“How Does it Look?”:
Building on the Design Legacy
of Larry Kornegay
On the whiteboard in a back
room of the Kornegay Design studio in Phoenix, Arizona, reads the succinct mantra, “How does it look?”
The deceptively simple phrase, jot down years ago by artist, designer, and founder, Larry Kornegay,
remains a fixture on the umber walls of the neatly appointed and immaculately landscaped desert studio.
Caption: Located in Phoenix,
Arizona, Kornegay Design is dedicated to creating original, timeless designs realized through
exceptional craftsmanship.
“It may seem a bit blunt for a design-oriented company, but the spirit behind it
lives in all we do,” describes Josh Fletcher, Operations Group Leader at Kornegay Design. “The principle of
beauty above all extends far beyond our products to guide everything here, from the visuals in our
advertising, to the way we maintain our property, even the way we organize the tools in our shop.”
Founded in 1997 by husband and wife team Larry and Paula Kornegay, Kornegay Design
has earned a reputation among landscape architects for its elegant design language, acute attention to
detail, and inventive sustainable practices in the production of large-scale handcrafted cast concrete site
furnishings.
Caption: The by-hand casting
process has been refined over the years to allow for unsurpassed quality control with minimal waste and
environmental impact.
“Larry is a true artist and personal inspiration of mine,” continues Fletcher. “The
opportunity to work alongside him was the entire reason I joined Kornegay Design. From the beginning, he had
a hand in everything, working from 6am until 8pm to ensure that nothing left the studio that didn’t meet his
exacting standards. Some of his designs were five years in the making, constantly being refined and
perfected as he visited sites, talked with users, and respectively made changes through his iterative,
trial-and-error-based creative process.”
Caption: Aspect is a
four-sided cast concrete landscape container with minimal, architectural style and simple shadow line at
base – one of the first products introduced after the acquisition by Landscape Forms.
When Larry Kornegay wanted to return to sculpting and other fine art projects in
2017, Kornegay Design was acquired by Landscape Forms with the intention of honoring and expanding the
founder’s creative spirit. "We were always inspired by Larry because he was a fine artist from day one,”
says Landscape Forms Chief Creative Officer, Kirt Martin. "He lives and embodies the design lifestyle—it’s
at his core, it’s evident in everything he creates. We want to preserve and evolve that legacy in our
leadership, specifically through the development of our Visiting Artists Program at Kornegay Design.”
The Visiting Artists Program, the first major initiative enacted at Kornegay Design
under Martin’s leadership, expands on Larry Kornegay’s creative legacy. "We want Kornegay Design products to
continue to be imagined, designed, and created by fine artists,” says Martin. “Yes, Kornegay Design creates
functional pieces, but we want each and every piece to continue to be beautiful works of art marked by a
sense of purity and integrity, and an absence of pretense —the same qualities that Larry brings to his own
work.”
Caption: The curing process
begins inside the mold and continues in the open air once the mold is removed. Cure time varies
depending on the temperature and humidity, as well as other environmental factors.
The first collaborator to join the Visiting Artists Program was Ian McDonald, one of
today’s most highly regarded potters and current Head of Ceramics at the renowned Cranbrook Academy of Art.
McDonald's work plays at the distinctive intersection of sculpture and craft, ranging from traditional
vessels to free-form sculpture and mixed-media installations. With Kornegay Design, however, he wanted to
challenge himself to create something truly unique. “I don’t think it would be very interesting to just take
something of mine, enlarge it, and transform the material,” McDonald says. “Rather, I wanted to take the
vocabulary I use to approach the objects I make and use it to guide new concepts that are large in scale,
exploring material possibility and embracing the outdoor space.” The graceful and sculptural Offset series
of landscape containers, the first product of McDonald’s collaboration with Kornegay Design, lives up to
that promise.
Caption:
Ian McDonald in his studio at Cranbrook Academy of Art. McDonald designed the Offset series of landscape
containers.
Following Ian McDonald in the Visiting Artists Program is Claudia Issa, a São
Paulo-based artist and designer who left a successful 20-year career in art direction and graphic design to
pursue her passion for ceramics, finding renewed inspiration in the hands-on manipulation of tactile media.
Claudia Issa’s work often incorporates elements of intentional imperfection, creating nontraditional beauty
out of traditionally discarded materials and organic, asymmetrical forms. "Sometimes I take a piece of clay,
I knead it and the shape comes up. It is my hands that ‘think' and I let it be so to see what will arise,”
describes Issa. "I find it beautiful that something imperfect can stubbornly show itself as it is, imposing
its own beauty, breaking with standards.” Claudia Issa’s line with Kornegay Design is currently underway and
is set to be released in October, 2020.
“Working with Claudia Issa and Ian McDonald has been instrumental in our mission to
grow and evolve the amazing brand that is Kornegay Design without losing the artistic soul it’s founded on,”
says Kirt Martin. "For example, I find the new seating element that Claudia is currently working on to be
very moving and inspiring—it’s at once very Kornegay Design, very evocative of the brand, but also a fresh
expression of her artistic vision and global experiences.”
Caption: Kornegay Design’s
products are more than quality handcrafted site furnishings; they are sculptural elements that enhance
any environment.
“Claudia, Ian, and the other artists who will follow them are our North Stars in
inspiring a broader offering and defining an exciting new future for Kornegay Design,” Martin continues.
“The expanded use of materials, the widened palettes, the unique new creative sensibilities will contribute
to a design language that’s more diverse and more globally relevant, while still staying true to Larry’s
legacy. That’s the path forward for Kornegay Design, and we couldn’t be more excited.”