Decade of Design Showcased in Colony’s Exhibition The Independents
"The Independents" marks Colony's tenth anniversary as a platform where personal vision and marketplace viability find rare equilibrium.

The Independents marks Colony’s 10th anniversary as a platform where founder Jean Lin’s personal vision and marketplace viability find rare equilibrium. The exhibition brings together 24 design studios from Colony’s orbit, each responding to what independence in design practice means to them. The resulting collection serves as both retrospective and manifesto – a declaration that independence in design isn’t merely aesthetic preference but philosophical stance.
A paper cord chair with a single walnut along a corner hinge sits in the corner of Lin’s Tribeca gallery space. To the casual observer, it might register simply as a thoughtful detail of material juxtaposition. But Chen Chen & Kai Williams’ Walnut Corner Chair carries cultural memory within its form. The designers drew inspiration from the Chinese tradition of passing walnuts from one generation to the next, objects worn smooth by the hands of ancestors. This object-as-inheritance becomes a fitting metaphor for what Colony has cultivated over its decade of existence.
“I’m very proud of the community of independent designers that we have built at Colony over the past decade,” says Colony founder Lin. “The Independents exhibition encapsulates my very own ‘why.’ My belief in the independent spirit is limitless, and so is my awe.”
The exhibition reveals how Colony’s cooperative model has evolved beyond representation to becoming an incubator. Studios emerging from the gallery’s Designers’ Residency program – including Ember Studio, Thomas Yang Studio, and the freshly minted Studio BC Joshua from the 2025 class – demonstrate how Colony functions as both launch pad and ongoing support system.
Materiality serves as a throughline connecting past and present. Current Colony designers like Hiroko Takeda, Moving Mountains, and SSS Atelier present new work that extends their material investigations. Takeda’s textiles in particular showcase how technical mastery creates spaces for expression – the constraints of the loom enabling greater creative freedom.
For more information on The Independents, visit Colony at goodcolony.com.
Photography by Brooke Holm.