EN APARTÉ WITH RELAX FACTORY 1

Discover Jean-Baptiste Moutte, the founder of Relax Factory, through his furniture tapestry workshop as well as his history and his know-how in a meeting... en aparté.

Relax Factory
16 rue Fort Notre Dame
13007 Marseille

@relax_factory

MARGAUX KELLER

In 2019, Margaux Keller founded her own publishing house Margaux Keller Collections, in association with Anaïs Fretigny. A publishing house that offers series of furniture and objects in limited edition, made locally by artisans with exceptional skills.

After training at Olivier de Serres, she joined the Ecole Boulle in Paris, from which she graduated in 2010 with honors. Margaux Keller then trained at the Philippe Starck agency, alongside Eugeni Quitllet. In 2011, she was selected to be part of the design team of Fabrica, the Benetton group’s communication research center. But strong of her attachment to her native city, Marseille, she feels the call of the South. And decided in 2012 to create her own global design agency there, developing a wide range of partnerships with Yves Saint-Laurent Beauté, Bibelo, Roche Bobois, Cartier, Made.com, La Redoute Intérieurs, Habitat, SIA Home Fashion and La Monnaie de Paris. In 2019, she founded her own publishing house Margaux Keller Collections, in association with Anaïs Fretigny. A publishing house that offers series of furniture and objects in limited edition, made locally by artisans with exceptional skills.

Margaux proposes a committed design: “I feel today the need to show and demonstrate that we can think of design differently, on a more reasoned scale, by paying more attention to the origin and manufacture of our objects. Our local territory reveals treasures and know-how that are being lost. It is our duty as designers to revalorize them and to prove that such a circuit is not only still possible, but that it is much richer, more qualitative and therefore sustainable.

Bringing together emotion, elegance and poetry, Margaux Keller Collections values ancestral craftsmanship in its first three collections: Vue Mer, Mistral Noir and Pin Parasol. Today, she presents in our Parisian ARCHIK House her new collection “Paradis perdus”, proposing to revisit our affective and emotional link to the objects that surround us. A journey through codes and traditions, to think of objects as a madeleine of Proust.

To be discovered from March 22, 2021 to June 22, 2021 in our Parisian ARCHIK House.

INFORMATIONS PRATIQUES

Le studio Margaux Keller
74 rue Saint-Jacques
13006 Marseille

margauxkellercollections.com

Découvrez notre exposition

RED ÉDITION

RED Édition is a Parisian brand created in 2006 by Cyril Laborbe. Highlighting the know-how of artisans in Vietnam or Italy, their timeless creations blend 50' character and contemporary writing through pieces that have something to say.

A family history, which first takes shape in Vietnam through an ancestral lacquer business. The founder designed the first collection bathed in his Asian culture and European influences. Highlighting the know-how of craftsmen in Vietnam or Italy, their timeless creations blend 50′ character and contemporary writing through pieces that have something to tell. RED Édition is all about materials, deep colors, architectural lines and handcrafted wood and lacquer work. The brand combines classic elegance, contemporary inspiration and glamour without ever compromising on comfort.

Their collection is presented in the RED apartment in the heart of the Marais. The classic architecture of the place is counterbalanced by bold colors and graphic patterns, a clever mix that diffuses an atmosphere as intimate as elegant.

Tailor-made creations, collaborations with architects for limited editions – such as the James Armchair created with Romain Costa or the Premier Acte collection designed with the talented designer Tristan Auer /// Wilson Associates, and dressed by Lelièvre Paris – the diversity of projects leads RED Édition to work all over the world. To design and create hotels or restaurants, such as L’Occitane Café by Pierre Hermé in Tokyo, the Scribe Hotel in Paris, or even professional spaces for L’Oréal… and to push the expression of their singularity even further.

A particular lesson in style.

A word from the founder, Cyril Laborbe:

“I love design and craftsmanship, I am sensitive to the nobility of manual work. Italy and Vietnam have always seduced me by the range of their talents.

