Anything but standard: How AXOR is redefining our understanding of luxury
In a new white paper, fittings brand AXOR gets to the bottom of the changing concept of luxury. Tristan Auer translates the paper's findings into a cinematic concept bathroom.
October 17, 2022 | 10:00 pm CUT

Inspired by Hollywood: for AXOR's Personalities campaign, architect Tristan Auer designed a futuristic luxury bathroom reminiscent of the setting of Ridley Scott's cyberpunk classic ‘Blade Runner’
Individualisation as the ultimate luxury
In a two-part Whitepaper entitled ‘Expressing your personality’, AXOR paints a more contemporary perspective that focuses on self-realisation rather than imitating a preconceived image. ‘Individualisation is the megatrend of a society that is constantly becoming more and more differentiated’, introduces the first of the two papers, which focuses on finding one's own personality, the role of designers, products and spaces – with particular focus on the bathroom. This raises the legitimate question of the function of a brand. If everything can be individualised to the highest degree, if users feel personally addressed and belong to a brand, does this not at the same time lead to the general perception of brands dissolving? The text provides an answer that, at the very least, brand identity must be rethought, positioned as a means of reducing complexity, and loaded with tangible values and qualities.The bathroom, on the other hand, as a usually smaller room in the home, is ideally suited to being sensually and holistically personalised to individual needs

Striking details: the towel rail and vanity mirror in Polished Gold Optic come from the AXOR Universal Rectangular Accessories series designed by Philippe Starck

Auer sees the boundaries between living space and bathroom as fluid. That's why he brings materials like travertine, elements of art, as well as elegant lighting into play
The Blade Runner Bathroom
This is well illustrated, for example, by the concept bathroom of Paris-based designer Tristan Auer, whom AXOR asked to realise his personal vision of a luxurious oasis of well-being for its ‘From Personalities for Personalities’ campaign. Auer is not actually known for developing shorthand interiors that seem to have sprung straight out of a film. The architect focuses on the needs and stylistic preferences of his clients, translating them into lively mixtures of colours and eras with pointed lighting concepts. For AXOR, he was allowed to consider himself his own client for once and slips into the role of blockbuster hero Rick Deckard for the occasion. In a flat in Hong Kong, he transfers the dystopian atmosphere from the film ‘Blade Runner’ – shady and bathed in a cool blue through the mirrors framed by neon strips, reminiscent of the incessant flickering of old advertising signs in the streets of a megacity.
Like the basin mixer, the free-standing bath spout with shower is part of the AXOR Edge collection designed by Jean-Marie Massaud. Auer particularly likes its haptic prismatic structure

A shower under the AXOR ShowerHeaven, whose various functions are operated via the buttons and knobs of the ultra-modern AXOR Edge thermostat module
Counter design to the globalised standard
Who did Tristan Auer really have in mind when he designed his Personalities bathroom for AXOR? ‘It's for a man. Clearly self-centred. The guy only thinks about himself. He likes to collect. He is a hedonist,’ says the architect. About luxury, he says, ‘Luxury for me means having something made for you. And that changes everything. When you have something made for you, you only need it once. So it's going in the right direction, not to consume too much.’ And so suddenly the concept follows a reverse logic, the opposite of the original one.Project Gallery


















