Categories
Design Featured Lifestyle NYC

Divine Design

BEFORE SOHO BECAME ONE OF THE PRICIEST –

retail and residential neighborhoods in New York, the large, cast-iron buildings housed factories on the top floors that were used for light manufacturing of household items, lighting, textiles, and fashion accessories. Those goods were then sold in the ground floor retail spaces.

 

In the 1960’s manufacturing started to give way to artists, who moved into the gigantic lofts because of the tremendous light, and the minimal rents. Though much of SoHo is now more reminiscent of a large, open-air mall, there are still pockets on the outer edges that recall those early days. It is in one of those pockets that Michele Varian has her eponymous design shop.

 

“I started my business from my loft in SoHo,” says Varian. “I worked as a fashion designer so I wanted to do something that I could self-finance.” Since Varian had fashion experience she had an understanding of textiles and she started with a business that was primarily wholesale. “I started doing these installation-type pieces. I was helping a friend who was getting married in their loft so I made massive cutout scrims that looked like trees and enormous mobiles with transparent and frosted plexiglass discs that reflected the light. I sold those in my first store, but I was mainly doing wholesale business.” Then after September 11, she decided to buck the current trend and open a retail store on “sleepy Crosby Street.”

 

Divine Design
Image by Ryan Liu

 

“I was one of the first retailers on Crosby Street.

I made all of the pillows in the back of the shop, and I hired all of the seamstresses I had worked with in fashion.” Though she had a shop, Varian was mostly still selling her merchandise wholesale to stores like Barney’s, Nieman Marcus, and ABC Carpet & Home. Then the 2008 recession happened and things changed. “My showroom reps in Texas were doing tremendous business for me, and in the beginning of 2008 they abruptly shuttered. They had started to feel the pain from the recession before it happened here.”

In the meantime, ABC asked her to do a pop-up shop, and they placed her in a great location on the ground floor. “Up until 2008, wholesale carried the business, and I was a neighborhood store with regulars, a place where people stopped in to take a break. After 2008, my retail business took off, primarily because I have always had accessible as well as aspirational design. I never wanted to be one of those snobby SoHo shops where the staff glares at customers who don’t have enough money. We always had a neighborhood kind of vibe here.”

 

Curated Collection –

Michele Varian in her Howard Street shop (Above). Below, leather-clad mirrors and tableware by DBO Home, in front of wallpaper designed by Varian and printed by Chambord in Hoboken New Jersey.

 

Curated CoLLeCtion Michele Varian
Image by Ryan Liu

 

Today, Varian’s Howard Street shop features an extensive, and colorful pillow library in the basement. She also manufactures her own lighting line in the shop and has a line of wallpaper that she designs, which is manufactured in Hoboken, New Jersey. She just started working with Two Trees in Brooklyn to create a furniture line, and designs jewelry and objets d’art, as well.

The shop also holds a beautifully curated selection of items from other artisanal makers like Bloomist, and DBO Home, which is arranged through Guesst, a system of “pop shares” that she created with fellow Detroit native Jay Norris. The system allows existing retailers and small, artisanal brands to connect. “Even doing a pop-up can be wildly expensive for a small brand.

 

Divine Design
Image by Ryan Liu

We are hoping that Guesst will help brick-and-mortar stores to survive and still evolve with the changing times.” DT

Editor’s Note: Michele Varian has moved to 400 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11217. At the present time, the physical store is closed due to COVID-19, however online ordering is available.

As seen in Downtown Fall 2019 

Categories
Design Featured

Arte International Launches Vanguard Collection of Wallcoverings Inspired by the Abstract Art of the 1950s and 60s

Expressionist from Arte International's Vanguard Collection of  art-inspired wallcoverings
Expressionist from Arte International’s Vanguard Collection of wallcoverings.

Arte International, a designer and manufacturer of luxury wallcoverings since 1981, has an in-house team of cutting-edge designers that create several new collections each year. The Belgium-based company has designs that  adorn the walls of residential and commercial projects around the world, with permanent showrooms in Paris, Culemborg, and London. While we are continually impressed with the level of sophistication, color palettes, and attention to detail exhibited in each collection, their newest collection launch, Vanguard, stopped us in our tracks. We were so taken with Vanguard that we discussed it with both Bill Calhoun, President of Arte US, and Frederik Decoopman, Art Director of Arte, NV. The results speak for themselves.

Downtown: What inspired Arte’s newest wallcovering collection, Vanguard?

Frederik Decoopman: Abstract art from the 1950s and 60s and the Italian design of the period—especially that of Gio Ponti, a playful modernist and the father of modern Italian design.

Downtown:  What drew you to abstract art from the 1950s and 60s?

FD: The middle of the 20th century was a brilliant era for art, architecture, design, and style. Abstract graphic patterns combined with playful and expressive colors brings something very special to the walls.

Downtown:  What about Italian art in particular most drew you, and how would you say it translated into your new collection?

Vanguard Collection from Arte International.
Tessella from the Vanguard Collection by Arte International.

FD: The interiors imagined by great Italian designers and artists remain incredibly modern, sophisticated, and creative. We tried to transcribe these dazzling contrasts of colors, exuberant shapes, and fine craftsmanship into this collection.

