Hall of Fame AD100: It is our pleasure to share with you some of the best architects and designers from 2022 and who are featured in the latest Architectural Digest AD100 list. Every year AD releases a list of the top interior and architectural designers from the previous year. And this year was no exception, but in addition to the AD100 list, the Hall of Fame AD100 was also established. Read this article to learn a little bit more about some of the professionals featured on the AD100 Hall of Fame 2023!
Hall Of Fame AD100: The Best Designers and Architects Reunited In A Single List
Jacques Garcia
Let’s start our Hall of Fame AD100 with Jacques Garcia who is widely regarded as one of France’s top interior designers and architects today. The Villa Astor in Sorrento, Italy, and storied hotel projects like Paris’s Hôtel Costes, Marrakech’s La Mamounia, and New York’s Nomad are just a few examples of Garcia’s elaborately built, luxurious dwellings.
Garcia has also amassed a portfolio that epitomizes classic French design. He refurbished 35 rooms at the Louvre and several private residences at Versailles over the course of the last ten years, lavishly recreating the interiors of 17th-century buildings. He is said to be an obsessive antique collector who buys at least one thing every day.
Garcia certainly has room for his ever-expanding collection given that he converted a medieval Sicilian monastery into his own personal retreat. Since then, the AD100 Hall of Fame designer has written two books about his one-of-a-kind residence: Jacques Garcia: A Sicilian Dream: Villa Elena and Jacques Garcia: Twenty Years of Passion: Chateau du Champ de Bataille. He definitely deserves his spot on the Hall of Fame AD100.
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JACQUES GRANGE
Jacques Grange, a Paris-based interior designer with a 50+ year career, is still going strong. One example is his most recent book, Jacques Grange: Recent Works, published by Rizzoli in 2021, which features 31 new projects in his lavish characteristic style. The Hall of Fame AD100 wouldn’t feel complete without him.
He also incorporates a wide range of styles and historical periods into his interior designs. He enjoys fusing luxury with a feeling of originality when it comes to his hospitality projects, as he did at The Mark in New York and Hotel Mamá in Mallorca, which has vibrant tiled floors and classic furniture shapes wrapped in floral fabrics.
Yves Saint Laurent, Valentino Garavani, Princess Caroline of Monaco, and François Pinault are just a few of Grange’s notable clientele. A one-bedroom flat in Paris that was created for a friend is among the other recent projects. “We exchanged knowledge and skills. I don’t want to just sit still and think about my previous thoughts. Regarding the project, he admitted, “I also learned.
Renzo Piano
Renzo Piano, an Italian native now living in Genoa, has built famous museums, gleaming corporate headquarters, and urban residential skyscrapers that have defined modern architecture in the 20th and 21st centuries.
His no-nonsense approach to cultural institutions has produced instantly recognizable structures like The Whitney Museum in New York and, earlier this year, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. Two of his skyscrapers, the New York Times building in Manhattan and London‘s The Shard, have become icons.
Renzo Piano eventually opted for a design of glass-and-steel structures that have the uncanny ability to simultaneously (and seamlessly) create a sense of identity and weightlessness after completing his ground-breaking and contentious inside-out Centre Pompidou museum in Paris (with Richard Rogers) in 1977.
Kengo Kuma
Kengo Kuma is a Japanese architect that draws influence from Japan’s traditional element-based architecture and frequently uses organic materials like stone and wood. He made a name for himself with large-scale avant-garde projects which are very impressive.
His capacity to scale up these concepts may be shown in two recent projects: The concrete panels that cover the V&A Dundee museum in Scotland’s coastal city give it the appearance of being formed like a line of ships or even a sheer cliff face. The 68,000-seat National Japan Stadium for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which is covered with a series of eaves constructed of wood from each of the nation’s prefectures, is his greatest achievement to date. His first residential skyscraper in the United States and a Miami apartment that Aman built recently were both inspired by the city’s art deco past.
In addition to his architectural work, he is praised for his thought-provoking writing. The most recent of his numerous publications, Kengo Kuma: My Life as an Architect in Tokyo, was released in 2021.
India Mahdavi
India Mahdavi develops a certain vision of happiness and color through her creations and never ceases to sustain it since the opening of her studio in 2000. She has contributed to redefining the aesthetic of opulent interiors for more than 20 years by giving them a whimsical and, most importantly, refined sense of color.
The Iranian-born designer works from her Paris studio to produce her colorful designs for homes, hotels, restaurants, furniture, accessories, and retail spaces. The Gallery at Sketch, her ground-breaking restaurant, was dubbed the world’s most Instagrammed restaurant in 2014.
