“I love my Bomber Short Rubber in ash. It feels like a modern solution to an ancient issue: being elegant and protected at once.”
“Probe Vol. 2 (1995) by OMA/Rem Koolhaas: Generic City. I love this catalogue because it feels more like an artwork than a book. Created for the 1995 OMA exhibition in Tokyo, it layers neon text, translucent pages, and Araki’s photo-story of the city. Chaotic, layered, and experimental, it feels like holding a snapshot of Rem Koolhaas’s ideas about the city in book form, and it challenges you to think about how ideas can be communicated in new ways. A catalogue that thinks it’s an artwork, and perhaps it is.”
“My home in Amsterdam — my never-ending exploration ground — is my safe space, a place that holds me when I need it.”
“If you know me, you know I have Zig-Zag chairs by Gerrit Rietveld in every home I live in. My friends and clients often joke that it’s a problem. I’ve traced it back to the first Zig-Zag chair I ever remember noticing, in a book from my CKV (Culturele en Kunstzinnige Vorming) class at school back on Aruba. Growing up in a former Dutch colony, we learned a lot about Dutch design, and that was the chair that made me question what a chair could be."
“I spent most of my last year in Mexico City working on a project and fell in love with the objects from Atelier Emaús while browsing at flea markets. It’s a workshop that began in the 1950s at a Benedictine monastery near Cuernavaca, where monks and artists collaborated to rethink religious art. At the time, Catholicism was undergoing a global redefinition leading up to the Second Vatican Council (1962 to 1965), and their work reflects that search for a modern, more open spiritual expression. They remind me of my childhood, growing up in a home with little art on the walls, but always a cross.”