2021 L'Epopée d'Hermès
Six generations of the same family have written the story of Hermès, which is built around encounters and nourished by innovations. The seventh-generation continues to uphold its founding spirit of boldness and elegance while looking firmly to the future. Designer Jan Bajtlik composed a game of snakes and ladders illustrating this rich adventure, which began in 1837 when Thierry Hermès established his harness-making and saddlery business in Paris. The founder, placed at the center of this joyous carnival, is surrounded by characters who have marked the history of the house. Charles-Émile Hermès, who in 1880 set up the family saddlery at 24 Faubourg Saint-Honoré, rides his rocking horse with childlike joy, while, further on, a spaceship launches on a mission to undiscovered planets, echoing the house’s ongoing quest for new horizons.
2021 Cheval de Fête
This design by Jan Bajtlik joyfully pays tribute to the posters of the Polish School from the 1950s to the 1970s. The artists of Warsaw broke with the era’s conventions to illustrate films, plays, concerts and exhibitions. More than just a question of drawing the eye, they sought to harness the art of detail through the use of simple lines and emblematic figures. Rosettes, ribbons and geometric patterns recall the power of these creations. The mischievous face of Kluska, the designer’s dog, makes an appearance on the right of the composition.
2020 Exposition Universelle
Jan Bajtlik invites us to a universal exhibition full of surprises. Absurd humor and nods to history punctuate this multicolored map in which dinosaurs frolic under a cloche and penguins dance underwater. A Tower of Babel transformed into a spiral slide stands near a Trojan horse housing a spa, while four drones hold the Great Pyramid upside down. The designer finds inspiration in the great world fairs of the 19th century to recreate a fantasy park in which innovation, combined with gigantism, is represented in all its forms: pragmatic, poetic and entirely far-fetched.
2020 600 chevaux (Men’s scarf)
2020 Voitures Exquises une Collection Polonaise
Like many Poles, Jan Bajtlik, the artist behind this design, has known about the incredible collection of horse-drawn carriages found at Lańcut Castle since his childhood. The most recent owners of the castle, the Comtes Potocki family, created this remarkable collection, which includes harnesses that were produced by Hermès. Rediscovering his inner child, Jan Bajtlik enjoyed choosing twenty horse-drawn carriages which he then cut in two in order to recreate these "Voitures Exquises".
2019 Cosmographia Universalis
Sebastian Münster was a cartographer, historian, astronomer, mathematician and scholar of Hebrew. His work, Cosmographia Universalis, was first published in Germany in 1544 and became one of the most widely-read books of the 16th century. When Jan Bajtlik discovered an original edition of the book in a library in Poland, he was fascinated by its vision of a world made up of myths and legends. His scarf depicts an imaginary landscape that combines architecture with fauna and flora. Taking the seahorses, sea monsters and pyramids of the Cosmographia as his models, he creates a dreamlike world teeming with extraordinary beasts.
2019 Sweet Dreams (Men’s scarf)
2018 Animapolis
In this phantasmagorical city, zebras, dinosaurs, monkeys and toucans joyfully run riot. Each animal tells a story - a dragon lays siege to the Warsaw Palace of Culture and Science, a leopard sets its sights on the Kremlin in Moscow, and a panda and crocodile pass the time lounging at the foot of Moscow's St. Basil's Cathedral. And, for the very best view of this delightful spectacle, other protagonists gather at the windows of Hermes on Faubourg Saint-Honore in Paris. An exuberant composition, Animapolis is Jan Bajtlik's, a graduate of the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts, first silk scarf designed for Hermes.
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