Order, play and chaos

The Live Editorial of Charlotte Taylor at Side Gallery

Written by Inma Buendía
Photographed by Enric Badrinas

A huge space with barely any walls, surrounded by windows, with floors and ceilings all in one colour, comes into view. It’s difficult to guess its purpose: is it a home, an office, a gallery, or all of the above at once? As the gaze gradually distinguishes the details, there’s a table set, perhaps for guests, and an unmade bed with a laptop on it. Hobbies lie on a desk, a small table holds a chess set, and various utilitarian objects like chairs, ashtrays and wine glasses, with great sculptural appeal, could well be exhibited in a museum.

This is the first ‘live editorial’ by Openhouse. An installation by Charlotte Taylor that reinterprets what we call home in an imposing setting: Side Gallery, a contemporary artefact in its forms but classic in its purpose, to preserve and arrange historical records related to Latin American design of the past century.

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Mosaic by RUAIDHRI RYAN.
Mosaics by RUAIDHRI RYAN. PIXEL Sofa by SABA ITALIA. OBJECT 3 “VATE” Black Stool by NIFEMI OGUNRO courtesy of SIDE GALLERY. Round coffee table by TEPPERMAN courtesy of SIDE GALLERY. Table Ashtray by CHARLOTTE TAYLOR. Wooden Baguese by unknown craftsman. LA PEPINO Sofa by OWL.

The majestic work carried out by Guillermo Santomá in the 700 square metres of this gallery in Barcelona is clad in nothing but concrete. This material serves to unify such a vast space into a single formal and functional piece. A body of work in which Luis Sendino, curator and founder of the Side Gallery, alternates tradition and avant-garde in a melancholic approach to the past that invites dreaming of possible futures.

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BRUTAL STOOL by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ. PIXEL Sofa by SABA ITALIA. GINGER Lamp by JOAN GASPAR for MARSET. LA PEPINO Sofa by OWL. CH327 Dining table by HANS J. WEGNER for CARL HANSEN & SØN. LOW CHAIR by BENNI ALLAN for BÉTON BRUT LONDON. Stone glasses by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ. KNITTED Rug by NANIMARQUINA. CH23 Chair and PK1 Chairs by CARL HANSEN & SØN.

In that sort of temporal parenthesis seems to lie Charlotte Taylor’s creative proposal. Unaffected by the aesthetic noise around, her workspace is the inexhaustible archive of images that this artist and designer catalogues in her mind, creating synergies between art and everyday life, between play and chaos.

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CHAIR IN OAK FINISH by CÉDRIC GEPNER for STUDIO HAOS. TRIANGOLO Chair black by FRAMA. Stone glass by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ. C+J TRAYS by CHRISTIAN & JADE for FORA PROJECTS. Incense burner by NICK ROSS. BOOKSTAND by LOUIE ISAAMAN-JONES. RYMD CHAIR by LUCAS & TYRA MORTEN. Alabaster cordless lamp by ARNOLD CHAN for VOLTRA. FLAGPOLE LAMP by FREDERIK FIALIN.
Artwork by ELISE BRAND.
The installation curator CHARLOTTE TAYLOR. RITUAL THRONE by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ.

To orbit in the same place as Charlotte is to be imbued by the calm – not docile – character she conveys with each step. A disposition from which sophisticated, lively spaces with a great sense of humour are born. Charlotte is the first guest to develop, alongside talented creators from all over the world, the live editorial that inaugurates OpenArchive, the life we share.

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Aluminum ARMCHAIR by STUDIO HAOS. LE MURA Sofa by TACCHINI. ACQUA E TERRA. Sofa by MARIO CEROLI courtesy of SIDE GALLERY. KNITTED Rug by NANIMARQUINA. BURNT CORK VASE Large by CÉDRIC ETIENNE. FARMHOUSE Coffee table by FRAMA. THE TRAY TABLE by FINN JUHL.

How did you incorporate the personal tastes and preferences of Openhouse and Side Gallery into your design?

There was already a synergy between Openhouse, Side Gallery and personal style so the result was more a collage of overlaying some of my more specific tastes into a palette that feels familiar. The sudoku unmade beds and striped shirts are definitely a signature of mine that brings a bit of disarray.

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THE PELICAN CHAIR, THE CHIEFTAIN CHAIR and THE EYE TABLE by FINN JUHL. Floor lamp 2093 by OLIVIER MOURGUE courtesy of SIDE GALLERY. VISIONI Rug by CC-TAPIS.
WHISKEY Chair by FINN JUHL.
GINGER Lamp by JOAN GASPAR for MARSET. CH327 Dining table by HANS J. WEGNER for CARL HANSEN & SØN. Stone glasses by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ. KNITTED Rug by NANIMARQUINA. CH23 Chair and PK1 Chairs by CARL HANSEN & SØN. THE OTTO CERAMIC PLATES and BOWLS and CUPS by FRAMA. C+J PEDESTAL PLATE by CHRISTIAN & JADE for FORA PROJECTS.
THE POET SOFA by FINN JUHL and the CH22 Lounge chair by HANS J. WEGNER for CARL HANSEN & SØN. VISIONI rug by CC-TAPIS.

