Architectural Digest USA - November 2023
Architectural Digest USA - November 2023
Architectural Digest USA - November 2023
THE TABLE
our ultimate guide
to entertaining
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16 AR C H D I GES T.COM
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CONTENTS
88
THE LIVING ROOM
OF A COUNTRY HOUSE
IN CONNECTICUT.
ARTWORK BY BILLIE
ZANGEWA GRACES
A NEW LOUIS
VUITTON HANDBAG.
ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST AND AD ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF ADVANCE MAGAZINE PUBLISHERS INC. COPYRIGHT © 2023 CONDÉ NAST. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. VOLUME 80, NO. 10. 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,
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20 A R C H D I GES T.COM
YOUR PROJECT
IS OUR PRIORITY
Our showrooms are designed to inspire, with bath,
kitchen and lighting choices from top brands curated in
beautiful, hands-on displays. From product selection to
delivery coordination, an industry expert will be there to
support your project every step of the way.
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AD it yourself FOR MORE SMART IDEAS VISIT
ARCHDIGEST.COM/AD-IT-YOURSELF
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Chef’s Kiss
Renovating his London apartment (page 128),
designer Bryan O’Sullivan finally got the kitchen of RINSE REPEAT
his dreams—a feat of bespoke oak cabinetry and O’SULLIVAN ALSO DOUBLED UP ON
DISHWASHERS, CONCEALING A
richly veined marble—in which to cook for friends PAIR BEHIND WOOD PANELING. FOR ALL
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1. STEPHEN KENT JOHNSON. 2. MATTHIEU SALVAING. 5. OBERTO GILI. 4. JAMES MCDONALD. ART: MARLENE DUMAS.
these pages. Indeed, November’s theme is “Reinventing Tradition,” and, far from
being a conventional affair, our featured spaces exude an exciting energy and a
decidedly contemporary blend of old and new.
Consider the 1863 Connecticut house on the cover, the retreat of influential
AD100 designer Giancarlo Valle and his wife, Jane Keltner de Valle, a former AD
editor. “The house was well-loved, and you could feel the good energy,” says Jane of
the New England classic. “It had an unimposing formality that we tried to maintain.”
In-demand designer Hugo Toro shares his slightly futuristic, superchic Paris apart-
ment, commenting of his modus operandi: “I like to engage with traces of the past,
as a way of preserving the soul of a place.” Also overseas, designer Bryan O’Sullivan
has set up his family in the Barbican, a Brutalist London landmark that he’s been
obsessed with since his student days. A sensitive
renovation of the Grade II–listed concrete beauty
ensued—“I’m all for preserving the past,” says
O’Sullivan, while noting that the old kitchen defi-
nitely needed to be updated for modern-day life.
He struck the balance perfectly. 5
6
In Brooklyn, an Italianate 1890s town
5. FRANK FRANCES. 6. WESTON WELLS.
24 A R C H D I GES T.COM
New York - Miami - Los Angeles
armani.com
object lesson THE STORY BEHIND AN ICONIC DESIGN
Bowled Over
The Castiglioni brothers’
midcentury “Mercedes of lamps”
is still cruising, decades later
HELENIO BARBETTA.
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1. ROMAS FOORD. ART: ENRICO DAVID. 2. UGO MULAS. 3. COURTESY OF FLOS. 4. WILLIAM WALDRON. 5. FONDAZIONE ACHILLE CASTIGLIONI.
3
5
4
AD VISITS
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 31
DISCOVERIES 1
3
O house of textile and fashion designers Peter
and Cecile D’Ascoli, candlelight and the full
moon glowed together as guests gathered
sur l’herbe for dinner. “It’s like dining at an
Indian Versailles,” remarked author William
Dalrymple over masala aubergines sprinkled with gunpowder
Sri Lankan pepper. In this verdant corner, tucked away from
the city’s hustle, the couple has realized something quietly
remarkable: a creative tour de force in the jostling landscape
of a country highly attuned to its cultural heritage.
Peter, an American expat, began his love affair with his
adopted homeland four decades ago, during a business trip to
the Punjabi city of Amritsar, among other sites. “We stayed
in the pilgrims’ quarters at the Golden Temple and ate at long
tables in the communal dining hall,” he recalls, crisp in a
white kurta. “All of this—and the many donkey carts, camels,
horses—seemed like a wonderland to me, having grown up
in prosaic Long Island.” (His wife is French.) After a five-year
stint working for Diane von Furstenberg in New York City,
life would eventually bring him back to India, where he had
a formative encounter with the textile doyen and elegant
Punjabi royal Martand “Mapu” Singh. “Mapu taught me so
much about the impact of Indian crafts on the wider world.”
Peter founded his atelier Talianna Studio in 2006, ensconc-
ing his young family—he and Cecile have two daughters—
rather snugly in a South Delhi apartment a decade ago. With
the business expanding, the family embarked on a new chapter,
looking for someplace “with our own fruit trees and a sense of
breathing out.” When they first visited Lal Kothi, they knew
MARK LUSCOMBE-WHYTE
B U T S H E A LWAY S M A D E A N entrance.
ENTERTAINING
HUDSON GRACE
FRENCH VINTAGE
SILVER FLATWARE;
$525 FOR A SET OF 12
SPOONS AND 12 FORKS.
HUDSONGRACESF.COM
PERFECT PAIRINGS
Blue-and-white treasures and classical
Scandinavian touches make for a dashing duo;
AGUA BY AGUA BENDITA
shown is a Connecticut home by Virginia Tupker.
x MISETTE HAND-
PAINTED CANDLES; $120
FOR A SET OF FOUR.
KIRNAZABETE.COM
LAGUNA~B STELLA GLASS
BY MARCANTONIO BRANDOLINI;
DIOR ROSE D’HIVER $193. LAGUNAB.COM
GLASS; $300. DIOR.COM
INTERIOR: ISABEL PARRA. STELLA GLASS: ENRICO FIORESE. ALL OTHER PRODUCTS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.
VITA KIN
PERIWINKLE TABLE
SET; $175 FOR
PLACEMAT, NAPKIN,
AND COASTER.
