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H E L L E N I C M I N I S T R Y O F C U LT U R E A N D S P O R T S - O D A P - T E M P L E O F Z E U S , N E M E A

D I O R B O U T I Q U E S 8 0 0 .9 2 9. D I O R ( 3 4 67 ) D I O R . C O M





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CONTENTS january 26 Editor’s Letter 28 Object Lesson

Joe Colombo’s Elda chair. BY HANNAH MARTIN

33 Discoveries

AD visits a Southampton home designed by Raymond Boozer... Today’s best poufs, stools, and ottomans!

55 AD100

The talents raising the bar for global design today.

82 The 2022 WOW List

From an experimental house to daring art spaces, these are true Works of Wonder. BY SAM COCHRAN

108

TWO VIBRANT SPACES (HERE AND ABOVE) IN MARTIN BRUDNIZKI’S ENGLISH COUNTRYSIDE RETREAT.

96 Perfect Union

At the Los Angeles home of Sean Rad and Lizzie Grover Rad, designer Jane Hallworth leads a master class in the marriage of substance and style. BY MAYER RUS

108 Maximum English

Designer Martin Brudnizki’s historic Sussex retreat is a joyfully over-the-top celebration of British tradition. BY MITCHELL OWENS

118 Mountain High

For collector Hélène Nguyen-Ban, Elliott Barnes puts a modern spin on a classic chalet in the French ski resort of Megève. BY MALLERY

126 Major Drama

One family’s industrial Tribeca loft undergoes a colorful metamorphosis at the hands of ASH NYC. BY HANNAH MARTIN

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AR CHDIGE S T.COM

HENRY BOURNE.

ROBERTS MORGAN


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CONTENTS january

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NEW AD100 HONOREE ELIZABETH GRAZIOLO OF YELLOW HOUSE ARCHITECTS IN NYC.

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AD100 NEWCOMER DAVID FLACK OF FLACK STUDIO IN HIS FIRM’S MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, OFFICE.

138 Real Simple

Darryl Carter conjures a calm, modern oasis for a family in Washington, D.C.

FOLLOW @ARCHDIGEST

144 Home on the Range

With the help of AD100 triumvirate Madison Cox, Annabelle Selldorf, and Jeffrey Bilhuber, a Texas twosome make a historic home in Marfa their own. BY SAM COCHRAN

156 Resources

The designers, architects, and products featured this month.

158 One to Watch

Simone Bodmer-Turner’s dreamy ceramics. BY HANNAH MARTIN

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SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION GO TO ARCHDIGEST.COM, CALL 800-365-8032, OR EMAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS@ ARCHDIGEST.COM. DIGITAL EDITION DOWNLOAD AT ARCHDIGEST.COM/APP. NEWSLETTER SIGN UP FOR AD’S DAILY NEWSLETTER, AT ARCHDIGEST.COM/ NEWSLETTER. COMMENTS CONTACT US VIA SOCIAL MEDIA OR EMAIL US AT LETTERS@ARCHDIGEST.COM.

A PRIVATE GARDEN AT A HOME IN MARFA, TEXAS. “HOME ON THE RANGE,” PAGE 144. PHOTOGRAPHY BY WILLIAM JESS LAIRD. STYLED BY COLIN KING.

THE MARBLE-CLAD BATH IN A LOS ANGELES RESIDENCE. “PERFECT UNION,” PAGE 96. PHOTOGRAPHY BY SAM FROST. STYLED BY MICHAEL REYNOLDS.

FROM LEFT: KELLY MARSHALL, ZAC BAYLEY.

BY CATHERINE HONG


P R AT E S I I S L O V E . S I N C E 1 9 0 6 .

P R AT E S I . C O M


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DESIGN INSPIRATION FROM THE ISSUE

Lay All Your Love on Me

As cofounder of the hit dating app Tinder, Sean Rad built his business getting people to cozy up. So it should come as no surprise that the Jane Hallworth–designed L.A. home he shares with his wife, Lizzie Grover Rad (page 96), is full of spots to snuggle—among them this bedroom. Dreaming of the same casual vibes and neutral tones? We have some z’s for you.... 22

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ACE OF BASE A CLEAN CONSCIENCE MEANS A GOOD NIGHT’S REST, SO GO WITH A CERTIFIED-ORGANIC, NONTOXIC MATTRESS LIKE AVOCADO; AVOCADOGREENMATTRESS.COM

PROD UCE D BY SAM COCHRA N AND MA DE LINE O’MAL LE Y

INTERIOR: SAM FROST. ALL OTHERS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.

SHINING MOMENTS SWING-ARM LAMPS SET THE MOOD AND PLEASE THE EYE, OFFERING FLEXIBLE GLOW FOR READING. A FAVE IS THE URBAN ELECTRIC CO.’S PHARMACY SCONCE; URBANELECTRIC.COM


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editor’s letter

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1. THE FANCIFUL SUSSEX DRAWING ROOM OF MARTIN BRUDNIZKI. 2. DEFYING DESERT EXPECTATIONS, A PRETTY BEDROOM IN MARFA, TEXAS, DECORATED BY JEFFREY BILHUBER. 3. A SKI CHALET IN MEGÈVE, FRANCE, WITH INTERIORS BY ELLIOTT BARNES. 4. IN THE L.A. HOUSE OF SEAN RAD AND LIZZIE GROVER RAD, DESIGNED BY JANE HALLWORTH. 5. WITH AD100 INDUCTEE RAYMAN BOOZER IN NYC. 6. DRAMATIC CURTAINS SET THE STAGE IN A TRIBECA LOFT BY ASH NYC. 1

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Storytelling is at the heart of every memorable interior and certainly sits at the heart of AD. Our editorial team works tirelessly for months (even years!) in advance to secure spectacular spaces for our annual AD100 issue. The goal? To ensure that we deliver all the dazzle readers rightfully expect from the world’s most exciting design talents. 4 Every project featured this month is the creation of a person or firm 5 honored this year, and each weaves its own tale. Some are the brainchild of names long familiar to “the list,” such as the power triumvirate of architect Annabelle Selldorf, landscape designer Madison Cox, and interior designer Jeffrey Bilhuber, jointly responsible for a singular residence in the desert in Marfa, Texas, for a particularly discerning couple. Others are by more recent additions and returnees, like Paris-based American architect Elliott Barnes and the deeply experienced interior designers Jane Hallworth, Darryl Carter, and Rayman Boozer. In every home, each of the key players talks about the importance of building a kind of plotline for the transportive spaces they dream up— interiors usually meant for others but in the case of London- and New York–based Martin Brudnizki, for himself and his life/business partner, Jonathan Brook. “This is a fantasy of English arcadian life by a Swede who didn’t grow up in houses like this,” says the designer of the historically minded yet utterly madcap Sussex retreat. “It’s an extreme point of view, but it’s not for a client; it’s for me and Jonathan. This is our own story.” In New York City, ASH NYC conjured a dramatic and colorful, lush and layered vibe for the kind of industrial Tribeca loft that often gets the all-white, minimalist treatment. “I like to look at things through a theatrical lens,” says Will Cooper, partner and chief creative officer of the firm. “What narrative unfolds when you open the door? We paint a picture for you; we make a movie for you to live in.” That’s show business with the AD100 stars! Curtain up on the January issue.

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AMY ASTLEY Editor in Chief @amyastley

1. HENRY BOURNE. 2. WILLIAM JESS LAIRD. 3. FLOTO + WARNER. 4. SAM FROST. 5. AMY ASTLEY. 6. MIGUEL FLORES-VIANNA.

“Jane comes up with insane ideas, insane stories, and as much as she values the integrity of the house, the story she cares most about is the one we’re making together.” —Lizzie Grover Rad on designer Jane Hallworth


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object lesson

THE STORY BEHIND AN ICONIC DESIGN 1. A JOE COLOMBO ELDA CHAIR IN THE GREENWICH VILLAGE HOME OF JONATHAN ADLER AND SIMON DOONAN. 2. THE DESIGNER WITH HIS 1965 CREATION. 3. THE PARIS ATELIER OF LUIS LAPLACE AND CHRISTOPHE COMOY. 4. A VINTAGE ELDA IN ALEXANDER WERZ’S MILAN HOME. 5. A NEW ELDA BY LONGHI. 2

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3

Joe Colombo’s spacey 1965 Elda chair is still a power seat

A

fter Italian designer Joe Colombo visited a shipyard in 1963 that made fiberglass hulls for boats, inspiration struck: Why not use that same hand-molding technique for the base of a chair? The results—a roomy, futuristic armchair in which seven detachable cushions hook into a molded plastic shell on a rotating base—would become an icon. He named it after his wife, Elda. Colombo moved a white fiberglass and black leather model— produced by Italian brand Comfort in 1965—into his own Milan

4

benefits of hibernation,” recalls Laplace of his early-childhood encounter with the seat. He and partner Christophe Comoy now live with one in Paris. Elda went on to star in the 1977 Bond flick The Spy Who Loved Me, in the 1970s series Space: 1999, and in the Laplace’s point: “It oozes power.” 5

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—HANNAH MARTIN

1. DOUGLAS FRIEDMAN. 2. IGNAZIA FAVATA/STUDIO JOE COLOMBO. 3. NICOLAS MATHÉUS. 4. GIULIO GHIRARDI. 5. COURTESY OF LONGHI.

Like a Boss



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Second home purchases have heated up in the last 18 months, and post-pandemic buyers are dreaming bigger and getting more creative in their searches, forgoing the traditional drive-to weekend house for homes that can serve as primary residences in destinations a bit farther afield. Christy Budnick, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, says more and more clients are buying homes sight unseen, particularly (though not exclusively) overseas. It’s not as daunting a prospect as it sounds. The internet, of course, makes it easier than ever to get a feel for a home from behind your laptop, with hyper-detailed listings that include professional-grade interior photos, drone photos and even 360º videos; complete histories; and local market trends for comparison points.

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DISCOVERIES

THE BEST IN SHOPPING, DESIGN, AND STYLE

EDITED BY SAM COCHRAN

AD VISITS

Rainbow Connection

Bound by their love of color, AD100 inductee Rayman Boozer and a repeat client make a splash in the Hamptons P HOTOGRAPHY BY DAVI D LAND

RAYMAN BOOZER OF APARTMENT 48 AT THE SOUTHAMPTON HOME HE DESIGNED FOR MAUREEN SULLIVAN AND HER FAMILY.

ARCHDIGEST. COM

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DISCOVERIES

1

A

residential concept for retail space may not seem like a new idea today as mega-brands settle into domiciles worldwide. But when AD100 inductee Rayman Boozer first opened his beloved Manhattan boutique, Apartment 48, in 1994, his approach was groundbreaking. Tucked on the garden level of a town house at 48 West 17th Street, the shop unfolded in a warren of rooms, with every corner (kitchen, bath, bed) outfitted as if inhabited. For Boozer, who had studied interior design at Indiana University before moving to New York to work for the likes of Saks Fifth Avenue and Bloomingdale’s, Apartment 48 was more than a chance to push products. It was a chance to push his point of view. “I was trying to find a way to express all my ideas at once,” he reflects. “My biggest desire was to be understood.” Among those who immediately got the concept, as well as the man, was Maureen Sullivan, then just a 20-something living with roommates. “Apartment 48 was so ahead of its time,” says Sullivan, a consumer-tech executive. “There was nothing precious or intimidating; it just felt warm and inviting and full of inspiration.” Her regular visits to the store gave way to a lasting friendship after she tapped Boozer to decorate her and her husband’s one-bedroom. Over the years, their lives have evolved in step—Sullivan having three children, Boozer pivoting to interior design full-time and closing up shop. Along the way, he has done five homes for her and her family. The latest was a pandemic project, brought on by the sudden sale of the Long Island retreat that Boozer had

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1. SULLIVAN WITH DAUGHTERS RYAN AND LUCY AND SON TEDDY IN THE LIVING ROOM; THIBAULT WALL COVERING, RH COCKTAIL TABLE, WISTERIA SOFAS, AND SERENA & LILY CHAIRS. 2. THE POOLSIDE ARMCHAIRS AND CHAISE LONGUES ARE BY SERENA & LILY, AND THE UMBRELLA IS BY WILLIAMS SONOMA HOME. 2






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DISCOVERIES

2

1. THIBAULT WALLPAPER WRAPS THE BREAKFAST NOOK; CHAIRS BY RALPH LAUREN HOME. 2. IN THE DINING ROOM, THIBAULT WALLPAPER ADDS A BASE LAYER OF GREEN. 3. THE DAUGHTERS’ ROOM MIXES THIBAULT WALLPAPER, PETER DUNHAM VALANCE AND SHADE FABRICS, AND SAMUEL & SONS TRIM.

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previously designed. “We got an offer we couldn’t refuse,” Sullivan explains. “Suddenly we were in the bizarre position of wanting a new home very, very quickly.” Friends directed her to a Shingle Style house on the market in Southampton. “What were the chances it would be perfect?” she recalls of the five-bedroom home, whose traditional layout and decorative details sealed the deal. “My next call was to Rayman.” Color, a shared passion, has always been the starting point for their collaborations. “People who don’t get color don’t get me,” notes Boozer, famous for his use of bold hues. Though Sullivan self-identifies as a “blue-and-white person,” Boozer made it his mission to incorporate green into the palette. (“She likes things to match; I like things to clash.”) Sylvan tones now creep into the mix like vines, appearing in pillows, artworks, and wallpapers. “Rayman always pushes me just outside my comfort zone,” says Sullivan. “He knows how to make it that much more playful and more interesting.” From the exuberant pink medley in the daughters’ room to the navy scheme in the son’s, the charter became bolder, brighter, more fun! “It’s an upbeat house for upbeat people,” says Boozer. “I like to do projects that are happy. That’s what I am always striving for, to put positive vibes out into the world.” For Sullivan, who moved in in July 2020 after just four weeks of Zoom decorating meetings, those vibes have been powerful medicine. Her family rode out the pandemic in the Hamptons, with remote school at the dining room table and alfresco gatherings by the pool. “Rayman has been with us through all our phases as a family,” says Sullivan, noting that Boozer put the same love and attention into that first one-bedroom as he did this home. “He will forever be my go-to.” —SAM COCHRAN

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CHESNEYS


H I S V I S I O N CONTINUES

I N P A R T N E R S H I P W I T H T H E F R A N K L L O Y D W R I G H T F O U N D AT I O N

|

B R I Z O .C O M

® 2021, Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. All rights reserved.


This year’s honorees—among them 15 newcomers making their first appearance and 11 top tastemakers who have been elevated to the Hall of Fame—are the talents raising the bar for global design today.

GLADIMIR GELIN.

Studio Zewde

NEW YORK

“Every landscape should look different,” says New Yorker Sara Zewde, deemed a 2021 Emerging Voice by the Architectural League of New York. Her work resists similitude down to the simplest things: “Why can’t we rethink what a curb looks like?” she wonders. Her projects, which hang somewhere between urban planning and landscape design, aim to “create enduring places where people belong.” They include the evolution of Graffiti Pier, a beloved (and much-Instagrammed) streetart landmark in Philadelphia and the winning design (with fellow AD100 honoree Sir David Adjaye) to redevelop part of the Kingsboro Psychiatric Center campus in East Flatbush, Brooklyn, which will include affordable housing and a range of public spaces for the community. Zewde, who has researched—and lectured on at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design—Frederick Law Olmsted’s writings that connect ecology to larger social structures, is working on a forthcoming book on the pioneering landscape architect. studio-zewde.com Landscape architect Sara Zewde in her Harlem, New York, studio.


Amy Lau Design NEW YORK Signature: Lau conceives interiors as total works of art, using dynamic mixes of antique and rare vintage pieces, contemporary art and design, and commissioned one-of-a-kind works and site-specific installations from emerging talents and living legends. amylaudesign.com DEBUT Apartment 48 See page 66.

