The Life-Changing Magic of âKnollingâ
Welcome to Sitting Pretty, a column that explores how timeless design and contemporary culture shape our homes today.
When Tidying Up with Marie Kondo debuted on Netflix in January 2019, the Japanese decluttering guru skyrocketed from a best-selling author to a popular culture phenomenon. Her name became a philosophy and a verb: "Kondo-ing," or keeping the items that "spark joy" and tossing the ones that donât. Fast forward to 2023, however, and the Kondo boom feels like the last hurrah of a particular type of the prescriptive, white-knuckled minimalism that felt inescapable for much of the past decade. Enter "knolling," a totally different organizational method born from the studio practices of artists, designers, and DIYers that involves laying out related objectsâpaint pens and ink markers, wrenches and chisels, metal chains of all sizesâin a precise but simultaneously stylish way, intended to streamline workflow. The organizing practice feels uniquely suited to meet this aesthetic moment and rife with potential as an interior design philosophy, focusing on highlighting your belongings instead of discarding them.
The push against minimalismâand backslide toward some strain of maximalismârevved up in 2020. It wasnât all Kondoâs doing. In a post-Kinfolk world, we were promised bliss, but ended up bored in sparsely decorated homes when a pandemic brought the world crashing to a halt. A Guardian excerpt from tech and culture reporter Kyle Chaykaâs book on minimalism pointed to "the empty promises of Marie Kondo." Writing about Chaykaâs book and the Kondo craze for The New Yorker, author and essayist Jia Tolentino cut directly to new minimalismâs core message: "Donât organizeâpurge." Architectural Digest and Apartment Therapy would later dive into the aesthetic shift toward micro-trends like "cluttercore."
If Kondo-ing puts the emphasis on purging, then knolling emphasizes keeping and organizing. The conceptâs name is synonymous with the American furniture manufacturing company shepherded by late architect Florence Knoll that rose to a midcentury promised land for industrial designers of all disciplines, offering sharp silhouettes and geometric forms. (Also, lots of office systems.) However, it was contemporary artist and provocateur Tom Sachs who popularized Knollâs last name as a shorthand for the method of "arrang[ing] like objects in parallel or ninety-degree angles as a method of organization."
"I know that Tom Sachs is where it proliferated," says Amy Auscherman, director of archives and brand heritage at MillerKnoll (the collective formed after fellow design titan Herman Miller acquired Knoll in 2021). "Itâs a point of pride to be able to say the company name is also a verb." While the blue-chip artist laid out the rules for knolling and championed the concept into the creative world, sculptor Andrew Kromelow originally invented it. Both men worked in Frank Gehryâs Santa Monica studio during the late 1980s; Kromelow was in charge of keeping the workshop tidy as a janitor and would feverishly organize so that workers could quickly and clearly see all the tools at once. At the time, the Gehry studio was constructing a bent-plywood chair for Knoll. The name stuck.
"Tommy absorbed it and made it his own," Kromelow later told Communication Arts. "Iâm glad it has become such a universal system. It makes sense because as human beings and artists, we all crave making order out of disorder."
In the early 1990s, Sachs moved from Los Angeles to New York to start his own studio. Knolling remained a mainly internal word until he released "Working to Code" in 2010, an instructional video of sorts that can now be purchased as a printed and bound zine. Over the next decade, knolling would go from Sachs Studio jargon to industry-wide terminology.
The style boomed in marketing and advertising, known as "flat-lay" photography, used by everyone from massive fashion retailers to beauty product companies. A Webby Awardâwinning Tumblr blog called Things Organized Neatly, featuring images of everyday objects laid out pleasingly and photographed from above, landed a book deal with the glossy arthouse publisher Rizzoli in 2016, the foreword written by none other than Tom Sachs. The long-running "Essentials" series by streetwear publication Hypebeastâwith daily must-haves and cherished objects of prominent figures like Virgil Abloh, Russell Westbrook, and Sir Richard Bransonâuses the method for its imagery. The photo style even found a more grassroots adoption via the ultra-popular "Everyday Carry" subreddit. All of these hyper-organized layouts are easy to recognize as knolling.
In Florence Knollâs old "paste-ups," furniture and layout details were meticulously arranged to present finished interior concepts to clients. Several early print advertisements for the company also carried an aura of artful neatness. "Florence was an architect first and foremost," says Auscherman. "The way she practiced furniture and interior design was sort of like knolling in 3D. She studied with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and his architecture is the epitome of the knolling concept. Very considered angles."
While knolling has a deep history in architecture and design, it feels more significant than just organizing tools in a workshop. Think of it as a picturesque and deliberate way of arranging that can be applied to our homes: Curate a vignette of sharply stacked novellas next to like-minded trinkets on your bedside table or hang your ceramic mugs and coffee gadgetry together like it belongs in an art gallery. Perhaps now is the year when knolling and Kondo-ing can meet somewhere in the middle. Get rid of the things you dislike, yes, but otherwise, embrace your tchotchkes and ephemera. Keep them and organize them with newfound order and purpose. On one level, you’re communing with your objects, and more practically, you’re updating your home with a deliberate breath of design. That sounds preferable to hauling stuff out to the trash.
Top photo by Stanislav Novak / Getty Images.
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