Downtown: How many patterns and colorways make up the collection? What are the wallcoverings made of?

FD: The collection has two plain variants and four patterned variants.

The two plain references— a horizontal and a vertical plissé—showcase a running motif that recalls folded paper.

“Plex” is the timeless variant from the collection. This contemporary, matte version is a non-woven wallcovering that has been irregularly creased with a pleat running vertically. The pleats are completely random and vary in intensity.

“Mira” is a finely pleated non-woven with the compact folds running horizontally. It looks like waves. The ‘crest of the wave’ is given a layer of shine using metal foil, resulting in a refined look.

The “Plex” and “Mira” colour palettes contain several calming, fairly neutral tints, but they also include some of the brand-new trend colours.

Plex from the Vanguard Collection of wallcoverings by Arte International.
Plex from the Vanguard Collection by Arte International.

“Modernist” consists of strips of stacked geometric shapes in contrasting colors, appearing almost as if patterns have been cut up and shifted around. It is finished with a thin layer of lacquer, which gives the entire surface a subtle gloss.

“Tessella” has a rhythmic tiled pattern with a combination of matte and metallic inks printed on the plain variant, Plex.

“Traverse” creates an intriguing play of vertical lines subtly interrupted by the vertical pleats of the plain variant, Plex. An accent layer of glossy metallic ink provides the ‘special effect’ in gold or silver.

“Expressionist”, printed on a high-tech mesh textile, invokes the notion of a modern painting and stimulates all the senses.

Downtown: If you could choose any of the patterns in one colorway, which would it be and where would you apply it?

FD: The real eye-catching design of the collection is undoubtedly the “expressionist”, a bold and beautiful modern painting-inspired pattern printed on a unique and experimental mesh material. These bright orange geometric shapes on a dark background will definitely make a statement.

Mira from Arte International
Mira from the Vanguard Collection by Arte International.

Downtown: We are absolutely blown away by Expressionist in all its colorways. It’s surprising how different it can look (and how tactile). What do you find special about this pattern in particular?

FD: The relief, the texture, the flexibility of the fabric—it is an unconventional high-tech material in an explosive colour palette that features daring combinations. It’s clearly for the bold! Modern meets homage.

Downtown: Mira appears to have a lot of depth. Where do you see this wallcovering working exceptionally well?

FD: The depth is brought by the pleating obviously, and especially by this metal foil which highlights the relief. This luxurious and subtle shine plays with light. The strength of this reference is that it can fit just about any space, from a bedroom in neutral and relaxing tones to the walls of a bar or a restaurant in a trendy and daring colorway.

Expressionist.

Downtown: Tessella seems to highlight imperfection in quite a beautiful manner. What was the goal with this particular pattern?

FD: Tessella invokes Greek and Roman Antiquity, where varied coloured blocks of glass, stone, or marble were pieced together to create a mosaic figure.

The whole thing is an optical challenge! Here you see depth, there relief…the pattern plays with the irregularity of the pleat which constitutes its base and magnifies it.

Downtown:
What can we expect from your next collection? Does Arte have any interest in exploring and finding inspiration in the art from other decades for a subsequent collection?

FD:  As everyone knows, the history of design and fashion is in eternal renewal. To be inspired by the treasures of the past and reinterpret them in our own way, to get that contemporary and trendy look, all of that is very exciting to us.

Downtown: Where can our readers find your wallcoverings?

FD: The best source for reviewing the Arte offering is www.arte-international.com From the site resources, resellers, showrooms, and sales agents info is available. Or, simply contact us at 866-943-2783 or email sales.usa@arte-international.com.

Traverse from the Vanguard Collection by Arte International.
Traverse from the Vanguard Collection by Arte International.
Categories
Lifestyle Living

Inspiring Wallpaper for Every Taste

growhousegrow

Chicago: Mexico City available at Grow House Grow 

Wallpaper has never stopped being chic! If you are looking to renew the decor of your home, business, office, hotel, or restaurant space in NYC, wallpaper can add just the flair you need. It can be used to decorate any room, spice up your kitchen or add color to a dull space. Just be sure to match your wallpaper to the furniture in the room and you are ready to go.

Whether you are looking for a quick, practical and innovative solution to change the look of a room or trying to add intricate detail to a plain room, you are sure to find something you love among the wallpaper selections DOWNTOWN has picked out for you.

We have chosen a little bit of everything with patterns including graphics, striped, textured, patterned, plain, floral, pastel and vibrant colors ranging from classic to modern taste. Here are some great ideas to change up your living space and leave them even cozier than they were before.

-Thais Morais

anewall

Watercolor Mural available at Anewall 

fermlivingshop

 Remix Wallpaper available at Clever Spaces

Ralph Lauren

 After Six Stripe – Gold available at Ralph Lauren Home

West Village

 West Village available at Innovations

aimee wilder

 Boating Wallpaper available at Aimee Wilder

Talavera

 Talavera available at Hygge & West

Brecia

Levante – Breccia available at Flat Vernacular

Anthropologie

Morning Glory  available at Anthropologie