A vintage card was the inspiration;
paint and découpage were the media used to carry it out.
Welcome to Glade, a fun project recently completed by one of my favorite designers,
Carolyn Quartermaine, and her oft partner, Belgian artist Didier Mahieu.
The
Glade is a tucked-away bar inside of London's West End restaurant and
gallery, Sketch.They created a dreamy landscape of a fairytale forest,
all inspired from a scene found on an early 20th century communion card, handed
down to Mahieu by his grandmother.
They had only one week to perform their magic, so with a dozen artists and designers
wielding their scalpels, they set about their transformation. After
having enlarged and reversed the design, they printed it onto hundreds
of meters of paper. Then they painted the walls with vast patchwork swathes of blue, intermingled with flashes of color, against which the cut-out pieces were pasted.
Trompe l’oeil shadows of leaves were added as they glued the pieces on, filling the four walls.
Trompe l’oeil shadows of leaves were added as they glued the pieces on, filling the four walls.
Vintage 1950s rattan furniture pieces from Portofino, Sardinia and
South of France were added, along with many of Quartermaine's screenprinted fabrics.
South of France were added, along with many of Quartermaine's screenprinted fabrics.
Très chic, no?
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