MENU
home shop art shop design artists about us blog faq Studio Visits Basket Close Menu

Who We Are

Fiercely Curious is an online art & design collective based in Brooklyn.

We believe in connecting directly with the artists and designers.

erin@fiercelycurious.com

Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
Hermès Window Installation
by Edward Granger

2015


Description

Hermès has collaborated with artists in their Vitrine d’Artiste edition since 2005 and this year, Edward Granger has been commissioned to design and create a series of windows themed, Flâneur Forever, (translation, forever strolling).

"With geometric shapes to layer and break apart the boundaries of the space, as well as an array of bright colors to inject warmth and dynamic presence, Granger creates a vibrancy that interprets and projects the familiar New York City rhythm onto a three-dimensional canvas. Repurposing material-concepts that are commonplace in the city—grids, fire escapes, and hand-painted walls—the new windows are just as much for the art critic as they are the casual window shopper. “I view this as being analogous to the constant pulsing energy and vibrant electricity of New York City life. The rhythmic beat of a person’s heart, or harmonics,” Wood cubes hang in the center of a rainbow gradation around Iconic leather goods suspended in a spray-painted metal structure reminiscent of a cotton candy–color Sol LeWitt." - Edward Granger

Find the full article on Edward's collaboration here:  Cultured Mag


More Art by Edward Granger

Current Work

Private Commissions

Mixed Media


Ian Trask
About Ian Trask
Ian’s visual art has been displayed in the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Recession Art, the Wassaic Project, Bertrand Delacroix Gallery, Bushwick Open Studios and DUMBO Arts Festival to name a few. In 2007 he took a temporary job as a hospital groundskeeper; a job which helped define his approach to artwork and the creative process. He sees the artistic potential of waste, making us consider the mark that we inevitably leave behind. He currently works at the Invisible Dog Studios in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn.
Book a Studio Visit