The prolific Parisian design duo Erwan and Ronan Bouroullec are no strangers to the contract industry, having produced successful workplace designs for Vitra, Kvadrat, and other manufacturers. The brothers’ reductive, linear aesthetic and keen sense of color explain the popularity of their designs in offices frequented by the young and creative, and their latest contract offering—a series of interior-exterior architectural glass panels—is no exception. Developed by the Bouroullecs in partnership with Chicago-based Skyline Design and debuting at NeoCon this month, the panels use custom color analysis software to create an abstract, immersive “stained glass” effect. The collection’s two primary designs—the diamondlike pattern Oblique, and Chevron, a zigzag look—are available in multiple colorways and graphic treatments, offering different degrees of scale, color saturation, and opacity.
With a glass panel portfolio including collections from superstars like Patricia Urquiola, Michael Graves, Alexander Girard, and Laurinda Spear, Skyline has long had an artistic bent. The Bouroullecs’ designs first caught the eye of Skyline’s creative director, Deborah Newmark, during a retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in 2012. “I found the work intelligent, playful, inventive, and poetic in its elegance,” she recalls. “I was curious how they would approach glass on an architectural scale.”
For the Bouroullecs, the floor-to-ceiling format provided a means to enliven static interior environments with patterns that present a vista onto dynamic landscapes. “Glass is linked to what happens through a window—something which has a nature of movement, of evolution,” says Erwan, describing the brothers’ intention to capture the sensation of seeing color and light shift outside as you walk around indoors.
As we take in our surroundings, our eyes synthesize huge amounts of visual data into a cohesive image. The Bouroullecs have developed Oblique and Chevron to do the opposite, and to sublime decorative effect. Their computer program deconstructs a photograph by distilling the image to its essential components of color and composition, abstracting these elements into each pattern’s lines and shapes to roughly re-create the balance of the picture. “It keeps the color, it keeps a little of the rhythm, but not [by] transferring the picture directly,” Erwan explains. Up close, both panel designs look like incredibly intricate stained-glass tessellations; when they are viewed as a panorama, the distinctions in the patterns become evident. Oblique, for instance, renders the image with the irregular rhythm of a bar code in variegated hues, while Chevron transforms it into an impressionistic gradient reminiscent of a giant Photoshop palette.