{"id":254433,"date":"2025-04-16T12:06:30","date_gmt":"2025-04-16T16:06:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=id_news&p=254433"},"modified":"2025-04-16T12:06:38","modified_gmt":"2025-04-16T16:06:38","slug":"10-questions-with-marc-antoine-barrois-and-antoine-bouillot","status":"publish","type":"id_news","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/designwire\/10-questions-with-marc-antoine-barrois-and-antoine-bouillot\/","title":{"rendered":"10 Questions With\u2026 Marc-Antoine Barrois and Antoine Bouillot"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
April 16, 2025<\/p>\n\n\n
Words: <\/span>Adrian Madlener<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n Photography: <\/span>Courtesy of Marc-Antoine Barrois<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n The oft-siloed worlds of fashion and furniture design are converging. Nowhere has that become more evident than at Milan Design Week\u2014still the largest annual event of its kind. Anchored by the long established Salone del Mobile fair<\/a>, the city-wide happening plays host to an increasing number of activations presented by various industries looking to harness the potential of cross-pollination and diversification. Car, beauty, and even appliance brands have gotten in on the game. Several are also venturing into the realm of homeware products and working closely with purveyors of fine materials to do so. At this year\u2019s edition, which ran from April 8-11, 2025, at least 10 leading haute couture houses and ready-to-wear apparel brands mounted especially immersive installations. All of this makes perfect sense given the Italian city\u2019s history as a bastion of fashion and textile production long before furniture was its thing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Among the more notable and comprehensive of these grand undertakings was multi-hyphenate Marc-Antonie Barrois<\/a>\u2019s MISSION ALDEBARAN staging. The widely celebrated Parisian couturier and perfumer\u2014having cut his teeth with the likes of Jean-Paul Gaultier and Dominique Sirop before establishing his own house\u2014imagined the project with equally polymathic and lauded designer Antoine Bouillot<\/a>. The multidisciplinary designer and creative director is the force behind wildly successful interiors practice Honneur Society and co-founder of collectible studio Bellon Bouillot<\/a>, represented in New York by gallery STUDIOTWENTYSEVEN<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The project is not merely a sensorial spatial experience like the rest but a fully fledged articulation of an underlying concept, one underpinning the launch of a newly formulated perfume branded with the same name and developed with fragrance expert Quentin Bisch. Barrois and Bouillot rounded out the particularly enveloping installation with limited edition furnishings, a book, and merchandise. This \u201ctotal work of art\u201d and \u201cworld-building\u201d narrative approach allowed them to fully explore the dualistic interplay of light and dark; a poignant theme in these uncertain times. The ambitious endeavor took close to a year to perfect and carry out.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n One enters the iconic, emphatically Art Deco-style Salone dei Tessuti in Milan\u2019s Lazzaretto neighborhood only to find a mirrored cube occupying the double height space. An aperture demarcated by black ropes appears to conceal the entrance but actually leads into a much more extensive densification of these elements\u2014an eventually pitch black \u201dforest.\u201d One moves further and further into the seemingly endless abyss only to decipher the glimmer of slowly emerging light from far off in the distance. What eventually emerges is a circular clearing with a large Aldebaran star-inspired luminaire suspended above a field of carefully crafted Tuberose paper flowers infused with the fragrance\u2014and encircled by rock-shaped marble settees. A multidirectional score plays along the perimeter. Everything is either rendered in black or white.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Barrois and Bouillot spoke to Interior Design<\/em> about various aspects of this labor-of-love endeavor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Marc-Antonie Barrois: Having worked in fashion, scent-creation, and a number of other creative fields, I\u2019m always interested in channeling the notions of elegance, timelessness, and nature\u2019s inherent beauty; regardless of what form that might take. Antoine and I share that appreciation on a deeply emotional level. We both have a sensibility for the world of childhood and the sense of sublime discovery that comes with that stage of life.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Antoine Bouillot: Somehow, we don\u2019t need to overly explain things to each other. There\u2019s an inherent symbiosis in the approach we each take to many facets of our respective practices. I\u2019ve designed a number of Marc-Antoine\u2019s boutiques in Paris and London.<\/p>\n\n\n\n M-AB: I believe that scent is an experience, a story, and a journey. The ALDEBARAN installation and fragrance embodies optimism, inviting visitors to lose themselves in darkness only to rediscover the brilliance of light and fragrance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n AB: Every element created for this event was carefully conceived to capture and convey the profound emotions Marc-Antoine and I experienced with this perfume. Each part tells its own story. We live in challenging times and our idea was that these components could inspire a sense of sanguinity. The installation, especially in the context of an exhaustive Milan Design Week, offers visitors a chance to rest, contemplate, and regain a sense of wonder.<\/p>\n\n\n\n M-AB: The Tuberose blooms at night and, in doing so, emits an especially strong aroma. On a deep emotional level for myself and hopefully others, this condition is indeed an expression of light and dark. ALDEBARAN is the first sole flower fragrance I\u2019ve developed. It\u2019s so potent and sensually captivating that when I close my eyes, it elicits a lot of imagery\u2014what we ultimately evoked in the installation and other components of the project.<\/p>\n\n\n\n M-AB: The idea for the installation came first. About 10 months ago, we began looking throughout Milan for the right venue. Initially, we considered a very raw industrial space near Centrale Station, but then came upon Salone dei Tessuti that has a strong history that\u2019s still evident. It also made sense with my background in textile as the building was once used as a warehouse for this city\u2019s thriving fabric industry. The flow of the space from the main hall down a corridor with wood paneled antichambers was ideal for some of the additional programming we wanted to include: more intimate spaces for showcasing the furniture, drawings, and shop toward the exit.<\/p>\n\n\n\n AB: Of course we love working together, but we also like to bring in other experts that can add their own perspective to the overall concept. With the initial idea of having the star element hover over the field of flowers already in place, we needed an additional treatment to express the notion of hope and optimism. Consulting scientific researcher Aur\u00e9lie Jean and astrophysicist Anthony Salsi, we learned that the Aldebaran has a strange rhythm in its celestial pattern, which we choose to translate in the frequency of the pulsating light. It\u2019s not a heartbeat or malfunction.<\/p>\n\n\n\n10 Questions With\u2026 Marc-Antoine Barrois and Antoine Bouillot<\/h1>\n\n\n
Explore This Installation By Marc-Antoine Barrois + Antoine Bouillot<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Interior Design: How did your collaboration first come about?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
ID: Tell us more about the vision behind MISSION ALDEBARAN?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
ID: Take us through the thinking behind the ALDEBARAN perfume.<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
ID: How did you select the location?\u00a0<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
ID: How were some of the other collaborators integral to this holistic staging?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n