This June, Maharam celebrates the European launch of Edelman and Knoll Textiles with a multi brand installation at 3daysofdesign in Copenhagen. In recent years, Maharam has grown to steward Edelman and Knoll Textiles, two historic creators of textiles and leather that share a vision for design-focused business. Through the design studio's own work and long-term multidisciplinary collaborations, Maharam seeks to celebrate and develop each of these unique design legacies in a collective global endeavour.
© Maharam
A part of FRAMING, a building-wide exhibition at The Odd Fellow Palace in Copenhagen, Maharam's installation features designs from across Edelman, Knoll Textiles, and Maharam on a dynamic presentation system by American industrial designer Leon Ransmeier.
Titled Stick Frame, the presentation system marks ten years of creative collaboration between Maharam and Ransmeier and explores the shaping of space within a space. 'I wanted to create a system that is honest about its modularity,' said Ransmeier, 'a structure that can redirect the flow of movement, and that can itself be reconfigured over time.' To design Stick Frame, Ransmeier drew upon a foundational building technique of constructing onsite from individual components, rather than relying on prefabricated structures. Assembled into a dimensional, grid-like structure from stainless-steel tubing, the system juxtaposes industrial materials with the Palace's 18th-century, rococo interiors, as well as subtle intricacies and natural textures of woven textiles and leather.
Stick Frame displays eighteen new and recent introductions. Edelman highlights a recent large-scale recolour by Ilse Crawford that embraces her humanist approach to design and practical expertise as an interior designer. Knoll Textiles previews several reissued archival upholsteries, including Altiplano by Sheila Hicks, 1966, along with architectural window coverings that are decidedly contemporary despite their archival origins. Maharam emphasises textiles designed for reduced environmental impact, ongoing collaborations with fashion designers Paul Smith and Sander Lak, and a reissue of an iconic 1952 design by Alexander Girard.
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