HISTOIRES
Chez Möels&Co, notre engagement va au-delà de la vente de produits. Nous sommes une marque animée par la volonté d'inspirer et d'enrichir la vie de notre communauté. Nous investissons des efforts considérables dans l'élaboration d'un contenu significatif qui trouve un écho auprès de nos clients et de nos followers, et nous vous invitons à embarquer pour un voyage d'inspiration et de découverte à travers nos histoires. Chaque mois, nous publions une collection d'articles qui suscitent la réflexion dans les domaines de l'art, de la culture, du design, de la photographie et au-delà. Ces articles sont méticuleusement sélectionnés pour enflammer votre imagination, élargir vos horizons et vous offrir une perspective unique sur le monde dans lequel nous vivons.

M. C. Escher: The Master Printmaker Who Twisted Reality
Maurits Cornelis Escher was an artist from the Netherlands who was known for incorporating mathematical equations into his lithographs and woodcuts. He represents the perfect coming together of mathematics and art. Although he is most known for his impossible constructions, he also created some wonderful realistic graphic art. M. C. Escher’s artworks were not that popular during his tenure as an artist, even in his own country. M.C. Escher is one of the world’s most famous graphic artists.

Celebrating 20 years of Goodwood
Möels&Co is thrilled to be showcased on a full page in the book "Strive for Perfection: Celebrating 20 Years of Goodwood," a collaboration with the International Club for Rolls-Royce and Bentley Enthusiasts. The book, developed by the renowned St. James's House publisher, explores the history of Rolls-Royce's Goodwood plant and celebrates 20 years of craftsmanship, innovation and sustainable luxury.

Hannes Wallrafen: The Blind Photographer
Hannes Wallrafen is a highly acclaimed Dutch/German photographer who lost his eyesight 10 years ago at the height of his career. Wallrafen is famous for his staged photography through which he seeks to translate time into engineered images. His work can be regarded as personal interpretations of local history: storytelling at its core. In the seventies and eighties Wallrafen used his camera to denounce injustice.

LUIGI COLANI: THE GREAT PROVOCATEUR
Luigi Colani was a pioneering German industrial designer whose varied oeuvre includes objects from sunglasses to trucks and furniture. “We should look to the superiority of nature for the solutions,” the artist said when describing the influence of nature on his designs. “If we want to tackle a new task in the studio, then it’s best to go outside first and look at what millennia-old answers there may already be to the problem.” The designer’s works are in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum in New York, and the Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein, Germany, among others.

Moonlight Etchings of the Forgotten Artist who Taught Edward Hopper
Martin Lewis died in obscurity in 1962; a retired art teacher who had found some success in his early career, but was largely forgotten after the Great Depression took away the demand for his craft, leaving Lewis to spend his last three decades teaching other people how to etch. History chose Edward Hopper, but Martin Lewis was his mentor.

The Story Behind Banksy
Today's social media landscape can make anonymity hard to come by. And yet, Banksy, the British graffiti artist whose works have caught the eye of average viewers and critics alike for decades has managed to maintain his. The elusive figure has succeeded in rising to great fame and navigating the art world without ever revealing his true identity. His art is sharply critical, putting modern societal ills on display with a unique brand of satire and stenciling.

Vivian Maier: the Enigmatic Nanny Who Took 150,000 Photographs
Vivian Maier was an American street photographer whose body of work was only discovered after her death. Maier took over 150,000 photographs during her lifetime, capturing the people and architecture of Chicago on a Rolleiflex camera as she walked the city on her days off. Born on February 1, 1926 in New York, she moved to Chicago in 1956, working as a nanny for wealthy families in the North Shore neighborhood. Her work has been compared to Diane Arbus, Garry Winogrand, and Weegee, both for her spontaneous shooting style and for her fascination with human behavior.

WIM CROUWEL: THE VISIONARY WHO SHAPED MODERN GRAPHIC DESIGN
Wim Crouwel (Dutch, 1928–2019) was a giant figure in the history of graphic design. Crouwel produced an astonishing body of work that is at once functional and experimental, objective and personal. He designed some of the iconic typefaces such as New Alphabet and Gridnik, following an extraordinary career from designer to teacher to curator to museum director.