Showing posts with label christopher farr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christopher farr. Show all posts

a conversation with Christopher Farr

....
"A slow and deliberate process that allowed for an honest and inimitable collection that speaks entirely of their integrity throughout the stages of selection, translation and manufacturing."


"The question as ever is one of excellence and quality as opposed to medocrity and plagiarism these forces battle it out and occasionally you see something breathtaking."




748 N. La Cienega Boulevard Los Angeles...

Last week, I spent the afternoon absorbed in the works of
Christopher Farr's Omega Group Collection. Tucked away down a small walkway is Christopher Farr's showroom, two floors of color, historical stories, fabrics samples, and inspiration in every room. Christopher Farr's work inspires so many designers for obvious reasons: pure beauty and a commitment to historical and contemporary artistic discoveries.

He has collaborated with design icons such as Ilse Crawford, John Pawson, Allegra Hicks, Gunta Stolz, and Gary Hume, to name only a few. I'm honored to have had this conversation with him, and hope that the future will lead to more conversations with him about his various styles of workings, and mediums.


Thank you Christopher, Christina, and Joe..... - David John







a detail shot of one of the rugs....




Christopher Farr selects a series of existing designs by the Omega Group, and brings them back to life in a series of 5 exceptional rug creations, based on the designs of Roger Fry, Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant and other key members of the Omega Workshop and Bloomsbury collective from 1912-1919.

Christopher Farr has chosen to work with some of the most beautiful and challenging of the Omega designs. This is testimony to the Omega artists’ design abilities in that they were able to create works of art that also function perfectly as rugs."

"The Omega Workshop were
a laboratory of design ideas, creating a range of objects for the home, from rugs and linens to ceramics, furniture and clothing ­ all boldly coloured with dynamic abstract patterns."






upstairs at the showroom...
until Nov 19, 2011



Who are the OMEGA Workshop, and why is their work relevant today?


Christopher Farr: The Omega Workshop was an experiment conducted by the founder Roger Fry. An important aspect was practical in that it enabled the well educated but cash poor artists to earn a living with as little compromise and as much enjoyment as possible. Omega is relevant today in terms of it's spirit and spontaneity as opposed to the contrived cleverness of so much of the output of today's art and design practitioners.


Did you grow up in London? Do you feel that British Design is different from American Design?

Farr: Yes I'm a Londoner by birth and have lived there most of my life. I relate to European design more as I know it better.The difference for me is that product design is celebrated much more in Europe, in the US it seems that interior designers are lauded and to a lesser extent architects. If you go back to the fifties and sixties I would say American designers and architects were easily as influential and perhaps more famous than their European counter parts.


How you are able to translate images to rugs? What are the obstacles and difficulties that arise?

Farr: The success of making historic designs is dependent on our understanding of the essence of the art you're working with. The process is basically a series of questions and sampling till it feels close to the spirit of the artist. I try to imagine myself in dialogue with the artist. It's a slow and painstaking business but deeply satisfying.


You have an ability to control, energize, and define color. Would you call yourself a colorist? Any artists who use color you look to as inspiration?

I find any self definition limiting so no I'm not a colorist as such. I try to stay as open as possible when I'm drawing as if I'm a kid playing with a cardboard box. As for artists well the usual suspects... Joseph Albers, Mark Rothko, Pierre Bonnard, Henri Matisse Sonia Delaunay .....






the studio wall of color! colors fading & communicating.....



You've had a history of incredible collaborations. What does collaborating mean to you? Any specific one that you are especially proud?

Collaborating means to surrender ones slavery to ego in order to listen and understand another artists process. I'm proud of all the collaborations, and if I had to pick standouts it would be Kate Blee of the living artists and Gunta Stolzl of the dead ones.


In your art studio, what do you find yourself creating? What mediums seduce you?


Black ink drawings by the hundred and painting both acrylic and oil. I also play with tape.


How has the rug business changed in time from when you began?


