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Aug 7 2024
Surface
Design Dispatch
Philippe Petit isn’t done walking the wires, Chelsea Ryoko Wong finds solace in unknown places, and Yelp culture.
FIRST THIS
“I can’t imagine my job without sketching.”
HERE’S THE LATEST

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Philippe Petit Isn’t Done Walking the Wires

What’s Happening: The high-wire artist who became a global sensation after walking between the World Trade Center’s hulking twin towers is putting on a performance to commemorate the stunt’s 50th anniversary.

The Download: In 1974, a sprightly Frenchman made global headlines and captivated gawking New Yorkers when he walked a high wire suspended between the World Trade Center’s twin towers, a tiny dot teetering some 1,350 feet in the air. Though the death-defying stunt got Philippe Petit arrested, he quickly became a global fascination. (The feat took on a poignant tone when the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, destroyed the towers.) Since then, a best-selling novel, Oscar-winning documentary, and children’s book have been published about his daredevil act. And to celebrate its anniversary, Petit, now 74, is staging a never-before-seen performance called Towering!! at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Upper Manhattan.


Petit is intimately familiar with the cathedral—he has been an artist in residence there since 1980, when its then-dean granted him the title to prevent police from arresting him yet again for another illicit high-wire stunt. Though he plans to walk a 20-foot-high wire inside, there will be more to Towering!! than tightropes. Petit created 19 scenes evocative of the legend surrounding his 1974 walk, and there will also be a performance by the musician Sting, his close friend. Apropos of the religious setting, he’ll also “confess” and set the record straight about some half-truths that he embellished about his feat. Most importantly, though, he wants onlookers to get the up-close-and-personal look that eluded them for so long, when they gazed upward and tried to figure out what exactly was motivating the small dot in the sky to walk on air.


In Their Own Words: “You don’t see my face, you don’t see my expression, you don’t see my hands, you don’t see my feet,” Petit told the New York Times. “I have been a dot in the sky in New York. It’s a nice thing for New Yorkers to have a vision of the twin towers walk where you can see what I’m doing—‘Oh, my god, he’s smiling.’”

Surface Says: Talk about a highwire act.

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What Else Is Happening?

Check-Circle_2x Remedy Place will bring its swanky social wellness club concept to SoHo in September.
Check-Circle_2x X will close its San Francisco headquarters and relocate its workforce to San Jose.
Check-Circle_2x SHoP and OSD become the latest firms to reinvigorate Governors Island’s infrastructure.
Check-Circle_2x Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer will curate the 2026 Whitney Museum Biennial.
Check-Circle_2x Heatherwick Studio will bring an ethereal hourglass-shaped retail development to Seoul.


Have a news story our readers need to see? Write to our editors.

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STORE

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Halleroed Crafts an Airy Saint-Germain Flagship for L’Uniform Paris

In its debut boutique, tucked along the Seine in Paris’s Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood, L’Uniform captures the ease and utility of Japandi style. Interiors by Swedish firm Halleroed combine touches like Noguchi pendant lighting and Nakashima chairs, with a spirit of easy Scandinavian minimalism. The firm’s approach reflects that of L’Uniform: a canvas accessories brand founded by Jeanne Signoles, who sought to realize practical silhouettes suited to everyday life in heritage-quality materials like cotton canvas and leather.

ARTIST STATEMENT

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Chelsea Ryoko Wong Finds Solace in Unknown Places

A period of existential dread compelled the San Francisco painter to travel across North Africa, where adventures in Tunisian bazaars and tea houses reset her perspective to find beauty in the mundane, bring order to chaos, and translate it all to her theatrical canvases.

Here, we ask an artist to frame the essential details behind a recent work.

Bio: Chelsea Ryoko Wong, 38, San Francisco.

Title of work: A Work That Outlives Me (2024).

Where to see it: Jessica Silverman, San Francisco, until September 7.

What was on your mind at the time: I had just gotten back from Tunisia and was reflecting on my time there; the vibrancy of the souks, the sounds, the scents and atmosphere in the air. Tunis, the capital, is an interesting place. Situated in North Africa and on the Mediterranean Sea, it’s a melting pot of cultures that felt elusive and mysterious. I found the city to be an enticingly laid-back visual and cerebral feast.

SPATIAL AWARENESS

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Pophouse Makes Connections in the Motor City

It’s hard to imagine a more apt partner than Pophouse to realize the new Detroit office for the automotive practice of international consulting firm Roland Berger. The interiors studio harnessed its built-environment expertise, hospitality-driven point of view, and local roots to create a “modern-day tailored workplace,” in the words of senior interior designer Pamela Janisse, who prioritized “intuitive wayfinding,” as well as connection, ease, and comfort. Connection was a literal and figurative directive for the team, whose biggest challenge was merging two adjacent historic brick buildings into a cohesive and contemporary place of being for Roland Berger’s team and clients.

THE LIST

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Member Spotlight: Phillip Jividen

Phillip Jividen’s works are about creating timeless pieces that feel familiar yet unexpected. Using intuitive forms that are a balance between practicality and playfulness, his design process is an exploration of material and composition as a means to create objects that instills a sense of permanence.

Surface Says: Jividen achieves the unlikely by bringing texture, warmth, and personality to stone, wood, glass, and aluminum through his explorations of form and composition.

AND FINALLY

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Today’s Attractive Distractions

Yelp culture has irrevocably indulged our so-called “desire to be huge bitches.”

A distinct walloping, thwacking sound has permeated modern pop and hip-hop.

First gentleman Doug Emhoff has emerged as TikTok’s crush of the month.

Gap, Abercrombie, J. Crew: we’re living in the mall brand renaissance.

               


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