VITAKIN.COM
ROYAL DELFT
TULIP VASE;
$4,105. MODA
OPERANDI.COM
ROSE ROOM
COCKTAIL NAPKINS; ROMAN AND WILLIAMS
$65 FOR A SET OF THE LUNET LANTERN;
FOUR. ROSEROOM PRICE UPON REQUEST.
COLLECTION.COM RWGUILD.COM
38 A R C H D I G E S T.COM
DISCOVERIES IL BUCO VITA
BELLOCCHI TERRA-
CASA DE FOLKLORE x COTTA CASSEROLE;
TOAST SPLATTER FRUIT $275. ILBUCOVITA.COM
BOWL; $90. TOA.ST
MIKE PARRY
SLIPWARE LARGE
JUG; $132.
ABASK.COM
EARTH STUDIES
Ceramic finds, rustic charms, and organic hues
celebrate the beauty of Mother Nature. Shown is
a California cabin by Salmon Creek Studio.
LOUIS VUITTON
PORTA BRANCH OBJETS NOMADES
STITCH NAPKINS; $72 FLOWER CARAFE;
FOR A SET OF SIX. $710. LOUIS
PORTA-NYC.COM VUITTON.COM
HERMÈS METIERS
CHAIR; $7,400.
HERMES.COM
40 AR C H D I G E S T.COM
DISCOVERIES AQUAZZURA
CASA EMERALD &
TURQUOISE WHITE
WINE GLASSES;
$400 FOR A SET
IL BUCO VITA OF TWO.
CERAMIC ARTEMEST.COM
SARDINES BY
ANTONELLO RADI;
$95 EACH.
ILBUCOVITA.COM
GREGORY PARKINSON
SURROUND BLOCK-PRINTED
DOUBLE-FACE NAPKINS;
$220 FOR A SET OF SIX.
GREGORYPARKINSON.COM
STORIES OF ITALY
MACCHIA SU MACCHIA
IVORY & GREEN TUMBLERS;
$202 FOR A SET OF TWO.
STORIESOFITALY.COM
CABANA MOROCCAN
PLACEMAT; $40. CAROLINA IRVING &
CABANA DAUGHTERS GIGI GREEN
MAGAZINE.COM DINNER PLATE; $95.
CI-DAUGHTERS.COM
JAYSON HOME
SKIPPER JUG; $78.
JAYSONHOME.COM
42 A R C H D I GES T.COM
Designers, epicureans, and guests.
The French door that satisfies them all.
SignatureKitchenSuite.com
Copyright 2023© Signature Kitchen Suite, 111 Sylvan Ave., Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632. All rights reserved. “Signature Kitchen Suite” and the Signature Kitchen Suite logo are trademarks of Signature Kitchen Suite.
DISCOVERIES LA DOUBLEJ
LISA CORTI PERFETTO WINE
MASONITE GLASS; $820 FOR
PLACEMAT; $47. A SET OF FOUR.
LISACORTI.COM LADOUBLEJ.COM
LA SOUFFLERIE
AMOUR AVEC ANSE
VASE; $18.
NICKEYKEHOE.COM
SABRE PARIS
ICÔNE LILAC
SERVING SET; $92.
SABRE-PARIS.COM
BOUGIES LA FRANÇAISE
MAUVE DINNER CANDLES;
INTERIOR: BILLAL TARIGHT. OLIVE BRANCH: ZACH TROOST. ALL OTHER PRODUCTS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.
$27 FOR A SET OF 12.
PENTREATH-HALL.COM
CABANA HEXAGONAL
RAFFIA BASKET; $45.
CABANAMAGAZINE.COM
TORY BURCH
SCALLOPED COCKTAIL
LINEN NAPKINS;
$138 FOR A SET OF SIX.
TORYBURCH.COM
KELLY WEARSTLER x
SERAX ZUMA CAKE
STAND; $122.
KELLYWEARSTLER.COM
44 AR C H D I G E S T.COM
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1 2 3
LEE JOFA
Few brands are woven into the very fabric of interior design quite like Lee Jofa
ARTISTIC TRADITION and its noble tradition of fine textiles. Kravet celebrates this storied 200-year
200 YEARS STRONG legacy with the launch of the Lee Jofa 200 Collection, a bespoke line of textiles,
wallcovering, furniture, carpet, and accessories to honor the brand’s artisanal
history. While Lee Jofa has long been hailed for its sumptuous fabrics, tapestries,
1. A ROBUST SELECTION OF WALLCOVERING ACCOMPANIES THE and iconic prints, the 200 Collection showcases 16 archival patterns iterated in
TEXTILES, INCLUDING A FRESH SPIN ON HOLLYHOCK. CHAIR fresh colorways of printed fabrics, wovens, and embroideries.
PICTURED HERE IN CHINESE BROCADE.
The anniversary collection also introduces a finely crafted furniture line fabricated
2. LUXURY ACCESSORIES LIKE THROW PILLOWS ROUND OUT THE
in traditionalist fashion and a sophisticated assortment of hand-dyed area rugs
LIFESTYLE ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION.
from Lee Jofa Carpets. Long-standing fans of the brand will enjoy fresh
3. A JAVA JUNGLE PILLOW ATOP AN ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION colorways of the artisanally hand-block printed patterns Hollyhock and Tree of
CHAIR; A VIBRANT SHOW OF HISTORY AND STYLE AT THE BOSTON
Life, which will be available as printed wallcovering for the first time as well.
ATHENAEUM.
Traditional yet trendsetting, classic yet current, for two centuries, Lee Jofa has
4. VERSATILE CARPETING WAS DESIGNED TO CREATE A BEAUTIFUL
FOUNDATION FOR A LEE JOFA INTERIOR, COMPLEMENTING THE balanced a venerable heritage with inspired modernity. Discover this exclusive
TEXTILES PERFECTLY. mix of timeless favorites.
