Thomas Takada 2026 Rug Model “Interdépendance” | Side Gallery

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THOMAS TAKADA

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Rug Model "Interdépendance"
Designed by Thomas Takada
Paris, 2026
Hand-knotted wool

Measurements
140 × 210 cm
55,1 × 82,7 in

Edition
Limited edition of 7. More sizes are available upon request

Exhibitions
Exhibited at Villa Noailles Design Parade 2026, Hyères (France)

About
The Buisson Ardent collection was conceived for the 20th Design Parade Hyères, presented at Villa Noailles (June 25–28, 2026). The exhibition takes its roots at the edge of Paris's Parc des Buttes-Chaumont, where seeds and debris gather and brambles grow abundantly beyond the reach of gardeners, suspended between freedom and abandonment. Often regarded as a weed, the bramble is nevertheless a pioneering species and the bearer of the symbolism of the burning bush, prompting a reflection on what this resilient plant can reveal about ourselves and our relationship with the landscape.
Each object in the collection is an exploration of the bramble through craftsmanship and materiality. The bramble is burned, cast, woven, cut, buried, imprinted, assembled and repaired. These processes reveal both the destructive relationship we can have with our environment and ourselves, as well as a more poetic, less anthropocentric perspective that embraces the complexity and mysteries of the physical world.
Hand-knotted in wool, Interdépendance translates the intertwined growth of the bramble into a textile composition. Its dense network of branches evokes the invisible connections that exist between living organisms, suggesting that resilience emerges not through isolation but through coexistence and mutual support. Through the slow and meticulous process of hand-knotting, the rug transforms the bramble into a tactile landscape, celebrating craftsmanship as a means of expressing the complexity, fragility and interconnectedness of the natural world.

Designer image

Thomas Takada is a French-Japanese designer whose practice operates at the intersection of architecture, art and design. His work engages critically with the environmental, cultural, and material conditions of the present, proposing a sensitive and poetic reconsideration of our relationship to the physical world in the context of the climate crisis.

Born in Japan and raised in the United States, Takada developed a cross-cultural perspective that informs his approach to landscape, materiality, and perception. His formative years in the U.S. fostered a deep connection to 19th-century American thought, particularly the writings of Henry David Thoreau and the paintings of Thomas Cole, whose reflections on nature and the transformation of the landscape during industrialization continue to resonate within his work.

Takada studied architecture at the École Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture de Paris-Belleville, where he developed a methodology grounded in observation, material research, and conceptual clarity. His practice privileges a local and handcrafted approach, often based on the collection of found materials—organic or industrial—from specific environments. Through this process, he seeks to reveal overlooked qualities and latent narratives embedded within everyday matter.

His work is characterized by a deliberate tension between the natural and the artificial, the ephemeral and the constructed. Organic elements such as branches, seeds, stones, and leaves are frequently combined with manufactured materials, creating assemblages that question systems of production, consumption, and value. In doing so, Takada proposes a form of practice that is at once ecological, educational, and deeply poetic.

A significant influence on his development was his experience at Junya Ishigami + Associates in Tokyo. There, he embraced a design philosophy centered on clarity and immediacy, guided by the idea that a successful project should be intuitively understandable—even to a child. This principle remains central to his work, which often adopts a minimal, legible, and instinctive formal language.

Takada’s artistic vocabulary is further enriched by references to the material intensity of Anselm Kiefer, the integration of architecture and landscape in Junya Ishigami’s practice, and the philosophical inquiries of Bruno Latour, particularly regarding the interconnectedness of human and non-human systems.

In June 2025, Takada was awarded the Grand Prize of Van Cleef & Arpels as well as the Visual Merchandising Prize by Chanel for his installation Au point calme d’un monde qui tourne, presented at the Design Parade Toulon. This project marked a significant milestone in his career, positioning him among a new generation of designers and artists redefining the boundaries between disciplines.

Today, Thomas Takada’s work continues to explore how objects, spaces, and materials can embody a renewed sensitivity to the environment. Situated between art, design, and architecture, his practice invites a slower, more attentive way of seeing—one that reconsiders the essential and opens new perspectives on the world we inhabit.

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