'petit h, a creation in reverse' is what happens when Hermès works on leftover materials from the maison’s métiers
SINGAPORE (Dec 4): Pascale Mussard, the 6th generation of the Hermès family, founded a workshop in 2010 where discarded materials from Hermès métiers are saved and turn into new objects. In 2018, she passed the baton to Godefroy de Virieu who is its current artistic director.
Now in Singapore until Dec 15, petit h, a creation in reverse features reinterpreted objects such as leather pendants, mushroom paperweight, fish-shaped bags, silk necklaces and more.
petit h, a creation in reverse features reinterpreted objects. Shown here are mushrooms paperweights
Pig in leather and mink
Pony bag in leather
For the Singapore installation, the concept was created by Singaporean designer Olivia Lee. de Virieu explains, “What I love about my meeting with Olivia [Lee] was the way she tells stories. She spoke so well about petit h, even better than me, so I was really impressed. I love how she interprets things. She sent me little drawings, much like a children's book.”
This book that Lee sketched illustrates how an astronaut arrives and discovers an incredible planet h, which is a metaphor for Hermès. This astronaut lands on this planet and picks up materials to work on in his laboratory and he starts to invent beautiful objects. This is in direct relation to Singapore because of our limited resources. In the same way the astronaut has a small space and makes good use of it. de Virieu likens the space where petit h work is done to that of a science laboratory.
de Virieu graduated from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Création Industrielle (ENSCI) in 1998. He started his career by collaborating with his classmate and friend, reknowned photographer Rip Hopkins where watch, listen and observe are key when it comes to the design process, something that de Virieu still practices today.
In Singapore for the opening of petit h, a creation in reverse, the Frenchman made time in his busy schedule to have a chat with Options.
Godefroy de Virieu, artistic director of petit h, in the workshop
From your experience with photographer Rip Hopkins, do you still watch, listen and observe first before you begin your design process?
This is the starting point of anything: to observe and to look carefully at what's going on. I love to meet craftsmen in their factories. This is what I used to do with my partner Rip [Hopkins] when I used to work with him. This is actually the way we start to design things instead of waiting for specifications.
After our student days we visited places around Paris just to observe products and the materials used. As designers we think about the usefulness of a product. We think about how to make the best of use of it while keeping the identity of the product but at the same time to try to find new solutions for the product.
As in the use of the saddle, you retain some of its original spirit?
We always want to keep the original and link that to a creative process. When I started in 2000 it was very much linked to the process – and it is something related to the principle of petit h’s creative process.
But what I like is to meet people, besides the craftsmen, I like to meet people who are not craftsmen but who own factories especially if they have been in the family from generation to generation. We look at the tools they use and we see if can use it too with some modifications.
We start from the technical points and look at it with the creative eye of a designer. Then we work with the craftsmen to come up with something.
We speak to the craftsmen and say ‘Is it possible to do it this way instead of doing it that way?’ He would say, ‘Oh I never thought about it that way, yes let's try it.’ If it works, we go forward to explore new product ideas.
At petit h, this is something that we do a lot because we are at the forefront of the design process. We assemble things that have never been assembled before to find solutions. It is very interesting to see this meeting between creativity and know-how and how it ends in ideas.
What is the story that petit h is telling?
This is the state of mind that Hermès always had since 1837 because they have always sought products that can be repaired by using the best quality material to do it. This was probably the starting point of sustainability for us. If you know how to repair a product, you don’t have to produce too much in the first place. You produce once, and you keep it for life. This is what Hermès is known for.
Pascale [Mussard] told me this story about her great uncle at the Faubourg Saint-Honoré store and she was with her daughter. She saw her great uncle take a piece of unused leather out of the trash and made it into a wallet. He started making the wallet at 10am and finished it by noon and he placed it in the store to see if it would sell. And it was sold, so they decided to put it in production. This is probably the starting point for petit h.
Hermès is really close to its customers because they find ideas to play with the products. There is a connection when you look at something at Hermès... there is a sense of humour that create a link between the customers and the maison.
Hermès is here to tell stories and to make customers dream.
What inspires you?
Daily life inspires me. I like very simple things. I like to take a walk. I like to go to the market. I like to see how people live. When I travel, I will try to visit a hardware store because in a hardware store you see how the local people live. This is one thing I love to do.
I am very interested in objects in the way they use it in the same way Hermès does. This is why I love the company because Hermès never produces decorative things; they always create useful things – since the beginning of time, such as the saddle.
Who inspires you?
My daughters aged 11 and 13. They were little when I started working for petit h and they sometimes offer ideas. My daughter wanted a swing and she would ask me to make one. To make the swing, I went to an equestrian store in my countryside house in Burgundy and I found a pair of stirrups and in my wood workshop I did the prototype and it became the petit h swing.
In another example I asked my daughter for ideas and she said why don’t you make a jump rope? So, I went to the workshop and we found the materials to do it.
What do you most like about working for petit h?
It is a dream project. I have all these beautiful materials and the best skilled craftsmen of Hermès to work with. In the petit h team there is a guy who asks all the departments to give him materials they don’t use. He shows me what he has and this is the starting point of petit h.
When you saw the line a creation in reverse, what was your initial reaction?
We need to explain to people that we are not just doing upcycling because this is not a marketing or communication point that we want to push. We need to define what petit h is. It all starts with the team and the theme. Because we reuse the material, it is a joyful way to speak about Hermès.
A creation in reverse needs to be seen when you look at the product. I love how people look at the petit h objects and smile. They smile because they understand it.
For example, this guy came with this idea for the salt and pepper shaker. He asks the craftsman to make the hole at the top here. So, when a Hermès customer looks at it they will know that the button is from the ready-to-wear collection. Hermès makes useful objects that put a smile on our face. It says so much about petit h.
As you work closely with your wife, how do you complement each other?
We both love creating. She is more focused on colours while I am more focused on structure. When we build things together, I look at it from a technical point of view while she looks at the details. This is the way we work for petit h.
petit h, a creation in reverseis from now to Dec 15 at Hermes Liat Towers 541 Orchard Road, Singapore |