What part of the project did you enjoy the most?

Watching people interact with the space and pieces. There were a group of children who started playing chess which was my favourite moment I caught a glimpse of.

How does the curation of art in a house-gallery differ from traditional gallery spaces, and how does the design facilitate this distinction?

The domestic side to the space brings that very personal element to the gallery and is an invitation to react with the space and pieces in a more casual and explorative way. Movement and people’s journey throughout the space is a very different consideration, to have people lean and lounge on the pieces and become of the show as opposed to purely a visitor to the show. Taking the gallery experience beyond the visual perspective and engaging the other senses.

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BRUTAL STOOL by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ. LÁMPARA SOBRE Lamp by MAX MILÁ SERRA.
REFLECTOR LAMP by FREDERIK FIALIN. THE FLOATING BED by AXEL WANNBERG. Bed sheets by TEKLA. RIVET BOX TABLE by FRAMA. POLO Lamp by JOAN GASPAR for MARSET. AC01 Chair by FREDERIK FIALIN. LARGE ASH CONTAINER and ORGANIC BASQUET by OROS DESIGN.
RITUAL THRONE by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ.

How do you create cohesive environments that look both elegant and effortlessly vigorous?

Maintaining an element of play and chaos and allowing things to have a sense of movement and openness, away from a highly considered yet static space.

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LOW CHAIR by BENNI ALLAN for BÉTON BRUT LONDON.
LA PEPINA Sofa by OWL. GINGER Lamp by JOAN GASPAR for MARSET. Wooden Baguese by unknown craftsman.

Are there specific design objects or materials that you find particularly effective in achieving this balance?

Objects go a long way in offsetting a space and bringing a notion of personality and breaking a rigid arrangement.

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Bathtub from TURA Collection by ANDREU CARULLA for ROCA. AML STOOL by FRAMA.
GOUTTES ANTI-ODEUR by AESOP.
Sink and toilet from TURA Collection by ANDREU CARULLA for ROCA.

How do cultural and historical elements inspire your design work?

I am always drawing inspiration from different historical/cultural eras and movements of design. Drawing on the similarities and contrasts, amalgamating references into something new yet very rooted in the past.

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FLAGPOLE LAMP by FREDERIK FIALIN. Pyjamas by TEKLA.
FRAGILE Lamp by JAUME RAMÍREZ for MARSET.

How do you see the relationship between design and other art disciplines in your work?

It’s very fluid. My process is very much bouncing between art and design practices. It’s inseparable for me as everything feeds into one another and design as a means itself can’t be isolated from the wider creative world.

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RYMD CHAIR by LUCAS & TYRA MORTEN.
PIXEL Sofa by SABA ITALIA. Round coffee table by TEPPERMAN courtesy of SIDE GALLERY. Table Ashtray by CHARLOTTE TAYLOR. Wooden Baguese by unknown craftsman. STROKE 1.0 by SABINE MARCELIS for CC-TAPIS.
TOTEM by CÉDRIC ETIENNE.

What would you say is the main challenge you face as a designer and how do you overcome it?

Actualising ideas. There’s always 100+ ideas that I can get really excited by and passionate about but it’s impossible to be able to develop and keep up with the speed of your imagination. It’s frustrating to see so many ideas dissolve and never take shape. Prioritising the projects and concepts that I’m most driven by and trying to allocate a dedicated time and schedule rather than starting multiple things at once is helping to keep the momentum but not dilute the designs.

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Table by LUIS BARRAGÁN courtesy of SIDE GALLERY. Sculpture by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ.
ASHTRAY WITHOUT QUALITIES by AMELIA STEVENS.

What has your design journey and the influences that have shaped your aesthetic?

My personal design journey has been a bit of a winding and unconventional one to reach architecture. Passing through a range of mediums and disciplines within design has shaped my interdisciplinary approach and aesthetic. Having a Fine Art education has also been very defining in my journey, allowing a very playful and unconstrained perspective to the design processes and protocols.

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WHISKEY Chair by FINN JUHL. TRIANGOLO Chair stainless steel by FRAMA. THE 109 CHAIR and THE FRANCE CHAIR by FINN JUHL. CHILLIDA GRAVITACIÓN rug by NANIMARQUINA.

How do you envision the future of design, and what role do you hope to play in shaping it?

I see it becoming more and more collaborative, not just within traditionally deemed creative fields but inclusive of all fields and sectors. Honouring the creativity of scientists, mathematicians, ecologists and design becoming the product of many, not a single designer/architect/artist. I would love to work with and learn from fields I am not familiar with and start conversations around creative ways of working together.

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LEAN 2 lamp by GRACE PRINCE.
CH25 lounge chair by HANS J. WEGNER for CARL HANSEN & SØN. Stone glass by DIEGO SÁNCHEZ BARCELÓ.
TWO TONE ASHTRAY by CHARLOTTE TAYLOR for GARCÉ & DIMOFSKI gallery.
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