House that Hermes built
Deirdre Newman
While California casual attire may have relegated the tie to an
anachronism, an art display at South Coast Plaza is restoring the tie
to its former glory.
The “Hermes Tie Temple” honors the paragon of tie makers -- Hermes
International, based in Paris. The company, which started out making
harnesses for horse-drawn carriages, has been designing silk ties
since the 1940s.
The temple, created by Italian artist Alessandro Mendini, honors
the Hermes tradition and illustrates the philosophy and creative
processes of the company. Its appearance at South Coast Plaza is its
only one on the West Coast.
“Hermes is an important luxury retailer at South Coast Plaza and a
company that has built its heritage on quality,” Debra Gunn Downing,
executive director of marketing for the plaza, said. “This unique tie
exhibit reflects the integral part the silk tie has played in Hermes’
identity since the 1940s.”
Mendini was inspired to create the temple because the Hermes tie
is “one of the great ceremonial symbols of our age,” according to a
note of his inside the temple.
From afar, the temple looks like a structure adorned with
curtains. But upon closer examination, the curtains turn out to be
made of groups of Hermes ties of the same color family joined in a
crisscross pattern. In the front of the temple, ties hang from the
ceiling to create an entryway. More ties make up the roof. A colorful
mosaic tile floor complements the array of ties throughout the
structure. All together, the temple is made up of more than 500 ties.
In the middle of the temple stands a golden-bronze sculpture of a
Hermes tie, like a Greek god used to being worshipped.
Along the walls are framed sketches of ties, dotted with notes in
French. Descriptions in English are below them.
Reading the descriptions, you learn that toward the end of the
1960s, “the drawings of Henri D’Origny freed the ties -- launched at
the beginning of the 1950s -- from their cautious geometric patterns
by creating playfully inspired equestrian compositions.”
Other drawings show ties with moon shapes and whimsical patterns
of jockeys riding flying horses among the clouds.
The temple drew mixed reactions from passersby. Some checked it
out from the outside, others peered in through the tie “walls,” and
some ventured inside to find out more.
“It’s very clever,” said Zena Gaynes of Los Angeles, who stopped
to examine it.
Others weren’t so impressed.
“Some people have too much free time on their hands,” said Joan
Wetzler, who was visiting from Reno.
The exhibit’s concierge, Chris Herrera, who sported a Hermes tie,
said the temple piques the curiosity of about 90% of the shoppers
strolling by.
“Everyone thinks it’s really unique,” Herrera said. “Mostly people
are interested in it as a work of art. Maybe 10% to 20% are
interested in Hermes afterward.”
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