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Exceptional Use of Color in Architecture & Interior Design

Benjamin Moore Hue® Awards to be presented for
Exceptional Use of Color in Architecture & Interior Design

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(NEW YORK, NY–FEBRUARY, 2012)—Color—and a distinguished group of design professionals who are true believers in its power and passionate about its use—will be celebrated when Benjamin Moore presents the HUE Awards, Tuesday, April 3, at Hearst Tower, 300 West 57th Street. The honorees emerging from this year's competition include D'Aquino Monaco Inc., New York, for Residential Interiors; Architecture Is Fun, Chicago, for Contract Interiors; and Publicolor, for Social Responsibility. They competed in a field of nearly 100 entries, and each will be receiving the hand-blown, paint drop-shaped crystal HUE sculpture, plus a $5,000 cash prize in recognition of the exceptional use of color in architecture and interior design.

Additionally, New York interior designer Muriel Brandolini was named by the judges to receive the HUE Lifetime Achievement Award, and 89-year-old itinerant muralist Virginia McLaughlin, of Frederick, MD, will be presented with a Special Achievement Award at the 2012 ceremony.

"This is now the fifth year Benjamin Moore has held the HUE competition," said Eileen McComb, director of corporate communications. "And each year the honorees' work awes us with not simply a richness of color, but also with the scope of breathtaking talent and imagination. This year's judges had no easy task in making their decisions, but it's another group of amazing architects and designers who will receive the HUEY. We are excited to salute their individual achievements and add them to the esteemed roster of what now numbers 29 honorees."

Lifetime Achievement Honoree – Muriel Brandolini

In the recently published book chronicling her work, The World of Muriel Brandolini (Rizzoli, 2011), the designer acknowledges that "the freedom to live a colorful life" has enabled her to flex her creative muscle.

A colorful life, indeed: Brandolini was born in Montpellier, France, to a French-Venezuelan mother and a Vietnamese father. She was the youngest of four sisters, and the family first lived in Vietnam for 12 years and then moved to Martinique in 1972. When she was 15, she was sent to live with relatives in Paris, where her interest and tastes for fashion, architecture and design were well nourished. It was an eventual move to New York City in her early twenties with no job but an instinctive entrepreneurial spirit and fearless drive that led to her emergence as an in-demand interiors artiste. Her own living spaces became laboratories for experimentation in the use of color and texture, pattern and scale, as she constantly was redecorating —seized by an endless flow of creative ideas.

The HUE judges were struck by Brandolini's innate sense of color, and in reviewing her work remarked that she's skillful at applying color in subtle measures or dialing it up to a more vibrant and audacious palette. They also noted how effectively she finesses the layering of colors to create spaces that seem less planned and more organic or evolved. Overall, the judges found her interiors "emotionally satisfying," which won her high praise and has become an indelible signature of her work.

Special Achievement Honoree – Virginia McLaughlin

It's not enough that this 89-year-old still climbs ladders and scaffolding to execute the extraordinary painted wall and ceiling murals for which she has earned acclaim. Virginia McLaughlin also still manages to do aerobics three times a week, plus gets plenty of exercise keeping up with her five-year-old grandchild. McLaughlin describes herself as "an itinerant painter," traveling job to job, whether it's for a private home, an institution or a commercial property. Her unique artistry was too hard for Benjamin Moore and the HUE judges to ignore, and so they will be presenting McLaughlin with a HUE Special Achievement award for the nearly 120 murals she has painstakingly hand-painted since 1977.

McLaughlin, who lives in Frederick, MD, often is commissioned to paint murals representative of the local history and landscape, and her work can be found in homes and even some restaurants and inns throughout Maryland, Virginia and the Mid-Atlantic region. Her work is inspired by the early 19th century American landscape painter Rufus Porter and also, from that era, a series of hand-blocked wallpaper from manufacturer Jean Zuber called "Scenic America."

Benjamin Moore's Regal® eggshell paint is her preferred medium. "It's easy to work with, is forgiving and stands the test of time," she said. McLaughlin also recently told the editor of her hometown magazine, Elegant Living, that she favors the brand's linen white (912) as a base for colors she mixes in, with labrador blue (1670) for mid-tones and then providence blue (1636) for a darker shade. What's especially astonishing about McLaughlin's work is that she rarely sketches scenes before starting and she often incorporates a client's home and family members in the final artwork.

A retrospective book of McLaughlin's work is due out this fall to coincide with her 90th birthday.

The Competition Honorees

Interior designer Carl D'Aquino and architect Francine Monaco formed their namesake partnership in 1997, and since then they have built an impressive portfolio of work for a range of residential and commercial projects both nationally and internationally. A noteworthy feat accomplished within 10 years of its founding, Interior Design magazine named D'Aquino Monaco to its prestigious Hall of Fame. Now the partnership is adding a HUE for Residential Interiors to its trophy shelf.