Photographed at The Boston Athenaeum
LEEJOFA.COM
STONE T H AT
STIRS
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b lis h e d 1 9 8
ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT
REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO
BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. RIVAGE BAL HARBOUR CONDOMINIUM IS DEVELOPED BY CARLTON TERRACE OWNER
LLC (“DEVELOPER”). THE COMPLETE OFFERING TERMS ARE IN A CPS-12 APPLICATION AVAILABLE FROM THE OFFEROR. FILE NO. CP23-0060
This offering is made only by the Developer’s Prospectus for the Condominium. Consult the Developer’s Prospectus for the proposed budget, terms, conditions,
specifications, fees, and Unit dimensions. Sketches, renderings, or photographs depicting use of space, design, furnishings, lifestyle, amenities, food services,
club services, rental services, hosting services, finishes, materials, fixtures, appliances, cabinetry, soffits, lighting, countertops, floor plans, or art are proposed
only, and the Developer reserves the right to modify or withdraw any or all of the same in its sole discretion. No specific view is guaranteed. No specific use of
space is guaranteed. Pursuant to license agreements, Developer has a right to use the trade names, marks, and logos of: (1) The Related Group; and (2) Two
Roads Development, each of which is a licensor. This is not intended to be an offer to sell, or solicitation of an offer to buy, Condominium Units to residents of any
jurisdiction where prohibited by law. 2023 © Carlton Terrace Owner LLC, with all rights reserved.
Mantels | Lighting | Furniture
London | Atlanta | Chicago | Los Angeles
A CENTURY OF STYLE
From editor-in-chief Amy Astley and Architectural Digest, AD at 100
FROM LEFT: ANTHONY COTSIFAS; JASON SCHMIDT; OBERTO GILI
Marc Jacobs, Jennifer Aniston, Diana Vreeland, India Mahdavi, Peter Marino,
Kelly Wearstler, Oscar Niemeyer, Axel Vervoordt, Frank Lloyd Wright, Elsie de Wolfe,
abramsbooks.com/AD100
DISCOVERIES
1. BILLIE ZANGEWA IN
HER JOHANNESBURG
STUDIO. 2. STUDIES FOR
HER PENGUIN CHARMS.
3. THE POOL BEING
EMBROIDERED. 4. LOUIS
VUITTON’S MONOGRAM
FLOWER. 5. ZANGEWA’S
NEW ARTYCAPUCINES
BAG FOR THE FRENCH
FASHION HOUSE.
2
ART SCENE
Strokes of Genius
Tapped by Louis Vuitton, Billie Zangewa
translates a cherished swimming scene
into the brand’s latest It bag 3
4
I
n her evocative silk collages, the South Africa–based artist Billie Zangewa
often mines everyday events—preparing a bottle for her child or taking a
shower, even just lounging on the sofa with a book. For the 2020 work The
Swimming Lesson, she revisited the weekly trips to the pool that she took
with her son, Mika. In it, a young boy sits along the water’s edge, juxtaposed
against a washed-out terra-cotta-color sky. “It was unfamiliar to him,” she
recalls of the emotional waves that accompanied those sessions. “I still think about
experience and use. It creates a more sculptural feel.” 1., 2. & 4. ULRICH KNOBLAUCH. 3. & 4. PIOTR STOKŁOSA.
58 A R C H D I GES T.COM
COMING SOON
RENOVATION
Tectonic Shift
To update a Manhattan loft,
3
F
or as long as Manhattan lofts have been livable,
savvy designers have delighted in the challenge of
putting their industrial bones to residential use.
Open layouts, after all, invite experimentation. It
was in that spirit that Michael K. Chen Architecture
(MKCA) approached the recent renovation of
a sprawling NoMad home. When his clients, a young couple
working in tech, bought the unit three years ago, it had
undergone only ad hoc updates by the previous owner, who
had lived there since the building’s conversion. “The loft was
so spectacular in terms of its proportions,” says Chen. But
as far as its fixtures, finishes, and floor plan were concerned,
he adds, “it was also nothing.”
To maintain its historic character while injecting warmth
and personality, MKCA set about breaking down the volume
into a functional but free-flowing scheme, with a second
bedroom and bathroom plus workspaces for husband and
wife. “Our idea was to treat the space as you would a landscape,
introducing features to navigate around,” explains Chen.
Architectural interventions, in other words, function as terrain,
BROOKE HOLM
60 A R C H D I GES T.COM
The frameless insulated sliding doors by Swiss manufacturer Sky-Frame blend naturally
into their surroundings, creating a seamless continuity between indoors and outdoors and
blurring the line between where the living space ends and the view begins. SKY-FRAME.COM
1
ment’s manufacturing past—from the hulking tempered-steel all help to make a beautiful space a functional space. And work,
exhaust hood to the powder-coated, perforated island. of course, is precisely what lofts have always been designed
The former took on a painterly, iridescent finish thanks to to do. —SAM COCHRAN
62 AR C H D I G E S T.COM
DISCOVERIES
DEBUT
D
1
uring their first
winter in the
Cotswolds, Miranda
Brooks and Bastien
Halard were met
not by glittering
hoarfrost and scenic drifting snow 2
3
but by one of the wettest seasons
on record. Rain poured, their 17th-
century stone house was damp,
and the freshly graded landscape
(a former dairy farm) was mud as
far as the eye could see. Despairing
that spring would ever come,
the AD100 Brooklyn expats—he
a French-born designer, she a
Hertfordshire lass turned garden
guru—fashioned a creative escape:
conjuring up flowered fabrics
that would be used on their own
outdoor furniture.
“I figured that chintz would
give me an instant garden whilst
waiting for everything to grow,” says Brooks. What they
intended for their own use, though, is now being introduced
to the public under the couple’s Catswood brand, named for
the house where they live with their two teenage daughters.
4
The five patterns offer all the botanical bounty that they
1. TABLECLOTH OF GREEN
hoped for, the motifs and colors adapted from vintage and TREE PEONY, ONE OF
antique documents. Roses bloom, leaves unfurl, and butter- CATSWOOD DESIGN’S FIVE
NEW OUTDOOR FABRIC
flies flit, joined by coordinating stripes with their roots in PATTERNS. 2. AN UMBRELLA
ikats and tickings. AND LOUNGE CHAIR
IN YELLOW ROSE CHINTZ
“It’s easy to find chic outdoor fabrics, but not decorative WITH CUCKOO, ONE
ones,” explains Halard, a scion of the family that founded OF THE FAMILY’S DOGS.
