SINGAPORE – Most exhibitions have barriers to prevent visitors from touching the items on exhibit.
But at No Taste For Bad Taste, so Starck, so Bouroullec… so le French Design, visitors are welcome to touch, sit and use the furniture pieces as they are intended.
The exhibition, which celebrates French design, is part of the annual Voilah! France Singapore Festival, which celebrates all things French. It runs till Nov 16 at the National Design Centre.
Created by French design association le French Design by VIA, the exhibition debuted in Milan in 2017 and has since travelled tomore than 10 cities. Singapore is the exhibition's only South-east Asian stop and it will be heading to Taiwan in March next year.
A total of 40 iconic French design masterpieces designed by notable names such as Philippe Stark, Jean-Paul Gaultier and Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, are on showcase.
These are selected by a team of 40 celebrated French and international figures in the design scene, including French designers Christian Liaigre and Matali Crasset.
At the media preview last Friday (Oct 11), Mr Jean-Paul Bath, 59, chief executive of le French Design by VIA, says: "Good design is universal. It surpasses language and cultural differences and can be appreciated no matter the content. French design has found a place for itself here in Singapore and French design brands such as Pierre Frey and Ligne Roset have been increasingly well received in recent years."
The 40 objects are housed in 10 tents, each with a poetic scenography done by French designer Jean-Charles de Castelbajac. Each tent represents a different value of French design, such as heritage, cultural openness and sustainable innovation.
A red sofa called Ploum, designed by brothers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec for Ligne Roset, is a favourite among visitors.
Mr Bath says the couch is so comfortable, when it was displayed at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) in New York, visitors once fell asleep in it and the staff had to wake them up at closing time.
The sofa is housed in the Art de Vivre tent, which celebrates the French way of life.
Singaporean industrial designer Nathan Yong's work for Ligne Roset is also on display.
The Break stool, which is designed to look like it is about to break, was picked up by the label in 2008. The stool, along with a Pebble coffee table, propelled Yong's career internationally.
The 48-year-old says: "French design is naughty and fresh with a small dose of humour that teases but does it so effortlessly. That is part of who I am as a Singaporean too."
Three exhibition highlights
1. PLOUM SOFA[hhmc]
French brothers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec designed the Ploum sofa for French furniture brand Ligne Roset in 2011. Its design is asymmetrical, with the right-hand seat slightly deeper than the left-hand, which enables the user toRead More – Source