The Archers LOS ANGELES Signature: Site-specific furniture and finishes are a defining aspect of the studio’s projects. In the Works: A new bookstore at L.A.’s Hammer Museum; the firm’s first luxury hotel. team-archers.com T URE

ASH NYC NEW YORK Signature: Transforming spaces 126 into multisensory one-of-a-kind experiences. Highlight: Creating a line of bath fixtures for Waterworks. In the Works: Ulysses, the firm’s fourth hotel, is scheduled to open in Baltimore this spring. ashnyc.com page

D IN

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SUE F

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IS IS

Ashe Leandro NEW YORK In the Works: Residences ranging from NYC, Martha’s Vineyard, and East Hampton to San Diego and San Francisco, as well as the firm’s first monograph, to be published by Rizzoli. asheleandro.com Atelier AM LOS ANGELES Current Projects: Homes in NYC, the Hamptons, Virginia, the Bahamas, Texas, Montana, and California, as well as a new book. atelieram.com Atelier Masōmī NIAMEY, NIGER Ethos: “Tackling a wide range of public, cultural, residential, commercial, and urban works around the globe, Atelier Masōmī believes that architects have an important role to play in creating spaces that have the power to elevate, dignify, and provide a better quality of life.” ateliermasomi.com Beata Heuman LONDON Signature: Color- and pattern-forward decor that inspires and uplifts. In the Works: New additions to her growing range of product designs. Highlight: The publication of Beata Heuman: Every Room Should Sing (Rizzoli), the designer’s first book. beataheuman.com

Workstead

Billy Cotton NEW YORK Recently Completed: An upstate New York farmhouse, a Hamptons beach house, and a historic property in L.A., as well as a new collection of furniture, lighting, and textiles. Coming Soon: A monograph from Rizzoli, due out this March. billycotton.com BROOKLYN

Stefanie Brechbuehler, Robert Highsmith, and Ryan Mahoney—the principals behind the multidisciplinary design studio Workstead—are connoisseurs of craftsmanship. Shortly after forming in 2009, the firm made a splash with its design of the Wythe Hotel in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The trio thoughtfully transformed the formerly industrial building, crafting a cool and contemporary space that preserved its historic roots, and the project has come to symbolize their subsequent work. Documented in the recently published monograph Workstead: Interiors of Beauty and Necessity (Rizzoli), their signature style marries the bones of the past with contemporary sensibilities. Case in point: the firm’s bold grafting of a modernist pavilion onto a graceful Victorian manse to create a genre-bending country getaway for a client in New York’s Hudson Valley (AD, July/August 2021). Additionally, Workstead’s covetable lighting designs have become must-have objects among design cognoscenti. workstead.com

Bories & Shearron Architecture NEW YORK Highlights: The firm’s work on legendary decorator Suzanne Rheinstein’s Montecito getaway was published in AD’s March 2021 issue, and its garden folly for the Lake Forest Showhouse won a 2021 Palladio Award. In the Works: A collection of neoclassical mantelpieces for Chesneys. boriesandshearron.com DEBUT Carlos Mota Inc. See page 76.

Casiraghi Architecture d’Intérieur PARIS Recently Completed: The renovation of Hôtel La Ponche, the legendary 21-room hotel in Saint-Tropez, France. Coming Soon: Chic hotels in London, Sydney, and Paris. In the Works: A furniture collection. fabriziocasiraghi.com

Workstead’s three principals—from left, Stefanie Brechbuehler, Robert Highsmith, and Ryan Mahoney— at One Prospect West, a building the firm recently renovated in Brooklyn. At top: The firm’s large House Cord Pendant, $2,500; workstead.com 56

THE 2 02 2 AD10 0

PORTRAIT: MEGHAN MARIN. PENDANT: COURTESY OF WORKSTEAD.

BIG—Bjarke Ingels Group COPENHAGEN, LONDON, BROOKLYN, AND BARCELONA Highlights: Topping out the Spiral skyscraper in New York; the opening of the Marsk Watchtower in Denmark. In the Works: A student center at Johns Hopkins University; an urban fashion village in Portugal; a transport hub in Sweden. big.dk



Mandy Cheng Design

Charlap Hyman & Herrero BROOKLYN AND LOS ANGELES In the Works: In addition to residences from Beverly Hills to Miami Beach, the firm is designing sets for the Santa Fe Opera. Coming Soon: New rugs for Patterson Flynn Martin and new wallpapers and fabrics for Schumacher. ch-herrero.com

LOS ANGELES

Following the well-traveled road from production design to interior design, Mandy Cheng has parlayed her experience in film, television, and music into a career as one of the most sought-after decorators on the contemporary scene. Her résumé in the entertainment industry includes a stint at DreamWorks Animation, music-video production design for chart-toppers J. Cole and OneRepublic, and graphicdesign work on Greta Gerwig’s movie Lady Bird and Beyoncé’s Lemonade album. She branched out into residential and commercial interiors in 2012, crafting environments defined by both high style and easy, unpretentious livability. The home she designed for actors Daveed Diggs and Emmy RaverLampman (AD, April 2021) made a splash with its bright pops of color and pattern and bespoke details that captured the effervescent spirit of her high-profile clients. She continues to apply her chic, breezy sensibility to a broad array of houses, traditional and modern, across Southern California. mandychengdesign.com

Charles & Co. NEW YORK AND LOS ANGELES Ethos: “We believe all spaces have a soul, and our work is about helping add to that history. We never confine ourselves to one type of ‘look,’ as our individualist design approach means each client goes on a different journey with us.” charlesandco.com Charles de Lisle SAUSALITO, CALIFORNIA Highlight: Helping to rebuild The Lodge at the 1960s Sea Ranch development on the Northern California coast while staying true to the original architects’ vision (AD, November 2021). In the Works: A collection of custom-woven fabrics with artisans in Mexico. charlesdelisle.com Clements Design LOS ANGELES Highlights: The firm’s work for Behati Prinsloo and Adam Levine graced the cover of AD’s September 2021 issue; the publication of Eight Homes: Clements Design (Rizzoli). clementsdesign.com Commune Design LOS ANGELES Recent Projects: Fanny’s, a restaurant, bar, and café located in L.A.’s Academy Museum of Motion Pictures; new rugs for Christopher Farr and a fabric collection for Kufri. In the Works: Dinnerware with Heath Ceramics. communedesign.com Corey Damen Jenkins & Associates NEW YORK Highlights: The publication of Design Remix: A New Spin on Traditional Rooms (Rizzoli); the premiere of Jenkins’s MasterClass; receiving the NYSID’s Larry Kravet Design Industry Leadership Award. coreydamenjenkins.com Dan Fink Studio NEW YORK Ethos: “The process of making the design should be as gratifying as the result.” danfinkstudio.com

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Darryl Carter Inc. WASHINGTON, D.C. Signature: Thoughtful, long-lasting design from classical to modern. darrylcarter.com

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DEBUT David Netto Design See page 78.

Deborah Berke Partners NEW YORK Highlight Berke was appointed to a second five-year term as dean of the Yale School of Architecture. dberke.com DEBUT Decada See page 74.

Dimorestudio MILAN Known for: Bold, unexpected, colorsaturated designs resulting in richly layered atmospheric spaces. In the Works: A new residential project in the center of London and a luxury retail-fashion project in the Middle East. dimorestudio.eu

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Elliott Barnes Interiors PARIS Signature: The elegant use of details, light, and both unusual and refined materials that invest unique, exclusive objects and spaces with an innovative approach to luxury. ebinteriors.com

IS IS

DEBUT Ensamble Studio See page 64.

Mandy Cheng, pictured in the kitchen she designed for Emmy Raver-Lampman and Daveed Diggs. 58

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YOSHIHIRO MAKINO.

Elizabeth Roberts Architects BROOKLYN Recently Completed: Newly renovated sculpture garden at the Brooklyn Museum; Southold General on the North Fork of Long Island for chef John Fraser. In the Works: A wallpaper collection for Calico and a monograph to be published by The Monacelli Press. elizabethroberts.com



ETC.etera LOS ANGELES Ethos: “We approach spaces with a sense of fun but, more importantly, think about who lives there and how they plan on living there.” etcforshort.com DEBUT Flack Studio See page 72.

Francis Sultana LONDON In the Works: Renovations of the Hotel La Palma and da Gioia beach club in Capri; a range of products, including accessories and furniture. francissultana.com Frank de Biasi Interiors NEW YORK AND TANGIER, MOROCCO Coming Soon: The launch of Habibi Burton, a company created with de Biasi’s partner, Gene Meyer, to celebrate the artisanal craft traditions of Morocco. frankdebiasi.com G.P. Schafer Architect NEW YORK Ethos: “For me, architecture is never about a theoretical idea. Rather, the question is always ‘How does a place, or space, make you feel?’ Our houses strive to be comfortable, gracious, understated, and beautiful, and stand the test of time.” gpschafer.com

Jeremiah Brent Design

NEW YORK

Jeremiah Brent is ready for his close-up. Despite the myriad projects—house commissions, television shows, product collections—that he creates in collaboration with his high-profile husband, AD100 designer Nate Berkus, Brent has established himself as a force in his own right, applying his discriminating eye to a broad range of residential, commercial, and hospitality assignments across the U.S. His roots in the fashion world continue to inform his work in the arena of interiors, particularly in his ability to conjure environments simultaneously of the moment and timeless. “I’ve always believed the ultimate form of luxury is personalization. It has nothing to do with budget,” Brent insists. “Designing a space is, in actuality, the art of telling a story. Through vignettes, materials, client-conscious decisions, and historical references, there’s an opportunity to craft something that is deeply relevant, truly original, and unequivocally personal.” jeremiahbrent.com

Gachot NEW YORK Highlight: The launch of Bond, the firm’s line of fixtures and fittings for Waterworks. In the Works: A luxury boutique hotel in Honolulu; interiors for The Brooklyn Tower, a residential building that will become the borough’s first supertall. gachotstudios.com DEBUT Green River Project See page 70. DEBUT Hallworth Design See page 66.

Ike Kligerman Barkley NEW YORK AND OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA Credo: “We want to create designs that are inventive— even a little surprising—at the intersection of modern and traditional.” ikekligermanbarkley.com DEBUT Jake Arnold See page 76.

Teo Yang Studio The two traditional hanoks in Seoul’s new-meets-old Bukchon Hanok Village where Teo Yang lives and works (AD, May 2021) have, no doubt, inspired the designer’s singular approach. “Focusing on local context, heritage, and culture but recasting it in a very modern, 21st-century aesthetic has been a manifesto for me,” says the designer, who worked for Marcel Wanders in Amsterdam before returning to his native Seoul to start his own practice in 2009. Since then, he’s brought that mantra to stores and restaurants as well as the lobby of the ancient artifact-filled Silla History Gallery at the Gyeongju National Museum. This year he launched his own furniture collection, Eastern Edition. Next up: the L.A. home of a prominent Korean art collector, the Seoul outpost of Thaddaeus Ropac gallery, and a national museum in Seoul dedicated to the Korean language. teoyangstudio.com

From top: Jeremiah Brent at a project in New York City; Teo Yang at home in Seoul, South Korea, with pieces from his Eastern Edition furniture collection. 60

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BRENT: NICOLE FRANZEN. YANG: SHIM YUN SUK.

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA


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Yellow House Architects

Elizabeth Graziolo, the Haitian-born, New York–based architect who worked under fellow AD100 architect Peter Pennoyer for two decades before striking out on her own in 2020, is well versed in the classics. But now, as she executes ambitious projects of her own—reconfiguring classic Manhattan apartments, executing a ground-up residence in the Midwest, renovating a private estate and designing and building a boathouse in Palm Beach— she explains, “We draw upon our knowledge of traditional architecture— proven models that have evolved over centuries—while adding modern touches.” A perfect example: an apartment in Tribeca’s storied Woolworth Tower Residences, where Cass Gilbert’s architectural flourishes have been refreshed for a modern family. yellowhousearchitects.com Elizabeth Graziolo of Yellow House Architects atop the Woolworth Building in New York City. 62

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KELLY MARSHALL.

NEW YORK


SKARA BRAE™

A LEGEND IN EVERY DESIGN CAMBRIAUSA.COM


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Jeffrey Bilhuber NEW YORK Current Projects: A 1930s stone cottage in Darien, Connecticut, two residences in 144 Greenwich, Connecticut, and a Grade I listed Tudor home in England, as well as a collection of upholstery and case goods for Dowel Furniture. jeffreybilhuberllc.com

IS IS

From an experimental residence built in the caverns of a stone quarry (AD, April 2021) to permanent art installations that appear to have been excavated from the earth, the work of husband-and-wife architects Antón García-Abril and Débora Mesa interrogate the very ways we live and build. That inquiry now continues from their own Brookline, Massachusetts, home and studio, assembled out of prefabricated elements, and extends to Spain, where the studio’s new factory outside Madrid produces more modules for projects to come—among them a follow-up to their blockbuster interventions at Tippet Rise Art Center in Montana. ensamble.info

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DEBUT Jeremiah Brent Design See page 60.

Joseph Dirand Architecture PARIS In the Works: Residential projects in Paris, London, Palm Beach, Malibu, Los Angeles, and Dubai; developing Norman’s Cay island in the Bahamas; a 118-meter and an 85-meter yacht. josephdirand.com Joy Moyler Interiors NEW ROCHELLE, NEW YORK Ethos: “A home is not complete without crafted, cultured elements, reflecting the past and present.” joymoylerinteriors.com Julie Hillman Design NEW YORK Ethos: “I believe there should be harmony in every room in a home by mixing decorative and functional pieces where each piece is in conversation with one another while maintaining its own significance.” juliehillman.com Kelly Behun Studio NEW YORK Highlight: The publication of Behun’s design work in the home of Alicia Keys and Swizz Beatz on the cover of AD’s December 2021 issue. Products: Home accessories for L’Objet; mosaic furniture with The Invisible Collection; lighting with Hudson Valley Lighting. kellybehun.com Ken Fulk Inc. SAN FRANCISCO AND NEW YORK Coming Soon: Fulk: The Movie in My Mind (Assouline) is slated for publication this spring, promising a glimpse into the designer’s creative process and beautiful, never-been-seen-before photos of recent projects and the story behind the designs. kenfulk.com Kravitz Design NEW YORK AND LOS ANGELES In the Works: Temple Detroit hotel; private residences in the Bahamas, Malibu, California, and Miami. Recent Products: A piano for Steinway & Sons (AD, November 2020) and a new collection for CB2 (AD, October 2021). kravitzdesign.com Laplace PARIS Ethos: “We believe that engaging local artisans and savoir faire—combined with a gentle contemporary gesture of design—creates the perfect base for timeless spaces. We create homes that celebrate art.” luislaplace.com Leyden Lewis Design Studio BROOKLYN Signature: Architectural detailing, tactile materiality, and storytelling through the collecting and curation of art. leydenlewis.com

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Madison Cox Associates NEW YORK Projects: Gardens in Miami Beach and Tampa, Florida; Comporta, Portugal; Normandy; and the Côte d’Azur in France. madisoncox.com

IS IS

DEBUT Mandy Cheng Design See page 58.

Mark Hampton LLC NEW YORK Highlight: Alexa Hampton’s “52 Weeks of Design” keeps the design community tuning in (on Instagram and at lextalks.com). In the Works: Additions to Hampton’s collections for Visual Comfort and Generation Lighting; a new book with Clarkson Potter. alexahampton.com Ensamble Studio principals Antón García-Abril and Débora Mesa at their Ca’n Terra project in Menorca, Spain. 64

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IWAN BAAN.

