Design with a difference for Gabriel Scott
Putting Gabriel Scott's Welles chandelier's infinite potential for customisation to the test, six renowned designers reimagine the arrangement and materials of the iconic polygonal lighting fixture.
June 14, 2022 | 10:00 pm CUT

Gabriel Scott founder, Scott Richler, set up shop in 2012 with the idea of creating an architect-pleasing furniture collection which would be infinitely customisable. The Welles chandelier is a key piece

During Milan Design Week, Richler presented Floating Ideas, which showcased six adaptations of the Welles Chandelier from six leading designers of product and interiors
Designs made to adapt
Over ten years he has built a core collection – designed to be adapted. 'Because I came from a bespoke background, my thoughts focused on how to assemble a table so that if somebody wants to change the size of it, it's not going to require a return to the drawing board. The thinking is, how can you retain the bespoke nature of something in a ready-to-wear collection?' Equally customisable, in his book, are materials and configurations. One of his early commissions was a vastly scaled up and stretched out version of the Kelly Chandelier he had shown at ICFF, requested by Thom Forsyth, Creative Director of the Rockwell Group, for the bar at Fairmont Chateau Frontenac in Quebec City.

On show at Floating Ideas was the Welles Reimagined by David Rockwell, Sybille de Margerie and Kelly Hoppen (top) and Alessandro Munge, Michelle Gerson and Dr Guan Lee (below)

The reimagining of the Welles Chandelier by Dr Guan Lee features the signature cuboctahedrons in PoliRock, a material made by Lee’s team from waste and developed to resemble authentic rock
Casting new lights
On the roster of designers is the mid-century-leaning New York interior designer Michelle Gerson, who, pushing a post-pandemic rebirth theme, has strung out the Welles’ cuboctahedron modules like May blossom on a branch; Kelly Hoppen, who has created an elegant, linear cluster of the Welles components, cast in white clay and connected with satin brass; David Rockwell, whose studio has developed a floating fixture that resembles a cluster of wet grapes – the cuboctahedrons here are produced in dark and clear glass of varying sizes that coalesce organically; and Parisian interior designer Sybille de Margerie, who has played with light and shadow in her arrangement of the elements, using padded leather on certain facets to cleverly sculpt the assembly.

David Rockwell’s version of the Welles (top) groups the light fixtures in an organic cluster like grapes, while Alessandro Munge’s take (below) shows them dancing at the end of long black limbs
Same but different
The two which have departed most from the original design come from Toronto-based Studio Munge and Guan Lee, director of Grymsdyke Farm and co-director of London UCL’s Material Architecture Lab. Led by Italian designer Alessandro Munge, the Toronto studio has been inspired by rhythmic dance, the dark glass faceted globes holding poses on the end of outstretched black stems. Easily adapted to hold its own in different volumes of space, the piece screams modern Mouille.

The reimagining by Michelle Gerson (top) has the delicate appearance of blossoms on a branch, while Sybille de Margerie’s reworking (below) is a clever grouping, sculpted using sections in leather
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