3. A PICNIC SET WITH
the influential French textile firm Nobilis. Especially, his wife PILLOWS IN BOBBLY RIBBON.
points out, fabrics made of invitingly soft synthetic fibers 4. CUSHIONS IN RED
ROSE CHINTZ WITH FINE-
(stain-proof, mold-proof, and water-resistant) that hold up FEATHERED FRIENDS.
against the kind of weather that sparked that winter project
in the first place. “I wanted natural dyes, not carcinogenic
coatings,” Brooks says. “I don’t want to lie on something toxic.”
That includes the flouncy skirted sofa that stretches across
LOTTIE HAMPSON
64 A R C H D I GES T.COM
sixpenny.com
DISCOVERIES 1
CRAFT
MOMENTS OF REFLECTION
Jamb, the British purveyor of antique
and reproduction chimneypieces, lighting,
and furniture, appreciates a good patina.
So naturally its new line of mirrors had
to shine just so. Set in aged frames—
some based on early-19th-century English
examples, others after Queen Anne
originals—the glass has been distressed to
replicate the mottled foxing of timeworn
panes. Above a mantel, they’ll sparkle all
the brighter. jamb.co.uk —SAM COCHRAN
RIGHT: JAMB’S GILTWOOD GOODISON MIRROR.
66 AR C H D I GES T.COM
DISCOVERIES
JEWELRY
SNAKE EYES
It was in 1948 that a
snake first slithered
around Bulgari’s elegant
wrist, appearing in
the Serpenti collection of
jewelry watches. Later
interpretations followed,
often marked by
increasingly intricate and
1
stylized feats of craft.
1. A GLASS-WALLED BEDROOM AT Today, in celebration of
THE NEW ONE&ONLY AESTHESIS RESORT
OUTSIDE ATHENS. 2. THE LAWN the motif’s 75th
OF A VILLA STEPS TOWARD THE SEA. anniversary, the Italian
luxury brand has released
a series of new Serpenti
treasures, among them
this glittering bracelet in
pink gold, diamonds,
and emeralds. Price upon
request; bulgari.com
—SAM COCHRAN
HOTEL
Greek Mythology
In the 1950s and ’60s, the Athenian Riviera came to epitomize Greek glamour 1. & 2. ONE&ONLY RESORTS. JEWELRY: COURTESY OF BULGARI.
thanks to the beach homes that society swans and patrician families strung,
jewellike, along this 40-mile stretch of Aegean Sea. While time later swept away
much of the region’s charms, the past few years have seen the area’s revival,
with sparkling new resorts, beach clubs, restaurants, and parks popping up
among the palms and cypresses. The One&Only Aesthesis hotel, opening
this winter, leans into that nostalgia. Set in the tony enclave of Glyfada, about
30 minutes from central Athens, the complex spans rectangular bungalows,
villas, and a spaceship-like midcentury main building—all set amid fragrant
pine trees and vibrant lavender. Nature played a big role when conceptualizing
the interiors. (It’s also within a 52-acre forest reserve.) “We used local volcanic
stone, oak timber, naturally woven fabrics, and marble quarried from the island
of Thásos,” says Inge Moore, cofounder and principal of the London-based
studio Muza Lab, which designed all 127 accommodations (rooms, bungalows,
residences, and villas) in collaboration with the Greek architecture firms
K-Studio, Audo, and A6Architects. Rooms were conceived to maximize natural
light, with multiple sliding window walls to let in cool sea breezes. Adds Moore:
“It’s all about immersing guests in this spectacular beauty.”
oneandonlyresorts.com —JOHN WOGAN
68 A R C H D I GES T.COM
Credit approval required. Terms apply. See capitalone.com for details.
DISCOVERIES
2
DESIGN
Light Hearted
In his new Brooklyn
studio, ceramist
series of lovable lamps
T
hey’re like characters,” says ceramic
artist Jeremy Anderson, examining a
parted ways a few years ago. “Working with clay is kind of a with a ceiling draped in linen, shoji-inspired doors, and rustic
lesson in life,” he muses. “You can’t get too attached to anything wood seating, the studio is a fitting backdrop for Anderson’s
because something can always go wrong in the process.” Just intuitive process. “There’s flexibility and freedom in the
the day before, he opened the kiln to discover that multiple making,” he explains. “But ultimately all the pieces have to
pieces had fused together or collapsed. But from those failures fit together.” jeremy-anderson.com —HANNAH MARTIN
70 A R C H D I GES T.COM
E L LY S U H , V I O L I N I S T & F L O R I A N L E O N H A R D , V I O L I N M A K E R
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with the launch of BR Home, a new
furnishings line that celebrates natural
materials, a global spirit, and local hand-
craft. Tactile wool rugs, for instance, are
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Three years after Tory Burch
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the fashion icon and the late
AD100 maestro’s studio
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3
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man who “made everything
1
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72 A R C H D I G E S T.COM
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e treat everything here
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or lack of respect,” says
74 AR C H D I GES T.COM
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the
august English writer and critic Samuel Johnson once opined,
“The two most engaging powers of an author are to make new
things familiar and familiar things new.” Johnson’s maxim
personal passions, and the spirit of their young family. It is
also a testament to the twin virtues of innovation and restraint,
inspiration and ease.
The site for the Valles’ adroit balancing act is a stalwart
1863 house, painted crisp white with dark green shutters,
which once served as a parsonage for the town’s historic Greek
Revival church. Trim and subdued, the original, essentially
cubic structure has a wood-paneled living room added in the
1920s and a kitchen extension built in the 1970s. “We loved the
ART: MATTHIAS MERKEL HESS
finds eloquent expression in the captivating Connecticut home proportions. It felt very modern in its simplicity. It’s gracious,
of Jane Keltner de Valle, cofounder of children’s skin care line but not in an overdone kind of way—elegance without the frills,”
Paloroma (and AD’s former style director), and her husband, Giancarlo says of the home’s appeal. “The house was well-
AD100 designer Giancarlo Valle. Together, the dynamic couple loved, and you could feel the good energy,” adds Jane. “It had
have conjured a vision of classic New England charm animated an unimposing formality that we tried to maintain. Even as
by a wholly contemporary spirit—a marriage of the familiar we put our own stamp on it, we wanted the house to remain
and the novel that speaks to their professional pedigrees, their as it has always been.”
