Go Fish! Restaurant, backsplash detail, c/o Igloodgn

The Vancouver Convention Centre recently hosted another successful year of Interior Design Show West. This four-day event allowed consumers and retailers to come together and display fresh design concepts, initiate forward-thinking conversation and seek design inspiration for renovation projects. Anna Abbruzzo and Alain Courchesne of Igloodgn, a branding and interior design firm from Montreal, caught my attention with what they are calling the new Canadian aesthetic.

As a proud Canadian and local Vancouverite, I was thrilled to hear about the buzz we are causing in the international design world. This new style—termed maximal minimalism— Abbruzo and Courchesne explain as a reduced space with clean lines, a muted colour palette and one focal piece that catches the eye and draws you into the space. Imagine a beige room with a vibrant red sofa, a grand fireplace or an outrageously wacky backsplash behind your kitchen counter. Generating drama in one area means balancing the remainder of the room with minimal ornamentation. Together the two components create a look and feel of serene perfection.

To some, the idea of pairing a loud patterned carpet with a simple black table may seem too daring. But Igloodgn reassured hesitant audience members that maximal minimalism is the future for design in Canada. After viewing past residential, hotel and restaurant design projects I must admit I was convinced.

This sudden attention to Canadian design is cause for celebration because it means that Canadians, well known for our demure and unassertive character, are no longer afraid to make a statement. According to Igloodgn, interior design has come a long way since the late 90s, when the Canadian aesthetic was “humble, honest, and safe”. Today major cities including Vancouver and Toronto are hosting design shows such as IDSwest showcasing Canada’s newly-gained reputation as assertive, trendsetting and inclusive.

the goliath table goes from powerful tiny...

So how are Vancouver demographics determining the direction of interior design? One of my biggest concerns was space and functionality in small apartments in downtown Vancouver. Amanda Forrest of Amanda Forrest Interior Design recommends Resource Furniture, a company that specializes in convertible pieces and solve the problem of oversized furniture. IDSwest featured the Goliath table at the event. This unique table utilizes space by expanding from a dining table set for two up to its full size which seats six comfortably.

Living in Vancouver, life can get hectic. Not everyone has time to shop for the perfect new addition to their

to dinner-party ready! check out resource furniture's website to watch a video of the table in action!

home, office, or workplace. Forrest recommends online shopping as more designers are turning to the internet to find those quirky fun pieces. Websites such as etsy are perfect for accommodating busy lifestyles in Vancouver.

Interior design trends are constantly changing depending on what’s hot, affordable and in style: how can we keep up? The good news, Abbruzzo explained, is that “trends are a result of economic circumstances.” If we are able to understand what sparked a current trend we can begin to predict what’s coming in the future. Look out for these trends continuing into 2014. Bright technicolor, brass detailing, and handmade products that personalize spaces.

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Vancouver Art Gallery’s Art Spiegelman retrospective proves there’s much more to comics than Archie & Betty and childhood superheroes. 

 

The Vancouver Art Gallery’s current exhibit, CO-MIX: A Retrospective of Comics, Graphics and Scraps, showcases artist Art Spiegelman, whose innovative use of the comic strip– as a tool for social commentary and to fearlessly intervene in high-stakes political, aesthetic and cultural issues– leaves nothing off limits.

The underground “comix” movement of the seventies in San Francisco ignited Spiegelman’s career. During this time Spiegelman published in diverse styles in Short Order Comix, co-edited and published in Arcade, and worked as a cartoonist for Playboy. Spiegelman was also employed by the candy company Topps as a designer of trading cards and stickers. In typical Spiegelman style, this meant producing designs that criticized consumerist culture even as it paid his bills.

There is so much to see in this exhibit, and if you look closely, you will be rewarded with the most “comical” of comic jabs. My favourite work, “The Comics Historian,” combines unlikely comic characters in a critique on the erosion of the cartoon craft. Spiegelman’s witty dialogue between Charlie Brown and the Peanuts, Popeye, characters from Southpark, and his own Maus mice are a clever juxtaposition of mass-market, lowbrow erotica, and coterie comics: the so-called “co-mix.” Fast-forward to Spiegelman’s work today and you will find him designing children’s books such as “Open me … I’m a Dog!” with a much more refined and censored style.

After providing a critical foundation in his juvenilia and the early work for Topps, the VAG’s exhibit launches right into the highlight of Spiegelman’s international career: Maus. This thirteen-year project skyrocketed Spiegelman to success and has since become his best-known work. A deeply personal artist, Spiegelman turns to his own adversity for inspiration in his works, and Maus is no exception. Weaving the threads of two narratives, one of a father and son, and the other of the Holocaust, Maus retells history. This graphic novel was revolutionary because it did something that had never been done, which is to combine reality and autobiographical material to enter into the world of comics. The VAG dedicates the largest chunk of the exhibit to Maus, with pages mounted like canvases on each of the walls and numerous sketches showing his artistic process.

Spiegelman’s influence on the art world cannot be overstated. He and his wife’s creation of RAW magazine, which was recognized as the leading avant-garde comix magazine of its era, brought together American, European and Japanese up-and-coming cartoonists in order to give them exposure.  This lead to recognition of artists such as Robert Crumb and shone the spotlight on up and coming cartoonists. His ongoing conversation with contemporary politics creates bold, sometimes controversial pieces. These dialogues come head-to-head in his cover for The New Yorker titled “Valentine’s Day” in 1993 and later “Ground Zero” following the events of September 11, 2001. In total his twenty one covers for The New Yorker are admirable for their intentionally scandalous say-it-how-it-is attitude. I highly recommend taking a close look at the “Ground Zero” cover and the series of incomplete covers for RAW; they are brilliant.

The VAG does a fantastic job showcasing Spiegelman’s artistic progression and ongoing experimentation. I would advise visitors to imagine the show as a manifestation of his Breakdowns: Portrait of an Artist as a Young %@?*! 2008 series, which was a sort of retrospective of his earlier series Breakdowns. Viewed this way, the exhibit not only builds up the successes of this artist but it also tears him down, revealing the intimate moments, scraping away the layers to find brilliance in the flaws. A culmination of the scraps of his artistic genius, Spiegelman is remarkably diverse and is sure to grab hold of your own artistic imagination.

The exhibition is running February 16 – June 9 2013.