Since 2006, when RED Edition was created, I have been committed to creating simple, beautiful, colorful and design furniture. And to work as I like: surrounded, assisted, motivated, inspired by friends, great designers, talents of all kinds … this is what makes the uniqueness and richness of Red Edition. Loving the trend but thinking of the practical, thinking our furniture for your interiors, staying close to your desires, staying friendly: always have in mind that Red Edition is your brand.

Imagining our furniture in Paris, manufacturing it in Milan, selling it in Hong Kong, being acclaimed in Copenhagen makes me happy!

INFORMATIONS PRATIQUES

The RED apartment
The French art of living
38 rue de Blancs Manteaux
75004 Paris

rededition.com

From March 18, 2021 to the end of June 2021
at the Maison ARCHIK Marseille

Discover our exhibition

GALERIE DU COTÉ

Five minutes from the centre of Biarritz, this confidential address is both a gallery and a publishing house with creativity and craftsmanship as its watchwords.

Marc-Alexandre Ducoté, Founder

Éditions du Coté is a publishing house for furniture and art objects founded in 2016. What makes it special? Its roots in the Pays Basque, its approach, closer to that of a gallery, and its rather personal universe, far from the trends of the design world. Marc-Alexandre’s aim is to enable local craftsmen, who possess remarkable know-how, to work with artists from a dreamlike world. Coming from the world of fashion, he was tired of this ephemeral and frantic world and wanted to create a project that valued time, the territory and people. Thus, a collection can take more than a year to develop, but it doesn’t matter, the intention being more the pleasure of creation than the constraint of marketing. Each collection is designed as a limited edition, distinguishing the uniqueness of each creation, developing a local economy and reducing the ecological impact of each project. Importance is given to long-term themes, evoking the Landes. Thus “Artzain” – “Shepherd” in Basque – refers to the land, while “Ondulation” is more reminiscent of the ocean. The Ucka artist Ludovic Ilolo, for example, collaborated with Daniel Lizarralde, a furniture restorer, and Florent Canini, a metalworker, to design Ekano (image on the left), an object that dances between sculpture and furniture. Beautiful and useful.

Elodie Maentler, Interior designer

Elodie and Marc-Alexandre form a duo, both in the city and in the office. As an interior designer, Elodie runs her own agency Maentler Architectes d’Intérieur. And quite naturally, a synergy was created with Marc-Alexandre’s publishing house, with Elodie proposing to her clients to integrate pieces into her projects. The idea of a shared space emerged, a space dedicated to creation: the Galerie du coté was born, a confidential place that can be visited by appointment or during summer exhibitions.

At the crossroads of design, art and craft, the gallery presents both pieces from the publishing house and emerging local artists, bearing the same values of uniqueness, sustainability and local manufacturing. “We select each piece together,” explains Elodie.

This space is the result of the renovation of an architect’s house dating from 1952, in which a great deal of streamlining was necessary in order to bring the activity of a gallery to life through the past of the place. Plural in essence, this living space brings together reading groups, exhibitions, dinners, curious people and creative personalities… an intention shared in our Archik Houses!

PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Galerie du Coté

15 allée des Trois Fontaines 64200 Biarritz
Thursday and Friday
10am – 12pm / 3pm – 6pm
By appointment from Monday to Wednesday

@editionsducote @galerieducote

Photographer : © Claudia Lederer

IN PRIVATE with the Founders of ARCHIK

(Re)discover the ARCHIK spirit with Amandine and Sébastien in our ARCHIK Paris House.

filmmaker ⓒThibaut Koralewski

KANN DESIGN

Kann Design is a family story, that of the pieces of furniture, of the hands that shape them, of the personalities that design them.

Founded in Lebanon in 1958 by Kanaan, a renowned carpenter and father of Houssam Kanaan – founder of KANN Design, the Kanaan workshop is the pillar of the KANN Design project.

Having been immersed in furniture since his childhood, Houssam draws inspiration from and relies on the expertise and know-how of the experienced craftsmen who make up the brand’s heritage. Cabinetmakers, welders, upholsterers, painters and canners, most of whom have been with the company since its inception, work passionately, hand in hand, with a concern for creativity, quality and a deep sense of detail.

With this collective of craftsmen, KANN edits and concretizes the ideas and drawings of designers by making timeless furniture, technically irreproachable, and with absolute comfort.

