Sun explains that, while Studio Tipi features their personal style, Vanguard Works is all about what the client wants and how to best achieve those goals. So if a client wants something dark and edgy, as Costa did for Bar Bricco, then that’s what they’ll produce. “You have to remove your own ego from the process and really listen. You can’t say: Well, this is what I like, so let’s do this and make it work.”
Sun and Chan had never worked with Costa before this project. A mutual friend recommended them when Costa was casting for ideas on how to make Bar Bricco’s feature wall special. Although Costa knew exactly what he wanted for the rest of the bar’s decor, he’d hit a literal creative wall when it came to that part of the restaurant.
Some brainstorming sessions at Corso 32, Costa’s restaurant next door, sparked the direction. “Italian Renaissance art was mentioned. We both thought that would be cool, and the project developed from there,” says Costa. “But I still wanted something unexpected, not the usual works like Michelangelo or Botticelli.”
Drawing on Chan’s fine-art knowledge, they settled on Bosch. “We actually cheated a bit,” Sun says. “He’s not Italian. Yet his work – edgy and not too comfortable – seemed perfect for the dark, on-the-edge ambience Daniel was after.”
As the couple immersed themselves in researching the paintings of the Renaissance, the work’s direction emerged. The fresco-like mural wouldn’t replicate a painting, it would be a new imaginary landscape created by merging elements from many different paintings, mostly Bosch, but others as well.
The next step was taking very high-resolution photographs, not scans, of their final choices from the pages of art books. Then, using these digital files like jigsaw pieces of a puzzle, the new work emerged. Hundreds of different elements were used, with the overall colour adjusted for a seamless look.