Friday Five with Cindy Allen
This year marks 16 years as Editor in Chief of Interior Design magazine for Cindy Allen, and she shares what keeps her inspired.
This year marks 16 years as Editor in Chief of Interior Design magazine for Cindy Allen, who has spent that time well championing the field’s up-and-coming designers right alongside the prominent and established ones. Besides bringing the best of interior design to the magazine’s pages every month, she has also published nine books on design and produced over 70 short documentaries on various designers. If the monthly issue isn’t enough, you should follow her on Instagram (@thecindygram) to check out her beautifully curated feed, which also gives viewers the occasional peek at what goes on behind the scene at the magazine. See what inspires Allen in this Friday Five. Spinneybeck \ Photo by Bob O’Connor Photography
1. Erwin Hauer, Sculptor
When the book, Erwin Hauer ? Continua ? Architectural Screens, landed on my desk a decade ago, I became obsessed with the Austrian sculptor and his modular large-scale screens. I made several visits to Hauer’s treasure trove of a barn/studio in Connecticut (near Yale where he taught under Josef Albers until 1990), and in 2008 had the honor of inducting him into the Interior Design Hall of Fame. Erwin’s designs are as relevant today as ever, and he’s experiencing somewhat of a resurgence (teaming up with former student Enrique Rosado), having designed leathers f...
This year marks 16 years as Editor in Chief of Interior Design magazine for Cindy Allen, who has spent that time well championing the field’s up-and-coming designers right alongside the prominent and established ones. Besides bringing the best of interior design to the magazine’s pages every month, she has also published nine books on design and produced over 70 short documentaries on various designers. If the monthly issue isn’t enough, you should follow her on Instagram (@thecindygram) to check out her beautifully curated feed, which also gives viewers the occasional peek at what goes on behind the scene at the magazine. See what inspires Allen in this Friday Five. Spinneybeck \ Photo by Bob O’Connor Photography
1. Erwin Hauer, Sculptor
When the book, Erwin Hauer ? Continua ? Architectural Screens, landed on my desk a decade ago, I became obsessed with the Austrian sculptor and his modular large-scale screens. I made several visits to Hauer’s treasure trove of a barn/studio in Connecticut (near Yale where he taught under Josef Albers until 1990), and in 2008 had the honor of inducting him into the Interior Design Hall of Fame. Erwin’s designs are as relevant today as ever, and he’s experiencing somewhat of a resurgence (teaming up with former student Enrique Rosado), having designed leathers f...
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