With the taste for beautiful things, defended since its beginnings, KANN Design signs total and made-to-measure realizations, thought in the slightest details and in an always more sustainable approach.

Houssam is joined by his wife Meghedi and Rudy, photographer and childhood friend, on the Studio KANN which gives birth to a collection of furniture inspired by the 50’s with a strong personality and signed KANN Design.

The former showroom was then transformed into the KANN Residence café (28 rue des Vinaigriers, Paris 10). The opportunity to experience KANN Design furniture over a coffee selected by Coutume – coffee for Houssam is his Proust’s madeleine.

Sharing common values, a sensitivity for craftsmanship and love of design, we will have the pleasure to make you discover KANN Design furniture in our Parisian ARCHIK House. We are particularly fond of the Mid Canvas bench in green Kvadrat fabric, the Ti low armchair in walnut and the Split folding screen in walnut, all of which enhance the interior of our house.

ON AIME

Their know-how and the timelessness of the lines of their furniture.

INFORMATIONS PRATIQUES

Kann Design
51 rue de Vinaigriers
75010 Paris

kanndesign.com

ALISON THIRION

From the preparatory drawing to the volume, Alison Thirion plays with perceptions, giving shape to graphic and sculptural ceramics, made one by one by hand and in small series.

According to her collections, she kneads the clay like references to the past. Music, literature or architecture: the arts are everywhere. They infuse her work and inscribe her pieces in a relative timelessness. Let’s meet in the heart of her workshop in the Paris region, where the head thinks, the hand transforms, the clay cooks and the chemistry works.

E-O Alison, could you tell us about your career? How did clay and volume come into your life?

A-T Although my initial training was far from arts and crafts (editor’s note: she worked as an advertising executive for several years), I have always cultivated a creative universe punctuated by experimentation, photography, painting… with drawing as a common thread. It was during a plastic expression class, where we were working on form and abstraction, that I felt like experimenting with volume. At that time I was going in circles in my artistic practice, I felt the need to evolve in a different way towards form and clay appeared as an obvious choice. After some leisure classes, my decision was made, ceramics took all the space, I could only think of it! So I started a reconversion with Grégoire Scalabre who trained me in throwing, and who remains my reference today. Drawing is still there, but in a different form!

What is your relationship with your workshop? How does it influence the way you work?

When I started ceramics, I left Paris and moved to a small village 50km from Paris, in the heart of the Rambouillet forest. I am surrounded by nature so it is very peaceful and perfect to concentrate. At the beginning, my studio was in a small corner of the house but I finally invested the whole living room to work… That’s how influential it was! I would sometimes get up at night to untwist or at dawn to shoot. I no longer count the days and weeks that never ended! Today things are organised differently. I still feel at home there, even if we are separated by several kilometres. I have my habits, my landmarks, it’s my refuge. It’s where everything starts. The studio evolves with me, I often move things around so that it is always the most adapted to my needs.

Your creations seem to be situated between tradition and contemporaneity. What do you want to convey through them? A certain idea of timelessness?

Above all, I try to make singular, balanced, offbeat objects that seem to have always been around, but at the same time that nobody has ever made. I like my ceramics to be pure in form and to keep the vibrancy of the handmade. My rather limited knowledge of ceramics (I’ve caught up a bit since then!) has allowed me to be very free in my creation. I took the time to make personal things, which resemble me. I therefore try to convey through them the demands of the material, its strength and fragility, but also the plurality it allows and its timelessness indeed…

All your pieces are produced in small series, and obviously by hand: a technical constraint or a real conviction?

I learned to turn because I wanted to make, produce, touch. I need this contact with the material and I spend a lot of time making my pieces. And then I like the uniqueness that it gives them. In any case, I have a small workshop and a small kiln, which do not allow me to produce a lot of pieces… for the moment anyway!

Through the “Cocteau” or “La Muralla Roja” collections, we can feel the importance of the past and its imprint, the desire to transmit or perpetuate a cultural heritage. What is your relationship with history?

