
A house isn't anything remarkable until the paintings are A up. Until then you can decorate with all the most luxurious finishes, fabrics, and pieces of furniture available, but you will only have a showroom. I find this every time I install a project.
To me the relationship between art and interiors is a dance, one that should be more Fred and Ginger than either Tom and Jerry or Gilbert and George. The art and the interior need to complement one another, not fight or match. It's common to buy art around the same time that you are decorating a house, and it can be easy to find yourself buying to fit spaces. It's more important, though, that the art connects with you, rather than just fitting the house. The place to put it will come. If you're buying something so large that you need to identify the spot first, do so, but otherwise you must relate to it before the room does.
Recently I was working on a house in the Hamptons. My client and I had bought a large 1970s photograph of a beach in Rio de Janeiro for my client's wife, who is Brazilian. I intended for the picture to go in their bedroom. On the day we were hanging, however, it found its spot on a wall in the main living room over the bar. It was totally unplanned that the colors in the picture would sit so well in the space. That serendipity elevated the room from something pretty to something that sung. We can tie ourselves in knots trying to coordinate things, but the best outcomes are often with elements that work together but don't match.
この記事は Elle Decor US の March 2025 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は Elle Decor US の March 2025 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン

Architecture of Time
Surviving the gelid gusts and gales of winter takes more than a vicuña coat and shearling earmuffs, and the watch designers at Van Cleef & Arpels understand this well.

The Jewelry House
A marriage between two centers of Italian culture, history, and design, Milan and Venice, finding its purest expression in a jam jar? Stranger things have happened.

BIOGRAPHY OF A ROOM
COULD A TURN-OF-THE-CENTURY MANSION BE THE CRADLE OF retail's next gilded age?

ON TERRA INCOGNITA
NEW YORK ARTIST CAMILLE HENROT AND HER COMPOSER HUSBAND MAURO HERTIG PURSUE A CREATIVE FAMILY LIFE WHERE THEY LEAST EXPECTED ITUPTOWN WITH HELP FROM DESIGNERS HUSBAND WIFE.

PORTRAIT of a HOUSE
THE ICONIC HOUSES OF LOS ANGELES ARE MORE PRECIOUS THAN EVER. IN LOS FELIZ, TWO COLLECTORS MAINTAIN THEIR RICHARD NEUTRA HOME WITH REVERENCE FOR ITS PAST, WHILE FILLING IT WITH CONTEMPORARY ART THAT SPEAKS TO ITS FUTURE.

WANTED: A CLEAN, WELL LIGHTED PLACE
They need rooms of their own to sculpt and paint. But how do you find such places with today's Manhattan rents? A look at the state of an industry legend: the New York artist studio.

IMMERSIVE THEATER
A FASHION DESIGNER MOVED INTO A LAW OFFICE IN PARIS, THEN ENLISTED UCHRONIA TO REIMAGINE IT FROM TOP TO PALETTE. FROM THERE, THE PLOT THICKENS.

HERE'S THE PLAN
A FLORIDA COUPLE COMMISSIONS ROBERT A.M. STERN TO BUILD A MODERNIST HOUSE, THEN ENLISTS ELLIE CULLMAN TO DESIGN IT. FINAL TOUCH: MAJOR ART, FIT FOR A MASTERPIECE.

WELCOME to the MUNIZVERSE
FROM A GATHERING SPACE TO HIS ART STUDIO AND THE COCKTAIL BAR OF HIS DREAMS, BRAZILIAN CONCEPTUALIST VIK MUNIZ IS CREATING A CULTURAL HUB IN THE COLOR-DRENCHED CAPITAL OF BAHIA.

SHOULD THE MATISSE MATCH THE DRAPES?
In her new column, Rita Konig tackles modern design dilemmas, both practical and philosophical. To begin: the art of hanging art.