Mark D. Sikes LOS ANGELES Ethos: “All-American style that is inviting, timeless, classic, and beautiful!” In the Works: A yearlong design collaboration with Anthropologie that will include furniture, bedding, rugs, and table and bath accessories; a new collection with Schumacher; a third book, to be published by Rizzoli. markdsikes.com


Form and function converge in Vincent Van Duysen’s Franck Modular Seating and performance fabrics and rugs for Perennials and Sutherland. I perennialsfabrics.com I sutherlandfurniture.com


Apartment 48

NEW YORK

As Rayman Boozer tells it, he’s all about “putting positive vibes out in the world.” From 1994 until 2011, the Alabama-born, Indianaraised interior designer did so from his beloved New York City store, Apartment 48, where he layered home goods into an imagined residence long before doing so was the norm. Eventually, devoted customers became adoring clientele (see page 33), and Boozer pivoted from shopkeeping to decorating. Ever since, he has created relaxed, confident rooms that brim with color, pattern, and an effortless air of joy— rooms, in other words, that bring a smile to your face. apartment48.com

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Markham Roberts Inc. NEW YORK Current Projects: A historic mansion on London’s Eaton Square; a midcentury-modern brick house by John Staub in Houston; a towered Victorian on the Connecticut shore (with G.P. Schafer Architect). markhamroberts.com Marmol Radziner LOS ANGELES, SAN FRANCISCO, AND NEW YORK Notable Clients: Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi; Tom Ford; Tommy Lee and Brittany Furlan Lee; Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Brad Hall; James Perse. marmol-radziner.com

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and a client’s lifestyle, a dedication to functionality, and a love of layering different materials, textures, and styles, the studio handcrafts environments that enable our clients to develop personal and long-lasting relationships with their interior spaces.” mbds.com

IS IS

IS IS

Hallworth Design

LOS ANGELES

Rather than being defined by an instantly recognizable signature style, the projects of interior and product designer Jane Hallworth are noted for their graciousness, ease, and soulful ambience—they look as if they evolved organically over time, not conjured magically with the wave of a decorator’s wand. Narrative-driven and intensely collaborative, her work tells stories specific to each client, articulated through the imagination of a diverse team of designers, craftsmen, artists, and fabricators. That approach has garnered a client roster chockablock with heavyhitting Hollywood creatives, actors Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons (AD, November 2021) and Michelle Williams and director Thomas Kail among them. “I take a studied approach to the details, born of my love for architecture and design of wide-ranging periods and geographic origins,” Hallworth says, underscoring her catholic tastes and dexterity in moving between traditional and modern idioms. Her current projects— including a 1,200-acre ranch in Montana, a classic George Washington Smith house in Beverly Hills, and a multistory condo in New York City—testify to the elasticity of Hallworth’s vision. hallworth.com

Martyn Lawrence Bullard Design LOS ANGELES In the Works: Residences for RuPaul, Cher, Ellen Pompeo, and Dee and Tommy Hilfiger; collections for The Shade Store, Ann Sacks, and La Cornue. martynlawrencebullard.com Michelle Nussbaumer Design DALLAS Signature: Merging old-world influences with a youthful spirit to create one-ofa-kind spaces. michellenussbaumer.com Miranda Brooks Landscape Design BROOKLYN Ethos: “My intention is to create a timeless landscape. This is underpinned by an emotional and intellectual approach to the design, and a strong sense of place. These principles continue to inform the approach as well as the use of local materials, and primarily native planting.” mirandabrooks.com Monique Gibson Interior Design NEW YORK Ethos: “Allow the architecture to tell you what it requires. Allow the client to imagine their most beautiful life. Connect the dots.” moniquegibson.com

From top: Apartment 48’s Rayman Boozer in a client’s Southampton residence; Jane Hallworth at the Los Angeles home she designed for Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons. 66

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HALLWORTH: LAURE JOLIET. BOOZER: DAVID LAND.

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Martin Brudnizki Design Studio LONDON AND NEW YORK Ethos: “Through the careful study of a project’s context

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Nate Berkus Associates CHICAGO, LOS ANGELES, AND NEW YORK Notable Clients: Ricky Martin; Karlie Kloss; Brian Robbins and Tracy James; Katie Lee; Celebrity Cruises; Great Wolf Lodge. nateberkus.com Joy Moyler for Joy Moyler Atelier Beresford cup and saucer and octagon dinner plate; from $42. joymoyler atelier.com

Nicole Hollis SAN FRANCISCO Current Projects: Private residences throughout California as well as Nantucket, New York City, the Hamptons, the Big Island of Hawaii, and Jackson Hole, Wyoming; boutique-hotel renovations in San Francisco and Sonoma. nicolehollis.com Oliver M. Furth Design & Decoration LOS ANGELES Coming Soon: A monograph to be published by Rizzoli. olivermfurth.com Olson Kundig SEATTLE Ethos: “Our design approach is grounded in the belief that buildings can act as bridges between culture, nature, and people, and that inspiring surroundings can positively affect every aspect of our daily lives.” olsonkundig.com

Rose Uniacke Drawing room sofa; from $11,500. roseuniacke.com

OMA New York NEW YORK Highlights: Created new and renovated existing galleries for the Denver Art Museum; the Audrey Irmas Pavilion at Wilshire Boulevard Temple. In the Works: The Jojutla bridge in Morelos, Mexico; a Jersey City outpost of the Centre Pompidou; the renovation of the Tiffany & Co. Fifth Avenue flagship. oma.com Patrick Mele GREENWICH, CONNECTICUT Highlights: A collaboration with Adelphi Paper Hangings; the debut of a tabletop collection with Nicholas Newcomb Pottery & Sculpture; the establishment of Patrick Mele Lighting. patrickmele.com Peter Pennoyer Architects NEW YORK AND MIAMI Highlights: The firm’s sensitive renovation of a historic waterfront mansion north of Boston was published in AD’s November 2021 issue. ppapc.com

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Sheila Bridges for The Met Store Harlem toile de Jouy silk scarf; $89. store.metmuseum.org 68

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Pierce & Ward LOS ANGELES AND BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Highlights: The firm’s showroom, featuring custom pillows, linens, wallpaper, and furniture, just opened in L.A. In the Works: Collaborations with House of Hackney on a new wallpaper collection and with Midheaven on a line of custom bathrobes. pierceandward.com Pierre Yovanovitch PARIS AND NEW YORK Ethos: “I take a made-tomeasure approach to each project, whether it be interiors or furniture.” In the Works: Opera set design in Basel, Switzerland; the U.S. launch of Pierre Yovanovitch Mobilier. pierreyovanovitch.com Rafael de Cárdenas Ltd. NEW YORK Recently Completed: A showroom for Ulla Johnson and executive offices and viewing rooms for Hauser & Wirth gallery, both in New York City; the Croquis flagship store in Beijing; homes in NYC, Miami, and Mercer Island, Washington, as well as Cárdenas’s personal residence, a former farmhouse in rural France. rafaeldecardenas.com Reath Design LOS ANGELES Ethos: “Central to our design approach is our love of color, pattern, and textiles, and this is manifested in our desire to create spaces that are both warm and elegant. We design spaces that feel lived-in and that will further evolve and improve with time.” reathdesign.com Redd Kaihoi NEW YORK Ethos: “Form and function are paramount, and then we always ask one guiding question: Do you want it? If you don’t, we know it’s back to the drawing board.” reddkaihoi.com Robert Stilin NEW YORK AND EAST HAMPTON Recently Completed: A new, post-Starbucks office in Seattle for Howard Schultz; residences from Connecticut to California. robertstilin.com Roman and Williams Buildings and Interiors NEW YORK Highlight: The opening of Guild Gallery, a new space celebrating the decorative arts through exhibitions of contemporary masters, just down the street from the firm’s iconic New York shop. romanandwilliams.com Romanek Design Studio LOS ANGELES Highlight: The debut of Brigette Romanek’s collection of furnishings with Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams. Notable Clients: Beyoncé, Joe Jonas, Kelly Rowland, and Demi Moore. romanekdesignstudio.com

BROOKLYN AND HILLSDALE, NEW YORK

“We will always reference artist-made homes,” says designer Aaron Aujla, who founded the New York–based Green River Project with Benjamin Bloomstein in 2017, after they’d worked for artists Nate Lowman and Robert Gober, respectively. What started with narrative-driven furniture collections that prioritized rough-hewn materials like raw mahogany, coffee-stained lauan, bamboo, and dried tobacco leaves quickly evolved into full-blown interiors, popularizing today’s vogue for all-over wood. The look is steadily infiltrating Lower Manhattan, where the duo designed retail spaces for menswear brand Bode (Emily Bode is Aujla’s wife) and hip Chinatown hangouts like Dr Clark, a Japanese restaurant, and The River, a new bar next door that features a 100-foot oil painting of the Hudson River. Meanwhile, they carve out idiosyncratic spaces for creative clients (among them photographer Tyler Mitchell and playwright Jeremy O. Harris) from Rockaway, Queens (AD, February 2021), to Virginia and Santa Monica, where personal histories are woven into the woodwork. greenriverprojectllc.com

RP Miller NEW YORK Ethos: “Whether it is commissioning sitespecific artwork, a set of bespoke china, or hand-loomed blankets, the collaborative relationship with artists and craftsmen is at the forefront of the practice.” rpmillerdesign.com S.R. Gambrel Inc. NEW YORK Ethos: “Design is the structure one builds to support and reflect a chosen lifestyle; I like crafting unique environments that reflect a client’s passion and family.” srgambrel.com Sawyer | Berson NEW YORK In the Works: A new 18th-centuryFrench-style ballroom for The Pierre in collaboration with Michael S. Smith; a monograph with Rizzoli. sawyerberson.com

Green River Project’s Benjamin Bloomstein (left) and Aaron Aujla at a client’s house in Rockaway, Queens. 70

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VICTORIA HELY-HUTCHINSON.

Green River Project

Rose Uniacke LONDON Highlight: The publication of Rose Uniacke at Home (Rizzoli). Notable Clients: Dua Lipa, David and Victoria Beckham, Alicia Vikander and Michael Fassbender, Jason Statham and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Jochen Zeitz of Harley-Davidson, and screenwriter Peter Morgan. roseuniacke.com


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Flack Studio The publication of musical phenom Troye Sivan’s richly layered Melbourne home (AD, May 2021) introduced much of the world to Flack Studio, a wildly creative multidisciplinary practice of designers and architects already well established in Australia. Launched in 2014 and led by founder David Flack and co-principal Mark Robinson, the studio specializes in residential work and hospitality commissions, all animated by an adventurous sensibility that privileges both historical research and contemporary innovation. “We delight in architecture and interior projects in which furniture, lighting, textiles, and fittings coalesce into a holistic—if sometimes idiosyncratic— experience,” Flack says, further describing the firm’s work as “personal and definitive, with a touch of daring.” A deep sense of materiality and a passion for contemporary art are two hallmarks of the studio, whose projects include homes throughout Melbourne, restaurants in New South Wales, and the much-anticipated Ace Hotel in Sydney, slated to open this summer. flackstudio.com.au David Flack in his studio office in Melbourne, Australia. 72

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ZAC BAYLEY.

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA


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Decada

Sheila Bridges Design NEW YORK Signature: Storytelling through thoughtful design. Highlight: Bridges’s work on a historic horse farm in upstate New York was published in AD’s June 2021 issue. sheilabridges.com

MEXICO CITY

Decada was born out of a love of collecting and travel. Founders Lucia Corredor and Cecilia Tena decided to turn their passion into a career, debuting the Mexico City–based design shop in 2010. The storefront has become an ode to their journeys and a purveyor for midcentury antiques. Organically, the practice grew into the field of interior design, where the duo translated the Atelier Decada sensibilities into serene and soulful spaces. Whether hotels or private residences (see Bosco Sodi’s Oaxacan escape in AD’s December 2020 issue), their projects brim with charm, incorporating works by local artisans and antique treasures to craft eclectic and welcoming spaces. decada.com.mx

Stephen Sills Associates NEW YORK In the Works: A town house in London; residences in Palm Beach, Florida, and Kent, Connecticut; several apartments in NYC. Notable Clients: Aerin Lauder; Lauren duPont; Paul Arnhold and Wes Gordon; Dominique Bluhdorn. stephensills.com Steven Harris Architects NEW YORK Ethos: “Our approach is deeply collaborative, fostering an open exchange of ideas both within the firm and with clients. Our process is tailored individually to a client’s program, context, and site so that each project at the end is unique in character and appearance.” stevenharrisarchitects.com Studio Gang CHICAGO, NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, AND PARIS In the Works: The Richard Gilder Center at the American Museum of Natural History in NYC; a new campus for the California College of the Arts in San Francisco and a new College of Design inside a century-old tobacco warehouse at the University of Kentucky in Lexington; a new Global Terminal for O’Hare International Airport in Chicago; a new U.S. embassy in Brasilia, Brazil. studiogang.com Studio Giancarlo Valle NEW YORK Highlights: AD’s back-to-back coverage of Valle’s reimagining of a newly built NYC town house (October 2021) and work on the apartment of model Martha Hunt (November 2021); an exhibition of Valle’s furniture designs at Magen H Gallery; a new furniture collection for Seventh House. giancarlovalle.com Studio KO PARIS AND MARRAKECH Ethos: “Each project could not exist elsewhere than where it sits. The sense of place— or genius loci—is the matrix of our projects.” Just released: A book dedicated to the firm’s design of the Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech. studioko.fr Studio Peregalli MILAN Recently Completed: A restaurant for a star chef in Portofino; a tower in Fessenbach for a German publisher; a chalet in Gstaad. studioperegalli.com Studio Shamshiri LOS ANGELES Ethos: “Style and substance working in tandem to nurture a well-lived life.” In the Works: Reimagining an iconic hotel property in Miami, a ground-up project for the Turtle Conservancy, and a hotel in downtown Ojai. studioshamshiri.com Studio Volpe SAN FRANCISCO Highlights: Volpe’s work in an apartment in a supertall Manhattan tower graced AD’s February 2021 cover; the publication of Rooms: Steven Volpe (Rizzoli). stevenvolpe.com DEBUT Studio Zewde See page 55. DEBUT Teo Yang Studio See page 60. page

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Tiffany Brooks Interiors GRAYSLAKE, ILLINOIS Ethos: “Livable Luxury: To create a space that looks like it came out of a magazine but is something you can feel comfortable in.” Notable Clients: LeBron James; Jimmy Butler; HGTV. tiffanybrooksinteriors.com Decada’s Lucia Corredor (left) and Cecilia Tena at Corredor’s family residence in Greece. 74

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MIGUEL FLORES-VIANNA.

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Terremoto LOS ANGELES AND SAN FRANCISCO Signature: Wellbuilt, site-specific landscapes that respond to clients’ 96 needs while simultaneously challenging historical and contemporary landscape construction methods, materials, and formal conventions. terremoto.la

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Carlos Mota Inc.

NEW YORK

With his wide-ranging experience as a celebrated stylist, creative consultant, and international style editor at AD, Carlos Mota has been well prepared for taking on the role of interior designer in recent years. He has even designed a beautiful scenic wall covering for Pierre Frey, and the title of his 2019 book, Beige Is Not a Color (Vendome Press), has become something of a rallying cry for aesthetes tired of bland decor. Today the multihyphenate creative uses his full-fledged mastery of color to enliven the homes of clients around the globe, including model Jessica Hart, whose vibrant Los Angeles abode (AD, September 2021) perfectly captures his philosophy that “houses should reflect the client’s personality as well as that of the designer.” One thing is for sure: The former stylist has kept his unerring knack for the details, thoughtfully curating every inch of the homes he touches with artistry and allure. casamota.com

LOS ANGELES

Although he launched his namesake firm a mere two years ago, Jake Arnold has already established himself as a major force in the world of interior design. As a cofounder of The Expert, a digital platform that connects high-profile designers with clients via online consultations, he rocked a famously tech-phobic industry tethered to outmoded business models. At the same time, he has built his own design practice into a juggernaut, with a list of celebrity clients that includes John Legend and Chrissy Teigen, Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom, Aaron Paul (AD, March 2020), Rashida Jones, and Whitney Cummings. “My philosophy is to create spaces that are high-impact but livable, timeless, and comfortable,” Arnold says of his approach, which places a premium on subdued tones, artisanal details, and richly textured organic materials. His coastto-coast commissions encompass residences in Fort Lauderdale and New York City as well as a host of projects, both renovations and new builds, throughout his hometown of Los Angeles. jakearnold.com

From top: Carlos Mota in a home he designed in New York City; Jake Arnold in a client’s living room in Los Angeles. 76

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Jake Arnold


©2021 The Container Store Inc. 52899 Photography by Nickolas Sargent.

