Artists' Editions Rugs - Silk Rug - Warehouse Conversion - 1
Material Price:
Silk: HK$7,200 per sq.m.
Wool: HK$5,900 per sq.m.
Bamboo: HK$6,400 per sq.m.
There are 12 products.
Material Price:
Silk: HK$7,200 per sq.m.
Wool: HK$5,900 per sq.m.
Bamboo: HK$6,400 per sq.m.
Material Price:
Silk: HK$7,200 per sq.m.
Wool: HK$5,900 per sq.m.
Bamboo: HK$6,400 per sq.m.
British Airways <Please send us your inquiry> Faux incorporates British Airways logo into it's London toile
Joyce Boutique <Please send us your inquiry> Our corporate projects include adapting our iconic Hong Kong toile repeat pattern to embrace Joyce Boutique's theatrical theme and logo to create bespoke designs for a beautifully packaged fine bone china cup and saucer.
Joyce Boutique <Please send us your inquiry> Faux adapted its iconic Hong Kong toile design to embrace Joyce Boutique's Theatrical Theme and logo
KOP Properties <Please send us your inquiry> Faux designed an original mug for KOP properties in Singapore
Pacific Place Mall <Please send us your inquiry> Faux designed a zodiac toile repeat pattern for a fine bone china dinner plate for the Pacific Place Shopping Mall over Chinese New Year. The plates were given to VIP based on purchases made. The plates sold out in days of the launch promotion. The design was used throughout the mall for Pacifuc Place's entire CNY celebrations.
The Huntington Foundation Please send us your inquiry Faux deigned an original contemporary toile repeat pattern for a tease for the Huntington Foundation based on the beautiful gardens of the estate.
Tybourne Capital Management <Please send us your inquiry> Our corporate projects include adapting our iconic Hong Kong toile repeat pattern to embrace Tybourne's logo to create bespoke designs for a beautifully packaged fine bone china cup and saucer.
A boxed set of 4 fine bone china sinner plates by Firenze Lai (edition of 30)
Firenze Lai says that she knows her studio of a few hundred square feet intimately; from the textures of its surfaces to the way the breeze blows into the room. The spaces depicted in her paintings are equally intimate. When curators seem to be at a loss for words to discuss troubled times, fear of containment, and the feeling of being completely enmeshed in a space, they turn to Lai's paintings, which have been shown as part of Para Site's A Journal of the Plague Year. Fear, ghosts, rebels. SARS, Leslie and the Hong Kong story (17 May–20 July 2013), and A Hundred Years of Shame—Songs of Resistance and Scenarios for Chinese Nations (6 March–17 May 2015). Further, Lai has shown work in international solo and group presentations, including Turbulence at Mirrored Gardens in Guangzhou (29 October–28 November 2015), the 10th Shanghai Biennale, Social Factory (23 November 2014–31 March 2015), the 2015 New Museum Triennial, Surround Audience (25 February–24 May 2015), and in Venice for the 57th Venice Biennale (13 May–26 November 2017). More recently, a selection of nine of Lai's paintings appear in Tai Kwun Contemporary's Contagious Cities: Far Away, Too Close (26 January–21 April 2019).
Faux is delighted to present a unique collection of limited edition Lightboxes by Hu Qinwu
Hu Qinwu (born 1969) was born in Shandong, China, and currently works in Beijing as a painter, photographer and printmaker.
Qinwu studied oil painting at the Yantai Normal Academy, Shandong where he graduated in 1990. He went onto attain a Masters degree in Painting from the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing in 2008. In 2010 Qinwu taught as a guest lecturer at the Central Academy of Fine Art in Beijing.[2] Qinwu's choice of materials for his paintings align with the scholarly tradition of Chinese ink painting. However, Qinwu subverts the traditions of the medium through a style that aligns more closely with the aestheticisms of the Abstract movement. The concept behind his style and technique, however, is informed by Zen Buddhist philosophies and practices. Critics have noted that Qinwu's command of ink, tempera, acrylic, oil and print media signals the germination of an exciting new approach to traditional techniques and the burgeoning of an abstract style amongst a young generation of artists in Beijing.
Faux is delighted to present a unique collection of limited edition Lightboxes by Hu Qinwu
Hu Qinwu (born 1969) was born in Shandong, China, and currently works in Beijing as a painter, photographer and printmaker.
Qinwu studied oil painting at the Yantai Normal Academy, Shandong where he graduated in 1990. He went onto attain a Masters degree in Painting from the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing in 2008. In 2010 Qinwu taught as a guest lecturer at the Central Academy of Fine Art in Beijing.[2] Qinwu's choice of materials for his paintings align with the scholarly tradition of Chinese ink painting. However, Qinwu subverts the traditions of the medium through a style that aligns more closely with the aestheticisms of the Abstract movement. The concept behind his style and technique, however, is informed by Zen Buddhist philosophies and practices. Critics have noted that Qinwu's command of ink, tempera, acrylic, oil and print media signals the germination of an exciting new approach to traditional techniques and the burgeoning of an abstract style amongst a young generation of artists in Beijing.