Subscribe to Metropolis

November 2007Observed

Trendsetter

Stephen Burks picks four examples of fashion-forward furniture.

By Melanie Ryan

Posted November 21, 2007

Like hurricanes, trends are easy to spot but take an expert to predict. Thankfully, every June the organizers of the IMM Cologne furniture fair send five creative experts into a room to interpret currents like the best weathermen, getting a fix on what’s happening before the main event rolls around in January. This year New York–based designer Stephen Burks, of ReadyMade Projects, joined architect Eero Koivisto, materials specialist Christiane Sauer, designer Fabio Novembre, and journalist Sophie Lov­ell. Each participant presented projects he or she found inspiring and then, as Burks describes the pro­cess, the group had to “hash it out and categorize the uncategorizable.”

The results have been published in “Interior Trends 2008,” which features materials, shapes, colors, and patterns representing the four movements the panel identified—Outside In, Neo Nature, Design School, and Priceless. Offering Metropolis a glimpse of the future, Burks chose one product that exemplifies each trend. Check out his forecast.

Bookmark and Share

Read Related Stories:

Material Savvy

Benjamin Hubert has built his practice based on a research-led process.

The Right Price

Alain Berteau’s Objekten line convinces customers to balance cost with quality.

The Creative Process | Spatial Conversations - Petra Blaisse

Inside Outside shapes its stunning textiles through a constant dialogue with its collaborators.

The Creative Process | Material Choices - Scholten & Baijings

The designers plunge into the technicalities of pigment and production to suggest bold new directions for an entire industry.

Destination: Design New York

Design Week activities kick off on May 10 and run for 11 event-filled days. As always, the festivities coincide with ICFF, which this year celebrates its 25th anniversary.

The Alcove Sofa
by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, Vitra

Outside In was partially in-spired by the Philip Johnson Glass House. Not only about panoramic windows, the trend also has to do with “micro-architectural moments within a larger interior.” The spacious high-back Alcove Sofa feels
like a room within a room, and two placed opposite each other create a sound-
insulating space.
courtesy Vitra
BACK TO TOPBACK TO TOP