Laren® Closet by Nicole White Designs Interiors

Schedule your free design consultation today (or try our new Virtual In-Home Design Service) at containerstore.com/custom-closets.


LOS ANGELES

David Netto is a true designer’s designer, deeply immersed in the history of the craft, its long-standing traditions, and its pantheon of legendary practitioners and landmark projects. A consummate arbiter elegantiae and industry gadabout, he creates interiors that transcend the increasingly antiquated definitions of traditional and modern. Instead, he draws on the past to conjure profoundly beautiful spaces rooted in the here and now, spaces alive to the pulse of contemporary life. Rejecting the wisdom of received ideas, his philosophy prizes inspiration and imagination above all else: “Respect the architecture, insist on quality, challenge yourself when it comes to color, and try not to repeat your favorite ideas. Ask yourself every day, ‘What did I do to add to the story of American chic?’ If it’s nothing, try again tomorrow.” That attitude has garnered a following of elite clients on the order of Jessica and Jerry Seinfeld, Lauren Santo Domingo, Renee Rockefeller, and Nathalie Farman-Farma. davidnettodesign.com

Veere Grenney Associates LONDON Ethos: “Less cool, more beauty.” In the Works: A fabric collection with Schumacher. veeregrenney.com Victoria Hagan Interiors NEW YORK AND PALM BEACH Ethos: “Celebrate the beauty of the everyday.” Highlights: The publication of Victoria Hagan: Live Now (Rizzoli); the firm opened an office in Palm Beach, Florida. victoriahagan.com Vincent Van Duysen ANTWERP, BELGIUM Highlight: Van Duysen’s design for the home of L.A. tastemaker Jenni Kayne was published in AD’s September 2021 issue. Products: Ongoing collaborations with Molteni&C, Flos, Sutherland, and Serax. vincentvanduysen.com Vincenzo De Cotiis MILAN Signature: Creations born out of an assembly of recovered materials and reflective, futuristic surfaces that appear evocative in their final form. Recent Projects: Ongoing furniture presented in shows at Carpenters Workshop Gallery; commercial and residential projects around the globe. decotiis.it Virginia Tupker Interiors DARIEN, CONNECTICUT Ethos: “To create striking yet livable interiors that serve as a portrait of their inhabitants.” Notable Clients: Lauren Santo Domingo; Derek Blasberg; Tabitha Simmons. virginiatupker.com Waldo’s Designs LOS ANGELES Ethos: “It’s all in the details!” In the Works: A Belmond Hotel in Sayulita, Mexico; a book and a documentary on the firm’s work. waldosdesigns.com WHY LOS ANGELES AND NEW YORK Recently Completed: The Stories of Cinema galleries at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. In the Works: Redesigning the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. why-site.com DEBUT Workstead See page 56. DEBUT Yellow House Architects See page 62.

David Netto in a client’s Hancock Park, Los Angeles, residence. The Bad Kitty table lamp from Netto’s recent collaboration with Soane Britain, from $2,250; soane.co.uk 78

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PORTRAIT: PHYLICIA J. L. MUNN. LAMP: COURTESY OF DAVID NETTO.

David Netto Design



True visionaries, these 34 superstars are enduring masters of design in all its forms 2022 DEBUTS

PREVIOUS INDUCTEES

Sir David Adjaye

Louis Benech

Peter Marino

adjaye.com

louisbenech.com

petermarinoarchitect.com

Tadao Ando

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Robert Couturier Juan Pablo tadao-ando.com robertcouturier.com Molyneux molyneuxstudio.com Backen & Gillam Ilse Crawford studioilse.com Architects Jean Nouvel bgarch.com jeannouvel.com Ellie Cullman cullmankravis.com Diller Scofidio + Michael S. Smith michaelsmithinc.com Renfro Thierry Despont dsrny.com despont.com William Sofield studiosofield.com Jamie Drake Mica Ertegun drakeanderson.com John Stefanidis Sir Norman johnstefanidis.com Kengo Kuma Foster kkaa.co.jp fosterandpartners.com Robert A.M. Stern ramsa.com Lee F. Mindel Jacques Garcia sheltonmindel.com studiojacquesgarcia.com Rose Tarlow rosetarlow.com Toshiko Mori Frank Gehry tmarch.com foga.com Axel Vervoordt axel-vervoordt.com Renzo Piano Jacques Grange rpbw.com +33-1-55-80-75-40 Kelly Wearstler kellywearstler.com Daniel Romualdez Robert Kime 212-989-8429 robertkime.com Bunny Williams bunnywilliams.com Annabelle Selldorf India Mahdavi selldorf.com india-mahdavi.com

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A bold move, any way you slice it. That’s

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Bourse de Commerce– Pinault Collection PARIS | TADAO ANDO

Ca’n Terra

MENORCA, SPAIN | ENSAMBLE STUDIO

For the first time ever, the international editors of Architectural Digest joined forces to celebrate the best new projects from around the world— Chapel of Sound BEIJING | OPEN ARCHITECTURE all designed by talents Nestled in a valley outside the on our AD100 and AD50 Chinese capital, this experimental concert hall was constructed in lists. From an experithe form of a prehistoric sedimenmental house to daring tary boulder using a mix of concrete and locally sourced rocks. Poetic art spaces, these are openings let in light, air, and the true Works of Wonder. noises of nature. In a word: WOW. Cheval Blanc Paris TO READ MORE ABOUT THE WORKS OF WONDER GO TO ARCHDIGEST.COM/AD100

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures LOS ANGELES | RENZO PIANO BUILDING WORKSHOP

The Genoese Pritzker Prize winner translated his childhood love of movies into a 300,000-square-foot design that ties past to future, connecting the renovated Saban Building with a new concrete sphere. academymuseum.org

Audrey Irmas Pavilion at Wilshire Boulevard Temple LOS ANGELES | OMA

Shepherded by OMA New York’s Shohei Shigematsu, this extension to the home of L.A.’s oldest Jewish congregation was an instant landmark, celebrating faith and fellowship while balancing architectural brio and deference to the ByzantineRomanesque temple. audreyirmaspavilion.org

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Rising star architects Débora Mesa and Antón García-Abril redefined the meaning of home in this otherworldly dwelling, located in an abandoned underground quarry that they surveyed with lasers and divided into rooms using translucent partitions.

PARIS | PETER MARINO ARCHITECT

Following up on its spectacular reimagining of the Right Bank retail icon La Samaritaine, LVMH cut the ribbon on this neighboring hotel: a 72-key feat of craftsmanship located on the Seine-facing side of a 1928 Art Deco building by Henri Sauvage. chevalblanc.com

CHAPEL OF SOUND

BOURSE DE COMMERCE— PINAULT COLLECTION TECLA

Frick Madison NEW YORK CITY | SELLDORF ARCHITECTS

In a not-to-be-missed museum milestone, the Frick’s Old Master treasures have taken up residence in a Marcel Breuer brutalist icon, formerly the Whitney. Annabelle Selldorf conceived the exhibition design, a creative offshoot of her ongoing renovation to the Frick mansion. frick.org

GES-2 House of Culture MOSCOW | RENZO PIANO BUILDING WORKSHOP

A 1907 power station on the banks of the Moskva River has been reimagined as a daring venue for contemporary culture, with flexible galleries, a cinema, a concert hall, artist residencies, a playground, and much, much more. v-a-c.org

MUSEUM OF THE FUTURE FROM TOP: JONATHAN LEIJONHUFVUD, PATRICK TOURNEBOEUF, IAGO CORAZZA, KARIM SAHIB / AFP.

The 2022 WOW List

A multipurpose space for contemporary art set inside a historic stunner, this blockbuster project marked the culmination of a decades-long collaboration between Ando (another Pritzker winner) and his client François Pinault. pinaultcollection.com



Hauser & Wirth Menorca

MENORCA, SPAIN | LUIS LAPLACE AND PIET OUDOLF

A former naval hospital on Isla del Rey was reborn as a stunning 16,000-square-foot outpost of the international mega-gallery. Laplace updated the 18th-century buildings while Oudolf transformed the grounds with native perennials. hauserwirth.com

Humayun’s Tomb Site Museum

DELHI | VIR.MUELLER ARCHITECTS

SHANGHAI ASTRONOMY MUSEUM THE ACADEMY MUSEUM OF MOTION PICTURES

Spearheaded by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, this exquisite museum and visitors center addresses longstanding needs at the Mughal complex, which welcomes some two million people annually. akdn.org

Japan National Stadium

TOKYO | KENGO KUMA & ASSOCIATES WITH TAISEI CORPORATION AND AZUSA SEKKEI CO.

Museum of the Future DUBAI | KILLA DESIGN

Window cutouts in the shape of Arabic calligraphy enliven the curved, eye-catching form of this forward-looking building, a hilltop temple to tomorrow. museumofthefuture.ae

Neue Nationalgalerie BERLIN | DAVID CHIPPERFIELD ARCHITECTS

Chipperfield’s nuanced refurbishment of this 1968 icon stayed true to Mies van der Rohe’s original vision, ensuring that the building’s pristine planes and sublime spaces will spellbind generations to come. smb.museum

Park Union Bridge

COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO | DILLER SCOFIDIO + RENFRO

Sleek, surprising, steel—this 250foot thoroughfare for pedestrians and cyclists appears to float above an active rail yard, connecting the DS+R’s U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Museum campus with the America the Beautiful Park.

Distinguished by its timber eaves and latticework—made using wood from every prefecture in Japan— the centerpiece of the Summer Olympic Games more than held its SHANGHAI | ENNEAD ARCHITECTS own against the incredible feats Totaling a remarkable 420,000 of athleticism on display. square feet, the world’s largest jpnsport.go.jp astronomy museum calls to mind a futuristic spaceship, with sci-fi curves, a gleaming oculus, and a INDORE, INDIA | ABHA NARAIN monumental dome whose roof deck LAMBAH ASSOCIATES allows unfettered views of the sky. With an assist from the World Monuments Fund, this 1926 palace (once home to the Holkar dynasty) TURKANA COUNTY, KENYA | has undergone overdue conservaKÉRÉ ARCHITECTURE tion. Its Italian Renaissance Revival Kéré collaborated closely with architecture and Europeanthe Kenyan community to realize influenced interiors are among the this training facility for information finest Indian examples of that era. and communication technologies, wmf.org part of an effort to tackle youth unemployment. Built from locally quarried stone, the complex hugs ARLES, FRANCE | GEHRY PARTNERS the terrain, with tall ventilation towers inspired by termite colonies. Inspired by the local light and Van Gogh’s Starry Night, the Pritzker startuplions.org winner designed a rippling, seemingly pixelated tower clad in 11,000 bricks of stainless steel—a shining RAVENNA, ITALY | beacon for this arts complex, the MARIO CUCINELLA ARCHITECTS brainchild of collector Maja Hoffman. Constructed out of natural earth luma.org using 3D-printing company WASP’s revolutionary technology, this 645-square-foot house took just 200 hours to build—a remarkable melding of 21st-century innovation MATAMOROS, MEXICO | and time-honored tradition. COLECTIVO C733 3dwasp.com —SAM COCHRAN Founded by a team of Mexican talents, including AD Mexico AD100 architect Gabriela Carrillo, C733 devised a prefabricated public marketplace modeled after historic plazas, with stalls surrounding a central garden.

Shanghai Astronomy Museum

Lal Bagh Palace

LUMA Arles Tower

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Welcome to an oasis of sophistication Experience legendary Ritz‑Carlton service Imagine a home defined not only by refined style and luxurious finishes but equipped to deliver legendary Ritz‑Carlton service. Combining warm hospitality with personal touches and thoughtful details, a lifestyle of distinction and comfort awaits. Bayfront condos and villas available from $1.6MM Schedule your appointment today. TheResidencesTampa.com (813) 261-3864

The Ritz‑Carlton Residences, Tampa are not owned, developed or sold by The Ritz‑Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C. Tampa Bay Oaks Condo, LLC uses The Ritz‑Carlton marks under license from The Ritz‑Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C. Oral representations cannot be relied upon as correctly stating representations of the developer. For correct representations, make reference to this brochure and the documents required by section 718.503, Florida statutes, to be furnished by a developer to a buyer or lessee. This Condominium is developed by TAMPA BAY OAKS CONDO, LLC ("Developer") and this offering is made only by the Developer’s Prospectus for the Condominium. This offering is not directed to any resident of a jurisdiction in which this offering is prohibited by law. Developer, pursuant to license or marketing agreements with each, has a right to use the trade names, marks, and logos of: The Related Group and of Marriott International, Inc., both of which are Licensors only and neither of which is the Developer. Consult the Prospectus for all terms, conditions, and unit specifications and to learn what is included with purchase. This condominium is not oceanfront; the sight line of the tower depicted is conceptual and situated with frontage along Bayshore Boulevard in Tampa. This ad is summary in nature generally depicting The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Tampa and Developer’s contemplated features and amenities, all of which is subject to change or modification by Developer. The Ritz-Carlton® is the registered trademark of Marriott International, Inc. 2021© Tampa Bay Oaks, Condo, LLC with all rights reserved. The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Tampa are not owned, developed or sold by The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C. or its affiliates (“Ritz-Carlton”). Tampa Bay Oaks Condo, LLC uses The Ritz-Carlton marks under a license from Marriott International, Inc. which has not confirmed the accuracy of any of the statements or representations made herein.


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Baccarat Residences are coming to Brickell. Illuminated by the infinite shimmer of the sun, this soaring tower will stand radiant on the waterfront where the river meets the bay, in the heart of the bright lights of the city. Here life will be more vibrant, more sensuous, more serene. Resplendent in style, spirit, and joie de vivre. An ode to light, essential and elemental. Carefully crafted to elevate and celebrate every day. Find out more about this exclusive opportunity at: BaccaratResidencesMiami.com (786) 971-3027 Visit the Onsite Sales Gallery 444 Brickell Avenue, Suite 800, Miami, Florida

ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. This Condominium is developed by 444 BRICKELL ONE, LLC (“Developer”) and this offering is made only by the Developer’s Prospectus for the Condominium. Your eligibility for purchase will depend upon your state or territory of residency. The Developer is not incorporated in New York. This offering is not directed to any person or entity in New York or to any resident of a jurisdiction in which this offering is prohibited by law. Developer, pursuant to license agreements with (a) Related Group and (b) SH Group licensee of Baccarat®, has the right to use the names and logos of Related and Baccarat®, but no licensor is the Developer or responsible for representations of Developer. In the event the license of Baccarat® to SH Group should terminate or the SH Group license to Developer terminate, the names and logos of Baccarat® will no longer be used. 2021© 444 BRICKELL ONE, LLC, with all rights reserved.




