The petit h collection of handcrafted objects by Hermès is presented in the brand’s Liat Towers store in an otherworldly installation imagined and crafted by Olivia Lee.
Olivia Lee and Godefroy de Virieu (Artistic Director, petit h)
November 22nd, 2019
The concept of material re-use has found its way to the highest echelons of luxury. petit h – written purposely in lower case – is the name of a family of objects created in a dedicated Hermès workshop using materials and remnants handed down by the brand’s other métiers (crafts) – materials that would otherwise have no further use.
These materials (be they leather, silk, crystal, porcelain, horsehair, metal or something else) are assembled with a free and creative spirit into new objects.
Hermès refers to the creative process within the petit h workshop as ‘creativity in reverse’ – the starting point is not a grand design but leftover materials that take new form via creative intervention and craft skill.
The piece-by-piece nature of the development of petit h objects lends itself to an impermanent retail presence. The objects are presented at Hermès stores around the world several times a year, and otherwise may only be viewed at the rue de Sèvres store in Paris. Presently, it is Singapore’s turn to host the petit h universe, and a mesmerising two-floor installation has been created in the Liat Towers Hermès store.
Designer and INDE.Awards Prodigy (2018) Olivia Lee was the creative force behind the installation, as well as special window installations and an interactive game outside the store – an electric wire loop game that will light up stars and planets if your hand is steady enough.
“When I visited the atelier of petit h in Paris, it became very clear to me that what they do is really this creative gymnastics under very tight constraints,” says Lee of the petit h creatives.
She continues, “They invent and work around whatever unused material is within the house of Hermès. It reminded me of the scene in the film Apollo 13 where the astronauts had to create a new kind of carbon dioxide recycling machine. The NASA engineers were listing down every single thing that was in the space shuttle and seeing what they could do with it to reinvent something.”
She saw a similar resourcefulness, invention and ingenuity in the work of the creatives in the petit h workshop, and the space-travel theme emerged naturally as a conceptual driver for her installation.
As such, on one floor of the store, visitors find themselves in an extraterrestrial landscape of red rocky outcrops – some organically hewn as though by millennia of atmospheric influence; others consciously shaped into tower-like forms with portal-shaped openings that hint at occupation and life.
petit h objects – animal forms, furniture, jewellery, bags, games and more – inhabit all areas the environment against backlighting that gestures at time and distance. But a yellow portal with a plastic strip curtain and a control panel invites exploration upstairs.
There, the clinical and futuristic environment of a space shuttle unfolds in crisp off-white and yellow surfaces, interspersed with the vivid green of tropical plants on walls and shelves. “I also wanted to celebrate the link to Singapore, and showcase its futuristic aspect,” says Lee.
“Singapore is also like a spaceship; there are very tight constraints, yet we have found a way to be resourceful in how we think about what we have and what we do with it,” she says.
Visitors may reach into the latex gloves of a laboratory isolation box to turn over and inspect the objects displayed within. A conveyor belt transposes shoes through a containment area. Textile offcuts replace the screens on an electronic control panel.
Lee’s installation encapsulates the wondrous spirit that journeys hand-in-hand with the creative process, and allows visitors a window to the uncertainty, analysis, intuition and ultimately joy that comes with creation. Catch it at Hermès Liat Towers, 541 Orchard Road, Singapore until 15 December 2019.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
Welcomed to the Australian design scene in 2024, Kokuyo is set to redefine collaboration, bringing its unique blend of colour and function to individuals and corporations, designed to be used Any Way!
A curated exhibition in Frederiksstaden captures the spirit of Australian design
It’s widely accepted that nature – the original, most accomplished design blueprint – cannot be improved upon. But the exclusive Crypton Leather range proves that it can undoubtedly be enhanced, augmented and extended, signalling a new era of limitless organic materiality.
How can design empower the individual in a workplace transforming from a place to an activity? Here, Design Director Joel Sampson reveals how prioritising human needs – including agency, privacy, pause and connection – and leveraging responsive spatial solutions like the Herman Miller Bay Work Pod is key to crafting engaging and radically inclusive hybrid environments.
Reuse, resourcefulness and material transformations bring unexpected stories to Arup’s new Brisbane office, designed by Hassell.
ReLove has celebrated the official opening of ReStory by ReLove, a social enterprise giving beautifully curated, preloved furniture a second life.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
From a Paddington studio to the streets of Paris, with the odd Irish rural pub in between, the founder of Smac Studio shares her inspiration in design.
Adelaide will debut its first city-wide design festival – every*where: Adelaide Design Week – from 20th to 24th August 2025.
The INDE.Awards 2025 has crowned Sirius Redevelopment by BVN as the winner of The Multi-Residential Building, sponsored by CULT. This ambitious project redefines urban living in Sydney’s historic Rocks precinct while preserving heritage, reducing embodied carbon, and elevating residential design.
With a bold, singular vision and a new factory just around the corner from their Western Sydney manufacturing heartland, Maxton Fox’s evolution takes the best of its history while setting its eyes on the future – and keeping its feet firmly planted on Australian soil.