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 91
MAKEUP BY JOSEPH CARRILLO; ART: ANASTASIA BAY
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 93
JULIA B. CASA CHAIRS
SURROUND AN ANTIQUE
MILLSTONE TABLE
BENEATH A TOWERING
MAPLE IN THE GARDEN.
LANDSCAPE DESIGN BY
KTISMASTUDIO.
STUDIO GIANCARLO VALLE’S PALOMA MIRROR ADORNS DAUGHTER PALOMA’S BEDROOM. ROMAN SHADES IN MAHARAM FABRIC,
QUILT FROM PAULA RUBENSTEIN, CHARVET EDITIONS BEDSPREAD FROM JOHN DERIAN.
That meant no anachronistic Pilates studio or open-plan CONTRIBUTIONS BY FRIENDS AND COLLEAGUES underscore
kitchen, no hammam, and no marble-clad bathroom large the feeling that the renovation is truly a family affair. Designer
enough to host an ice cream social. Yet within the house’s rooms, Minjae Kim, who once worked in Giancarlo’s studio, is rep-
the couple teased a palpable sense of wonder and delight resented by wood benches he fashioned for the couple’s two
through discreet decorative gestures that put an entirely new children, one inscribed “PV” for daughter Paloma and the
complexion on the traditional architecture. Naturally, exam- other “RV” for their son, Roman. The work of designers Aaron
ples of Giancarlo’s own furniture designs buoy the winsome Aujla and Benjamin Bloomstein of Green River Project, fellow
ambience: the toothsome chunkiness of his dining room members of the AD100, appears throughout the house, notably
sideboard; the insouciant curves of his living room sofa; and in the signature raffia-festooned club chairs that enliven the
the custom kitchen island inlaid with delft tiles, to name just living room, and the dining room table incised with an outline
a few. In the primary bedroom and bath suite, he added of the Green River in upstate New York, which meanders
attenuated, branch-form columns that introduce a note of through Bloomstein’s family property. (“The kids use it as a
fairy-tale forest magic to the sprightly mix. track for marbles,” Jane offers.) The dining room walls are
Many of the pieces were crafted in a makeshift woodshop adorned with medallions by ceramist Matt Merkel Hess, rep-
set up in the garage, including a series of boxy sconces resenting local flora and fauna, including moths, leaves, horses,
knocked up from scrap wood. “Fabricating things on-site made birds, acorns, and even ticks, the scourge of Connecticut.
them feel even more special and connected to the life of the Of course, Jane’s incisive eye and deft touch are unmistak-
house,” the designer notes. “My dream is to turn our dilapi- able in the house’s sophisticated color palette, the chic yet
dated barn into a proper woodshop and guesthouse, but that’s unpretentious fabrics and finishes, and the array of antiques
going to have to wait until we catch our breath.” and vintage treasures, many collected from local shops and
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 95
ROMAN’S BEDROOM HAS A
CUSTOM DAYBED AND A
SCHOOLHOUSE TABLE LAMP.
ABOVE A PLATEAU LAMP (LEFT)
BY STUDIO GIANCARLO VALLE
AND NATALIE WEINBERGER IS
JOINED BY PIERRE PAULIN
CHAIRS AND A CUSTOM SOFA
AND SCONCE IN THE DEN. THE
LINEN-WRAPPED COCKTAIL
TABLE IS FROM THE ESTATE OF
MARIO BUATTA. THE LARGE
PAINTING IS BY LANDON METZ.
ABOVE THE PRIMARY BEDROOM IS FURNISHED
WITH STUDIO GIANCARLO VALLE BEDSIDE TABLES,
A MINJAE KIM BENCH, PAAVO TYNELL SCONCES,
A PIERRE JEANNERET CHAIR, A GIANCARLO VALLE
FOR NORDIC KNOTS RUG, AND ROMAN SHADES
OF ZAK+FOX FABRIC. RIGHT IN THE LIVING ROOM,
A JEAN PROUVÉ SWING-ARM LAMP SURMOUNTS
A PIERRE JEANNERET DESK AND CHAIR.
© 2023 THE LARRY T. CLEMONS COLLECTION / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.
ART: © 2023 LANDON METZ / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.
LINEN NAPKINS
BY CHARVET EDITIONS;
TAPESTRY DAYBED; $172 FOR A SET OF SIX.
PRICE UPON REQUEST. JOHNDERIAN.COM
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SIDNIE LAMP;
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BENGALI COTTON BY
BRAQUENIÉ; TO THE
TRADE. PIERREFREY.COM
MELIN TREGWYNT
WELSH BLANKET;
$305. US.TOA.ST
SMOOTH SAILING
GENTLE CLEANSING
BAR; $12.
PALOROMA.COM
BIG COLLINA
SMALL VASE
BY GAETANO
PESCE FOR
CORSI DESIGN
FACTORY; $355.
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P ROD U C ED BY M AD ELI NE O ’ M A L L E Y
IN THE COUNTRY
BY INGE MORATH AND
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overdosed on marble
trophy kitchens.” SENTEI GARDEN
SCISSORS BY NIWAKI; $35.
—Jane Keltner de Valle GOODEEWORLD.COM
BUTAQUE CHAIR
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OBJETS NOMADES
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ARCH DI G E S T. CO M 101
IN THE PRIMARY BEDROOM,
A BESPOKE BED IS DRAPED
IN A CLAREMONT SILK TAFFETA.
THE CURTAINS, INSPIRED BY
A PERIOD ROOM IN NEW YORK’S
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF
ART, ARE OF THE SAME FABRIC.
CHILDREN’S PORTRAITS BY
JULIA CONDON ARE DISPLAYED
ON A GUSTAVIAN-STYLE
ART: JULIA CONDON
REMARKABLY, SIEBER DECORATED the entire residence Sieber was born in Vienna and raised in stately homes
herself. But unlike her work as a stylist, which sees her there and in the mountains that were always picture-perfect.
dressing other people, she has no desire to decorate beyond “They were very formal spaces, with a lot of things that we
her own interiors. She says she “wouldn’t dare” to do it weren’t allowed to touch or come near to as children,” she says.
professionally. “The house is decorated for us and to suit “I wanted our house to be accessible, unforced and not too
the way we live, the decoration is intuitive and personal. precious. Everything in it serves a purpose.”
