Globetrotting designer Mark Grattan shares his latest plans and next moves
Amid his meteoric rise, Mark Grattan speaks with Wallpaper* about his trailblazing career, 'getting the right type of help', and calculating his next move

For designer Mark Grattan, New York City is a necessary evil. At the time of his interview with Wallpaper*, he had just signed a lease on a new apartment in Brooklyn. Not a permanent space, he insists, just somewhere to lay his head when he’s in town to meet clients and collaborators or fabricate furniture in his studio.
‘I need to be in New York for business and I was spending too much money on Airbnbs,’ he says. ‘I’m the type of person who needs things a certain way. I was pulling out all the furniture and living in these empty homes, which was actually kind of fun – but ridiculous.’ Instead, Grattan would rather be in Mexico City, where he lives in a Luis Barragán-designed apartment building. Or in São Paulo, where he plans to open a gallery to support young Brazilian designers and craftspeople. ‘Ideally, I would have this cycle of New York, Mexico and Brazil – just following the heat.’
Sitting down with Mark Grattan
Mark Grattan’s ‘Museum’ stool
Grattan may be physically hard to pin down, but for the past several years he has occupied a consistent spot on the design industry’s radar of buzzworthy talent. In 2014, he co-founded the brand Vidivixi, a design industry darling praised for its sensual forms and impeccable craftsmanship, which he shut down in 2021 to go solo. That same year, he won the reality show Ellen’s Next Great Designer, hosted by Ellen DeGeneres, where, to snag the top prize, he conceived and built a living room collection, inspired by bold 1980s interiors, in a matter of days.
In 2023, he created a luxe New York home for sports superstars Megan Rapinoe and Sue Bird, a richly layered apartment with mirrored surfaces and sexy built-in furniture in leather and velvet designed – and largely constructed – by Grattan himself. Around the same time, he was hired by the singer Solange to head up the product development department of her creative project, Saint Heron. Their first drop, a collection of sculptural goblets fabricated by the glassblower Jason Mcdonald, launched in June 2023.
Museums and institutions have begun to take notice of the Ohio native, too, the Smithsonian and the Brooklyn Museum recently adding Grattan’s ‘Stool’ to their collections. Originally designed in 2022 for Cristina Grajales Gallery, the soft, upholstered seat has an ovoid top and sits atop two triangle-shaped legs. ‘It incorporates a lot of the visual themes in my work: there’s always a touch of repetition, contrasting materials, rigid architectural elements and subtle rounded edges,’ Grattan says of the design.
Amid this meteoric rise, Grattan has even found the time to create new work. At this year’s Milan Design Week, he debuted his first collection for the roving Latin American design gallery, Unno. The collection, titled ‘Thick’, took the form of utilitarian-seeming office furniture whose brown lacquered forms are subtly exaggerated. Each piece sits atop a flared base, as if melting into the floor or wall.
‘It felt like one of the safer collections I’ve done. There weren’t a lot of crazy details. Usually my work is very opinionated, but this was very stripped back.’ Audiences disagreed. The collection topped many of the week’s ‘best of’ lists, introducing Grattan to a new, European fan base.
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Speaking of the immediate future, Grattan’s main concern isn’t designing a new collection or landing a new interior client. Instead, it’s about ‘getting the right type of help’, he says. ‘I’ve been doing all of this myself without an assistant or a manager.’ Looking ahead, he’d like to try something new, such as collaborating with a Parisian fashion house or historic Italian design brand. ‘Maybe,’ he ponders, seemingly calculating his next move, ‘I need to spend more time in Europe.’
This article appears in the August 2024 issue of Wallpaper*, available to download free when you sign up to our daily newsletter, in print on newsstands from 4 July, on the Wallpaper* app on Apple iOS, and to subscribers of Apple News +. Subscribe to Wallpaper* today
Laura May Todd, Wallpaper's Milan Editor, based in the city, is a Canadian-born journalist covering design, architecture and style. She regularly contributes to a range of international publications, including T: The New York Times Style Magazine, Architectural Digest, Elle Decor, Azure and Sight Unseen, and is about to publish a book on Italian interiors.
-
Morgan announces nine limited editions of its Super 3 three-wheeler
The Super 3 Origins Collection assembles nine elaborate design specifications for the diminutive Morgan Super 3, drawing on the influences and inspirations that shaped this high-performance three-wheeler
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Vipp’s new guesthouse in Latvia’s Salaca National Park is its cosiest to date
Danish design brand Vipp transforms a 19th-century Latvian riverside log cabin into its ninth guesthouse
By Sofia de la Cruz Published
-
Step inside Le Harlequin, an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment
Le Harlequin by Design Hex is an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment in the bustling Indian city's Lower Parel neighbourhood
By Daven Wu Published
-
First look: Ini Archibong explores 2D design with Dr Dre and Snoop Dogg for new canned gin drink
‘I had to make sure that the packaging looks like it deserves to be in their hands’: Ini Archibong tells us what it was like working with music giants Dre Dre and Snoop Dogg on their new canned ‘Gin & Juice'
By Tianna Williams Published
-
Studio Shamshiri and Abask unite on the softest interior décor collection
LA-based Studio Shamshiri joins forces with Abask on a new collaboration of interior objects including pillows, throws, and eyemasks
By Tianna Williams Published
-
The best American furniture design finds a dream home
Celebrating the best American furniture design, our dream house was created by set designer Stefan Beckman for August 2024 Wallpaper* – come on in
By Rosa Bertoli Published
-
‘Midcentury modern is as American as punk rock’: 22RE on its latest full-scale project
The new LA offices of music branding agency Ceremony of Roses, designed by local studio 22RE, are a real conversation starter
By Carole Dixon Published
-
Ido Yoshimoto turns salvaged wood into sculptural pieces at his northern Californian workshop
Visiting Ido Yoshimoto at his California studio, we talk to the artist about his work with wood, from his beginning as an arborist to his sculptures and furniture made with local reclaimed material
By Shonquis Moreno Published
-
12 American icons of design, from cowboy boots to the MacBook Air
Our star-spangled round-up hails American icons of design and their latest iterations, from Pharrell Williams' cowboy boots to the Tiffany Lock, and a tiny yellow cab
By Jack Moss Published
-
Wallpaper* USA 400: meet the people shaping Creative America in 2024
The Wallpaper* USA 400 honours the people defining America's creative landscape in 2024, from legends to rising stars, activists to celebrity shapeshifters
By Wallpaper* Published
-
August 2024 Wallpaper*: Creative America is on sale today and free to download
Enjoy a free digital copy of August 2024 Wallpaper* – our celebration of the USA as a creative superpower – when you sign up to our daily digest of news
By Bill Prince Published