Just 40 miles east of Fabrègues, the modest commune in the South of France that is residence to Pierre Yovanovitch’s 17th-century castle (Advert, April 2018), lies another abode steeped in French layout record: Château de la Colle Noire, the onetime home of Christian Dior. “Its architecture has normally influenced me,” Yovanovitch states of the storied residence, which is tucked absent in the Grasse countryside, where the fashion legend blended his perfumes. “My household is like this much too, extremely simple architecture but strong and austere.”
So when Dior Maison tapped the Advertisement100 titan to dream up new household components, debuting on the heels of his new adaptation of the brand’s Medallion chair, Yovanovitch discovered sufficient fodder in these popular grounds. Musing on Old Entire world requirements that might have existed at La Colle Noire, he set out to usher home staples into a fashionable context. The resulting Midi assortment involves an elegantly flared desk lamp, which echoes the curves of Yovanovitch’s strike home furniture. A hand-carved cigar box, in the meantime, retains high quality top rated of head. (Embedded in its lid is a dial to evaluate humidity.) And, perhaps most playfully, a Picassoesque mirror nods to the Fabrègues songbirds that lifted Yovanovitch’s spirit through the pandemic’s early lockdown times. These parts and extra just debuted at the Nomad St. Moritz reasonable, established in the Chesa Planta museum, exactly where Yovanovitch also unveiled new furnishings underneath his possess label.
Cigar box from Yovanovitch’s Dior Maison assortment.
Photograph: Courtesy of DiorAux Oiseaux Mirror by Pierre Yovanovitch for Dior Maison.
Photograph: Courtesy of DiorGlass-and-Oak Balloon Lamp by Pierre Yovanovitch for Dior Maison.
Picture: Courtesy of DiorLike so a lot of Yovanovitch’s do the job, the Dior selection tells a story of French savoir faire. Hewn from community timber (oak, hornbeam) and hand-carved by the renowned woodworkers of the Les Vosges region, every single object pays homage to the stripped-down magnificence of the South
of France. “All of it is wood—rough, sound wooden,” Yovanovitch describes. “I needed to develop a collection with what was basic and noble, like Dior did.” dior.com
The designer.
Picture: Stephen Kent JohnsonChâteau de Fabrègues.
Photo: Jerome Galland