I so enjoyed doing it.” She spent a year at the Sorbonne in Paris and then enrolled
Similar to fashion work, her design process included in the European Business School London, where she received
scrupulous research and cataloging. The window treatments her MBA. Did a business degree help coordinate contractors,
in the primary bedroom copy designs in a period room at builders, movers, and upholsterers? “Let’s just say it has come
New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, which she photo- in handy many times,” she deadpans.
graphed on her phone and saved for years until she could have She met von Westenholz not long after moving to London
them made for her own home. The curtains in the drawing two decades ago, and they were married in 2013. (Her wedding
room replicate those in Pauline de Rothschild’s London dress was Chanel Haute Couture, designed by Karl Lagerfeld.)
apartment. Inspired by Horst P. Horst portraits in archive They have two girls, Electra, seven, and Cleopatra, five, and a
issues of Vogue, the breakfast room is covered in Soane three-year-old son called Balthazar. “We thought they sounded
Britain wallpaper with window shades in the same pattern. like superhero names,” she says. “I knew when I was six that
She stalked auctions, including Christie’s, Sotheby’s, Stair should I have a son he would be called Balthazar. Fritz took
Galleries, and Dorotheum in Vienna. some convincing.”
ARCH DI G E S T. CO M 107
THE PRIMARY BATH IS
OUTFITTED WITH
WATERWORKS FIXTURES
AND TILE. SOANE BRITAIN
SCONCES; A 1940s ANTIQUE
TABLE FROM PARIS.
“The house is
decorated for us and
to suit the way
we live,” says Sieber.
“The decoration
is intuitive
and personal.”
ARC H DI G E S T. CO M 109
“I wanted our house
to be accessible,
unforced and not too
precious. Everything
in it serves a purpose.”
ELECTRA AND
CLEOPATRA’S BEDROOM
FEATURES CUSTOM
CANOPY BEDS DRAPED
WITH D. PORTHAULT’S
TRÈFLES. OPPOSITE THE
GARDEN WAS DESIGNED
BY MILAN HAJSINEK.
design notes THE DETAILS THAT MAKE THE LOOK
BATIK COTTON
BY LE MANACH;
TO THE TRADE.
A GUEST ROOM PIERREFREY.COM
FEATURES A BED
TENTED WITH
LE MANACH FABRICS
AND DRESSED IN
D. PORTHAULT BEDDING.
TRÈFLES BOUDOIR
SHAM; $295.
DPORTHAULT
PARIS.COM
ROUND BASKET;
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Just as I am drawn
to a more timeless style in
fashion, this also resonates
with my taste in interiors.”
FRAISIER CARPET BY
MADELEINE CASTAING
JARDIN MIRROR; $2,150. FOR CODIMAT
BUNNYWILLIAMSHOME.COM COLLECTION; PRICE
UPON REQUEST.
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PILASTRO TABLE
LAMP WITH AMBI
LAMPSHADE BY OKA x
CABANA; $490 AS
SHOWN. OKA.COM
112 AR C H D IG E S T.COM
P ROD U C ED BY M AD ELI NE O ’ M A L L E Y
THE PETAL WALL
LIGHT; FROM
$1,875. SOANE.COM
POTTED PAPER
DELPHINIUM BY
THE GREEN
VASE; $460.
JOHNDERIAN.COM
I constantly
roam the
house with a
mission
to declutter.”
HAMPTON SMALL CHANDELIER
BY AERIN FOR VISUAL
COMFORT; $739. AERIN.COM
IN THE LIVING ROOM,
A MURANO GLASS SCONCE
HANGS ABOVE A VINTAGE
COCONUT LAMP, TURNTABLE,
AND THE ANDY WARHOL–
DESIGNED COVER OF DIANA
ROSS’S 1982 ALBUM, SILK
ELECTRIC, ON A SHELF NEXT TO
BESPOKE LACQUERED ZIRICOTE
CABINETRY. OPPOSITE HUGO
TORO DESIGNED THE LIVING
ROOM’S CURVING SOFA, WHICH
WEARS A PIERRE FREY VELVET.
VINTAGE COPPER SCONCES
FLANK A FRAMED MOROCCAN
HORSE SADDLE. 1970s
COCKTAIL TABLE; CUSTOM
CARPET BY ÉDITION 1.6.9.
the suite life
THE VISUAL ARTS, INC. / LICENSED BY ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK
ART: © 2023 THE ANDY WARHOL FOUNDATION FOR
ARC H DI G E S T. CO M 115
w hen Hugo Toro
first saw his
new apartment
the 1960s and ’70s, and he was drawn to the floral pattern on
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 117
ABOVE LEFT IN THE AND M ÉDITIONS;
BATH, BRECCIA SIENA MERMAID SCULPTURE BY
MARBLE CLADS THE TUB, HENRY PARAYRE FROM
AND THE NICHE IS GALERIE PATRICK FOURTIN.
COVERED IN FLUTED TILE ABOVE RIGHT A VINTAGE
BY CÉRAMIQUES DU LAMP AND BRUTALIST provides indirect light. In this apartment, wood is also used
BEAUJOLAIS. TRAVERTINE MIRROR SOURCED AT A
SIDE TABLE FROM TORO’S FLEA MARKET HANG to striking effect, with three different species—walnut, sweet
AMANECER COLLECTION ABOVE A CUSTOM TORO- gum, and ziricote—employed to provide contrast.
FOR KOLKHOZE GALLERY DESIGNED SINK.
Toro also designed much of the furniture himself, punctu-
ating the space with travertine pieces from his new Amanecer
collection, created with Kolkhoze gallery and M Éditions. In
have since been refinished in a custom limewash, Toro notes, the bedroom, the angled niche above the bed adds a surprising
adding, “I like to engage with traces of the past, as a way of element. “I wanted to achieve a hotel feel, but at the same time
preserving the soul of a place.” He continues, “Both lacquer follow a more Brutalist approach,” he notes. “Here, it’s almost
and bold color are less common in apartments, but I use them like a temple or Batman’s lair in his villa…only more exotic.”
regularly in my hotel and restaurant projects. Clients don’t He also worked extensively with curves to counterbalance the
come to me looking for beige and gray.” rectilinear aspect of the apartment, smoothing the transitions
While admitting that it’s important to find the right balance, between spaces as well as materials and volumes. “I like
“I don’t think you get tired of colors,” he asserts. “But I’d rather accidents,” he confesses. “I’m neither a maximalist nor a
get tired of a color than not take any risks.” With the apart- minimalist; I like living architecture.”
ment’s nine-foot-high ceilings, the lacquer also helped to instill
a sense of verticality to the space, while its play of reflections (Translated from French by John Newton.)
