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Travel, nature, history, imagination infuse new wallpapers that help rooms tell stories

Wallpaper is back in fashion in decor, and often tells a story

Kim Cook
Wednesday 26 July 2023 08:46 EDT

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In the Emmy-nominated opening credits of HBOā€™s ā€œWhite Lotus,ā€ wallpaper-like images told a story: The tropical prints started off innocuously enough, but then turned ominous. Fruit started rotting, fish got tangled in seaweed, and a sense of foreboding set the whole premise of an exotic paradise on its edge.

The artist, Lezio Lopes, has said he was trying to evoke the design and themes of the shows resort suites.

It's a surreal example of a current trend in decor ā€” wallpapers that combine art and narrative qualities to set the mood of a room. Some take us to wild places in nature, others to wild worlds born in artistsā€™ imaginations. They go way beyond your nice stripe or simple floral.

They tell a story.

Wallpaper in general is back in a big way, decor experts say, and often makes a statement through images or texture (many papers incorporate fabric or fibers). Chicago-based design writer Elaine Markoutsas, who attended two of the year's biggest design expositions, Maison et Objet and Deco Off, in Paris, said new wallcoverings were among the most exciting things she saw.

She cited intriguing patterns, and digital and 3D printing techniques. One theme stuck out.

ā€œWe heard the term ā€˜revenge travel,ā€™ referring to a post-pandemic urge to get away for real, or virtually,ā€ she says. ā€œTravel often triggers designers, who mine details from architecture, landscape and destination culture.ā€

Some of the new papers feature contemplative renditions of forests and seascapes. Others reference places, people or creatures as fun, imaginative, maximalist marvels.

For a mashup of both, there's the baroque "Novafrica Sunsetā€ created by Christian Lacroixā€™s creative director, Sacha Walchoff.

Heā€™s envisioned a kind of fever dream jungle with a tangerine sky, foliage clouds, glimpses of fauna, hyper-colored blooms and silk-ribbon-wrapped tree trunks. Put this on your walls and let the conversation begin.

At Pierre Frey, artist Veronique Villaret cut out simple paper sprigs of Pacific Island vegetation to create a joyful, colorful pattern she calls ā€œRangiroa.ā€ Itā€™s available as a wallpaper or fabric.

Dutch studio Moooiā€™s "Memento Moooi Medley " wallcovering collection was inspired by the accounts of early explorers and the creatures they encountered. The ā€œGolden Tigerā€ roams among cubs and other jungle animals on a wood veneer background. ā€œMimic Moths,ā€ now extinct, take on the coloring of their favorite plants. Other moths, moon orchids and lilies-of-dusk tumble across an embossed, suede-like wallcovering.

Partnering with textile giant Romo, Alice Temperleyā€™s eponymous London-based fashion and design house drew inspiration from their archive of richly detailed gowns. They came up with a wallcovering collection full of leopard prints, swirling sea agate patterns, and golden Victorian keys and dressmaking scissors.

Stories for Walls has a cheeky one called ā€œSafari Gangsta,ā€ featuring fierce and funny wild animals dressed in hip-hop gear; thereā€™ll be some cool kids whoā€™ll want it in their bedrooms, and probably some adults too.

Katie Deedy has found a way to artfully mix her intellectual curiosity and love of history. Her Brooklyn-based Grow House Grow studio produces some of the most imaginative wallpapers and tile. One pattern, ā€œOde to the Unhasty,ā€ includes pictures of sloths, snails, manatees and slow-growing bristlecone pines.

ā€œThe patternā€™s narrative inspiration is more of a gentle lesson,ā€ she laughs.

Between running her business and parenting, Deedy says she began to feel like life was going too fast.

ā€œSo I created this wallpaper as a visual ode to taking it easy. When I look at this collection of our Earthā€™s slowest moving flora and fauna, itā€™s a reminder to mosey more and sprint less.ā€

Another of her patterns, ā€œMary Ward,ā€ honors a forgotten female entomologist. In the mid-1800s, Ward spent her days with a magnifying glass, collecting and drawing insects.

ā€œAs a woman, she couldnā€™t be formally trained at university,ā€ says Deedy. ā€œYet over the course of her young life, she became a renowned expert in microscopy, writing the go-to texts used in the same schools that wouldnā€™t admit her.ā€

The wallpaper playfully intermingles late-Georgian-style silhouettes of Ward and her beloved oversize insects.

At this year's International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York, Emma Hayes showed a couple of ethereal and dreamy wallcoverings based on her New Zealand home. ā€œWillowā€ depicts willow wisps caught by a breeze, against a midnight background. ā€œSedimentā€ shows a gently rolling shoreline of tonal watery hues.

Alexis Audette of New York-based studio Mazy Path showed nature-inspired papers in the styles of Arts & Crafts textiles, Delft tiles and 16th century French wallpapers. Audette sees a commonality between plants and people.

ā€œJust as family heirlooms remind us of our history and identity, heirloom plants do too," she says.

She developed wallpapers that tell stories about plants. One collection, ā€œHeirloom,ā€ features patterns depicting wild ramps, Virginia strawberries and winter wheat ā€“ all part of Americaā€™s food history. Her ā€œTreasure Treeā€ collection pays homage to trees that provide food, medicine or protection; the paper is printed with imagery of guava, elderberry, nickel trees and mangroves.

Studio Heimat recently worked with clients in Mission Dolores, California, to incorporate their interests in geology and zoology into their home's interior design.

ā€œThe clients LOVE bugs,ā€ says the studioā€™s Eva Bradley. So local artist Rafael Arana was commissioned to hand-paint some crawling up a stairwellā€™s wall.

ā€œThe homeowners asked that the bugs be black and white and oversize, so visitors wouldnā€™t be scared," says the studioā€™s Alicia Cheung.

Another way designers tell artful stories is by mixing materials, Markoutsas says. She cites a new wallpaper from French design house deGournay "made of embroidered silk, embellished with shells. Elitis has a vinyl wallcovering that simulates beautiful embroidery.ā€

And Arte introduced ā€œLe Foret,ā€ with wallcoverings made from wood, raffia and banana leaf.

ā€”-

New York-based writer Kim Cook covers design and decor topics regularly for The AP. Follow her on Instagram at @kimcookhome.

For more AP Lifestyles stories, go to https://apnews.com/hub/lifestyle.

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