Objects of Desire

The Wick Culture - Species II, Frederikson Stallard

Design Species II, Frederikson Stallard

An armchair as you’ve never seen it (or felt it) before. Jagged in form and plush in style, ‘Species II’ juxtaposes the rough with the sensual. Like a velvet-coated mass of rock, this Frederikson Stallard-designed item is an unexpectedly inviting elevation of the domestic, characteristic of the duo’s work. Made as part of the Species series, the piece was created specifically for Momentum, an exhibition by Frederikson Stallard held during the London Design Festival in 2015 – described by them as ‘a celebration of the experimental and the rigorous, the unique versus the mass produced’.

Species II is currently available with David Gill Gallery, a London-based gallery exhibiting art and design collections by cutting-edge contemporary artists.


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The Wick Culture - Nebu Bracelet, Loren Nicole

Design Nebu Bracelet, Loren Nicole

Though a fast-up-and-coming brand, Loren Nicole carries a 10,000-year strong legacy of jewellery making. Founded by archaeologist-turned-designer Loren Teetelli in 2016, her house’s collection of ethically sourced gemstones and gold jewellery seeks to translate the spirit of ancient civilisations into modern and wearable pieces. Looking back to the bygone eras of Rome, Egypt and South American, the brand even replicates the traditional forms of jewellery-making. This bracelet, part of the Ancient Egypt-inspired Nebu Collection, is handmade from 22k yellow gold to depict the famous Horus Will Be King story from Egyptian mythology. They say there’s nothing new under the sun, but there’s a novelty to how Loren Nicole’s jewellery rediscovers the past.


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The Wick Culture - Floral Embroidered Shawl Coat, Mira Mikati

Fashion Floral Embroidered Shawl Coat, Mira Mikati

It’s the era of joyful dressing: positive associations, bright prints and colours that spark happiness. This puts Mira Mikati right in the fashion spotlight. Since the launch of her eponymous brand five years ago, the fun and optimistic aesthetic of her designs have earned a cult following. A case in point is this floral embroidered coat, which brings more than a touch of summer to the cold season. Cheering up our outdoors look with an elegant shawl collar design, the coat has been beautifully crafted from a blend of virgin wool and cashmere. With long sleeves, belt loops, a belted waist and mid-length hem, this is a coat to define the season.


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The Wick Culture - Cysaan, Helen Beard

Art Cyssan, Helen Beard

At a time of forbidden human contact, Helen Beard’s high-octane artworks of erotic tactility pack a greater punch. Flat in colour and rich in sensuality, her paintings are unapologetic in their celebration of female empowerment and sexual experience. Her highly distinctive style has resulted in sell-out shows at Reflex Amsterdam and Newport Street Gallery: Damien Hirst is one of her greatest champions. She often uses pornographic online material as inspiration, wanting to paint in ‘an exciting, fresh way that doesn’t involve shame or prudishness and opens up possibilities of talking about the subject without being shy.’ In its depiction of an androgynous couple kissing, Cyssan has become one of her cult hits.


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The Wick Culture - Cocoon Lamp, Nacho Carbonell © The Carpenters Gallery

Design Combi Cocoon lamp, Nacho Carbonell

Ethereal and embracing the magic of nature, these lamps by Spanish designer Nacho Carbonell are reimagined as small tree-like structures. Held together by steel branches, they’re enveloped in steel meshes covered with a mix of sand and textile hardener – also Carbonell’s own creation. ‘I like to see objects as living organisms, imagining them coming alive and being able to surprise you with their behaviour,’ Carbonell says. ‘What I want to create are objects with a fictional or fantasy element, that allow you to escape everyday life’. Let these lamps light the way.

Carbonell’s Cocoon lamps are available at London’s Carpenters Workshop Gallery, a world-leading gallery in collectible design and functional art.


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The Wick Culture -  Candy Sculpture Sphere Chandelier, Estudio Campana

Design Candy Sculpture Sphere Chandelier, Estudio Campana

The light at the end of the rainbow. The changing iterations of colour that emerge from this Estudio Campana-designed glass chandelier are as much a joy as the confectionary goods they’re based on. First presented by Lasvit at Paris trade fair Maison&Objet in 2016, the Candy Sculpture Sphere Chandelier was inspired by the sweets sold at the popular markets in the Campana brothers’ native Brazil. The duo are renowned worldwide for their eclectic, poetic and artistic style of design, and this chandelier – made as part of their wider Candy Collection – is an expansion of their colourful universe of creations.


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