From the Hotel Du Cloitre in Arles to the Monte Carlo Beach Hotel in Monaco to the Gallery at Sketch in London or Ladurée in Los Angeles and Tokyo, India Mahdavi has created a variety of locations, bars, restaurants, retail concepts, clubs, and hotels. She is an architect and designer who celebrates an Oriental Pop in the West by imposing herself on the contemporary scene in a singular, eclectic, and nomadic manner.
Jean Nouvel
The Louvre Abu Dhabi, one of Jean Nouvel’s most famous creations, is made up of numerous white cubes covered by a huge dome made of thousands of interlocking aluminum stars. According to Jean Nouvel in 2017, it’s “one of the best pieces I have been fortunate to achieve.” It’s uniqueness is what, of course, makes the Hall of fame AD100 architect so amazing because no other project is quite like it.
The incredibly daring buildings created by French architect Jean Nouvel challenge all preconceived assumptions of conventional design. The Pritzker Prize-winning architect’s museums, music halls, towers, and residential complexes each have their own distinctive style, playing with wide expanses of color and shapes that seem retro-futuristic.
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Ilse Crawford
The distinctive perspective of British interior designer Ilse Crawford has enabled her to produce ground-breaking rooms that have altered expectations about what cutting-edge design looks like. Ilse Crawford, a former writer and magazine editor, founded her design firm, Studioilse, in 2001.
She has used an approach similar to an industrial design company to focus her creative energy on warm, welcoming residences (like this one in Stockholm) and hospitality projects that appreciate natural materials and elegant, hospitable settings that are nostalgic without being precious or extravagant.
Along with Studioilse’s lounge at the Hong Kong International Airport, her designs for the Soho House in New York and the Ett Hem hotel in Stockholm have come to represent a new standard for luxury in the hospitality industry that trades bling for comfort.
Sir Norman Foster
Norman Foster’s portfolio includes everything from private homes and furniture to airports (including a brand-new airport in Kuwait) and museums, but his style has been particularly influential in office buildings, such as his HSBC Tower in Hong Kong from 1986 and the circular Apple Park in Cupertino, California, from 2018.
Because of his emphasis on technical innovation, sustainability, and purposefulness, British architect Norman Foster, winner of the Pritzker Prize, and his long-standing firm Foster + Partners have changed how architecture may be utilized to support change in contemporary life. He was the one who built The Gherkin in London, which is famously known around the world. An icon that deserved his spot on the Hall of Fame AD100.
In order to effectively address urgent concerns, he established the Norman Foster Foundation in Madrid in 2017. This organization encourages interdisciplinary activities and educational initiatives for the design community.
Rose Tarlow
Rose Tarlow, a Los Angeles-based interior designer, antiques dealer, and proprietor of a boutique, has been defining Californian style for decades. She is one the Hall of Fame AD100. With a new flagship location for her furniture, lighting, and fabric company, Rose Tarlow Melrose House, in Beverly Hills and an upcoming interiors book, Tarlow has cemented her reputation as a genuine decorator’s decorator.
Tarlow has furnished the houses of celebrities like Oprah Winfrey and David Geffen with soulful, rustic furnishings in solid, neutral colors and an appreciation for organic materials, especially all things wood. She is also a great believer in collaboration; she collaborated on her own tranquil retreat in Provence with renowned Belgian landscape architects Peter and Jacques Wirtz.
Kelly Wearstler
To finish our Hall of Fame AD100 list we have Kelly Wearstler. Before she made a name for herself, New York was the undisputed hub of the American interior design industry. However, by introducing a distinctive, glitzy aesthetic to the local scene and playing with numerous 20th-century inspirations, including Hollywood Regency, to create a look all her own, Wearstler tilted the balance of design power toward Los Angeles.
Her maximalist style has had a significant impact on how we view contemporary American interiors through a number of best-selling books, boutiques, and an ever-growing portfolio of product lines (including an incredibly desirable collection for the Rug Company).
Other initiatives include The Kelly Wearstler Gallery, which honors the long history of cooperation between her studio and up-and-coming and interior artists. The gallery gives customers the chance to purchase unique goods created for private clientele and her expanding portfolio of hotel projects, many of which were completed for Proper Hotels. “My method is the same every time; it stems from the heart. When anything feels right, it is correct, according to my free-spirited design philosophy, the AD100 designer said in 2016.
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from RUG'SOCIETY BLOG https://rugsociety.eu/blog/2022/12/15/hall-of-fame-ad100-the-best-of-architecture-and-design/
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