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A designer resource from the editors of ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST

P O D C A S T N E W E P I S O D E S A D D E D W E E K LY

PHOTO BY PAUL RAESIDE

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GALERIE GLUSTIN PA R I S

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Los Angeles


At the Los Angeles home of Tinder cofounder Sean Rad and his wife, Lizzie Grover Rad, designer Jane Hallworth leads a master class in the marriage of substance and style TEXT BY

MAYER RUS

PHOTOGRAPHY BY

SAM FROST

STYLED BY

MICHAEL REYNOLDS


PERFECT UNION

IN THE LIVING ROOM, A VINCENZO DE COTIIS COCKTAIL TABLE FROM CARPENTERS WORKSHOP GALLERY IS SURROUNDED BY A DMITRIY & CO. SOFA FROM UNA MALAN, 1950s ITALIAN CLUB CHAIRS, CHARLOTTE PERRIAND STOOLS, AND A GABRIELLA CRESPI LAMP. A 1930s LOUIS POULSEN LIGHT HANGS FROM A FICUS TREE PLANTED IN A 16TH-CENTURY ITALIAN MARBLE WELLHEAD FROM BLACKMAN CRUZ. FOR DETAILS SEE RESOURCES.


a

ABOVE A SET OF HANS WEGNER CHAIRS AND AN ARNE HOVMAND-OLSEN LEATHER ARMCHAIR FROM GALERIE HALF AT A CHARLOTTE PERRIAND DINING TABLE BENEATH A JAMESPLUMB CHANDELIER FROM OBSOLETE. THE PAINTING IS BY PAUL SIETSEMA. CARPET BY WOVEN.

great room is like a fabulous dinner party: The guest list encompasses a broad array of fascinating figures, each with a singular point of view; there is both harmony and a welcome degree of friction in the conversation; and a handful of unexpected, oddball characters turn up to keep the proceedings from becoming too polite. By that measure, the dazzling Los Angeles home of Tinder cofounder Sean Rad and his wife, fashion designer Lizzie Grover Rad, is the hottest ticket in town. Chockablock with myriad treasures both familiar and obscure, the house gathers strength not simply from its blockbuster lineup of design luminaries but from the surprising affinities, interwoven narratives, and intriguing juxtapositions orchestrated by AD100 designer Jane Hallworth. In short, it’s a knockout. “You can’t make a house like this without clients who are willing to take risks and break a few rules, clients committed to living with beautiful things they truly appreciate and

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understand,” Hallworth says. “Lizzie grew up in Virginia, very East Coast. She’s got a mellow-chic sensibility that can veer off into the eccentric. Sean is an L.A. guy with a more minimalist style and a kind of magpie fascination with strange, wonderful objects. The house spins those different threads together in a way that feels youthful but sophisticated,” the designer adds. The couple’s idiosyncratic personal tastes come into full flower in the decor of their home offices—spaces that rarely grab top billing in a typical house story. Rad’s lair, wrapped in an envelope of reclaimed French oak, feels ready-made for a modern captain of industry. A monumental Georg Baselitz canvas hangs behind a George Nakashima dining table repurposed as a desk, surrounded by estimable pieces by Tobia Scarpa, Poul Kjærholm, Marcel Breuer, Pierre Jeanneret, Charlotte Perriand, and Jean Prouvé. Elevated on a bespoke wood pedestal, a vintage late-1970s Apple II computer—a 30thbirthday gift from Grover Rad—nods to her husband’s roots in tech. “I’ve been working out of hotels and boxes for years. I never had a proper office before, so I wanted to create a space that would inspire me and the people I work with,” says the tenacious entrepreneur, who parted ways with Tinder in 2017 and now runs Rad Fund, a private investment company.


PAUL SIETSEMA.

“We love the stories of great antiques and little oddities.” —Lizzie Grover Rad

ABOVE SEAN RAD AND LIZZIE GROVER RAD IN THE FAMILY ROOM WITH MINNIE, THEIR GOLDEN RETRIEVER. PAINTINGS BY MARY CORSE. LEFT A MALABAR CHESTNUT TREE IN A DAVID CRESSEY PLANTER STANDS BEFORE AN ANTIQUE JAPANESE SILVERLEAF SCREEN FROM BLACKMAN CRUZ IN A CORNER OF THE DINING ROOM.


RAD’S OFFICE IS OUTFITTED WITH A GEORGE NAKASHIMA TABLE, TOBIA SCARPA LOUNGE CHAIRS, A DAYBED BY CHARLOTTE PERRIAND AND JEAN PROUVÉ, A PIERRE JEANNERET BOOKCASE, AND MARCEL BREUER TABLE LAMPS. THE PAINTING IS BY GEORG BASELITZ. THE 1970s APPLE II COMPUTER WAS A GIFT FROM HIS WIFE.

GEORG BASELITZ. AYTHAMY ARMAS.

“I wanted to create a space that would inspire me and the people I work with.” —Sean Rad



“It’s over-the-top, but in the nicest possible way.” —Jane Hallworth THE PRIMARY BATH (THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE, TOP) IS CLAD IN SLABS OF BRECCIA CAPRAIA MARBLE, WITH A TUB CARVED FROM A SINGLE BLOCK OF STONE. WATERWORKS FIXTURES.


ABOVE A LINA BO BARDI STOOL STANDS BEFORE A CUSTOM RICHARD WAKAMOTO VANITY FROM 1957. RIGHT A VINTAGE ALVAR AALTO PENDANT FOR ARTEK HANGS IN THE STEAM SHOWER. BELOW THE PRIMARY BEDROOM

FEATURES A CUSTOM HEADBOARD FASHIONED FROM A CENTURIESOLD OAK SLAB, RICK OWENS SIDE TABLES FROM CARPENTERS WORKSHOP GALLERY, A PAIR OF SERGE MOUILLE SCONCES, AND AN ANGELO MANGIAROTTI TABLE LAMP.

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ABOVE THE MUSIC ROOM IS ANCHORED BY A 1936 POUL HENNINGSEN GRAND PIANO WITH A PHILIP ARCTANDER BENCH. ARTWORK BY LANDON ROSS. RIGHT GROVER RAD’S OFFICE HAS A CARL MALMSTEN DESK FROM LIEF, AN OSVALDO BORSANI CREDENZA, A GIO PONTI TABLE LAMP, AND A GABRIELLA CRESPI BAMBOO LANTERN FROM DAVID GILL GALLERY.

Grover Rad’s office, meanwhile, features a massive disco ball, hand-distressed by Grover Rad herself with coatings of espresso powder, alongside signature furnishings by Osvaldo Borsani, Gio Ponti, Gabriella Crespi, and a host of lesser-known creators of objets de vertu. The ensemble sits on an ice floe of sheepskin carpets proudly procured from IKEA and Costco. Positioned behind her Carl Malmsten desk—where she’s currently plotting the 2022 launch of her namesake fashion brand, Grover Rad—a George Condo painting titled Interacting Figures makes a provocative backdrop for Zoom meetings. with acanthus leaves, lion heads, and other classical ornaments. “Sean had zero input here. This was my opportunity to express “I didn’t want to do some big statement light fixture that my maximalist self,” she admits. would suck up all the energy and focus,” the designer explains. “The tree tempers the scale of the room, and that gorgeous, craggy planter makes a lovely counterpoint to the silvery WHILE MOST DESIGNERS typically reserve their choicest finds Vincenzo De Cotiis cocktail table, which feels like a heraldic and most dramatic gestures for a home’s main social arena, Hallworth took a quieter approach to the double-height living shield bouncing natural light into the room.” Of course, if it’s drama and wonder you’re looking for, there’s room. The first major piece she and her clients acquired for the plenty to be found elsewhere in the home: in the kitchen’s senspace was a 16th-century marble water-well head from Italy, repurposed as a planter for a towering ficus tree and festooned suous, Rorschach-like marble treatment and bronze cabinetry;


ALICE NEEL. LANDON ROSS. © 2021 GEORGE CONDO / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.

in the rare, futuristic 1930s Poul Henningsen grand piano that anchors the music room (Rad is an accomplished composer and musician); in the Carlo Bugatti table that holds the whiskey decanter in the bar; and in the ballet of swirling, skirted, mechanized pendant lights by Studio Drift in the entry hall. For sheer jaw-dropping astonishment, however, there’s no topping the gloriously decadent primary bath, wrapped in a cocoon of Breccia Capraia marble, with a monolithic tub carved from a single block of stone and a marble chaise longue installed in the steam shower—Hallworth’s tip of the hat to

Le Corbusier’s bathroom at the Villa Savoye. “It’s over-the-top, but in the nicest possible way,” the designer observes wryly. “Jane took me out of my comfort zone on this project. It’s the detail and care she put in, her refusal to compromise, that I respect so much,” Rad says, summing up the extraordinary design adventure. Grover Rad seconds the notion: “It’s inspiring to see how bold she’s willing to go. Jane comes up with insane ideas, insane stories, and as much as she values the integrity and authenticity of the house, the story she cares most about is the one we’re making together.”

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ABOVE IN THE KITCHEN, A GABRIELLA CRESPI LANTERN HANGS ABOVE A CHARLOTTE PERRIAND TABLE WITH JEANLOUIS BERTHET CHAIRS. LEFT THE BAR HAS A SERGE MOUILLE PENDANT LIGHT, A CARLO BUGATTI TABLE, AND A WALNUT PING-PONG TABLE BY BDDW. ARTWORK BY MARK VERABIOFF.

OPPOSITE SEATING BY GREEN RIVER PROJECT INHABITS THE COURTYARD OFF THE KITCHEN. LANDSCAPE DESIGN BY TERREMOTO.


MARK VERABIOFF.


MAXIMUM ENGLISH

Designer Martin Brudnizki’s historic Sussex retreat is a joyfully over-the-top celebration of British tradition TEXT BY

MITCHELL OWENS

PHOTOGRAPHY BY

HENRY BOURNE


IN THE DRAWING ROOM, AN 18TH-CENTURY PORTRAIT OF A GIRL BY JOHAN ZOFFANY HANGS ABOVE A PAIR OF 1940s FRENCH SLIPPER CHAIRS DRESSED IN A CHRISTOPHER MOORE CHINTZ AND SAMUEL & SONS TRIM. OPPOSITE DESIGNER MARTIN BRUDNIZKI (RIGHT) AND HIS PARTNER, JONATHAN BROOK, WITH THEIR WHIPPET, ZENON, ON THE GROUNDS OF THEIR COUNTRY RETREAT. FOR DETAILS SEE RESOURCES.


BELOW THE REDBRICK EXTERIOR OF THE 17TH-CENTURY HOUSE. RIGHT THE DRAWING ROOM IS OUTFITTED WITH AN ARRAY OF ANTIQUES SOURCED ACROSS THE U.K. ZENON PERCHES ON AN OVERSCALE MOHAIR-TOPPED OTTOMAN BY CHRISTIANE BAUMANN. AND OBJECTS ARMCHAIRS IN A JEAN MONRO TOILE; 18TH-CENTURY-STYLE CHANDELIER MADE IN VENICE; ON WALLS, PAINT BY EDWARD BULMER.

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ot too terribly long ago, an aristocratic neighbor dropped by interior architect and designer Martin Brudnizki’s new country place in the wilds of Sussex. Eyes widening, he was plainly stunned by the orchidaceous ensemble: lampshades piped with ruffles, fabrics as thickly flowered as any high-summer herbaceous border, flashes of mirrored glass. Passing from the English-pea-purée entrance hall into the goldenrod-yellow drawing room thickly hung with works of art—among them a heroic depiction of Charles II that is parked above the drinks table—he paused, peered, and pondered, eventually settling down on a supersized pink ottoman. After a moment, the visitor said, in a reflective tone, “This is a lot to take in.” It was a comment that delighted Brudnizki. Indeed, it is precisely the sort of reaction that the AD100 star and his partner in life and business, Jonathan Brook, await when they throw open the eau-de-Nile front doors on weekends. “People don’t know where to look,” Brudnizki says, grinning. “I love that complete confusion.” It’s his horror vacui riposte to playit-safe decors. “Minimalism has nothing to say,” the designer continues, adding, “This is a fantasy of English arcadian life by a Swede who didn’t grow up in houses like this. It’s an extreme

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point of view, but it’s not for a client; it’s for me and Jonathan, and we wanted to be quite crazy.” Brook chimes in, “Anybody else would have brought in brown furniture and chintz curtains. You need an outside influence to do something different, and people forget that traditional English design and architecture are full of foreign influences, from Andrea Palladio to Giacomo Leoni.”


Anyone familiar with Brudnizki’s commercial projects, most famously his punchy, pattern-on-pattern revamp of Annabel’s, the venerable London club, knows that a certain level of pearl-clutching delirium is expected. In the couple’s apartment—which takes up much of the ground floor of Binderton House, a 17th-century bolt-hole that once belonged to former prime minister Anthony Eden—the general effect

is as if John Fowler, the Colefax & Fowler tastemaker, had dropped a bit of acid. Why hang one painting from a decorative blue bow when you can do it with a dozen and then swag them all with rosy ribbons? Or lavish a bedroom with a wall-to-wall linen print of life-size foxgloves beneath a ceiling as pink as a candied almond? When Brook and Brudnizki decided to gild



“What I really like about maximalism is that it’s about camouflage.” —Martin Brudnizki A JEAN MONRO TOILE ENVELOPS THE PRIMARY BEDROOM. AND OBJECTS CHAIRS; EDWARD BULMER PAINT. OPPOSITE 18TH-CENTURY PRINTS OF THE KINGS AND QUEENS OF ENGLAND LINE THE WALLS OF THE BATH. DRUMMONDS TUB, SINK, AND FITTINGS DESIGNED BY BRUDNIZKI; VISUAL COMFORT PENDANT LIGHTS.


ABOVE LEFT THE DRESSING ROOM DOORS WEAR A PINK PIERRE FREY FABRIC OUTLINED WITH AQUA BRAIDED SILK TRIM BY SAMUEL & SONS. ABOVE RIGHT A GUEST BEDROOM IS SWATHED IN FABRICS BY AND OBJECTS FOR CHRISTOPHER FARR. PENDANT BY AND OBJECTS FOR THE URBAN ELECTRIC CO.

the Georgian chimneypiece in the drawing room, the discreet accenting that had been intended soon morphed into a mother lode that crept up and out, even to the room’s cornice. Not many people would add lampshades to a Venetian chandelier— after all, those light fixtures are already pretty opulent—but the jolly gentlemen of Binderton House did just that, each shade fashioned of boldly ruched pink silk and wrapped with rows of fluffy blue fringe. “They’re like hats,” Brudnizki explains. “And they’re so much fun.”

a

s the designer observes, “Most people are in shock when they first see the place, but by the end of the evening, they’re sprawling on the sofa. What I really like about maximalism is that it’s about camouflage. You feel hidden in a room full of patterns and things. People walk in and they disappear, like in a painting by Vuillard.” A gallery’s worth of art, from Old Masters to what Brudnizki describes as tat, has been fitted into the drawing room like pieces in a jigsaw puzzle. “We started with three big canvases, but Martin wanted to fill the walls, so we created a grid with a Zoffany portrait, capriccios, and landscapes, and added miniatures to fill the gaps,” Brook says. Adds Brudnizki, “I hate seeing blank spaces.” Most of the works that the couple have assembled have local resonance. Several paintings—found on eBay and online auctions during the pandemic lockdowns in spring

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2020—depict the area, such as Claude Lorrain–ish views of Chichester Harbor by George Smith, an 18th-century painter and poet from the town. Contemporary works are creeping into the mix, too, namely Flora Yukhnovich canvases that resemble abstracted details from Tiepolo murals and, thus, echo the palazzi where Venetian chandeliers like the one in the drawing room would have been installed. One of the couple’s dreams is to own Rex Whistler’s 1944 painting of Binderton House, created during a weekend he spent there; sold at auction a few years ago, it was likely the last oil painting that Whistler—one of the most incandescent of the era’s bright young people—did before he was killed in World War II. The aforementioned Charles II portrait, a 19th-century copy of a Sir Peter Lely, also has a regional reference: When the future king, accused of high treason, fled to France in 1651, his journey took him through West Sussex. And since the harbormaster is one of their neighbors, Brook and Brudnizki snapped up a 2015 Ryan Mosley portrait of a bearded sea captain and placed it in the striped guest room. “We like everything to fit into a narrative,” Brook says of his and Brudnizki’s philosophy of personal style—and much of that narrative is built around the people at its heart. “In a typical country house, generations of a family always add their own touches over hundreds of years,” Brudnizki says. “At the same time, we wanted everything to relate to the area or to us. This is our own story.”


