Designer Furniture Goes Sculptural: Design Miami/Paris 2025 Highlights — and How to Bring the Look Home
L’Hôtel de Maisons, Paris • October 2025
Why this matters
Collectible design is steering everyday interiors toward softer geometry, richer material mixes and playful, interactive pieces. The 2025 Paris edition crystallized five takeaways you can adapt at home—with art choices that harmonize with designer furniture rather than compete with it.
1) The floor becomes furniture
Pierre Paulin’s radical 1966 idea—“living on a shifting, inhabitable floor”—returned at monumental scale. The re‑staged La Déclive replaces legs and backs with cushioned bars that cascade across the room, blurring architecture and seating. It’s theatrical, low‑slung, and invites new lounging rituals.
2) Surfaces tell stories
Fornasetti’s Surface Narratives showed how cabinetry can double as trompe‑l’œil theater—astronomical instruments, musical motifs and curiosities layered across doors and panels. Surfaces are no longer “quiet backdrops”; they’re narrative fields that reward close looking.
3) Nature gets multisensory
The Soul Garden by Vikram Goyal with scent researcher Sissel Tolaas cast zoomorphic forms in repoussé brass and copper, embedding scent activators within stools and turf. The message: bring nature back to eye level—and nose level—through material warmth and sensory cues.
4) Furniture plays back
James de Wulf’s Resonating Ping Pong Table, Song no. 1 turned a match into music, ringing out A‑minor notes with every strike on aluminum plates. Functional furniture + sound = a more social room set‑up without screens.
5) Context is the co‑star
Installed inside an 18th‑century mansion, the works read against paneling, parquet and light wells. The curators leaned into contrast—sleek aluminum against lime plaster; voluptuous upholstery against crisp moldings. At home, that translates into pairing modern silhouettes with textured walls and art that holds its own in scale.
How to bring the look home (without rebuilding your living room)
Go lower, go softer
Introduce one grounded piece—think a low bench or lounge with rounded edges—to create that “inhabitable landscape” feeling. Anchor it with an oversized canvas whose composition mirrors the furniture’s curve or rhythm.
Layer materials intentionally
Mix matte plaster, brushed metal, rattan, or linen. When materials vary, keep your art palette focused (two neutrals + one accent) so the room reads curated, not chaotic.
Make surfaces speak
Cabinet fronts or sideboards can carry pattern. Echo those lines in geometric artwork so storage reads like part of the composition.
Invite a little whimsy
A zoomorphic lamp, a wavy edge, or a playful side table adds the lightness we saw across Paris. Balance with structured wall pieces to keep it sophisticated.
Compose for conversation
Group seats to face each other—with a large art piece behind the “long wall” to frame the scene. Big art = fewer small objects = calmer energy.
Shop the look — 5 art picks that echo 2025’s sculptural designer furniture
Buttons use outline styling (no black fill) for clarity and a modern, minimal look.
Pro move: curate your wall like a gallerist
Designer furniture shines when the wall composition is intentional. If you’re ready to replace a single canvas with a story, our editorial guide explains how the 2025 gallery wall got smarter—think fewer frames, bigger scale, tighter color. Read: Gallery Walls, Reimagined: Why the Feature Is Back in 2025.
Further reading (complements this story)
- Furniture Trends Designers Predict for 2025 — macro directions you’ll spot in showrooms.
- Milan Design Week 2025: Color highlights — palettes that pair well with sculptural seating.
- Sight Unseen’s Best of MDW 2025 — collectible design picks across the city.
References
- Wallpaper*: Best of Design Miami Paris 2025
- Hypebeast: Pierre Paulin’s “La Déclive” reimagined
- Design Miami — official site
- The Art Newspaper: 2025 program overview
All images used for editorial purposes with credit to original sources. Product images © Artoholica.