Alexander Girard?s forgotten textile patterns find new life as rugs
Too pretty to step on Alexander Girard was a man of many design talents. Trained as an architect, he practiced across disciplines?making furniture, designing interiors, patterning wallpapers.
Girard is perhaps best known for his work as Herman Miller?s head of textiles, a title he carried from 1952 to 1973. During that time, Girard designed hundreds of patterns, each with a refined eye toward pattern and geometry.
Maharam
Original artwork for ?Step? textile.
Five of those patterns are now being reissued as rugs by the textile company Maharam, and they include some long-forgotten favorites. Working with Girard?s grandchildren, Maharam?s team uncovered the patterns during a trip to the Cooper Hewitt Design Museum a couple of years back.
Maharam
?Step?.
Maharam
?Plus?.
Buried in the archive were five gloriously modern textiles?Check, Circles, Edges, Plus, and Steps. Each of the fabrics has a colorful pattern that feel just as on point today as they did when he created them more than 50 years ago.
Maharam
?Check?.
Maharam
?Check?.
Girard designed the patterns for different purposes. Plus and Step were originally created in 1960 as printed napkins for a restaurant in the Time-Life Building in New York City, while Check was a pattern made in 1956 for Georg Jensen?s table setting. Circles, from 1952, and Edges, from 1962, were taken...
-------------------------------- |
Brinkworth suspends wooden skateboarding bowl inside San Francisco's Supreme store |
|
Kitchen Island with Stove Design Ideas & Inspirations
06-05-2024 08:15 - (
architecture )
Casa Borgo Ventidue: Discovering Motovun’s Historic Charm
06-05-2024 07:51 - (
architecture )