“This is a fantasy of English arcadian life by a Swede who didn’t grow up in houses like this.” THE PLATES HANGING IN THE KITCHEN ONCE BELONGED TO DECORATING DOYENNE NANCY LANCASTER. NATURAL PAINTS BY EDWARD BULMER COLOR THE WALLS AND CABINETRY. VISUAL COMFORT CHANDELIER AND SCONCES.


design notes

THE DETAILS THAT MAKE THE LOOK

A SOFA BY AND OBJECTS IS UPHOLSTERED IN A CARMINE FADINI BORGHI VELVET IKAT.

CLASSIC TWO-TIER RING CHANDELIER BY CHAPMAN & MYERS FOR VISUAL COMFORT; $2,629. CIRCALIGHTING.COM

LUSTMORE LINEN BY JEAN MONRO; TO THE TRADE. FABRICUT.COM

COUNTRY ESTATE PETAL PINK DINNER PLATE; $54. JULISKA.COM

RUFFLE HAND-KNOTTED TIBETAN-WOOL-AND-SILK RUG BY MARTIN BRUDNIZKI FOR THE RUG COMPANY; $235 PER SQUARE FOOT. THERUGCOMPANY.COM

OISEAU BLEU DINNER PLATE BY GIEN; $36. SCULLY ANDSCULLY.COM WALTHAM CONSOLE; $17,500. ANDOBJECTS.COM

RUFFLE CUSHION; $155. INCASABYPABOY.COM

This is the complete opposite of mediocre or tedious.” PRODUCE D BY MAD ELINE O’MA LL EY


Rooms should make you smile; we all need to smile.” —Martin Brudnizki

CURTAINS OF A BRAQUENIÉ TOILE DRESS THE DRAWING ROOM WINDOWS.

PAPIER-MÂCHÉ VASE WITH BIRD BY MARK GAGNON; $1,800. KRBNYC.COM

BOUNDARY LINEN BY AND OBJECTS FOR CHRISTOPHER FARR CLOTH; TO THE TRADE. CHRISTOPHER FARRCLOTH.COM

INTERIORS: HENRY BOURNE. ALL OTHERS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.

A RUNNER FROM ABC CARPET & HOME LINES THE GREEN-PAINTED HALL.

OTTERBOURNE SLIPPER CHAIR; $4,665. ANDOBJECTS.COM

TAMARIND LINEN BY CHRISTOPHER MOORE; $162 PER SQUARE METER. THETOILEMAN.COM

THE REGENT BATH; $7,500. DRUMMONDS-UK.COM

NEEDLES HANG PENDANT BY MARTIN BRUDNIZKI FOR THE URBAN ELECTRIC CO.; FROM $7,354. URBANELECTRIC.COM

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IN THE SALON, THE SOFA, OPENSIDED LOUNGE CHAIRS, AND COCKTAIL TABLE ARE VINTAGE GUILLERME ET CHAMBRON, AND THE ARMCHAIRS ARE BY VIGGO BOESEN. THE CHIMNEY AND FLOORS ARE LINED IN PIERRE DE VALS STONE, AND THE WOODWORK IS PINE. FOR DETAILS SEE RESOURCES.

MOUNTAI


For collector Hélène Nguyen-Ban, Elliott Barnes puts a modern spin on a classic chalet in the French ski resort of Megève PHOTOGRAPHY BY

TEXT BY MALLERY ROBERTS MORGAN CASSIE FLOTO WARNER STYLED BY VIRGINIE DUBOSCQ

N HIGH


A MONUMENTAL GEORG BASELITZ SCULPTURE GUARDS THE ENTRY.


© 2021 PASCALE MARTHINE TAYOU / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.

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magining a dream retreat in the French mountain village of Megève led AD100 designer Elliott Barnes and his client Hélène Nguyen-Ban, a passionate collector, to profound conversations about art, family, and togetherness. “We talked about a contemporary chalet interior as a suitable backdrop for art and also a welcoming environment for family and friends,” says Barnes, a Los Angeles native who has lived and practiced in Paris for more than 30 years. “That basic idea—art and family—became the inspiration, theme, and organizational backbone of the entire project.” Tucked away in the French Alps, Megève, a renowned ski destination for the beau monde since the 1920s, has managed to maintain its fairy-tale-like charm. The village’s sweeping views of Mont Blanc and its cobblestone streets, dating back to medieval times, are part of its enduring allure. Only an hour’s drive from Geneva, the location makes it an accessible getaway for Nguyen-Ban, her husband, and their three daughters, who are based in London and travel frequently to France. “Construction in the mountains is complex,” Barnes admits, with a note of wry understatement. The designer’s longtime clients (this is their fourth project together) had initially searched for an existing property before they ultimately decided to build from the ground up. Citing climate and thermal considerations as well as the restricted building schedule of a resort area, Barnes says that partnering with a local architect was a priority. He describes the close collaboration that resulted with architect Gérard Ravello as a commitment to creating a holistic home, with a seamless bond between the interior and exterior. “We didn’t want to fall into a cliché of Swiss chalet style, so we used traditional building materials but in a much more tailored, pared-down fashion,” Barnes explains, sketching the overriding design sensibility. Only four primary materials were used in the construction: Pierre de Vals stone, locally sourced pine, blackened metal, and plaster. The modest front door, set within a façade detailed with small windows, belies the drama that unfolds within. “Once you enter into the main salon, that’s where the view happens,

THE DINING TABLE AND CHAIRS WERE FLEA MARKET FINDS. BARNES USED FAUX-SHEEPSKIN COVERS TO UNIFY THE ARRAY OF MISMATCHED SEATING. THE COLUMNAR SCULPTURE IS BY PASCALE MARTHINE TAYOU.

that’s the big wow,” the designer says, noting the space’s lofty ceiling, soaring chimney, and enormous picture window overlooking a majestic mountain vista. “By opening up the space it becomes a gathering point, driving our idea of togetherness through the topology of the house,” he adds. Comprising four bedrooms in the main house, a kids’ dormitory that sleeps nine, and a guesthouse christened the “Petit Chalet,” the property can host 23 people, which means plenty of activity, especially in the salon. “Everything can be moved easily. When you have lots of people coming and going, you can’t have a space that’s fixed,” says Barnes. An oversized table from a pub in England, a flea market find, grounds the main dining area. The grouping of mismatched wood dining chairs, also flea market finds, were unified with faux-fur covers. A column of ceramic pots created by Cameroonian artist Pascale Marthine Tayou represents a clever homage

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A RETRACTABLE FLOOR COVERS THE POOL TO CREATE A MULTIFUNCTIONAL SPACE. GLASS BLOCKS USHER LIGHT THROUGH THE HOUSE.


THE KITCHEN IS OUTFITTED WITH A RANGE, HOOD, AND CABINETRY BY LA CORNUE. BELOW ELLIOTT BARNES ON-SITE.

“We didn’t want to fall into a cliché of Swiss chalet style, so we used traditional building materials but in a much more tailored fashion.” —Elliott Barnes to a long tradition of decorative faience tiles in the Alps. “In a subtle way, all the artwork selected for the chalet gives a nod to certain things one might see in more traditional mountain homes,” Barnes observes. For the pine-paneled kitchen, the designer chose a custom range and signature cabinetry by La Cornue, “to capture the spirit of classic French cooking,” he says. The art of living is also celebrated with a cheese cave, a sausage-curing room, and a luxurious wine cellar with a subterranean picture window highlighting the granite of the excavated hill. “It’s important to feel connected to the earth,” Barnes avers.


ABOVE DEDAR FABRIC COVERS THE HEADBOARD IN ONE OF THE CHILDREN’S BEDROOMS. RIGHT STEPPED SINKS ACCOMMODATE KIDS OF DIFFERENT AGES.

TRADITIONAL CHALET BEDROOMS are typically small

in order to maintain heat, and the sleeping quarters here are no exception. Whatever they may lack in size, the bedrooms more than make up for in intimacy, warmth, and magical views from windows strategically placed to best appreciate the beauty of the land. A circular skylight crowns the primary bath, pouring natural illumination onto a generous round copper tub with standing faucets. A fireplace recessed into a mirrored wall casts a gentle glow on the tub’s metallic surface. The retractable floor above the swimming pool was an idea that emerged from discussions with Nguyen-Ban about creating a multipurpose space for parties and other functions. With the push of a button, the pool can easily become a dance floor—a vision seemingly plucked from a James Bond movie. An unexpected view of people splashing in the water as one enters the ski room from the garage only buoys the Bond fantasy. Given the expansive scope of the clients’ art collection, Barnes says that selecting pieces for the chalet essentially amounted to a curatorial conversation. “Hélène likes to live with the works she collects almost in the way one would live with family portraits—everything has a connection and an emotional resonance,” the designer explains. “Pieces move in and out, so the installation isn’t static. Like the house itself and the experiences it nurtures, the art feels alive.”

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THE PRIMARY BATH IS CENTERED ON A WILLIAM HOLLAND TUB WITH ASTON MATTHEWS FITTINGS. SHOWER FIXTURES BY VOLEVATCH.


major

One family’s industrial Tribeca loft undergoes a colorful metamorphosis at the hands of ASH NYC TEXT BY

HANNAH MARTIN

PHOTOGRAPHY BY

MIGUEL FLORES-VIANNA


drama

IN THIS TRIBECA LIVING ROOM, A CUSTOM SOFA SITS WITH A 1950s ITALIAN BOOKCASE, AND AN OTTOMAN, CHAIRS, AND STOOL, ALL BY ASH NYC. THE PAINTING IS BY DAVID AUSTEN, AND THE CUSTOM TABLE LAMPS ARE HANDMADE BY EPISODE. FOR DETAILS SEE RESOURCES.


IN THE CALACATTA VIOLA–CLAD KITCHEN, MENU STOOLS ARE SKIRTED WITH ANTIQUE TURKISH SILK, AND A PIERRE CHAPO DINING TABLE IS SURROUNDED BY MARCEL BREUER CHAIRS. THE CUSTOM ASH NYC PENDANTS ARE BY EPISODE, AND THE 1970s WICKER LAMP IS BY HEYWOOD-WAKEFIELD.



TR ERICSSON.

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having breakfast? What happens at 5 p.m. when they want to hen you step off the elevahave cocktails? It’s the same as a hotel. They need coffee, they tor and into this fifth-floor need cocktails, they need a comfortable bed to sleep on.” Tribeca loft, a lush crimson When Cooper started conceptualizing this place roughly four curtain of Victorian cut years ago, the client, with whom he had worked previously on velvet frames one end of more commercial projects, imagined living in a quintessential the foyer, just past a rather Tribeca loft. “They really wanted everything in white,” recalls outspoken Kenny Scharf painting and an 18th-century Cooper of the family—a physician assistant and an entrepreneur Rococo mirror. “I like to look with two young boys. Cooper’s own apartment (AD, October 2020), admittedly, adheres to a similar palette. “I love living in at things through a theatrical lens,” says Will Cooper, partner and chief creative officer of white, but I don’t like designing in it,” he laments. Still, they AD100 firm ASH NYC. He asks, “What narrative unfolds when started there. The place, which hadn’t been renovated since the 1980s, you open the door?” needed to be gutted—walls rebuilt, kitchen moved, bathrooms Cooper and his partners at ASH NYC have always brought overhauled, ceilings opened to reveal chunky wooden beams; that dramatic flair to their singular hotels—there’s a vibe of laid-back Belgian modernism at the Dean Hotel in Providence, even a few windows had to be covered over, as new buildings sprang up overnight. After Cooper’s team stripped things back a disco ball shimmering amid Deco-era glam at the Siren in to the essentials, the main walls were painted in Domingue’s Detroit, and a divine gingham fantasia at Hôtel Peter & Paul, a onetime church and school in New Orleans. And for the right Chalk limewash, floors were coated in slick white epoxy, and a big open kitchen (the clients love to cook) got an island, client, they’ll dream up an equally transportive private residence too. “We paint a picture for you; we make a movie for you countertops, and backsplash of Calacatta Viola marble. The to live in,” says Cooper, explaining his research-heavy process. space was taking on the industrial cool of Cooper’s original reference: the all-white SoHo loft of Dean & DeLuca founders “We always write a narrative when we start these projects— Jack Ceglic and Joel Dean. What are they doing? What happens at 8 a.m. when they’re


LEFT VINTAGE ITALIAN CLUB CHAIRS, 1920s ITALIAN ALABASTER LAMPS, AND AN RH BED IN THE PRIMARY BEDROOM, PAINTED IN BENJAMIN MOORE’S RICHMOND GOLD. RIGHT TILES BY COMPLETE TILE COLLECTION AND D. PORTHAULT HAND TOWELS IN A BATH. BELOW ZELLIGE TILES BY CLÉ AND A 1960s DANISH CHAIR BY DIRK VAN SLIEDREGT IN THE POWDER ROOM.

“I like to look at things through a theatrical lens. What narrative unfolds when you walk through the door?” —Will Cooper ARCHDIGEST. COM

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IN THE MEDIA ROOM, A 1930s DANISH JACOB KJÆR SOFA PULLS UP TO A TABLE DRAPED WITH A 1930s ARMENIAN KARABAGH RUG. OPPOSITE A RED VELVET CURTAIN IN THE FOYER WITH A ROCOCO MIRROR BY OLAF WETTERBERG, A PERSIAN RUG FROM HEIRLOOM, AND A PAINTING BY KENNY SCHARF.

MARA DE LUCA. © 2021 KENNY SCHARF / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.

“We paint a picture for you; we make a movie for you to live in.”



A PENHAGLION TUB WITH WATERWORKS FITTINGS IN THE PRIMARY BATH IS CURTAINED WITH BRAQUENIÉ FABRIC AND TOPPED WITH A 1960s CARL FAGERLUND CHANDELIER FOR ORREFORS. VINTAGE ITALIAN RATTAN CHAIR.

BUT AS TIME PASSED, the narrative shifted. Cooper started doing

what he does best: collect. A pile of textiles from Turkey, India, and France found its way into the space, as pillows, seat cushions, and even a clever disguise for the TV. With a suite of Scandinavian antiques from Manhattan purveyor Dienst + Dotter Antikviteter and a range of rugs from Heirloom in Brooklyn, Cooper layered in bursts of the unexpected. “A project needs time to evolve,” says the designer, who, after looking at Horst P. Horst’s images from Vogue, began to fantasize about the eclectic high-society homes of the 1960s grandes dames. “I wanted to somehow imbue that level of taste and sophistication here in a loft in a contemporary way, through textiles and layers,” he explains. Slowly he coaxed his clients out of their all-white comfort zone. Most of the walls remained as requested, but the inside of the wet bar got a hit of aubergine lacquer. Bathrooms were clad in colorful tiles, the primary bedroom was painted a warm shade of praline and the moody media room a deep navy blue. In went the textiles, adding texture and color galore. Perhaps the biggest thrill came in the children’s room, where twin 1920s beds were dressed in D. Porthault linens and antique Turkish and Peruvian textiles, then canopied with antique ceremonial wedding-procession tents from Gujarat, India.

