• aspire design and home
  • Galerie
  • Design Chicago
  • 150E58
  • Cambria Style
HOME+ by aspire
  • Behind the Design
  • Creative Conversations 
  • Culture Cache
  • Destination: Design
  • Sources + Style
  • Curated Chill
  • Video
    • MarketWatch
    • Muse
    • Power Brokers
    • Showroom Features
    • Curated Chill Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Behind the Design
  • Creative Conversations 
  • Culture Cache
  • Destination: Design
  • Sources + Style
  • Curated Chill
  • Video
    • MarketWatch
    • Muse
    • Power Brokers
    • Showroom Features
    • Curated Chill Videos
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
HOME+ by aspire
A Creative Convergence

Designed by Barber Osgerby for B&B Italia, the Tobi-Ishi dining table echoes the serenity of a Japanese garden. It sits in contrast to a large-scale installation from Serge Attukwei Clottey made of plastic pieces from Ghanian water vessels, aimed to raise awareness of the toxicity of plastic. The breakfast nook is comfortably outfitted with B&B Italia Caratos armchairs around a Pathos table, and features artwork by Angelina Pwerle.

An Artful Arrangement

Party Perfect

A Creative Convergence

An apartment by Aubrey Maxwell blurs the line between art and design.

by HOME+ by aspire
March 11, 2022
in Culture Cache

An apartment by Aubrey Maxwell blurs the line between art and design.

When interior design firm AubreyMaxwell was invited to design a model apartment in San Francisco’s 181 Fremont, co-founders Robbie McMillan and Marcus Keller chose to home in on two distinct themes to create interiors that would be as special as the building itself.

Two oversized silhouettes hang on the wall above a Ray sectional sofa and the Surface coffee table, which is designed by Vincent Van Duysen for B&B Italia. Across from them is the Le Bambole lounge chair by Mario Bellini. 
A plum-colored Maru TM5 side table beside a Pablo armchair clad in chocolate-colored leather, both by B&B Italia, have the best views of the house.

One of San Francisco’s tallest mixed-use buildings, 181 Fremont has garnered the most engineering awards of any building in the U.S. and is as well-known for its art collection curated by art advisor Holly Baxter as it is for its sweeping views of the city, its sparkling bay, and the bridges that span it.

The designers used a single design house —B&B Italia — to outfit the entire three-bedroom apartment and filled the space with artwork solely from artists of color. 

“We loved the problem-solving challenge of using only one design house’s furniture throughout to execute a full vision,” says McMillan. The company chose B&B Italia because of its deft use of industrial engineering in its designs. 

The serenely outfitted bedroom features a mulberry-colored Mart armchair by B&B Italia, as well as a Richard bed and Hypnose nightstands by B&B Italia’s sister brand Maxalto. A beautiful photograph by Chanell Stone completes the setting. 

The result encourages discourse and introspection in an environment that’s as functional as it is visually stunning. An Antonio Citterio-designed wool-and-linen sectional sofa sits in front of a pair of large-scale silhouette portraits of Black women created by Erica Deeman. A minimalist kitchen is energized by a work by Isaac Julien. And in the bedroom, a bed from B&B Italia’s sister brand, Maxalto, is dressed in soothing blue bedding that offsets black-and-white photography by Chanell Stone. 

The iconic Terminal 1 Chaise Longue, designed by architect and designer Jean-Marie Massaud for B&B Italia, echoes the curvilinear lines of the Bay Bridge behind it.
The hallway is a veritable art gallery, inviting guests to pause to take in intricate works from Tavares Strachan, Shaina McCoy, and Moffat Takadiwa.
In the kitchen, which boasts sleek white cabinetry and Miele wall ovens, hangs a piece by filmmaker and artist Isaac Julien that picks up the blue hues of the bay waters seen through the window.

The stunning views from the floor-to-ceiling windows are taken into consideration, too. Case in point: The designers playfully set Jean-Marie Massaud’s Terminal 1 Chaise Longue before a view of the Bay Bridge and its similarly undulating lines.

But while the views are commanding, the collection of art is just as much of a conversation starter, particularly at a time when America is healing from its racial divide. A hallway is lined with works by Moffat Takadiwa, Tavares Strachan, and Shaina McCoy, and the focal point in the dining room is a colorful piece by Ghanian artists Serge Attukwei Clottey.

Bringing together this singular collection of artists of color in such a beautiful space, says McMillan, “was one of my proudest moments in design.”

Dig deeper into this project with our partner publication, 150E58.

Related

In the Kitchen with Jim Dove
Creative Conversations 

In the Kitchen with Jim Dove

Party Perfect
Culture Cache

Party Perfect

An Artful Arrangement
Culture Cache

An Artful Arrangement

  • aspire design and home
  • Galerie
  • Design Chicago
  • 150E58
  • Cambria Style

© Hudson One Media

No Result
View All Result
  • Behind the Design
  • Creative Conversations 
  • Culture Cache
  • Destination: Design
  • Sources + Style
  • Curated Chill
  • Video
    • MarketWatch
    • Muse
    • Power Brokers
    • Showroom Features
    • Curated Chill Videos

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00