118 AR C H D IG E S T.COM
“I don’t think you get
tired of colors.
But I’d rather get tired
of a color than
not take any risks.”
I sensed it
the moment
I crossed
the threshold.
The soaring archways and streaming light reminded me of
the architecture of Tunisia, where my father is from, and it
on three continents by age 12. At 22, I was diagnosed with an
aggressive form of leukemia, and for the next few years,
the grim fluorescence of a hospital was my primary dwelling.
immediately felt like home. Eager as we were to put down roots, we had a long road
Jon and I had been looking to buy our first place for months. ahead. A peek behind the walls revealed a gut renovation was
We’d seen close to 70 properties, but none fit our specifications needed. Friends regaled us with tales of couples who’d been
of a space where we could both live and create. Jon needs sundered by similar projects, and we soon understood why.
the freedom to explore making sounds and congregate with Suddenly we were faced with decisions around budget, collab-
fellow musicians. As a writer, I need total silence and solitude. orative dynamics, and division of labor like never before.
Touring the 1890s Brooklyn Italianate, I saw that the thick We also had to find a way to merge our tastes, lifestyles, and
walls and large, atmospheric rooms could hold both. I called visions for the future in both symbolic and pragmatic ways—
Jon, who was on the road, to say I’d found the One. In a leap and let me tell you, pragmatism is not a strong suit for either of
of faith, he made an offer, sight unseen. us. I wanted to preserve and restore every decaying tin ceiling—
Until then, home for both of us had been makeshift and to fill the house with one-of-a-kind salvaged objects, each with
fleeting. Jon’s 20s were spent traveling with his band and a whimsical backstory, including a vintage elephant-shape bar
bouncing between disparate creative projects, with layovers and a taxidermied peacock that became the topic of fraught
in a small Washington Heights apartment, where he dined debate. Jon had his own outrageous dreams, like a yellow brick
on canned beans each night surrounded by suitcases. When road running through the garden, and for a while, a Mardi
he played piano (noon or night) his neighbors would bring Gras theme: everything furnished in purple, gold, and green.
out the broomstick and get to banging. For me, a child of My diplomatic reply was an upbeat: “That sounds great… for
immigrants, home always felt elusive. I attended six schools your recording studio!”
ARC H DI G E S T. CO M 123
“The vision for the
house was deeply tied to
who Jon and I are as
humans—to our creativity
and our lineage.”
THE PRIMARY BATH FEATURES A CAST-IRON TUB BY BARCLAY PRODUCTS WITH WATERWORKS FITTINGS.
BESPOKE PENDANT LIGHT BY APPARATUS; WALLS IN PLASTER FINISHES BY PORTOLA PAINTS.
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE GUCCI’S A CORNER OF THE PRIMARY
LILLIES WALLPAPER HIGHLIGHTS BEDROOM. IN THE CALIFORNIA
A WALL OF THE STUDIO LOUNGE. CLOSETS–DESIGNED DRESSING
MOROCCAN-INSPIRED TABLE ROOM, A TÊTE-À-TÊTE BY JOHN
FROM QUITTNER, A 1940s FRENCH DERIAN FOR CISCO BROTHERS
FLOOR LAMP, AND A VINTAGE STANDS ON A VINTAGE WOOL
LEATHER CHAISE LONGUE FURNISH OUSHAK RUG FROM NICKEY KEHOE.
BUT IN TIME, A SHARED AESTHETIC LANGUAGE EMERGED.
With the invaluable help of our friend, the writer and designer
Hallie Goodman, who became my collaborator on the interiors,
we achieved a balance. Hallie and I both love all things thrifted,
and we developed an unconventional, possibly inefficient,
but powerfully organic process. We’d find one object, say on
Facebook Marketplace or in a flea market, and it would lead to
one idea and then another. Gradually a room would coalesce.
The vision for the house was deeply tied to who Jon and I
are as humans—to our creativity and our lineage. We began to
meld Tunisia and New Orleans into a style we call “Tunisiana,”
an homage to our shared Francophone and African roots. We
wanted a home that felt soulful, timeless, and elegant, with a
playful twist.
It’s there in the poetry of the arches and curves of the
millwork. It’s there in the contrast between white lime-
washed walls and those drenched in color. The pink kitchen,
inspired by the New Orleanian love of saturated hues, pairs
perfectly with the blue Tunisian tile backsplash. (The tiles
were made by my friend, Mokhtar Lahmar, who hand-makes
and paints each tile in a garage turned atelier in the seaside
town of Nabeul.) It’s in the 19th-century beaded Moroccan
light in our bedroom, and the giant, drippy chandelier in the
living room made of upcycled water bottles by artist Willie
Cole. It’s in the art, which ranges from paintings by my Swiss
mother, Anne Francey, to the Haitian American artist Patrick
Eugène, to my grandfather’s collection of vintage posters. It’s
in the traditional Parisian furnishings and the North African
pottery, textiles, and rugs, collected over a lifetime of trips hospital for my second bone marrow transplant, we got mar-
back to the fatherland. ried in the living room in an intimate, impromptu ceremony.
