On a dark night in London earlier this week, tucked away behind the busy streets of Marylebone, one home on a quiet mews shone brighter than the remainder, throwing gentle throughout the moist cobblestones. By an open door, we glimpse a wall of dazzling gentle and a small workforce making cautious changes to a grid of modular panels. A better look confirms that one of many employees is world-renowned creative director Alexandre de Betak himself. He greets us mid-video name, bespectacled and smiling broadly.
The unassuming London location is the positioning of de Betak’s new studio, his first unbiased enterprise since stepping again from the megalith manufacturing home, Bureau Betak, that he spent his profession constructing. The lighting set up he’s engaged on right here is momentous – each in its bodily presence and its private significance – marking a brand new metropolis and a brand new chapter through which his private apply and creative journey take centre stage.
However why London? ‘I’ve been requested that so typically previously few days,’ he laughs. ‘Possibly as a result of everybody’s leaving. I discover that intriguing – when everybody goes, I need to come. It creates a way of newness, a brand new starting.’
Having produced his first style present at 19 and opened his company, Bureau Betak, in 1990, he left Paris for New York in 1993 when he was in his early twenties. ‘I sort of fell into this world accidentally after I was very younger,’ he recollects. Over the previous three a long time, he has constructed a worldwide fame for staging a few of style’s most spectacular exhibits – from Dior’s delphinium-covered tent in Paris to Saint Laurent’s glittering spectacles beneath the Eiffel Tower.
Why London? Possibly as a result of everybody’s leaving. I discover that intriguing – when everybody goes, I need to come. It creates a way of newness, a brand new starting
Alexandre de Betak
In more moderen years, he has divided his time between Mallorca and Paris, however London, he feels, is in a state of transition – a spot the place shifting fortunes are creating area for brand spanking new beginnings and extra attention-grabbing artistic voices. ‘There’s a punk artistic freedom right here that I’ve at all times felt,’ he says excitedly. ‘Paris will be too good, too historic, too boxed-in. London has a sort of free-spirited vitality – it’s uncooked, it’s experimental, it’s at all times the place the place issues begin.’
The set up, which opens at the moment throughout Frieze Week, is designed to evolve. De Betak describes it as ‘an set up in progress’. Unfold throughout the bottom flooring of two conjoined mews homes, the set up is made from two contrasting halves – one clad solely in lighting fixtures, and the opposite painted black, with a walkway constructed from the identical modular panels and a mirrored wall set on a diagonal. The work is impressed by workplace fluorescents – ‘the worst lights on the earth,’ as he calls them – reimagined into heat, flattering ‘Hollywood magnificence gentle’. ‘It’s a mixture of disorientating and exquisite,’ he says, standing earlier than the mirror within the black room. ‘At evening it turns into very heat, nonetheless very shiny. Everybody who comes right here might be glowing – I promise.’
I’m going via a second of uselessness. Extra un-practical, extra exploratory – and I’m fairly having fun with it
Alexandre de Betak
For de Betak, the area shouldn’t be a gallery however a working atelier: ‘It’s a spot to create and to replicate,’ he says. The set up – and the studio itself – will stay in flux. He plans to knock down partitions, raise flooring and hold reconfiguring the rooms as new concepts take form. ‘It is going to at all times be evolving,’ he says.
He stresses that this new chapter is much less a rupture than a re-centering: ‘My on a regular basis life is identical – I design bizarre, large, loopy stuff with a variety of gentle in it. The one distinction is that I’ve eliminated the lady strolling on prime of it,’ he jokes, referring to his departure from the relentless style treadmill. ‘However immediately, while you take away that lady, then the eye goes in the direction of what I do, and solely what I do.’
He’s now taking time away from commissions to deal with gentle sculptures, architectural installations and homes that blur artwork and design – a deliberate step, he says, in the direction of artistic freedom. ‘I don’t need to do occasions anymore – I believe I’ve completed extra occasions than anyone on this planet,’ he laughs. What follows, he explains, shouldn’t be about rejecting that legacy however rediscovering what occurs when the transient – and the model – are eliminated. ‘I’m going via a second of uselessness,’ he provides, ‘extra un-practical, extra exploratory – and I’m fairly having fun with it.’
Once you take away the target of the occasion, you’re a bit extra free – however you’re additionally misplaced. And that’s attention-grabbing. I by no means had the time to get misplaced earlier than.
Alexandre de Betak
This night, the set up opens throughout Frieze London, with music by Paul Simonon, delicacies by Rose Chalalai Singh and a particular cocktail by House Speak. As company lose themselves within the Hollywood glow of de Betak’s set up, the expertise feels nearly allegorical. ‘Once you take away the target of the occasion,’ he says, ‘you’re a bit extra free – however you’re additionally misplaced. And that’s attention-grabbing. I by no means had the time to get misplaced earlier than.’
TOPICS
Supply: Wallpaper