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Robin Bourgeois

Industrial designer, furniture designer
November-December 2021

Noémie Pilo

  • Craft & Design
  • New York

“I am drawn to everyday objects, those that we do not pay attention to but end up choosing for support in our daily lives.”

During my studies, I was lucky enough to train with the agency Unfold Design Studio, in Antwerp, alongside US designer Shane Schneck, founder of the Office for Design agency in Stockholm.

 

I am drawn to everyday objects, those that we do not pay attention to but end up choosing for support in our daily lives. I take an interest in artifacts of the past. Their uses and forms, which are sometimes obsolete, inspire me. Why make a clean break with the past when humans have been designing objects for millennia? The challenge is not so much to dig up forgotten forms as to reuse them in a contemporary setting.

 

Robin Bourgeois graduated from École des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, in 2020. He designs unassuming objects that blend into daily life naturally and lastingly. Through his creations and exhibitions, he has developed a formal, economical language that promotes craftsmanship and celebrates materials. In 2021, he won the first prize in the Cinna/Ligne Roset révélateur de talents design competition.

The Bettencourt Schueller Foundation is supporting Robin Bourgeois’s residency, as sponsors of ‘Design and Craft’ Villa Albertine residencies.

 

The starting point of my Brooklyn-based project is the history of the Sunset Park district, home to Industry City, a former industrial park that is now a creative hub. The objects, uses, and other traces of the past that I come across in my research will serve as springboards to reexamining relations between the site’s inhabitants, history, and culture. I tried out this approach in my end-of-studies project, which sought to bring the legacy of Cistercian monks into our era, via a series of six mainstream objects.

 

Before the residency, I will learn all about the history of Sunset Park, from the Lenape indigenous people and Dutch colonies to the life of today’s district. On the ground, I hope to have to chance to talk with the district’s inhabitants, meet experts, see old artifacts with my own eyes, and relate my research carried out in Paris to my experience in the field.

 

I would like to make use of these documentary studies and on-the-ground encounters to design objects. These objects could be based on forgotten items of local life, highlight certain aspects of everyday life in Sunset Park, or perhaps do both.

 

I am fortunate to be in touch with a culture I am unfamiliar with, and to get to know its heritage through design: day-to-day life, uses, customs, and more. In return, through my revival of forgotten or unheralded aspects of life, I hope the project will strike a chord with the people of Sunset Park.

In Industry City, I will be supported by Wanted Design, a platform that promotes designers globally. Located on the Upper Bay waterfront in Western Brooklyn, Industry City is a former industrial port that was turned into an area that now houses firms, restaurants, studios, co-working spaces, and more. At the end of the 19th century, the port was home to Bush Terminal, New York City’s first hub of goods manufacturing and distribution. It fell into disrepair in the second half of the 20th century, and was eventually renovated. Yet the site’s heritage is not only industrial, but cultural: it was home to the Lenape indigenous people, whom European settlers gradually drove out of Long Island in the 16th and 17th centuries; to European immigrants from the same period; and to Asian and Latin American immigrants who settled in Sunset Park at the end of the 20th century. I would like to explore these overlaid narratives, interpreting them through forms and objects imagined on site.

 

In a broader sense, the US eastern seaboard is highly attractive in terms of industrial design, with firms such as Herman Miller, Maharam and Emeco; designers such as Leon Ransmeier, Dylan Davis and Jean Lee (Ladies & Gentlemen Studio), and the collective Furnishing Utopia; and events such as the NYCxDesign Festival, which will take place during my residency.

In partnership with

Bettencourt Schueller Foundation

Bettencourt Schueller Foundation strives to embody the will of a family, driven by the spirit of enterprise and awareness of its social role, to reveal talents and help them thrive, in three fields that contribute concretely to the common good: life sciences, the arts and solidarity. Both a family foundation and recognized as a public utility since its creation in 1987, the Bettencourt Schueller Foundation intends to give wings to talent to contribute to the success and influence of France.

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École des Arts Décoratifs

A wellspring of intellectual, creative and artistic development for over 250 years, the École des Arts Décoratifs aims to prove a new generation of artists, designers and creators with the tools they need to transform tomorrow’s world. Every year, the École des Arts Décoratifs trains over 800 students in 10 departments : Art, Interior Architecture, Animation, Graphic Design, Product Design, Textile and Texture Design, Fashion Design, Printed Image, Photography/Video and Stage Design.

 

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WantedDesign

About WantedDesign:

Founded in 2011 in New York City by French New Yorkers Odile Hainaut and Claire Pijoulat, WantedDesign has evolved into a dynamic connector and amplifier for global design, fostering creative synergy and serving as a pivotal crossroad for the international design community. Following an important transformation for these past years, the multi-generational, women-led company now includes Colombian partner Daniela Giraldo Hinestroza and will continue to build on its foundation of community, education, and curation. Through its diverse array of programs- including residencies, workshops, immersion trips, and a membership program- WantedDesign connects designers at every stage of their career with key players of the industry across the Americas and Europe. Claire and Odile, based in New York, have also taken on the role of Brand Directors for ICFF since 2023. Daniela continues to lead from her hometown of Medellín, Colombia.

WantedDesign’s legacy includes the successful WANTED (previously known as the WantedDesign Manhattan), acquired by Emerald Expositions in 2019 to become a section within the International Contemporary Furniture Fair. Co-founders, Odile and Claire, stepped into their role as brand directors of ICFF in 2023 and will continue to do lead the show in 2024. WantedDesign will continue to support the WANTED section at ICFF to spotlight outstanding emerging design.

 

About WantedDesign’s Residency Program:

Presented in partnership with Industry City, the WantedDesign Residency program in New York offers a one-of-a-kind opportunity for international creatives to immerse themselves in the city’s vibrant design scene. With the support of international cultural organizations, this tailored immersion allows residents to explore, research, network and gain a deeper understanding of the US market and of its opportunities.

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