PARIS — Having labored with the Donald Judd Basis on the redesign of its Rive Droite flagship in Paris, Saint Laurent is celebrating one other icon of 20th century design with a particular occasion through the Salone del Cell in Milan.
The French style home is resurrecting 4 uncommon furnishings designs by Charlotte Perriand for an exhibition titled “Saint Laurent — Charlotte Perriand,” resulting from happen on the Padiglione Visconti from April 8 to 13.
Courting from 1943 to 1967, the gadgets chosen by artistic director Anthony Vaccarello beforehand existed solely as prototypes or sketches, together with a number of items the French architect and designer created for her personal houses world wide.
Saint Laurent has painstakingly reproduced the furnishings designs, which will probably be accessible on a made-to-order foundation as a restricted version.
“The partnership between Saint Laurent and Charlotte Perriand is the most recent instance of the home’s ongoing dedication to heritage, aimed to deliver necessary artifacts of design tradition — beforehand hidden in inaccessible collections — to a wider viewers,” the model mentioned in a press release shared completely with WWD.
“It additionally honors Yves Saint Laurent’s admiration for Perriand’s work, whose pure modernity echoed his personal creations. He collected her designs all through his life, whereas Pierre Bergé supported necessary international retrospectives of her work,” it added, referring to the home’s founder and his associate.

Saint Laurent’s reedition of the Rio de Janeiro bookcase by Charlotte Perriand.
Courtesy of Saint Laurent
Having began her profession working alongside Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret, Perriand went on to journey broadly, heading to Tokyo in 1940 to work as a marketing consultant to the Japanese authorities on the event of furnishings manufacturing.
Compelled to go away the nation throughout World Warfare II, she was appointed director of crafts and utilized arts by the colonial administration of present-day Vietnam, the place she met her second husband Jacques Martin.
Perriand designed the Rio de Janeiro bookcase in 1962 for Martin, who was working for Air France in Brazil on the time. Product of strong rosewood, it was conceived to show artistic endeavors alongside books, with sliding doorways made from woven cane.
A part of a non-public assortment, the unique has solely been exhibited thrice over the past 25 years, Saint Laurent famous.
Likewise, the Indochina visitor armchair was created in 1943 for the couple’s house in Vietnam. Saint Laurent recreated the piece from a drawing, as the unique piece was misplaced.

A element of Saint Laurent’s reedition of the Mille-feuilles desk by Charlotte Perriand.
Courtesy of Saint Laurent
The Mille-feuilles desk, in the meantime, existed solely as a reduced-scale mannequin because it was too advanced to fabricate. Designed in 1963, it’s comprised of 10 layers of two forms of wooden, one mild and one darkish, and recessed within the middle to kind concentric circles.
Saint Laurent famous that every desk produced will probably be distinctive, owing to the singular patterns created throughout its fabrication.
The ultimate design was extra public-facing: a settee for the Japanese ambassador’s residence in Paris from 1967. Perriand was answerable for the interiors of the dwelling, designed by the architect Junzo Sakakura, together with the big couch in the primary reception room.
The Japanese embassy in Paris helped to establish key particulars of the banquette couch, which incorporates a 23-foot-long curving base, in order that it might be reproduced in restricted numbers.
To coincide with the exhibition throughout Milan Design Week, the short-term Saint Laurent Editions kiosk exterior its retailer on Piazza San Babila will carry a e-book of Perriand’s images alongside a catalog of the brand new furnishings assortment.
A collection of her images will even be on view on the model’s bookshop and report retailer on Rue de Babylone in Paris, from April 9 to Might 4, and its Rive Droite flagship on Rue Saint-Honoré, from April 8 to Might 7.

Saint Laurent’s reedition of the couch for the Japanese ambassador’s residence by Charlotte Perriand.
Courtesy of Saint Laurent