The contemporary rug business has moved from almost zero when I started in 1984 to a status of dominance - you only have to look at the editorial and advertising then and now to see how dramatic it has been. The question as ever is one of excellence and quality as opposed to medocrity and plagiarism these forces battle it out and occasionally you see something breathtaking.





samples of Christopher Farr cloth....



Christopher Farr has been at the spearhead of contemporary rug design for over twenty years. Together with his business partner Matthew Bourne, they were the catalyst that revolutionised contemporary rug design. Starting with a small shop in a leafy area of north London, a stone's throw from Primrose Hill, this one time painter, trained at the Slade School, wrought a vision that combined the art of the times with a different form. From cool minimalism to bold neo-expressionism influenced by the artists Ryman, Albers and Martin, his medium was no longer oil on canvas, but wool and dye, spun and woven by hand into objects that were more than mere floor coverings. They were themselves works of art.




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Christopher Farr :
new cloth
, breakwater


"Breakwater (structure),
a structure for protecting a beach or harbour"











Ah, Christopher Farr can do no wrong. His work continues to melt my mind with colors, and strikes of form that dance on the surface! .... I'm crazy bummed I missed his art show last week here in Los Angeles downtown.... But Christina, was kind enough to send me some images of some of his new designs that are in the works....

Above is a new design they have been working on for C L O T H,
the fabric collection designed by Christopher Farr in association with business partners Matthew Bourne and Michal Silver. This design is still a prototype, and not in production...

This particular print is called BREAKWATER
.

"Breakwaters are structures constructed on coasts as part of coastal defence or to protect an anchorage from the effects of weather and longshore drift."





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Looking at these new designs by Christopher Farr, I was reminded of Richard Long's new works, at the newly designed Sperone Westwater (Norman Foster) in New York...


"Works using raw materials
and my human scale in the reality of landscapes.
"











"In the nature of things: Art about mobility, lightness and freedom. Simple creative acts of walking and marking about place, locality, time, distance, and measurement.

Works using raw materials and my human scale in the reality of landscapes.
"

"Systems, patterns, and repetition are inherent in his process and flow and ebb is a natural rhythm which he incorporates in this exhibition." from Long's press release...









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C L O T H , the fabric collection designed by Christopher Farr in association with business partners Matthew Bourne and Michal Silver was founded in 2000. For Christopher designing fabrics was not only a long held ambition but a natural step to make for the rug company he founded in 1988.

The collection currently comprises over 40 designs of prints and weaves, utilizing the highest qualities of cloth from combed Egyptian cottons and Belgian linens to acrylic dyed solution fabrics suitable for outdoor use.

The printed collection is produced in the UK, a large part of which is hand printed by the same family-owned company that produced the original collections for Michael Zsell. With an ever expanding stable of designers and artists such as Kate Blee, Ilse Crawford and Ptolemy Mann, a new era of design sprang forth from the vision and acumen of Christopher Farr.




more Christopher Farr here...
more Richard Long here...

It's officially the weekend.
I'm off to the beach to stack stones and boulders.....


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Y H B H S (card catalog) selection 3


Christopher Farr, Los Angeles
"quietly drawing our attention to what is always in front of us..."













“Grandfather’s Envelopes”
by Fujii Sakuko


Christopher Farr writes, “I love this mans work as it the real "arte povera"... No artifice...just quietly drawing our attention to what is always in front of us but mostly ignored.. What makes this even more delightful is that book is an homage from a granddaughter to her grandfather.”
















"Around the age of 80, Kouzaki--who was a master builder and carpenter--retired and started creating envelopes from discarded pieces of paper: he'd rescue paper, resize it, fold it, glue it--sometimes delicately peeling paper of many layers in order to get the thin layer that he desired.

This envelope making became Kouzaki's
raison d'etre in his old age, and after his death in 1997 his granddaughter memorialized her grandfather's artworks in this slim volume of exceptional images..."

(via SRI threads bookstore.)




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Christopher Farr has been at the spearhead of contemporary rug design for over twenty years. Together with his business partner Matthew Bourne, they were the catalyst that revolutionised contemporary rug design.


