Fresco, bas-relief, marquetry… wall decorations compete in creativity and return to extraordinary interiors.
After the great comeback of wallpaper, it remains to create the most beautiful walls with frescoes, bas-reliefs and other innovative plasters. Decorative techniques that are making a comeback. As always, before moving to private homes, the comeback took shape in public places, restaurants and hotels.
The appetite for wall murals was thus awakened by Florence Bamberger, who painted the walls and ceilings of Fogo in the 17th century.e district in Paris. He poetically reinterprets “Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe”, By Edouard Manet. Another restaurant, another atmosphere. At the capital’s legendary Lucas Carton restaurant on the Place de la Madeleine, we admire the painted decor with more classical references, created by Blundell & Therrien.
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Celina Blundell and Christophe Therrien, who founded their workshop in 2013, refurbish sets in institutions such as the Palace of Versailles, as well as creating bespoke works around the world. Using ancient techniques using pigments, mineral dyes and natural glues, the duo combine modern writing with old world charm.
Decor and architecture
Old charm also shines through the work of Willy Morlon, who won the top prize at the Design Parade Toulon Van Cleef & Arpels in June. Submitted for this competition by this young graduate of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels Placo Studiolo:interpretation of a Mediterranean palace whose walls are made of Placoplatre marquetry. A material that she knew how to sublimate to create a room with an elegant atmosphere made of pastel pinks, greens, blues…
“My original idea was to question mass construction and its future, but eventually the gesture took over and the manifesto softened in the face of aesthetics,” explains this decorating enthusiast. In a recent interview, he stated: There is a new interest in know-how. And then, having a work designed specifically for a space, integrated into the architecture, it brings a very strong emotional value.”
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Therefore, it is not surprising that since receiving his award, the offers have piled up, and that he is considering using his technique with metal, fabric, glass… And there is no shortage of opportunities to reappropriate materials in this field. or distract.
Inheritance and transmission
L’Atelier Prométée, a specialist in art casting, is also a great specialist in the design of earthenware tiles. The workshop can replicate anything, like creating murals or motifs in a very heritage spirit. Every piece of decor is handcrafted, like in this Pebble Beach, USA mansion, where the dining room walls are completely covered in earthenware, reminiscent of 18th-century California.e century. Olivia Cognet also chose ceramics. But his approach is more unique. He creates works on the spot that generate large scale puzzles. Set in Roger Capron’s former workshop in Vallauris, Alpes-Maritimes, it doesn’t hide its references to Picasso, Matisse or Cocteau…
Artists who at some point in their career have turned the wall into a creative medium. Furthermore, we owe Jean Cocteau the nickname Villa Tatue given to the Villa Santo Sospir in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat. Indeed, the artist, invited by owner Francine Weissweiler in 1950, circled around during his stay; “Idleness makes me tired, I dry up.” The walls are white and empty. He then asks Francine if she can paint Apollo’s head in charcoal above the living room fireplace. Then, in an absorbing creation, Cocteau will “emboss” all the walls and ceilings of the house with murals of very soft tones. For years he would return to Villa Santo Sospir to complete his work, undoubtedly his most personal.
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Volumes and surfaces
Luke Ganem, aka Lucas, also brings a new personality to the walls. But with a spatula… Lucas, who started out as a facade designer, discovered a passion for creativity and mortar. It was with this natural material that he made delicate trees emerge from one of the walls of Stephanie Coutas’s Parisian gallery, whose outline resembles olive trees. The magic that captivated the interior designer emerges from this park. Passionate about know-how and artistic crafts, these wall sculptures have grown in many residences.
As a result of these customized creations, more affordable alternatives are emerging. Architect Pierre Gonalon, for the brand CarréSol, transforms parquet to treat it as a luxurious slab. His Médaillon collection, which combines oak panels and marble inlays, brings a touch that is both whimsical and sophisticated. The terracotta tile, a collaboration between the Italian Fornace Brioni and the Norwegian architecture agency Snøhetta, goes from the floor to the wall. .
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Cork, which until now was limited to simple insulating panels, is showing itself. La Parqueterie Nouvelle spins it with embossed, graphic, hypnotic options… Encountering this avalanche of wall decorations, each one more amazing and captivating than the other, it’s better to hold on. the expression of Matisse in the mind, which opens up many horizons; “When you decorate one wall, you decorate others.”
Source: Le Figaro
