Feel Wabi Sabi. An inter play of presences and absences.
Decorating a space is not overcrowding it with things, it’s about something else, it’s about setting up an ideal setting to create experiences, where every piece of furniture and every element must have a reason to be there.
It’s easy to become invisible in the nebula. The wabi-sabi philosophy argues that reducing habitat to the essentials allows us to enjoy better the present moment, that carefully selecting the objects around us generates an environment that truly satisfies us.
Furniture is part of the soul of a space, in the private or public sectors, at home, creating a feeling of home, but also giving warmth to waiting rooms, workspaces, shops and restaurants where we eat, chat and laugh together.
The essential thing is to be at ease in an atmosphere that moves us, that inspires good sensations. The decoration could well be defined as an interplay of full and empty. What we can see and touch, and also what we can’t.
Their relation and harmony define a city, a room, even a life. Complete and uncomplete, both physical and spiritual. Who has not ever experienced the feeling of fullness where everything seems idyllic, or that impossible-to-fill gap that makes us feel lost, empty inside?
Presences and absences, dissimilar concepts that give meaning to interior architecture, an orderly set of elements that values our spaces, and with them our life.