The Best Furniture at NYCxDesign According to Dwell’s Editor-in-Chief

The Millennial aesthetic has officially aged out. People still love ceramics. Sofas are only getting larger. And other observations.

New York’s design week used to be an insular event, with industry people confined to a convention center or mingling among themselves over warm white wine in a showroom or two. But this year, NYCxDesign ran for nearly a fortnight—with events, exhibitions, pop ups, and parties all over town. The International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) is still the reason for the season, but everything spilling out across the city has given the design world a very public face. Whether or not you can tell a Bellini sofa from an Ikea couch, the mood for the last 10 days or so was that design is officially a thing in New York. And if you weren’t in town to take it all in, don’t worry. I hit the streets with photographer Ike Edeani, who has shot this excellent house and many others for Dwell, to find some of the best work out there.

First Stop: Dumpster Diving Courtesy of Marta Gallery

Let’s all say a final farewell to arched doorways, tasteful pastels, and Memphis-inspired flourishes. The


Marta owners Heidi Korsavong and Benjamin Critton invited Avi Kovacevich (of startup auction house Catalog Sale) to show his collection of chairs salvaged during a road trip across the U.S. Made from cast-off materials and other found detritus. They range from a chair constructed from cardboard boxes to an old tire strung with leather straps.


Then, they asked contemporary designers to create their own masterpieces from cast-off material in just three days.

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