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Archive for the ‘São Paulo’ Category

Popular taste

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009
I met Pedro Ariel and Lucia Gurovitz – respectively editor-in-chief and design editor for Casa Cláudia – at the Idea Brasil award ceremony. Pedro later emailed me and mentioned they’d like talk to a bit more about my research, so on my return we met for lunch at the executive dining room on the top of the Abril headquarters, where we were joined by Regina Galvão, senior editor of the magazine – after lunch we checked out the terrace’s impressive view.
Casa Cláudia is Brazil’s oldest shelter magazine, and one of the most recognised titles from the mammoth media and publishing group Abril. Despite a growing number of competitors, it also a household name in Brazil (and also in Portugal) when it comes to decoration and, to some extent, the tricky notion of taste. I was really interested in finding out how design has been featured in the magazine and perceived by its wide audience, and also here things are changing. The growing “C class” (or lower-middle class) is altering its patterns of consumption, but also its access to information. Being a popular title, Casa Cláudia is noticing those social changes, but also a more widespread interest in all things Brazilian. Differently than the past – when foreign decorative elements, trends and taste were seen as superior by the so-called laughter class – or AAA, the super rich. This appreciation of “Made in Brazil” products and aesthetics (whatever that means)  has been coming from larger, increasingly more populous social groups that are more in touch with their (popular) culture than the traditional Brazilian elites. And that is no small shift.
The editors of Casa Cláudia have been answering that appreciation with the “Design Brasil” volume series, where since 2003 – but on an irregular basis – they have been collating profiles of Brazilian product and furniture designers. In true Casa Cláudia tradition, these inexpensive, highly accessible publications are a great way to introduce a large audience to some of their most important design practicioners. I left the Abril building with all 4 of them, including the latest 2009 issue.

I met Pedro Ariel and Lucia Gurovitz – respectively editor-in-chief and design editor for Casa Cláudia – at the Idea Brasil award ceremony. Pedro later emailed me and mentioned they’d like talk to a bit more about my research, so on my return we met for lunch at the executive dining room on the top of the Abril headquarters, where we were joined by Regina Galvão (right), senior editor of the magazine – after lunch we checked out the terrace’s impressive view. (more…)

Our Business

Monday, August 17th, 2009

I first knew of Gerson Oliveira and Luciana Martins’ work when I assisted Guta Moura Guedes on the research for the &Fork book back in 2006. Their studio is called ,Ovo, and I had it on my São Paulo list from early on. I arrived at their Vila Olímpia address quite late in the day (7pm is actually night time in the Autumn), and managed to have a great chat with Gerson – Luciana said hi on her way from a meeting to a dinner.

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Adélia, Daniela, Flávia

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

I spent the better part of my day with three amazing women.
First, design journalist and curator and former director of Museu da Casa Brasileira Adélia Borges, who has been a terrific guiding hand for me from the very first moment, welcomed me into her house/office in Vila Madalena for a great lunch and conversation. I forgot to take a photo of Adélia, but I will meet her again in Bento Gonçalves and also on the 11th here in São Paulo – more news on that later.

Just as I left Adélia’s street I got a call from Daniela Pizetta, who I got in touch before coming to Brazil through design journalist and curator Aric Chen. She picked me up on the corner and we drove to her husband’s Bike Shop. Cris runs one of the few licenced Harley Davidson workshops in Brazil, and he started our chat there. Then we walked up to the Sunset spot in Vila Beatriz, where we arrived just after the sun set. And today was the first day I actually saw São Paulo’s blue sky… We went back to their place and continued talking over pizza about Daniela’s experience with Brazilian product design, design development and export, in what was a remarkably insightful take into the industry, its achievements but also its shortcomings over the past years.

Then I got a taxi – with the greatest, most politically opinionated cab driver I’ve ever met – to Morumbi, where I met Flávia Pagotti Silva. Flávia had a really busy day, and is having a very busy week of exciting new projects and commissions, so we could only talk from 8pm. Her cool, soon to be 4-year old son Pedro paid us company throughout the talk/interview, repeatedly attempting to fly over the couch.

3 São Paulos

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Yesterday I managed to see three remarkably different versions of São Paulo:
1. Lunch at the Museu da Casa Brasileira, the place to go to see Brazilian furniture, applied arts and the gardens of the Fábio Prado mansion.
2. More books and general wonderment at Shopping Cidade Jardim, Brazil’s most exclusive (and dare I say beautifully executed by Arthur Mattos Casas) shopping mall, which includes a whole floor dedicated to Art&Design – an empty floor, but I guess the intention is there.
3. Chopps and more at Bar Brahma, a São Paulo classic in downtown. While the bar and its fenced terrace are delightful, its surroundings are somewhat bleak: homeless people and crackheads wonder the streets, alone or in groups. Some of downtown São Paulo’s blocks and streets are appropriately called “Cracolândia”. I wondered how long it will take for this area to become gentrified…

Along the way me and the Finottis met some friends, eventually sitting down together at Bar Brahma: first Domingos Pascali, an architect and associate of Isay Weinfeld, plus former fabricanti and product designer Brunno Jahara. No Sunday rest from Brazilian design.

Sábado São Paulo

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

Saturday was a lazy, overcast day spent mostly with the Finotti family. Leonardo, Michelle, Gu, Mariana and I went for breakfast at Galeria dos Pães, a 24-hour, busy bakery, café and restaurant in Jardins. I then walked with Michelle along Rua Óscar Freire, the shopping street of choice for the well-to-do Paulistanos. Michelle had worked in the studio that redesigned the street a few years ago, and told me how they buried electrical cables and tried to format things like manholes and sidewalk heights and widths. Flagship stores for Brazilian brands such as Richards, Forum, Melissa and Havaianas share the street and with other international big fashion names. (more…)

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