
News · Jul 19, 2024
The art of living inspires Bardo Collections in Tunisia
News · Jul 19, 2024
‘The idea for Bardo Collections was inspired by the desire to offer design objects made by artists,’ says architect and designer Chacha Atallah, the curator of this new collection, which launched in Tunis last week.
The idea soon evolved into a wider collection of art, objects and furniture celebrating what Atallah calls the ‘art of living’, designed by architects, artists or designers and made by craftspeople in Tunisia.

At the launch, in collaboration with gallerist Selma Feriani, on the second floor of Feriani’s recently opened and purpose-built art gallery in Tunis (also designed by Atallah), the objects were displayed amid lush plants and carefully selected vintage pieces. The result was a galaxy of pieces that bear the seductive intellectual and physical signature of their creators and makers.

The collection, which will be expanded in September 2024, so far includes lithographies, photos, jewellery, textiles and various furniture pieces. The furniture, ceramic pieces and bed covers were designed by Atallah, while the rest of the collection is by artists including Catalina Swinburn (the lithographies), Sofia Essaied (the hand-woven jewellery) and Skander Khlif (the photos).
All of the pieces, including a collection of leather accessories, were made in collaboration with local artisans, some whom Atallah has been working with for over a decade, others of whom the team got to know as a result of this project.


The carpenter Atallah collaborated with to bring these pieces to life works in Nabeul, a coastal town in north-eastern Tunisia known for its centuries-long wood craftsmanship. The furniture series also includes the ‘Babylon’ bookshelf, comprised of modular units that reference the steel sections used in the construction industry, explains Atallah, and the ‘Prairie’ modular kitchen that comes with cabinet or drawer storage and can be combined with original and colourful geometric splash backs.

Mbarki, who is used to working on 2D sheets of paper, says the collection was an opportunity for him to explore ‘new textures and materials and explore the increasingly blurred boundary between art and design’.

‘In September, we will launch a new table in collaboration with Aymen Mbarki, as well as carpets made out of seagrass and more jewellery, by a new guest designer,’ says Atallah. Though the pieces in the collection are all very different in design and use, there is a coherence and shared identity to them; they speak of a land, a history and a distinct materiality.
The new Bardo Collections is also about bringing Tunisian craftsmanship, heritage and design to the rest of the world. And the results are rich and compelling.
