Furniture exhibitions: from creativity to ancient traditions
You won’t surprise anyone with a design solution for the interior. Nevertheless, furniture art exhibitions held in the capitals of European countries amaze with their diversity and attract a large number of new ideas..
Paris designer landmarks
The Paris winter exhibition Maison, which took place in January this year&Objet 2013 featured over 3,000 exhibitors from around the world. Creative projects and incredible plans were presented at a non-exhibition program, including the textile exhibition Salon éditeurs, a show of young design talents Talents à la Carte, the creative workshop Scènes d’Intérieur, which includes the sights of Paris and its environs.
Paris winter
A lot of extravagant installations, «living» paintings, incredible room decorations with ball-shaped lamps and armchairs — all this was available for review. The great design masters of our time are a real landmark of Paris, so the presentation of the Nomade collection from the stunning imagination of Louis Vuitton was a real treat.
80,000 visitors were able to visit the wonderful exhibition, despite the snow-covered city and other sights of France. According to the director of Maison&Objet Public Relations Philippe Chaum, this forum was a milestone in the stage of expanding the sales network, finding suppliers and partners of creative products.
Wood know-how in New York
While the exhibition of modern furniture in New York took a new round in improving the production of wooden furniture products. Young, stylish designers planed chairs in front of the astonished audience. This is how the International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) exhibition was held at the Javits Center, the main trend of which was handmade furniture.
It became a kind of protest against the faceless production of mass products, filling the exhibition with new and at the same time eternal trends of the real quality of true art objects and sights of New York. Discreet, high quality and beautiful, like all New York attractions, furniture from many manufacturers, in particular from Brian Folk-Zimmermann, has been called «forward into the past» due to the recreation of traditional ways of processing wood surfaces.