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Feb 28 2024
Surface
Design Dispatch
How a Turrell ended up at a Manhattan Quaker school, “The New Look” stumbles over couture history, and Disney superfans.
FIRST THIS
“What happens when inquiry is the point and there are no wrong answers? It’s disarming.”
HERE’S THE LATEST

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How a Turrell Ended Up at a Manhattan Quaker School

What’s Happening: One of the vaunted Light and Space artist’s trademark Skyspaces has found an unexpected home—at the top of a Quaker school in Manhattan.

The Download: Cushy, over-the-top amenities are standard fare at Manhattan’s elite private schools, but few can even dream of boasting museum-caliber contemporary art. Friends Seminary, an independent Quaker school in the borough’s Gramercy Park neighborhood, has entered these ranks thanks to one of James Turrell’s mesmeric Skyspaces that was recently installed on its sixth floor. Inspired by square-shaped Quaker meeting houses but with an oculus cut open to the sky, the rooms are bathed in atmospheric LEDs that gradually change color with time. Experiencing one verges on hallucinatory—visitors recline on teak benches surrounding the room’s perimeter and lose themselves in the light, much like how Turrell’s grandmother once instructed him to “go inside to greet the light” as he sat in Quaker silence.


The installation, titled Leading, came about after head of school Robert Lauder invited Turrell, a practicing Quaker, to create a site-specific artwork there. Though he now lives in Flagstaff, Turrell and Friends Seminary share a lengthy history—he used to live nearby and worship every Sunday at the 15th Street Meetinghouse, now a part of campus. When he toured the school, he noticed the unobstructed view from its rooftop would ideally suit a Skyspace. Building a two-story intervention on the towhouse’s top floors was a more ambitious project than Lauder had in mind, but Kliment Halsband Architects, the firm behind the school’s expansion and redevelopment, was up to the task. They convinced the city’s Department of Buildings to bypass the landmarked district’s stringent zoning regulations by designating the Skyspace as a “house of worship” tower, and construction got underway.

Now that Leading is complete, Friends Seminary students are free to take “field trips” there. Third graders sketch objects that come to mind as the illumination shifts; high schoolers studying graphic design explore “how color combinations impact how we perceive color,” one teacher explains. While the installation technically belongs to the school, the public can make reservations to visit on a first-come, first-serve basis on select Fridays, including a 40-minute viewing at sunset. With only a few spots available, entry may be difficult to secure at first. Art enthusiasts (and avid Instagrammers) go to great lengths to experience Turrell’s work, and Meeting at MoMA PS1, the only other Skyspace in New York City, continues to be one of the museum’s most-visited attractions.


In Their Own Words: “I never had exposure to anything like this kind of project or way of working as a young person and I can only imagine how it would have opened my eyes,” the artist Rashid Johnson, whose son attends 6th grade, told the New York Times. “It’s an opportunity to expose kids to how art functions in space and in real time outside of textbooks and talking heads.”

Surface Says: Hopefully no new high-rises peek through the oculus this time.

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What Else Is Happening?

Check-Circle_2xWeiss/Manfredi receives the 37th Louis I. Kahn Award for contributions to architecture.
Check-Circle_2x The French agency contracted to help the Royal Commission for AlUla is under audit.
Check-Circle_2x Mati Diop wins big at the Berlin Film Festival for her film about looted Benin artifacts.
Check-Circle_2x Plans for Hudson Yards Phase Two may involve building a new Wynn Resorts casino.
Check-Circle_2x Adidas initiates another sale of leftover Yeezy sneakers following its breakup with Ye.


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STUDIO VISIT

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To Jesse Schlesinger, Nature Is the Greatest Teacher

After training extensively in Japan with seasoned artisans and craftspeople, the second-generation carpenter and student of Paul Discoe has never been more dialed into the wisdom about growth, erosion, and transformation embedded in the outdoors. A showcase at Frieze L.A. with Anthony Meier shows how the San Francisco artist has learned to follow his intuition and imbue objects with the spirit of their place and maker.

HOTEL

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Palau Fugit’s Contemporary Twist on a Palatial Stay

El Equipo Creativo was unafraid to flip the script on restoring a centuries-old palace in Girona, Spain. Instead of filling the 18th-century Palau Fugit with ancient antiques, the Barcelona interiors firm brought an abundance of color and contemporary art, collectible literature, and eye-catching design to the former Casa Heras de Puig. The property is divided into two parts: El Palauet and El Pavelló. The latter, a modern secondary building, houses the art-and color-filled guest rooms that overlook the Girona cityscape. In El Palauet, the old palace, an abstract landscape mural painted by Joana Santamans captivates diners at the property’s Casa Heras restaurant, which serves Mediterranean fare from Chef César Calfa. Next door, a moody library is filled with tomes that chronicle the works of creatives from Dalì to Chanel.

FASHION

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“The New Look” Stumbles Over Couture History

While watching “The New Look”, the recently debuted series by Todd Keller, one quickly learns that the atrocities of World War II also played out in Paris’s haute couture fashion houses. The Apple+ series focuses largely on Coco Chanel (played by Juliette Binoche) and Christian Dior (Ben Mendelsohn) as rival couture designers who found themselves navigating the same tragic wartime quandary—both fashion designers had family members imprisoned by Nazis—and the hurdles they jumped through to try to get them back while also saving their own houses.

The show’s title draws from Dior’s debut 1947 collection, which Harper’s Bazaar editor-in-chief Carmel Snow (Glenn Close) famously called the New Look. Though it sparked backlash at the time, the collection ended up revolutionizing women’s fashion and re-established Paris as a nexus of the industry after World War II. In a Time cover story, Dior explained that he wanted to turn women into “flowers with soft shoulders” after long stretches of war with “soldier-women with shoulders like boxers.” The show also doesn’t overlook Coco Chanel’s thorny involvement with the Nazis, the extent of which has been contested by biographers, though some critics took issue with the show treating such weighty subject matter with “kid gloves”—and portraying couture struggles as “more debilitating” than the atrocities faced by European Jews.

STORE

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Audo Brings Copenhagen-Cool to Tokyo

It’s been a momentous year for Audo Copenhagen. First, brand director Joachim Kornbek Engell-Hansen stewarded a pivot from the company’s origins as Menu to Audo following the acquisition of by Lassen and Design Holding. Now, the band is putting down roots in Tokyo with a new showroom in the vibrant neighborhood of Roppongi. Warm wood tones and time-tested classics—such as Flemming Lassen’s winged Ingeborg lounge chair in sherpa, and Norm Architects’ linen-shaded Hashira pendant—impart a distinctly Japandi touch to the space.

THE LIST

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Member Spotlight: Original BTC

Original BTC was founded in 1990 by Peter Bowles. Breaking convention, Bowles was the first designer to use bone china in lighting, paving the way for his pioneering investment in British manufacturing. Original BTC has since grown but remains committed to using the best quality raw materials to their utmost capability, and paying great attention to concept and form.

Surface Says: The lighting across Original BTC’s collections celebrate British craftsmanship. From nautical Ship’s Well Glass lights to the factory-inspired Titan Pendant fixtures, the brand’s products carry on a tradition of well-machined style.

AND FINALLY

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Today’s Attractive Distractions

Creating grown-up Disney superfans has been the corporation’s plan all along.

After laying off 90 percent of its staff, the disruptive mission of Thinx is waning.

AT&T reimburses customers a measly $5 after last week’s massive network outage.

Grimes declares that Google’s Gemini is the decade’s “most impactful art project.”

               


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