french designer
Frenchman Hubert Le Gall is holding his first solo show in Asia and it showcases works such as the Remus mirror, Whale armchair, an Orchid 18 Flowers side table and the Pinocchio Console (above). Photos: Hubert Le Gall, Lim Yaohui

For French artist-designer Hubert Le Gall, functionality and aesthetics are always entwined.

“Architects are, in a nutshell, sculptors. The modern architecture of Singapore is a massive source of inspiration,” says Le Gall, who was in Singapore last week to promote his first solo show in Asia.

He hints that the plants he saw at Gardens by the Bay, which he visited during his three days here, could well inform his future work. “Art has no borders,” he says, with a nod to the French impressionist masterpieces currently showcased at the National Gallery Singapore. Le Gall’s works, which are perhaps best known in Europe, famously combine functionality with playfulness. They are now on display at Mazel Galerie in Pacific Plaza.

Among the 75 pieces at the show are Placide, The Rabbit Chair (2012), made with synthetic fur, wool and varnished wood; and Commode Ferriere (2014), a chest of drawers obscured by bronze flowers gilded with gold leaf in a game of visual “hide and seek”. He created several orchid flower side tables for his Singapore show, signalling an evolution from the Warhol-inspired flower side tables he made two decades ago.

Le Gall says that his works, inspired by art and which often feature animal imagery, exist “for no reason except for the pleasure of creating”. But his work is “not pretentious”, he adds. “When I make a seat, it’s very important that you can sit on it,” Le Gall says. “What is fake, a lie, to me is the designer who makes a seat you can’t sit on.”

In fact, the interview was conducted on two of his Whale armchairs (2004). Inspiration for the chairs – fashioned from velvet and metal, with backs that look like fins – struck him while he was in bed in a hotel room in Montreal.

“I was looking for ideas. I turned on the TV. I looked at everything and thought: What if this were a chair? Then I saw a fish’s fin…”

His fusion of usefulness and whimsy is perhaps best exemplified by his Pinocchio Console (2012), a black table held together with a decorative “Pinocchio nose” of bronze gilded with gold leaf.

 

french designer
Frenchman Hubert Le Gall (above) is holding his first solo show in Asia and it showcases works such as the Remus mirror, Whale armchair (both above), an Orchid 18 Flowers side table and the Pinocchio Console. Photos: Hubert Le Gall, Lim Yaohui

Pointing at the console, Le Gall adds: “I thought I was (the wood carver) Geppetto at first, but I am Pinocchio. A designer is a good liar. He sells you a dream.”

Public response to the show has been enthusiastic. Collectors have already bagged more than five works, including two Whale chairs, several mirrors and a Good Dog lamp. Le Gall’s limited-edition works typically fetch five-figure prices. The Pinocchio Console, for instance, costs about $90,000. The 57-year-old, who is a self-taught artist-designer, has also done scenography, or spatial design, for museums and has previously collaborated with Champagne house Ruinart.

 

french designer
Frenchman Hubert Le Gall is holding his first solo show in Asia and it showcases works such as the Remus mirror, Whale armchair, an Orchid 18 Flowers side table (above) and the Pinocchio Console. Photos: Hubert Le Gall, Lim Yaohu

From Friday to next Sunday, about 15 of his creations, including the Orchid flower tables, Whale Chairs and Remus mirror, will be displayed at contemporary art fair Art Stage. Mazel Galerie Singapore’s director Kevin Troyano Cuturi had encouraged him to take his works to Singapore. The international gallery was founded by a French family in 2010. “In Hong Kong, the market is very overcrowded,” says Mr Cuturi. “For a young gallery trying to show daring things, Singapore is an interesting place to be.”

Adds Le Gall, who was in Shanghai last September, where he had his work exhibited in a group show there for the first time: “People in Asia are fond of new things and can accept them more easily than those in Europe. Asia is my destination at the moment.”

This story first appeared on www.straitstimes.com

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