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L A N G U A G E Sign up / Log inN E W S S TA N D S U B S C R I B E IT EN
What prospects for collectible design? Thegallerists have their say
Five leading international gallerists tell us aboutthe state of the art and the potential for contemporarydesign in the gallery. The rediscovery of craft skills,regional ties and the ever-finer line dividing it from theart world unite the work they do in Beirut, Athens, Milan,Copenhagen, New York and Cape Town.
The historian Renato De Fusco saw design, production, sale and consumption as
the four factors that make the experience of design a unified process. By starting
from these parameters, we analysed the changes now taking place in
contemporary design and so identified a new collectible design movement that
forms a strongly growing universe and market. In recent years independent
events have multiplied and new galleries have arisen dealing only in
contemporary design. And increasing numbers of young designers are self-
producing their own work while shunning industrial production. To explore these
developments, we sought the opinions of some gallerists active in different parts
of the world, talking to both established and emerging figures: Beatrice
Bianco of Camp Design Gallery (Milan), Nicolas Bellavance-Lecompte of Carwan
Gallery (Beirut and Athens), Maria Foerlev of Etage Projects (Copenhagen), Marc
Benda of Friedman Benda (New York) and Trevyn McGowan of Southern Guild
(Cape Town).
Read also: Ugo La Pietra: “Help the territories to exalt thedifferences, without cultivating nostalgia”
Friedman Benda gallery. Misha Kahn, Pig of the sea. Photo Daniel Kukla
The indefinite relationship between design and art, local roots and direct work
with designers, are the most common reasons that have given rise, all within the
last 20 years, to the galleries we contacted. This shows just how recent the
collectible design movement is and why it is still difficult to historicise. “Our
gallery started to focus on the work of contemporary designers in 2007. We
wanted to represent designers in the same way that galleries represent
traditional artists,” explains Marc Benda. ”We were interested, and still are, in
long-term projects, because what matters to us is to develop a vision and not to
display items to build up an existing market.” Trevyn McGowan explains how her
gallery made the breakthrough ten years ago. “Southern Guild was founded in
2008 in Cape Town, but it was a visit to Design Miami in 2010 that showed us our
work could be channelled into a specific market segment for collectors of
design. This context helped set the course for our practice.”
“We launched Carwan Gallery to develop the great artistic, artisanal, landscape
and civic potential of a city like Beirut. In 2011 it was the region’s first
contemporary design gallery,” explains Nicolas Bellavance-Lecompte. “We
wanted to create a new landmark and a place for exchanges with Western
culture. In ancient Persian, carwan means ‘caravanserai’, a building
where caravans halted on their way across the desert.” Maria Foerlev’s gallery
is younger. It was 2012 when she opened Etage Projects, devoted to design from
the start. ”Here I find and show work that translates conceptual visions into the
realm of functionality and daily-life objects. What interests me is how aesthetics
affect us and how ideas can translate into aesthetics.”
Read also: A lighting sphere plays with its metal frames: Hecocollection by Nendo
Camp Gallery, Adam Nathaniel Furman, The Royal Family. Photo JamesHarris
Working along the same lines is the Camp Design Gallery in Milan, opened in
2015. “To create a haven where we can find space for new ideas and meanings,”
were the motives that prompted Beatrice Bianco to open it. ”The gallery
complements contemporary production methods. We work with small
businesses and craftspeople, suggesting experimental production processes.”
Relations between gallerist and designer cannot be classified as a simple
professional partnership. The small scale and themes developed require a
human relationship capable of producing value in social and cultural terms. It is
underpinned by intense work on both sides. “The relationship I have with
designers is very personal,” points out Bianco. “I’m not just investing money, but
also time, a part of my life.” An approach and intensity shared by Marc
Benda , who concentrates on experimentation. “We are looking for people with a
new sensibility that complements our own work, designers we do not yet fully
understand.” Maria Foerlev has adopted a similar approach. ”In order to rely on
my intuition,” she says, “I spend a lot of time researching, visiting studios,
travelling to fairs. Generally, I have all my antennae out there. I work with artists
who make functional pieces and designers who work conceptually, and their
work relies on an engaging experience you can’t get as a passive viewer.”
Carwan Gallery, Mary-Lynn Massoud and Rasha Nawam, “Essai”
At the Carwan Gallery the work of selection is equally intense and takes a
precise direction. ”Nearly all the projects we present,” recounts Bellavance-
Lecompte, “are the result of an exchange that grows out of a work specially
commissioned and made specifically for the gallery. We’re not just looking for a
nice decorative object. The conceptual factor is very important.” Trevyn
McGowan’s research at Southern Guild is more distinctly local. ”We look at the
margins of disciplines, always choosing South African artists. We’re searching
for people who want to explore a personal narrative, looking at history, traditions,
a different way of relating to nature or a political theme. For this reason
our artists often develop instinctive self-production processes, archaic and low
tech, or they work with local craftspeople using traditional techniques.”
Read also: When I grow up, I want to be an industrial designer
Southern Guild, Porky Hefer, Molecules. Photo Hayden Phipps
While Modernity sanctioned a clear-cut separation between project and
production, the gallerist’s job is to recombine and disrupt the four factors of
design, especially the last, consumption. Saying that “design should be for all” not
only means enabling a wide range of people to buy, but critically reasoning on
the ways an object is used. Galleries’ involvement in networking and education
are a way of rethinking the role of design apart from functionality. “Our outlook,”
explains Marc Benda, “means trying to bring our work to a much broader public
than that of the gallery by working with schools and institutions. Today training
can take many forms. We believe the exhibition is the best way to recount a
designer’s vision and enable it to be expressed to the full.” In a region with
special problems, Carwan Gallery shares this same approach. “We’re a
gallery that’s located in an emerging market where practically everything still
remains to be done,” says Nicolas Bellavance-Lecompte. “In our ten years of life
we’ve had to invest a lot in education and fostering design culture. It’s partly
thanks to us that there are dozens of independent art design studios in Beirut
today and their works can be found in many homes, company premises,
restaurants...”
Etage Projects, Postcard from Superpoly. Photo Peter Boel
They all feel a strong sense of mission in their work, apart from the logic of the
market. “It is my responsibility to show and raise awareness about their work,”
says Maria Foerlev in Copenhagen. ”I’m interested in the idea, as in my opinion it’s
always been ideas that have been driving history. You have to explain an idea,
and of course I do as best I can in the exhibitions I host and the fairs I participate
in.” In Italy, according to Beatrice Bianco, a lot of work still needs to be done to
broaden the penetration of collectible design. “Italy has been a bit late in
understanding this dimension, even though our design week is the most
important in the world. And then in Milan there are individuals prominent on the
international scene. Our job is also to build up a contemporary design
system,” she explains. These difficulties take on a peculiar form in South Africa,
as Trevyn McGowan points out. “In education, we’re working on many fronts. In
general, we’re interested in explaining the value of collectible design and what it
means to be South African. A key aspect is training artists, giving them the
opportunity to see the best fairs so as to realise what’s happening around the
world and the level of excellence required.”
Read also: Ten poems and thoughts on imagination that are dearto Michele De Lucchi
S E C T I O N S
K E Y W O R D S
Creativity, People and Culturesupporting Made in ItalyA state of presence and support to all the activities thatare characterised by design and excellence, know-howand savoir-faire.
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A U T H O RSalvatore Peluso
P U B L I S H E D25 May 2020
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