I work a lot before the creation of a piece. Drawing, architecture and all forms of art are inexhaustible sources of inspiration. I love ceramics, of course, but in the end it is not this discipline that inspires my pieces the most. I often detach myself from it to draw inspiration from elsewhere. These two collections are linked to my personal history. I have been drawing since I was a child and Cocteau is an artist whose boldness and plurality I admire. His approach to fullness and emptiness, the symmetry of his bodies and the poetry of his line combine perfectly with porcelain. As for the Muralla Roja, it is a nod to my interest in architecture and my Spanish origins. More than a vase or a cup, my pieces are a part of me, of my personality that I transmit through them.

With your Muralla collection, you are moving away from monochrome for the first time and introducing colour into your work. How did you feel about this chromatic audacity?

I must admit that colour scares me as much as it fascinates me. It is powerful, complex and in my opinion must bring something to the piece. If it’s just decorative, I’m not really interested. I prefer the natural colour of the earth, which is often perfect. Here the blue refers to the Mediterranean, the shades of light and shadow of the Muralla Roja, the sky. Sometimes there is a nod to Majorelle or Greece, why not! I like everyone to make the story their own.

How did you choose to translate the constructivist aesthetic of this post-modernist masterpiece into this collection?

I wanted the object to be inspired by and use the codes of Ricardo Bofill’s architecture, without simply reproducing it. The numerous staircases are found in the cut-outs of the rooms, and the installation of cubes allows us to find the lines. The photo and the staging of my pieces are an integral part of the object. It helps me to convey their history and to integrate them into a world.

What does the city mean to you?

The city inspires me, especially its architecture. I like to borrow details from it. I’m more comfortable with the idea of taking on a subject that has already been used by man; art and architecture, for example, are themes that feed my work. Nature, on the other hand, is so perfect that it has something sacred about it. I don’t dare to venture into it.

How important is the contact with the material for you?

When I go from drawing to clay, I need all my senses. It starts with the kneading of the clay, its humidity, its firmness, its smell, its colour… It’s an experience every time. I couldn’t do without it. I have complex pieces to make. Unconsciously I think that I extend the moment of contact with the material, the shaping during which I cut, scrape, polish the raw clay. This is my favourite moment.

Drawing is very important in your work. But do you leave room for improvisation?

Unfortunately not. It’s something I’d like to know how to do, to be more spontaneous. But the preliminary work and the drawing are stages that I don’t know how to do without yet. I need to collect words, images, then make sketches and study the proportions before I start. By the time I get to the realization, the piece is already well done, I just have to test its volumes.

Manual creation is often a solitary exercise that allows you to refocus on the essential. But would you like to be surrounded by others to create? Have you collaborated with other designers?

I like being alone in the studio. It wasn’t always the case. It took me a while to get used to it because I liked sharing my work space. Beyond the practical aspect, it’s also another energy. We can exchange ideas, give each other advice, simply chat. Now that I’m on my own, collaborations are starting to happen. There is a project with the ceramist Emmanuelle Roule which is still dormant but which I hope will soon see the light of day. There is also a collaboration with Pia Van Peteghem which will be exhibited during the Journées de la Céramique in the Saint Sulpice district in Paris (27 to 30 June 2019).

What will be the theme of your next collection?

I have a lot of desires and projects that are waiting to see the light of day, some of them for a long time. It’s important for me to take the time. I have notebooks and inspiration boards that are starting to multiply. I let the ideas mature. This allows me to sort out the ideas because there are many, but they are not always good! In the short term, I would like to develop the Intervalle collection, which is close to my heart, made up of strong and singular pieces that are a little bit outside the world of tableware, notably with a lamp. I would also like to explore bare earth more. To be continued…

Any favourite addresses in Paris?

The Guimet Museum: it’s a superb source of inspiration and the modernity of some of the pieces, even though they are centuries old, is really surprising. The Ateliers de la Manufacture de Sèvres is also worth a visit if you like ceramics and workshops. Otherwise, I love the Yvon Lambert bookshop, rue des Filles du Calvaire, and the À Rebours shop for its sharp selection. I haven’t wandered around Paris for a long time, and it makes me want to.

PRATICAL INFORMATION

Credits ©2020 Text – Emmanuelle Oddo
Photos – Gaëtane Girard & Tiphaine Caro
Article from the Revue n°l selon ARCHIK