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Lest we forget: Kids are part of this story. Cooper designed accordingly, squirreling toys away here and there—in a yellow ottoman in the living room, in generous closets in their colorful bedroom. Per the family’s request, ASH devised a modular sofa upholstered in red velvet and mohair with an integrated back, perfect for tumbling tots. Across the apartment, the plot thickens as highly decorative furnishings—a fleet of Swedish Rococo pieces (a bench, a console, a pair of gilt-wood mirrors, and more), whimsical wicker and rattan from the world over—blend in with industrial classics. Marcel Breuer’s B33 chairs surround the Pierre Chapo dining table, for instance. Overhead, custom cone-shaped ceramic pendants, inspired by one from Cecil Beaton’s bedroom, hang on metal chains. Meanwhile, in the living area, a Gio Ponti lounge is covered in Scalamandré’s “Panthera” leopard-print velvet, and at the bar, simple, powder-coated-steel counter stools are dressed in frilly skirts of striped Turkish silk. “That modernity was important—the Breuer, the black leather, the chrome, the planters in polished stainless steel,” explains Cooper, whose own contemporary furniture designs for ASH— a few Pillow Chairs, a range of simple WC tables—are also sprinkled in. “We’re not in an old-world place,” he says, after all. “This is Tribeca.”


IN THE KIDS’ ROOM, PAINTED IN BENJAMIN MOORE’S CEDAR GROVE, 1920s BEDS ARE CANOPIED WITH ANTIQUE INDIAN WEDDINGPROCESSION TENTS. CIRCA 1850 NORWEGIAN KUBBESTOL CHAIRS.


design notes

THE DETAILS THAT MAKE THE LOOK

TWO ARMCHAIRS—ONE 19TH-CENTURY NORWEGIAN (LEFT), THE OTHER 1950s GIO PONTI— FLANK THE LIVING ROOM FIREPLACE.

WC3 STOOL BY WILL COOPER FOR ASH NYC; $1,400. ASHNYC.COM

PRIMARY DINNER PLATE BY ASH NYC x NICHOLAS NEWCOMB; $88. NICHOLAS NEWCOMB.COM

PRIMARY SALAD PLATE BY ASH NYC x NICHOLAS NEWCOMB; $78. NICHOLAS NEWCOMB.COM CUSTOM ASH NYC CERAMIC PENDANTS BY EPISODE, AND MARCEL BREUER CHAIRS IN THE DINING ROOM.

The TV is actually hidden behind those two antique suzani textiles I bought in Turkey.” —Will Cooper

CLAES THELL CERAMIC; PRICE UPON REQUEST. DIENSTANDDOTTER.COM LARGE COLORFUL UZBEK SUZANI; $2,500. CREELANDGOW.COM PRODUCE D BY MAD ELINE O’MA LL EY


IN THE PRIMARY BATH, THE VANITY WEARS A BRAQUENIÉ FABRIC SKIRT.

THE PILLOW SOFA BY WILL COOPER FOR ASH NYC; $6,400. ASHNYC.COM 1930s KARABAGH PARTRIDGE RUG; $2,850. HEIRLOOMBK.COM

QUEUE LAMP BY JESSE SHAW FOR EPISODE; $2,200. EPISODE.NYC

It was all about not being scared to mix a bunch of pattern and color. To me, it all works together.” HEARTS OF GLASS, 2021, BY DAVID AUSTEN; PRICE UPON REQUEST. DAVIDTOTAH.COM

LOUIS XVI–STYLE MIRROR BY DANIELE NENCIONI; $1,175. ARTEMEST.COM

INTERIORS: FRANK FRANCES. ALL OTHERS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.

ARISTOTE FABRIC BY BRAQUENIÉ; TO THE TRADE. PIERREFREY.COM

MARCEL BREUER CESCA SIDE CHAIR BY KNOLL; $968. DWR.COM

HIGHGATE LAVATORY FAUCET WITH PORCELAIN LEVER HANDLES BY ASH NYC FOR WATERWORKS; $985. WATERWORKS.COM

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Darryl Carter conjures a calm, modern oasis for a family in Washington, D.C. TEXT BY CATHERINE HONG PHOTOGRAPHY BY STYLED BY HILARY ROBERTSON

FRANK FRANCES

REA


© 2021 MANFRED MÜLLER / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.

IN THE DINING ROOM, TWO SCULPTURAL LIGHT FIXTURES BY TED ABRAMCZYK HANG ABOVE A CUSTOM TABLE BY DARRYL CARTER SURROUNDED BY ALFREDO HÄBERLI CHAIRS UPHOLSTERED WITH LEATHER. SCULPTURE ON PEDESTAL (AT LEFT) BY CHRISTOPHER STUART; ARTWORK OVER FIREPLACE BY MANFRED MÜLLER. FOR DETAILS SEE RESOURCES.

L SIMPLE


THE HOMEOWNER AND HER DAUGHTERS WITH THE FAMILY DOG IN THE KITCHEN. CABINETRY PAINTED IN FARROW & BALL’S ALL WHITE; CUSTOM COUNTER STOOLS BY DARRYL CARTER.

“But can you do modern?"

but in a considerably more stately house that felt “much too It’s a question that Darryl Carter says he gets from a lot of large and formal for us,” says the owner. “I had decorated prospective clients these days. He understands their hesitait to reflect the grandeur of the house, so it was filled with a tion. “Most of the work people have seen of mine is more lot of antiques and decorative pieces that we never felt classic,” he acknowledges. The designer first made his mark comfortable with.” in Washington, D.C., in the late ’90s with interiors rooted in This time around, she envisioned a simpler family home antiques, patinated furniture, and chalky washes of color, a that would first and foremost be a place to relax. “This was look often described as “new traditional.” But over the years my chance to create something that reflected us,” she says. Carter’s aesthetic has come to embrace a more modern verA friend of hers who had been one of Carter’s earliest clients nacular. “My style has evolved,” says the AD100 designer. “If recommended the designer for the project. Although that I was stamping out the same thing again and again, I would home was much more traditional than what she had in mind, probably go back to being a lawyer.” the owner says that from her very first meeting with Carter This home in D.C.’s Kalorama neighborhood may be his she could tell that he was the man for the job. “Darryl told me, deepest exploration of pared-back modernism yet. The ‘You have an incredibly low tolerance for chaos,’ ” she recalls. flat-fronted 1912 Renaissance Revival town house was “He understood me!” They conceived a serene, monochromatic designed by architects Samuel A. Finley and David J. Spence interior combining linear and organic forms in subtly variefor eminent geophysicist Frederick Eugene Wright and his gated shades of white. “We came up with a mantra: ‘Sculptural, wife, Kathleen (Finley’s sister). It was later home to Walter durable, nothing precious.’ It was at the core of all our deciBowes, cofounder of postage-meter company Pitney Bowes. sions,” she says. Carter also devised a multitude of hidden When the current owner and her husband saw the house in 2016, they were impressed by its beautifully preserved façade storage solutions, including deep built-in drawers in the dining room that eliminated the need for a breakfront and a surprisand graciously proportioned interior. They and their two young daughters had already been living in the neighborhood, ingly capacious cubby tucked beneath the staircase (ideal for


A PIERO LISSONI SECTIONAL IN HOLLY HUNT FABRIC WRAPS AROUND THE LIVING ROOM. CUSTOM COCKTAIL AND SIDE TABLES OF WHITE TINTED CONCRETE; VINTAGE MIDCENTURY ARMCHAIRS BY GEOFFREY HARCOURT. ARTWORK ABOVE FIREPLACE BY SYLVIA SCHUSTER.

backpacks and sports equipment), which the family quickly dubbed “the hole”—all crucial for keeping clutter out of sight. THEN THE UNTHINKABLE HAPPENED. Two weeks after the family

moved in, the husband suffered a fatal heart attack. “It was a very rough time for our family,” acknowledges the homeowner. “The girls and I were in a difficult place for a while.” Helping her daughters through their grief became her priority. “I wanted them to see that we could still be happy and hopeful people, despite their father’s death,” she says. And though it would be a stretch to say the new house became a source of healing, it did provide a tranquil space for the three of them to recover. “One thing I can say is that when we came out of it, we were in this beautiful home together,” she says. Indeed, the house’s untrammeled spaces seem to invite especially deep breaths. In the living room, the low-profile seating promotes an easy flow, and the walls—which have built-in cabinetry disguising a television and additional storage areas—seem to recede. Carter removed the kitchen’s stainless-steel elements to create a more ethereal space, with custom counter stools that appear to float. For the backyard, he designed a patio with a small, jewellike pool, set off by

“White seems easy, but it’s such a nuanced color. For this house, we wanted a true white.” —Darryl Carter ARCHDIGEST. COM

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ABOVE TWO WILLY GUHL CHAIRS FACE OFF ACROSS A TABLE BY MAY FURNITURE IN THE GARDEN. BELOW A FLOOR LAMP FROM YLIGHTING STANDS NEXT TO A LINEN-COVERED KNOLL CHAIR AND OTTOMAN IN A BEDROOM.

curvaceous concrete furniture. Throughout the house, the plaster walls are coated in Farrow & Ball’s All White, which Carter settled on only after an iterative process of experimentation. “White seems easy, but it’s such a nuanced color,” he explains. “For this house, we wanted a true white. But if I were designing a more traditional interior, for instance, I would have gone with a warmer shade.” “The house is minimalistic but doesn’t feel empty,” the owner says. “We fill up the space with the talk of the day’s events, work, school, and teenage drama.” In the late afternoons, she and her daughters often find themselves drawn to the dining room, where they’ll work separately on their laptops, comfortably sitting in silent concentration beneath the undulating Ted Abramczyk chandeliers suspended cloudlike above them, their adored dog, a Lagotto Romagnolo, napping at their feet. It’s a room Carter says he particularly loved designing. “I don’t see the point of a formal dining room that only gets used on holidays,” he explains. “We designed this one to feel almost like a library, with places for books and an indestructible table. I think it’s a room that beckons.” The owner agrees. “We all have our private spaces, but we also have these rooms where we love to be together,” she says. “Darryl understood my vision for the house, and the result is something we’re very grateful for.”


ABOVE A HANDMADE THROW BY REBECCA ATWOOD DESIGNS AND CUSTOM RUGS BY KYLE BUNTING BRING TEXTURE TO A BEDROOM. EAMES DESK CHAIR; PIERRE PAULIN LOUNGE CHAIR IN SPINNEYBECK LEATHER. BELOW THE MEDIA ROOM FEATURES A MODULAR SECTIONAL FROM PROGETTI DESIGN STUDIO WITH PILLOWS OF A KRAVET VELVET.


home on

With the help of AD1OO triumvirate Madison Cox, Annabelle Selldorf, and Jeffrey Bilhuber, a Texas twosome make a historic home in Marfa their own TEXT BY SAM COCHRAN PHOTOGRAPHY BY WILLIAM STYLED BY COLIN KING

JESS LAIRD


the range

METICULOUSLY INSTALLED WITHOUT THE USE OF GROUT, MOROCCAN TERRA-COTTA TILE SURROUNDS THE POOL AT A HISTORIC MARFA HOME, UPDATED BY AD100 STARS ANNABELLE SELLDORF, MADISON COX, AND JEFFREY BILHUBER; THE RUSH AWNING ON THE IRON PERGOLA WILL ONE DAY BE TAKEN OVER BY CREEPING VINES. FOR DETAILS SEE RESOURCES.


Reflecting on Marfa in 1985, Donald Judd wrote:

“The area of West Texas was fine, mostly high rangeland dropping to desert along the river, with mountains over the edge in every direction. There were few people and the land was undamaged.” Decades later, that spellbinding beauty and sense of exquisite isolation remain, albeit juxtaposed with the artist’s own legacy—the Judd Foundation (anchored by The Block, his former home) and the Chinati Foundation, the army base he transformed into a museum for contemporary art. Today’s Marfa is a contradiction: a tumbleweed town and an international pilgrimage site, where Judd’s visions of unified art and architecture reached their apotheosis.

It was that heady mix that set two creative New Yorkers, both natives of the Lone Star State, on the long drive to this one-stoplight oasis. “If you’re from Texas and involved in the arts, then all roads lead to Marfa,” says one, whom we’ll refer to as Cowboy for the sake of this western adventure. As his other half—let’s call her Cowgirl—recounts, “The moment I saw the town, I felt connected. It’s intangible…the big sky, the light, the breeze. Marfa is not one thing; it’s many things.” Their plans to buy land and build a contemporary glass box were scrapped when they visited a 1920s Spanish Colonial Revival house for sale. Designed by Henry Charles Trost, a celebrated El Paso architect who cut his teeth in the Chicago School, the home occupied a hilltop plot not far from the center of town, with spectacular views and an adjoining empty parcel. Judd had even owned it once upon a time. Says Cowgirl, “It just felt true and beautiful and right.” To reimagine the property, they turned to architect Annabelle Selldorf, whom they knew from New York and through Chinati. She updated the Trost house (whose original details had already been stripped away by the prior owner) through a series of deft interventions to the floor plan. On the


CUSTOM-MADE EBONIZED BENCHES AND BONACINA 1889 WICKER CHAIRS MINGLE ON THE LOGGIA. OPPOSITE TIMBER BOOKSHELVES IN THE STYLE OF DONALD JUDD LINE THE LIBRARY; CUSTOM-MADE SOFA IN A PINDLER FABRIC.


© 2021 RICHARD SERRA / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.


“There is a minimalism that echoes Judd and is carried through in very strong but simple interventions.” —Madison Cox RIGHT THE KITCHEN’S LARGE ISLAND CAN ACCOMMODATE SIX ON COUNTER STOOLS; ANTIQUE PENDANT. BELOW A RICHARD SERRA ETCHING IN THE DINING ROOM; MIRROR MASK BY KADER ATTIA. OPPOSITE TERRACED PLANTINGS OF RUSSIAN SAGE DESCEND FROM THE ENTERTAINMENT PAVILION TO THE POOL.

main level, clusters of small rooms were combined to create a vast living space, with multiple seating areas, and a spacious chef’s kitchen, where an enormous island can seat six comfortably. A tight, sculptural staircase now descends to the primary suite on the lower level, creating a sequence of compression and expansion. “You had to make the trip downstairs into something exciting,” notes Selldorf, whose hand can be felt most clearly on what had been vacant land, where she devised a side-by-side guest casita and a garage/gym, as well as an entertaining pavilion up on another hill. “The architectural vocabulary is a simple series of volumes that speak to one another but feel distinct from the old architecture,” she notes of the structures, clad in clay-colored stucco and aligned to create beautiful transitions. ALONG THE WAY, Selldorf connected the clients with landscape

mastermind Madison Cox, whom they visited in Marrakech well before Cox made it to Marfa. That first trip to Morocco was an aha moment: Their eyes widened as Cox welcomed them to Villa Oasis, introducing them to the work of designer Bill Willis, and guided them to sites throughout the region, whose landscape, building materials, and sensibilities reminded them of West Texas. In no time, an enormous shipping container filled with pots, zellige, and furnishings of all kinds was on its way to Marfa, where Cox conceived a series of outdoor spaces that blend the local vernacular with Moroccan traditions.

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“It embraces Marfa fully, reinventing the language of what Marfa could be.” —Jeffrey Bilhuber

LEFT A TONY FEHER SCULPTURE HANGS IN THE STAIRWELL TO THE PRIMARY SUITE. BELOW AN OUTDOOR DINING AREA ON THE TERRACE BESIDE THE ENTERTAINING PAVILION.


CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE IN THE ENTERTAINING PAVILION, A DONALD JUDD DAYBED SITS ATOP A TUAREG RUG; ARTWORKS BY DO HO SUH (LEFT) AND ED RUSCHA. CREAMY ZELLIGE TILE SHEATHES THE PRIMARY BATH. A VIEW OF THE HISTORIC HOME, DESIGNED IN THE 1920s BY ARCHITECT HENRY CHARLES TROST.


