Starck recalls spending his childhood underneath his father's
drawing boards; hours spent sawing, cutting, gluing, sanding,
dismantling bikes, motor cycles and other objects.
Endless hours, a whole lifetime spent taking apart and putting
back together whatever comes to hand, remaking the world around
him.
Several years and several prototypes later, the Italians have
made him responsible for our furniture, President Mitterand asked
him to change life at the Elysées Palace, the Café Costes has
become Le Café, he has turned the Royalton and Paramount in New
York into the new classics of the hotel world and scattered Japan
with architectural tours de force that have made him the leading
exponent of expressionist architecture.
His respect for the environment and for humankind has also been
recognized in France, where he was commissioned to design the
Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, the control
tower at Bordeaux airport, and a waste recycling plant in Paris
metropolitan area.
Abroad, he continues to shake up the traditions and culture of
major cities around the world, with the decoration of the Peninsula
Hotel restaurant in Hong Kong, the Teatron in Mexico, the Hotel
Delano in Miami, the Mondrian in Los Angeles, the Asia de Cuba
restaurant in New York, and a whole clutch of projects under way
in London and elsewhere. His gift is to turn the object of his
commission instantly into a place of charm, pleasure and encounters.
An honest, enthusiastic citizen of today's world, he considers
it his duty to share with us his subversive vision of a better
world which is his alone and yet which fits up like a glove.
He is tireless in changing the realities of our daily life, sublimating
our roots and the deepest wellsprings of our being into his changes.
He captures the essential spirit of the sea for Béneteau, turns
the toothbrush into a noble object, squeezes lemons but the "wrong"
way, and even makes our TV sets more fun to be with when he brings
his "emotional style" into Thomson's electronic world. He also
takes time out to change our pasta, our ash-trays, lamps, toothbrushes,
door handles, cutlery, candlesticks, kettles, knives, vases, clocks,
scooters, motorcycles, desks, beds, taps, baths, toilets in short,
our whole life. A life that he finds increasingly fascinating,
which has brought him now closer to the human body with clothes,
underwear, shoes, glasses, watches, food, toiletries et al., still
determined that his designs shall, as ever, respect the nature
and the future of mankind.
