Ella Soccorsi, Head of Design and Creative - ARKET
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BRINGING CURIOSITY TO THE DRAWING TABLE

with Ella Soccorsi

‘Design means curiosity to me. It is a tool for discovery, excitement, and a chance to completely dive into a topic I’m drawn to but know nothing about. It could be science or nature or something as literal as material,’ says Ella Soccorsi, ARKET’s Head of Design and Creative.

Brought up in Zambia by a Swedish mother and an Italian father, Ella Soccorsi moved to Stockholm to go to school in the early 90s. She later decided to depart from the planned career path in engineering to cultivate an interest in art and design, falling in love with scenography and costume design during an internship at the Stockholm Opera House and then co-founding the independent fashion label Nakkna before starting a long relationship with the H&M brand.

'I know it sounds grand, but I think my interest in design comes down to a curiosity about people and what’s going on in the world. That’s why I often turn to art at the very beginning of the design process, before starting the work, because it gives you a feeling of how artists, who I think of as more sensitive to the world around them, perceive what’s happening, whether it’s the climate crisis or political situations, and how that affects our everyday lives. It helps me understand people’s needs and desires.'

If you put in the attention and passion and all that comes with being inspired in the design process, and you know the lives of the people you’re designing for, it somehow shines through in the product. You can feel the consideration and choices behind it, which gives it purpose and meaning, and in the end, beauty. Because beauty comes from connection. If I look at what makes my life more beautiful, it’s certainly not always the aesthetic of things but because they give me comfort and make sense in my day-to-day routines.

Most of us have a more relaxed and functional approach to how we create our homes than to our wardrobes and how we dress. What becomes your house is a natural process, with a mix of inherited objects that are not really your style and stuff you actually need because you have children and small things they bring home from school, or that you bring home from the beach. I think it would be quite interesting if the same kind of meaning and connection would play a bigger role in how we buy and relate to clothing.’

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