{"id":203808,"date":"2022-12-07T08:54:23","date_gmt":"2022-12-07T13:54:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=id_news&p=203808"},"modified":"2022-12-07T08:54:27","modified_gmt":"2022-12-07T13:54:27","slug":"mavis-wiggins-tpg-architecture-2022-interior-design-hall-of-fame","status":"publish","type":"id_news","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/designwire\/mavis-wiggins-tpg-architecture-2022-interior-design-hall-of-fame\/","title":{"rendered":"Mavis Wiggins of TPG Architecture: 2022 Hall of Fame Inductee"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
December 7, 2022<\/p>\n\n\n
Words: <\/span>Cheryl S. Durst<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n Ceaselessly generous, effortlessly elegant, and indelibly humane, Mavis Wiggins thrives in the \u201cand\u201d: that beautiful landscape between nuance and subtlety, art and design, the said and the unsaid. Her colleagues at TPG Architecture, where she serves as managing executive and studio creative director, consider her something of a client whisperer for entities from DZ Bank to Irving Place Capital, who tend to emerge from their collaboration as design evangelists in their own right. \u201cMavis\u2019s clients know every design decision is important to the success of the project,\u201d TPG managing executive and studio creative director Suzette Subance Ferrier explains. \u201cThat is because she includes them in the process and educates them, so that they become an advocate for the design scheme.\u201d Adds TPG managing associate and creative director Ricardo Nabholz, \u201cMavis understands clients better than they understand themselves. She shows them a vision of their future that fulfills their every aspiration and responds to needs that have yet to be articulated and offers them the opportunity to build that vision.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n The \u201cMavis mantra\u201d equates the design process to a revelatory and bottom line\u2013affirming journey that requires seeing the arc between what is needed and what can be achieved. \u201cI first determine how I can best help a client, really help them, and therefore improve their business acumen by guiding them through a remarkable journey together,\u201d the workplace specialist says. \u201cMy mission is to help them see what is possible.\u201d Her vision is truly multidimensional and peripheral, allowing her to look, see, and interpret from a multiplicity of stances. \u201cWhat sets Mavis apart is her understanding of both space and occupants,\u201d says Howard Albert, chief risk officer of insurance company Assured Guaranty, its New York workplace TPG<\/a> completed in 2016. \u201cShe spent the time to understand exactly how we work and collaborate in the office, finding a way to be true to her aesthetic while really hearing what we were saying.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cSeeing the possible\u201d is Wiggins\u2019s guiding principle, in life as in design. Her clear and coherent vision was honed by an early interest in photography and fine art. Growing up in Berkeley, California, in the 1960\u2019s<\/a>, Wiggins was deeply influenced and affected by the multicultural mix of that time and place\u2014one that saw peace and turbulence, youthful uprising and middle-aged malaise, civil rights and social unrest. The era\u2019s musical culture left a lasting impression, too: Wiggins still finds joy in the wall of sound that surrounded her then. \u201cSly Stone was a radio DJ at the time and played a crazy range of artists in the morning as we got dressed for school,\u201d she recalls. \u201cLed Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, James Brown, Janis Joplin, Smokey Robinson\u2014my personal sound\u00adtrack then is my playlist now.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n Wiggins took her love of the visual arts with her to Brooklyn, New York, where she moved to attend Pratt Institute. She claims the design profession \u201cfound\u201d her. \u201cAt Pratt, I realized I could shape space and continue to enjoy the fruits of what fine art offers, and even apply some of those principals to interior architecture,\u201d the discipline in which she received her BFA and connected with mentors like Joseph D\u2019Urso and Stanley Felderman.<\/p>\n\n\n\n That desire to shape space in combination with her keen photographer\u2019s eye for composition and framing\u2014and her deep intuition to see place from both a designer\u2019s and the end-users\u2019 perspective\u2014has resulted in a definable signature. During her three-decade career working at a roster of top-tier commercial-design firms (Gensler and HLW among them), Wiggins has become known for interiors that are elegant, serene, rational, and always tethered to place. \u201cMavis\u2019s work is deeply contextual,\u201d Nabholz says. \u201cThere are geographical, architectural, cultural, and organizational touchstones in each project. These come together to create spaces that are as timeless as they are specific to their place and purpose.\u201d Ferrier concurs: \u201cThere is a level of clarity to her work that echoes great modernist design but with today\u2019s level of sensitivity.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nMavis Wiggins of TPG Architecture: 2022 Hall of Fame Inductee<\/h1>\n\n\n\n
Behind the “Mavis Mantra”<\/h2>\n\n\n\n