Starting with a small shop in a leafy area of north London, a stone's throw from Primrose Hill, this one time painter, trained at the Slade School, wrought a vision that combined the art of the times with a different form.
From cool minimalism to bold neo-expressionism influenced by the artists Ryman, Albers and Martin, his medium was no longer oil on canvas, but wool and dye, spun and woven by hand into objects that were more than mere floor coverings. They were themselves works of art.


(take a look at Christopher Farr's latest collection of Rugs, "Itten" inspired by
Johannes Itten, the Swiss art teacher/ painter....)















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A
day

of
color.











Anne Truitt,
1964 Out
Nippon A - Marine Finish Acrylic
on Welded Slab Aluminum












Spent the afternoon being overwhelmed by color & beauty at Christopher Farr here in Los Angeles, on La Cienega Blvd. Ptolemy Mann, an artist based in London gave an inspired talk about her work, from weaving, installations, new fabrics and architectural commissions. I was particularly obsessed with this digitally printed fabric Christopher Farr is releasing. To say it is psychedelic and charged with energy is an understatement. To say it is refined and elegant, well, that's pretty much accurate!


I left thinking today about Anni Albers, Anne Truitt, Bauhaus textiles, The Light Movement of California, Donald Judd, and looking for colored buildings as I drove down Santa Monica Blvd toward Rachel Harrison's new show at Regen Projects. Melted statues with photographs!














Anni Albers..(1899-1994) s
screenprint, 1985























China, by Allegra Hicks
at
Christopher Farr, Los Angeles






Christopher Farr has been at the spearhead of contemporary rug design for over twenty years. Together with his business partner Matthew Bourne, they were the catalyst that revolutionised contemporary rug design.

Starting with a small shop in a leafy area of north London, a stone's throw from Primrose Hill, this one time painter, trained at the Slade School, wrought a vision that combined the art of the times with a different form.



thank you christopher farr
and christina tullock....


















Varvara Stepanova









A
day

of

color.

T o. M a k e. A. R o o m.

Ptolemy
Mann
at
Christopher
Farr, L.A.










To Make a Room
with Ptolemy Mann


Handwoven, handspun Anatolian wool
& mohair flatweave rug




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I'm looking forward to seeing this new exhibition
at Christopher Farr of Ptolemy Mann's new work.
This will be an exhibition of new flatweaves, fabrics,
and woven textiles. See you Friday Christina...
(I've been meaning to get over to Christopher Farr
for sometime now, and excited to be there for
this lecture by the artist.)




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Also hoping to have time for some other galleries:
Cannon Hudson at LaCienega Projects,
Tim Hawkinson at Blum and Poe,
Robert Heinecken and others at Cherry and Martin,
and Cris Brodahl at Marc Foxx,
Alice Neel at La Louver....



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Ptolemy Mann is a textile artist and architectural colour consultant.
Since 1997, after graduating Royal College of Art, Mann's hand dyed and woven textile art works have graced the walls of many corporate, public and domestic interiors internationally.

“As soon as I started weaving it was like magic…everything slotted into place. Weaving channeled all my interests, all my in uences. A recurring theme in my work for many years has been a fascination with the transition from one color to another; the movement and ‘traveling’ in between complementary opposites in particular” says Mann, a London based textile artist and designer who works as a color consultant specializing in architectural projects. Her collaboration with Christopher Farr brings her trademark color sense to the ancient tradition of hand weaving in Turkey for the first time.
















Ptolemy Mann works in partnership with architects, art consultants and interior designers to produce hand dyed and Woven Textile Art pieces to commission for specific domestic, corporate and public spaces. Carefully stretched and three dimensional, these panels bring dynamic colour and geometric form to interior spaces.











Through collaborative development with architects Ptolemy Mann now offers an Architectural Colour Consultancy service advising on colour application within and without the built environment. She specializes in external façade colour schemes and explores the use of colour internally particularly in relation to way finding and psychological wellbeing within healthcare environments.









"To Make a Room" with Ptolemy Mann
Los Angeles
Christopher Farr USA inc
748 N. La Cienega Boulevard
Los Angeles CA 90069




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