a Sunday afternoon, apply coconut oil in the hair of the other, massage the head of the other and then braid the hair to immerse. Palaash has a similar memory or massage your grandmother’s hair with oil. And now that we are in the United States, far from home, we make the same rituals on each other: it is the belly our Sunday ritual to grease the hair of the other. The idea of ​​these pieces was to create a portrait inspired by that choreography of the care of their hair and take care of the hair of the other and find softness in that ritual.

Study: Vy voi

Location: Queens

Work: “Comet lamp in flight “made with paper

This piece was inspired by the Vietnamese whistle kite. What attracted you to the kite as a subject to explore?

It is a kite that is over 2,000 years old. It is very historical for Vietnam and very exclusive for Vietnam. He has jackfruit wood whistles, so when he is actually in the air, he creates this really beautiful moment of sound and fantasy. I was really delighted with this idea, how do we capture this rich story in a modern design piece that honey from my spirit?

And why a lamp, unlike a chair or table or something else?

I think that lighting is one of those things that we really take for granted. It is something that we live every day, be it upper lighting, desktop lighting, floor lighting, but there is something really pleasant to create this sculptural moment in which I felt that we could capture the idea of ​​a kite flying in the air against the sun.

Location: Denver

Work: Sculptural painting “the mari” made of uprooting paste

You chose Spacking adjustment as your medium because your father works in construction. What was your family’s reaction creating art with this material?

Covid duration, the materials were expectations and the stores were closed, and I returned to Spacking Fit and Yeses, because it was what I grew up using that I would work with my father in their work sites. I thought I would use it to experiment, but I had this love for the material again.

It wasn’t until I made my BFA show in 2021 that my parents said: “We really don’t understand what you are doing. How, sketches?” They do not have a higher education, and for them it was a foreigner. Then he looked at a painting and said: “I don’t understand it, but I understand how you did it.” And I realized that this material is a language; It is closing a gap.

Then he read my biological statement and said: “You know, I would really like you to know the part that you are immigrant and Mexican.” And I was like, “What? I thought you would be very proud of that.” And with tears in his eyes, he said: “I don’t want you to face the racism that your mother and I have faced.” And it was at that moment that I thought, Wow, what did this material have just done?

Tanuvi Hegde

Location: Brooklyn

Work: “Reflect” Chair made with Cherry and leather wood

This chair is Meean to be restless: you can roll the ball from one arm to another. What is the purpose of that movement?

I am a very anxious person and I really like to worry. So I was thinking about how anxiety appears physically in the body. And I kept returning to small restless moments with respect to your hands, as if you were touching your fingers or you are shooting something in your hands. I wanted to combine all that and design a chair that rests on that. I was also working with the idea that a chair, more specific than any other form of furniture, is to keep you still, as if accompanied by the body. But what happens yes, instead of asking the body to be still, let the furniture meet the body where it is already, and want to worry, and want to play with you?

Sandia Nassila and Toluwalase Rufai

Study: Sale iwadi Studio

Location: Dakar, Senegal and Lagos, Nigeria

Work: “Zangbeto side table ”made of Iroko wood

What story are you trying to have this piece?

Toluwalase Rufai: It is rooted in the culture of the masquerade of Zangbeto de Benin. They are coined to be the protectors of the night, move and then turn to protect people in the community, and this oscillating movement hypnotized us. It is a very mystical and mysterious masquerade. So we wanted to embody that: how could a furniture educate you in a part of the culture and also bring different meanings? And how can we capture the movement in a static object?

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