The pair's mastery of color selection and usage is apparent in nearly every space they design. In some, like an Upper East Side townhouse restoration they recently orchestrated, the palette registers with uninhibited boldness. In this space, they applied unexpected color and pattern contrasts that are visual treats from all corners. Yet, their color competency is equally evident in a Riverside Drive flat where the client requested an all-white décor that could have been cliché. But D'Aquino Monaco delivered with a combination of nuanced tones on a white and gray scale that is remarkably complex and compelling.

Peter Exley, FAIA, and Sharon Exley, MAAE, head the Chicago-based Architecture Is Fun, which has earned the HUE for Contract Interiors. The husband and wife duo dedicate their practice to architecture for play and learning for children of all ages, with projects that include museums, public spaces, libraries, parks, playgrounds and healthcare facilities. Dynamic colors infuse their projects, engaging youngsters and their families.

For example, the couple relied on an eye-popping palette of hot red, deep blue, crayon purple and pulsating green to transform an abandoned car dealership into the Mid-Michigan Children's Museum in Saginaw. It is a vibrant space that has become a catalyst for community revitalization. The Pritzker Family Children's Zoo in Chicago's Lincoln Park utilizes a palette that helps children connect with nature. Two dominant shades of green are used to create a perennial springtime woodland environment that invigorates this public landmark.

Also youth-focused, Publicolor, founded in 1996 by Ruth Lande Shuman, is the recipient of the HUE Social Responsibility Award. The non-profit organization, which is one of New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg's favorite causes, helps inspire disaffected and at-risk teenage students by involving them in adding color to all the public spaces in their schools. Publicolor teaches the process of commercial painting to these youngsters, who work together to improve their learning environment, empowering them to make over their surroundings and experience a sense of success and accomplishment as they gain a marketable skill.

School painting projects are just the tip of the Publicolor iceberg. The organization also provides ongoing programming to help students plan and prepare for college and career. In doing so, it addresses two root causes of poverty: under-education and lack of job preparedness.In an interview with catalystsdr.com last year, Shuman said, "I feel very strongly that by introducing design and color you can change attitudes and behavior as well as create visual order in environments where chaos reigns supreme."

About the HUE 2012 Judges

As it has in the past, Benjamin Moore enlisted a panel of renowned and respected leaders in the fields of design, fashion and industry to serve as HUE judges. This year's jury included Paul Goldberger, architecture critic, The New Yorker; Tim Murray, former creative director, TARGET Creative Vision Group; Hans Neubert, executive creative director, frog; Linda O'Keeffe, design author and former creative director, Metropolitan Home magazine; and Gary Panter, artist, graphic designer and set designer for the original "Pee-wee's Playhouse."

For more information go to benjaminmoore.com/hueawards.

About Benjamin Moore Benjamin Moore & Co., a Berkshire Hathaway company, was founded in 1883. One of the country's leading manufacturers of premium-quality residential, commercial and industrial maintenance paints and other coatings, its products are distributed via a network of independent paint and decorating retailers throughout North America. Benjamin Moore has been a longstanding steward of the environment with a relentless commitment to sustainable manufacturing practices plus the ongoing development of the most eco-responsible formulations possible. Its portfolio of Green Promise® products continues to grow and includes Aura®, the über-performance low-VOC paint; Natura®, the true zero-VOC interior paint, remaining zero after tinting in any color, any sheen; and EcoSpec zero-VOC paint for commercial interiors. The J.D. Power & Associates 2011 Interior Paint Satisfaction Study ranked Benjamin Moore highest in consumer satisfaction. What's more, the Benjamin Moore color offering of 3,300 hues is unrivaled, but any custom color choice can be matched, as was recently done for the White House Oval Office ceiling and trims. The only assurance of getting an authentic Benjamin Moore color is using Benjamin Moore paint, since the colorants and resins are proprietary and formulated with the company's own patented waterborne technologies. And, authentic Benjamin Moore colors are available exclusively from Benjamin Moore retailers.

Past HUE® Awards Honorees

Lifetime Achievement Steven Holl '06
Ettore Sottsass '07
Legorreta + Legorreta '08
Diamond Baratta Design '10

Residential Interiors Moore Ruble Yudell Architects & Planners '06
Drake Design Associates '06
David Ling Architect '07
Danielle Bokor, '08
Ghislaine Viñas '10

Contract Interiors Clive Wilkinson Architects '06
TVS Interiors, Inc. '06
Saia Barbarese Topouzanov Architectes '07
STUDIOS Architecture '08
Envision Design, '10

Residential Exteriors Daniel Weiland Architect '06
Ibarra Rosano Design Architects '07
Donald Lococo Architects '08
Amy Wax, Your Color Source Studios '10

Contract Exteriors Rockwell Group '06
SMC Alsop, Inc. '07
Allen + Philp Architects/Interiors '10

Social Responsibility Gary Wang, Architect '07
Make It Right, New Orleans '08

Special AchievementRestoration & Preservation
Eikona Studios '10

Press Contacts:Eileen McComb
201-949-6620
eileen.mccomb@benjaminmoore.com

Esther Perman
212-966-3759
estherp@vpcpartners.com

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