IN THE PRIMARY BEDROOM, HEADBOARD OF FABRIC BY CHAPAS TEXTILES AND CURTAINS OF LINEN BY PENNY MORRISON.

Terra-cotta tiles line porches, walkways, and exterior stairs. Terraced terrain, fragrant with sage, descends from the pavilion to the pool—part of a larger strategy to limit lawns for water conservation. And iron pergolas devised with Selldorf offer shade thanks to rush awnings that will one day be replaced by creeping vines. JEFFREY BILHUBER, the couple’s longtime decorator, com-

pleted the design dream team. “When the clients brought me on, they said the first thing to do is come and soak in what Marfa is, what Marfa gives,” he reflects with trademark flourish. “Over the course of the drive your mind begins to open, so that by the time you do arrive your mind is ready to receive.” The mandate for the interiors was to maintain that spirit of discovery. Vintage and antique finds from around the world mix with an assortment of textiles—Turkish, Navajo, Uzbek—and a collection of contemporary art, including pieces by Walead Beshty, Rashid Johnson, Jenny Holzer, and Do Ho Suh. Tilework inspired by Bill Willis enlivens bedroom suites, each one defined by a color scheme that nods to the

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surrounding landscape. “This house doesn’t turn its back on Marfa,” Bilhuber reflects. “It embraces Marfa fully, reinventing the language of what Marfa could be.” Nods to Judd are, in fact, few and far between. One of his daybeds can be found in the entertaining pavilion, sometimes positioned before the telescoping window walls that merge indoors with outdoors. Timber shelving in the style of the artist’s own lines the library. And privacy walls throughout the grounds recall The Block’s adobe perimeter. Yet Judd’s influence is unmistakable—evident in the refinement of every minimalist detail and the rhythm of Selldorf’s geometries. The greatest connection, however, may just be the clients’ commitment to Marfa. The home was a multiyear project, with more phases to come outside where Cox plans to expand the plantings based on what has thrived. At times the property even serves as an extension of the local cultural landscape, with art-world gatherings for upwards of 100. Neither clients nor dream team, however, seem fazed by the marathon effort. Says Bilhuber, “You have to take the long road—and a long road it is.”


THE GUEST CASITA’S BATH FEATURES ZELLIGE TILE FROM CASABLANCA THAT WAS LAID IN A GEOMETRIC PATTERN INSPIRED BY NAVAJO BLANKETS.


design notes

THE DETAILS THAT MAKE THE LOOK

ONE OF SEVERAL SEATING AREAS IN THE SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM.

STAR LANTERN; TO THE TRADE. VAUGHAN DESIGNS.COM

HELADO CERAMIC BOWL BY TINA VAIA; $91. MATCHES FASHION.COM

LW103B RUG; PRICE UPON REQUEST. NEWMOONRUGS.COM

A lot of the materials came from Marrakech. There were a number of parallels between Morocco and Marfa.” —Madison Cox

RAMBLER RUSH WOVEN BENCH; $649. CRATEAND BARREL.COM

BOW BASKET BY ANNEMARIE O’SULLIVAN; $2,100. MARCHSF.COM

ELISE EURO PILLOW COVER; $96. LESINDIENNES.COM

CLOVER CHAIR; $1,749. INDUSTRYWEST.COM

ZANZIBAR LINEN; TO THE TRADE. PETERDUNHAM TEXTILES.COM

QUILTED KAPOK MATTRESS BY TENSIRA; $282. VIACOQUINA.COM

PRODUCE D BY MAD ELINE O’MA LL EY


The color palette is in direct response to the surrounding landscape.”—Jeffrey Bilhuber

NETTO x NOCON TERRA-COTTA SPIRAL LAMP; $7,500. DAVIDNETTO DESIGN.COM

D6 HANLEY TUBE LINED TILE; $32 EACH. BALINEUM.CO.UK RUSH HOUSE ORIGINAL RUG; $425 FOR 9' x 12'. SHOPRUSHHOUSE.COM

SHEARLING-LINED CHAIRS CREATE A COZY SITTING AREA ON THE PORCH. TERRA PLATES; FROM $23. CASALOPEZ.COM

INTERIORS: WILLIAM JESS LAIRD. ALL OTHERS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.

RECLAIMED ENGLISH BEAM DINING TABLE; FROM $7,035. RH.COM

GOBI LINEN; $205 PER YARD. PENNY MORRISON.COM

BOSTON FUNCTIONAL SINGLE ARM LIBRARY LIGHT BY CHAPMAN & MYERS FOR VISUAL COMFORT; $469. CIRCALIGHTING.COM

IN A GUEST BEDROOM, A HEADBOARD OF ZANZIBAR LINEN BY PETER DUNHAM TEXTILES AND CURTAINS OF NINON COTTON BY LES INDIENNES. ARCHDIGEST. COM

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resources All products have been identified by the designer of each residence. Items similar to vintage and antique pieces shown are often available from the dealers listed. Contact information was up to date at time of publication. PERFECT UNION PAGES 96–107: Interior design by Hallworth Design; hallworth.com; Landscape design by Terremoto; terremoto.la. PAGES 96–97: In living room, cocktail table by Vincenzo De Cotiis; carpentersworkshop gallery.com. Seine III sofa; dmitriyco.com; upholstered in Cervinia; cec-milano.us. In tree, 1930s Louis Poulsen pendant light; galeriehalf.com. 16th-century Italian marble well head; blackmancruz.com. PAGE 98: In dining room, Hans Wegner armchairs and Arne Hovmand-Olsen leather armchair; galeriehalf.com. Charlotte Perriand dining table; 1stdibs.com. JamesPlumb chandelier; obsoleteinc.com. Carpet; woven.is. PAGE 99: In corner of dining room, David Cressey planter; 1stdibs.com. Japanese silver-leaf screen; blackmancruz.com. PAGES 100–01: In Rad’s office, George Nakashima table (as desk); galeriehalf.com. Tobia Scarpa lounge chairs and Charlotte Perriand and Jean Prouvé daybed; 1stdibs.com. Pierre Jeanneret bookcase; galeriedowntown.com. Marcel Breuer table lamps; obsoleteinc.com. PAGE 102: In primary bath, fixtures; waterworks.com. PAGE 103: In primary bath, vintage vanity; lostcityarts.com. Vintage stool; justoneeye.com. In primary bedroom, Rick Owens side tables; carpentersworkshopgallery.com. Serge Mouille sconces; galeriehalf.com. Angelo Mangiarotti table lamp; leifalmont.com.

PAGES 104–05: In music room;

MOUNTAIN HIGH

REAL SIMPLE

Poul Henningsen grand piano; secherfineart.com. Philip Arctander bench; 1stdibs.com. In Grover Rad’s office, Carl Malmsten desk; liefalmont.com. Osvaldo Borsani credenza; blackmancruz.com. Gio Ponti table lamp; obsoleteinc.com. Gabriella Crespi bamboo lantern; davidgillgallery.com PAGE 106: In kitchen, Gabriella Crespi lantern; nilufar.com. Charlotte Perriand table and Jean-Louis Berthet chairs; 1stdibs.com. In bar, Serge Mouille pendant light; 1stdibs.com. Carlo Bugatti table; blackmancruz.com. Walnut ping pong table; bddw.com. PAGE 107: Seating; greenriverprojectllc.com.

PAGES 118–25: Interior design

PAGES 138–143: Interior design by

MAXIMUM ENGLISH PAGES 108–17: Interior design by Martin Brudnizki Design Studio; mbds.com. PAGE 109: In drawing room, on 1940s French slipper chairs, Tamarind fabric by Christopher Moore; thetoileman.com, with Aurelia trim; samuelandsons.com. PAGES 110–11: In drawing room, ottoman by Christiane Baumann Design; chb-design.com. Wickham armchairs; andobjects.com, in Cecilia Toile in Delft; jeanmonro .com. On walls, paint in Naples Yellow; edwardbulmerpaint.co.uk. PAGE 112: Martin Brudnizki Collection tub, sink, and fittings; drummonds-uk.com. Moravian Star pendants by Visual Comfort; circalighting.com. PAGE 113: Slipper chairs; andobjects.com; in Lustmore toile; jeanmonro.com. On walls, paint in Rose; edwardbulmerpaint.co.uk. PAGE 114: On dressing room doors, Naomie in Ballerine; pierrefrey.com, with trim of Orsay Silk Diamond Braid in Aqua; samuelandsons.com. In guest bedroom, ceiling, walls, and curtains of Boundary linen and headboard and bedspread of Fresco linen, both by And Objects; christopherfarrcloth.com. Needles Hang pendant by And Objects; urbanelectric.com. PAGE 115: Classic Two-Tier Ring chandelier and Bryant sconces by Visual Comfort; circalighting.com. Paints in Dutch Orange, Invisible Green, and Whiting; edwardbulmerpaint.co.uk.

ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST AND AD ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF ADVANCE MAGAZINE PUBLISHERS INC. COPYRIGHT © 2022 CONDÉ NAST. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. VOLUME 79, NO. 1. ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST (ISSN 0003-8520) is published

monthly except for combined July/August issues by Condé Nast, which is a division of Advance Magazine Publishers Inc. PRINCIPAL OFFICE: Condé Nast, 1 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. Roger Lynch, Chief Executive Officer; Pamela Drucker Mann, Global Chief Revenue Officer & President, U.S. Revenue; Jackie Marks, Chief Financial Officer. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and at additional mailing offices. Canada Post Publications Mail Agreement No. 40644503. Canadian Goods and Services Tax Registration No. 123242885-RT0001. POSTMASTER: Send all UAA to CFS. (See DMM 507.1.5.2); NON-POSTAL AND MILITARY FACILITIES: Send address corrections to ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST, P.O. Box 37617, Boone, IA 37617-0617.

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FOR A DEEPER DIVE INTO THE SOURCES IN THIS ISSUE, VISIT ARCHDIGEST.COM/ADPRO

by Elliott Barnes Interiors; ebinteriors.com. Architecture by Gérard Ravello; +33-4-50-21-15-65. PAGES 118–19: Vintage Guillerme et Chambron sofa, open-sided lounge chairs, and cocktail table, Viggo Boesen Armchairs; 1stdibs.com. PAGE 123: In kitchen, range, hood, and cabinetry; lacornueusa.com. PAGE 124: On headboard, fabric; dedar.com. PAGE 125: Tub; williamholland.com. Fittings; astonmatthews.co.uk. Shower fixtures; volevatch.fr. MAJOR DRAMA PAGES 126–37: Interior design

by ASH NYC; ashnyc.com. PAGES 126–27: In living room,

custom sofa, ottoman, chairs, and stool; ashnyc.com. Custom table lamps by ASH NYC fabricated by Episode; episode.nyc. PAGES 128–29: In kitchen, Pierre Chapo dining table and Marcel Breuer chairs; 1stdibs.com. Custom pendants by ASH NYC fabricated by Episode; episode.nyc. 1970s wicker lamp; heywoodwakefield.com. PAGES 130–31: In primary bedroom, 1920s Italian alabaster lamps; 1stdibs.com. Canopy bed; rh.com. On walls, paint in Richmond Gold; benjamin-moore.com. In bath, tiles; completetile.com. Hand towels; dporthaultparis.com. In powder room, zellige tile; cletiles.com. 1960s Danish chair by Dirk Van Sliedregt; dienstanddotter.com. PAGE 132: Jacob Kjær sofa; dienstanddotter.com. PAGE 133: Circa 1760 Rococo mirror by Olaf Wetterberg; dienstanddotter .com. Persian rug; heirloombk.com. PAGE 134: Tub; penhaglion.com. Fittings; waterworks.com. PAGE 135: On walls, paint in Cedar Grove; benjamin-moore.com. Circa 1850 Norwegian Kubbestol chair; dienstanddotter.com.

FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS, ADDRESS CHANGES, ADJUSTMENTS, OR BACK ISSUE INQUIRIES: Please write to ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST, P.O. Box 37617, Boone, IA

37617-0617, call 800-365-8032, or email subscriptions@archdigest.com. Please give both new address and old address as printed on most recent label. SUBSCRIBERS: If the Post Office alerts us that your magazine is undeliverable, we have no further obligation unless we receive a corrected address within one year. If during your subscription term or up to one year after the magazine becomes undeliverable, you are ever dissatisfied with your subscription, let us know. You will receive a full refund on all unmailed issues. First copy of new subscription will be mailed within eight weeks after receipt of order. Address all editorial, business, and production correspondence to ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST, 1 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. FOR REPRINTS: Please email reprints@condenast.com or call Wright’s Media, 877-652-5295. For reuse permissions, please email contentlicensing@condenast .com or call 800-897-8666. Visit us online at archdigest.com.

Darryl Carter Inc.; darrylcarter.com. PAGES 138–39: In dining room,

custom table; darrylcarter.com. Medium Boa light fixtures; ralphpucci.com. PAGES 140–41: In kitchen, on cabinets, paint in All White; farrow-ball.com. Custom bar stools; darrylcarter.com. In living room, Île sectional sofa by Piero Lissoni for Living Divani from Progetti Design Studio; progettidesignstudio .com, in At Last in Mink; hollyhunt.com. Circa 1963 chairs by Geoffrey Harcourt; 1stdibs.com. PAGES 142–43: In garden, Loop chairs by Willy Guhl; 1stdibs.com. Cast resin Hemisphere table; mayfurniture.com. In bedroom, chair and ottoman in Magritte linen-blend in Wheat; knoll.com. Brazo floor lamp in white; ylighting.com. In bedroom, linen and cotton throw; rebeccaatwood .com. Custom cowhide rugs; kylebunting.com. Eames Aluminum Group Management chair, in MCL leather, in Pearl; hermanmiller.com. Circa 1970 Pierre Paulin lounge chair; 1stdibs.com, in taupe leather; spinneybeck.com. In media room, modular sectional sofa; progettidesignstudio.com. Pillows of velvet; kravet.com. HOME ON THE RANGE PAGES 144–155: Architecture by Selldorf Architects; selldorf.com. Interior design Jeffrey Bilhuber; jeffreybilhuberllc.com. Landscape design by Madison Cox Associates; madisoncox.com. PAGE 146: On custom sofa, Halford fabric in Flax; pindler.com. PAGE 147: Custom Arpa wicker chairs; bonacina1889.it. PAGES 150–51: In entertainment pavilion, Donald Judd daybed; judd.furniture. PAGE 152: In primary bedroom, on headboard, New Delhi cottonlinen; chapastextiles.com. Curtains of Gobi linen, in Neutral; pennymorrison.com.

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one to watch Simone Bodmer-Turner

When Simone Bodmer-Turner began experimenting with clay in 2014, as a creative outlet from her day job at a start-up, the artist fell in love with the process. “It’s so…quiet,” she half whispers during a recent visit to her sun-dappled Brooklyn studio. The work itself is equally hushed: soft, undulating shapes, glazed in a spectrum of dreamy whites. “I was so interested in form making that I put color on the back burner,” she notes of her signature restrained palette. Hand-built vessels made for the florist Saipua gave way to slip-cast series, allowing her to streamline her production process and become more ambitious in her fine-art practice. In 2019 she started experimenting with chairs, and one of her most recent, pictured, features a swooping, ever-so-slightly cantilevered seat. Early in the pandemic she created a gypsum wall in her studio that was loosely inspired by artist Valentine Schlegel. Now she’s working on several similar architectural interventions for private residences in New York and abroad. It all feeds her latest project: a solo show this month at New York City’s Matter gallery, where she will unveil a console, chairs, lights, and sculptures—most of it in clay. These days she doesn’t really see herself as a ceramist. Rather, she says, “The work is just sculpture and clay is the medium.” simonebodmerturner.com —HANNAH MARTIN

PHOTOGRA PHY BY T RE CREWS


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