Striking this balance wasn’t seamless. At times we found The house was mid-construction, but Hallie had the first
ourselves at a stylistic impasse, though often those yielded floor swept free of debris and filled with flowers and candles.
absurdly humorous exchanges. Once I fell in love with a pair We served fried chicken sandwiches and champagne to the
of vintage Poliedri sconces, made up of smoky Murano glass handful of guests who joined us, and Jon serenaded me on a
polyhedrons. I thought they were weird and beautiful, like grand piano that he’d rented just for the night. It felt like an
sexy, moody dinosaur jewelry. I texted Jon a photo, certain act of defiance, to make a promise to our future life in that
he would love them too. He responded: “Like an enemy space, a wager that all the hopes contained there would come
starship descending upon earth, with several ports to launch to pass—to say, “We will be here. We will live here.” It was
flames and laser beams through.” Then, “they look like trash another leap of faith.
hanging on the wall, or a fungal growth.” And then later, “I To have cancer is to live for the next deadline. You have to
feel assaulted by this design. But if you want them, go for it.”get through this chemo protocol, survive this procedure, get
With that, I let the sconces go—though light became a to this milestone. But the biggest goal for me was making it to
guiding principle for us. Once, in reference to a lamp, Jon saidthis new home. For years now, I’ve relied on a creative practice
in an exaggerated fashion, “Now this light is healing!” It to navigate illness by alchemizing life’s interruptions into
cracked us up, and we put it on repeat. About anything that we something beautiful, and this time was no different. I spent
loved, anything that was beautiful and life-giving, we’d say, the next two months in the hospital doing two things. The first
“This is healing.” was painting watercolors of one fever dream after another,
like a self-portrait with a giraffe as my IV pole. The second was
THOSE WORDS TOOK ON A NEW TIMBRE and became a more scouring the internet for delightfully imperfect objects to
literal guiding principle last winter when I learned that after make our house completely our own.
a decade-long remission, my leukemia was back. A relapse so I entered the hospital in winter. The day I was discharged
far out is extremely rare, and my chances of survival were slim. was sunny and fully spring. I was weak, in need of a walker to
At that point, we could easily have put the renovation on get around, but I was so happy and relieved. As Jon and I made
pause, or dropped it altogether. Instead, we doubled down— our way through the house, I had tears in my eyes—not just
as Jon said, we had a plan, and we were not going to let cancer because it far exceeded our expectations. We had finally made
derail it. On February 5, 2022, the night before I entered the it home.
MARKEY ROBINSON © 2323 ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK / DACS, LONDON. © ANNIE MORRIS. ALAN RAGGETT.
ART: TREVOR PRICE. COLM MAC ATHLAOICH. PETROS KOUBLIS.
ARC H DI G E S T. CO M 131
IN THE KITCHEN, SURFACES
OF RICHLY FIGURED MARBLE
COMPLEMENT CUSTOM
CABINETRY IN THE SPIRIT OF
LE CORBUSIER; STOOLS BY
O’SULLIVAN. OPPOSITE THE
DINING AREA’S PENDANT LIGHT,
TABLE, AND CHAIRS ARE ALL
FROM O’SULLIVAN’S DEBUT
COLLECTION OF FURNITURE;
UPHOLSTERY FABRIC
BY CLAIRE DE QUÉNETAIN.
vegetables and mother-of-pearl psychedelic mushrooms) to always get a sunset,” notes O’Neill. “At magic hour the whole
the entry’s starburst mirror. Both pieces are part of O’Sullivan’s apartment seems bathed in honey. It feels like a real retreat
debut furniture collection, which elegantly blends bygone up in the clouds.” Adds O’Sullivan, still awestruck: “You can
glamour with present-day pizzazz. see everything.”
134 A R C H D IG E S T.COM
“Our goal was to counterbalance
all that concrete, to make the
spaces feel as uplifting as possible.”
THE GUEST BATH IS LINED IN CIPOLLINO MARBLE, WITH A MATCHING SINK CARVED
FROM A SINGLE BLOCK OF STONE; FITTINGS BY WATERWORKS.
design notes THE DETAILS THAT MAKE THE LOOK
EMMETT
ANTIQUE BRASS
TAPER CANDLE
HOLDER; FROM
$30. CRATEAND
BARREL.COM
CIPOLLINO MARBLE
ENVELOPS THE GUEST BATH.
CUSTOM GRAY ONYX BASIN;
WATERWORKS FITTINGS.
MACAROON
ARMCHAIR; $6,640.
BRYANOSULLIVAN.COM
JELLYFISH MIRROR;
$55,840.
BRYANOSULLIVAN.COM
RAINBOW SWIRL
SHOT GLASS BY
AQUAZZURA CASA;
$161 FOR A SET
OF TWO. MATCHES
FASHION.COM
BEMBO CREDENZA;
PRICE UPON REQUEST.
ORIORFURNITURE.COM
ALESSI STERLING
SILVER KETTLE BY
MARIANNE BRANDT;
PRICE UPON REQUEST.
SHOP.NEUEGALERIE.COM
MASER. NANA SHIOMI. ALL PRODUCTS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.
We get to live
in a space that
is finished to the AN AURA MIRROR BY BRYAN
level of one O’SULLIVAN COLLECTION
HANGS ABOVE A BESPOKE
of our projects.” GLASS CONSOLE IN THE
ENTRANCE HALL. ARTWORK
—James O’Neill BY CORMAC BOYDELL.
Super Soaker
“There must be quite a few things a hot bath won’t own hand-painted mural depicting figures from
cure, but I don’t know many of them,” Sylvia Plath Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling. (Seen here are
wrote in The Bell Jar. Granted the writer was hardly the Delphic Sibyl and the Prophet Ezekiel.) Hicks,
the Gwyneth Paltrow of her day, but in this case who crafts similar feats for clients, surmounted those
her wellness tip bears out—a good bath is indeed scenes with his vision of Bertel Thorvaldsen’s frieze
good for the soul. Just ask Ashley Hicks, the puckish of Alexander the Great’s triumphant entry into Babylon,
designer, artist, and son of the legendary arbiter rendered to simulate terra-cotta. Images of flowers
elegantiae David Hicks. At his home in Oxfordshire, leaven the classical pageantry with lyrical notes from
England, hard by the famous garden his father the garden. The tub is encased in his signature resin-
ASHLEY HICKS
cultivated on the family’s country estate, Hicks has foam boulders, and the floor is painted to resemble
crafted an idiosyncratic marvel of ablutionary terrazzo. “I love to read in the bath, being glared at by
splendor. The walls of the hexagonal room, formerly these stern apparitions,” says the designer.
a storage space, are wrapped in the designer’s ashleyhicks.com —MAYER RUS
NEW YORK
Q U E S T R O YA L F I N E A RT, L L C
Important American Paintings
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