
09.17.19
Excerpt: Exhibition
A Himalayan Salt Chair and a Purple Ombré Space Bench Were Among Our Favorites at This Year’s In Good Company
There were many quote-unquote “winners” in this year’s In Good Company exhibition, which opened last week and was co-curated this time around by Fernando Mastrangelo and Milanese design doyenne Rossana Orlandi. There was Elyse Graham, who turned her resin scraps into a slick, patterned meta-material that was here used to form an entire Judd-inspired seat, brass inlay included. There was Ian Felton, who previewed the debut collection he’s launching this week with a curvaceous, soft-feel table finished in Tadelakt, an ancient hand-plastering technique. There was Gregory Beson, whose Scarpa-inspired seat was made entirely from bricks of pink Himalayan salt. And there was Soren Ferguson, who graduated from RISD only a year ago but who has apprenticeships with Vonnegut/Kraft, Misha Kahn, Eny Lee Parker, and more under his belt. But this year, there was an actual winner as well — someone who would be chosen by a jury of peers and offered $5000 to further their practice. On Friday it was announced that the winner was Nick Missel, a sculptor who typically creates silicone casts of giant vehicles, like Caterpillar tractors, but here applied that same technique to a cardboard pallet in order to create a foam-filled, purple ombré, giant spaceship bench. (Can you tell it was our favorite, too?) The exhibition is on view until October 11 by appointment only in Brooklyn; we highly recommend a visit to see these in person!
Nick Missel
Elyse Graham
Ian Felton
Soren Ferguson
Alexis McNier
Studiovoll
Gregory Beson, Marco Piscitelli, Zac Hacmon
Marco Piscitelli
Nicholas Tilma
Zac Hacmon
Arcana
Gregory Beson
Bailey Fontaine
Ragna Ragnarsdottir
Winston Cuevas