NACHO CARBONELL

LADBROKE HALL COCOON CHANDELIER (210/2022)

Carpenters Workshop Gallery

Unique

2022

Metal Mesh with Paverpol and Pigments, Metal Welded Branch, Silicone Cable, Light Fittings

Height — 177.2 in (450 cm)

Width — 137.8 in (350 cm)

Depth — 98.4 in (50cm)

Price — Upon Request

Inquire with Carpenters Workshop Gallery

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  • Nacho Carbonell’s Ladbroke Hall Cocoon Chandelier concaves into tree-like forms as it spawns into a luminescent forest hanging from above. Swathed in metal mesh with Paverpol and pigments, the metal welded branch cradles the soft, angelic glow of the light fittings and the decorative entanglement of the silicone cables wrapped within. The artist views objects as living organisms, where natural materials, textures and techniques come to life and spark imagination in the viewer

    This artwork was custom-made for Ladbroke Hall, the arts and culture venue in Notting Hill and home to Carpenters Workshop Gallery's London location. The artwork hangs invitingly from the ceiling of Pollini at Ladbroke Hall, the award-winning Italian restaurant by chef Emanuele Pollini

 
 

ARTIST BIOGRAPHY

 

NACHO CARBONELL

Nacho Carbonell is a Spanish designer and sculptor known for his tactile, experimental approach that transforms objects into expressive, living forms. Combining organic textures, hand-built forms and fantasy-driven design, Carbonell creates communicative objects that arouse feelings and imagination and that allow viewers to escape everyday life.

Born in Valencia, Spain, Carbonell graduated in 2003 from Cardenal Herrera C.E.U. University before continuing his studies at Design Academy Eindhoven in the Netherlands. He now continues to live in Eindhoven, where he works with a team of designers and artists from an open warehouse studio and has developed a practice that combines experimental techniques with natural materials.

Carbonell’s work explores the idea of objects as living organisms capable of emotion and surprise, creating pieces that appear both organic and otherworldly. The designer forms all his works by hand, using locally sourced materials found near his studio and elsewhere to instil each piece with personality and presence. Among his notable works are the Cocoon lamps – a series of tree-like sculptures built from steel branches and mesh-like cocoons made from a mixture of sand and textile hardener. These pieces evoke elements of magic realism, appearing to both imitate and transcend nature.

Carbonell’s work has been exhibited internationally in museums including Groninger Museum, 21_21 Design Sight, Fonds National d’Art Contemporain, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Mint Museum and MAXXI. His work One-Seater Concrete Treeis held in the permanent collection of Cincinnati Museum of Art.

Carbonell was named Designer of the Year by Architectural Digest Spain in 2013. He was recognised as Designer of the Future at Design Miami/Basel in 2009. The same year, his Evolution collection earned him a nomination for Beazley Design of the Year from the Design Museum in London. The book De Rebus Natura (Lecturis, 2015) covers seven years of work by Carbonell through an expressive overview of his distinctive style, organic forms and textural qualities. Carbonell also features in Dysfunctional: Beyond the Boundaries of Form and Function(Editions Norma, 2019) by Glenn Adamson.