With her spot-on personal style, soft Parisian accent, and effortless furnishings, designer Laura Gonzalez exudes an unmistakably French aura. She’s brought that sensibility to unmistakably French projects, too, ranging from the opulent interiors of Lapérouse (an iconic 18th-century Paris restaurant) to a decadent shop for the “Picasso of Pastry” Pierre Hermé on the Champs-Élysées.
This week, devotees to all things Gonzalez are in luck: The designer has just opened a gleaming new gallery in Manhattan’s TriBeCa neighborhood that aims to bring the vibe of the City of Light to a Big Apple clientele. The showroom at 102 Franklin Street, Galerie Laura Gonzalez, is about three times as big as the flagship location on Paris’s Rue de Lille (which Gonzalez calls her “European playground”)—and she’s giddy for the impact it can create.
“This is not a gallery, the way people used to see art galleries. It’s a way of living,” the ELLE DECOR A-List designer tells us. “We want to show the way the French live and used to live.”
The space displays highlights from Laura Gonzalez’s collection that represent the pinnacle of French craftsmanship: in materials like ceramics, wood, metal, and glass. There’s her Medusa side table (with hand-cast, twisted bronze legs that evoke the seductive mystery of the famed Greek femme); poufs covered in patterned velvet; feminine chandeliers (the Lilypad Chandelier will never not be a point of conversation); and the Himawari floor lamp-sculpture hybrid, which resembles a whimsical, animated flower straight out of The Lorax.
In fact, to step into Galerie Laura Gonzalez is to enter a garden: Delicate blooms seem to be the inspiration for many of her creations, making the showroom all the more buoyant and life-affirming. There are also surprising twists on Gonzalez’s core offerings, like her beloved Rainbow Table (with its funky, multicolored raku top and hand-carved base): now reinterpreted in black to better fit the New York vibe. “We also used a lot of dusty silver, a lot of New York colors, to bring the sexiness of [the city],” she says.
This isn’t the first time the concrete jungle is getting a taste of Gonzalez’s sensuous ethos, however. She was behind the redesign of Cartier’s flagship Fifth Avenue location and curated a solo show at the Invisible Collection’s Upper East Side townhouse, among other projects. This certainly won’t be Gonzalez’s last love letter to the city, either: She’s in the process of designing the Paris department store Printemps’s first-ever U.S. location, set to open on Wall Street next spring.
The TriBeCa gallery launch couldn’t have been better timed to a more subtle kind of transformation—or “phase of evolution,” as she calls it—in Gonzalez’s work. With a portfolio that’s grown to encompass projects in Shanghai, Barcelona, Stockholm, and beyond, Gonzalez has entered what she feels is a markedly “Japanese era.”
“We were very, very maximalist, and now, for example, we didn’t put fabrics on the walls [of the new gallery] for the first time,” the designer says. “It’s luxurious, it’s detailed, but it’s never too much.”
Stacia Datskovska, Assistant Digital Editor at ELLE DECOR, covers design, decor, and architecture—with an eye towards trends and culture at large. She has previously written for USA Today, the Boston Globe, Teen Vogue, Apartment Therapy, and more.
Source: elledecor.com
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