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ELLE-DECOR-JET-SET Style

Published by shazi_sz, 2014-07-03 00:22:47

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JET-SET Style EXTRAORDINARY HOMES IN PARIS, ROME, MARRAKECH, AND BEYOND THE ALLURE OF THE LOIRE VALLEY Global Chic!

Breguet, the innovator. The first wristwatch, 1810 In tribute to the first wristwatch created between 1810 and 1812 for the Queen of Naples, Breguet reinvents the ladies’ watch in a classic case with a contemporary profile. The various models in the Reine de Naples collection radiate a refined blend of expertise, elegance and precious materials, lending their aesthetic backdrop to an array of horological complications, art and jewellery. History is still being written ... www.breguet.com/inventions

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Freshness above all.

Dual refrigeration keeps food fresher longer, in a refrigerator that itself lasts longer. Every Sub-Zero product is individually tested for exceptionally long life–not just years but decades. As long as there is Sub-Zero, food will have a delicious future. subzero.com

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DESIGN PORTRAIT.

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PROMOTION HAPPENINGS Francois Sulic, head of marketing, Gloster; Barbara Friedmann, Bunny Williams, interior designer; Jim Druckman, president Christian Darnaud-Maroselli, co-founder, Jean de Merry; Michael VP, publisher & chief revenue offi cer, ELLE DECOR; Joanne and CEO, New York Design Center. Photo: Sylvain Gaboury/ Boodro, editor in chief, ELLE DECOR; Jean de Merry, co-founder, Medeiros, western U.S. regional sales director, ELLE DECOR. PatrickMcMullan.com. Jean de Merry. GLOSTER CELEBRATES BELLA KIPS BAY CELEBRATES JEAN DE MERRY CELEBRATES OUTDOOR COLLECTION THE BEST IN DESIGN NEW CHICAGO SHOWROOM Editor in chief Michael Boodro and Gloster Industry professionals and design enthusiasts Editor in chief Michael Boodro cohosted an hosted a cocktail event to celebrate the gathered to celebrate the opening of the 41st event to celebrate the grand opening of the launch of the brand’s new Bella Outdoor Annual Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Decorator Jean de Merry Showroom on the Merchandise collection at the Gloster showroom in Show House, an exhibition of the very best Mart's reimagined 14th fl oor. Renowned Los Angeles. Designers and tastemakers in fi ne furnishings, art, and technology. Since architects and Chicago designers enjoyed an enjoyed a preview of the highly anticipated its inception, the project has raised over $17 intimate dinner, in honor of the showroom, at collection, conceived by leading European million for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club— The Arts Club of Chicago. product designer Carsten Astheimer. one of the most prominent youth development agencies in New York City. ELLE DECOR CELEBRATES ANNUAL A-LIST LUNCHEON Jesse Carrier and Mara Miller, 2013 A-List designers. Kristen Buckingham, 2013 A-List designer. Kate Kelly Smith, SVP and publishing director, Hearst Design Group; Beth Greene, executive vice president, director of marketing and strategic branding, Kravet. ELLE DECOR fêted interior design luminaries at its annual A-List Luncheon held at The Modern at the Museum of Modern Art. Cohosted by Kravet and Baccarat, the event recognized the 10 newest additions to ELLE DECOR’s prestigious designer list. The A-List Luncheon is the magazine’s fourth annual salute to the country’s top talents—designers who continue to excite, inspire, and intrigue ELLE DECOR readers and editors. FIND OUT ABOUT ALL ELLE DECOR EVENTS AND PROMOTIONS ONLINE AT ELLEDECOR.COM/HAPPENINGS

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CONTENTS LEFT: A hallway at Russborough House in County Wicklow, Ireland. ON THE COVER: The study of Samuel and Caitlin Dowe-Sandes’s home in Marrakech. “Morocco Moderne,” page 122. Photography by Simon Upton; produced by Anita Sarsidi. SEPTEMBER 2013 VOLUME 24 NUMBER 7 148 DEPARTMENTS 28 EDITOR’S PAGE 62 TALENT By Michael Boodro The designers of Atlas Industries 32 ON THE SCENE take a hands-on approach to The people and events behind the creating sleek furnishings—and to making of this issue reviving an upstate New York town. By Kathleen Hackett 34 MAILBOX Our readers write, Tweet, and post 66 GREAT IDEAS The best home offices are studies in 36 STYLE SHEET What we’ve seen, what we’ve heard style as well as efficiency 43 WHAT’S HOT! 72 TREND ALERT Dispatches from the world of design Studs, grommets, and rivets are adding a touch of industrial chic to A cantilever 49 WHAT’S NEXT chair by Atlas The iconic Paris images of Charles the latest fashions and the home Industries. Marville, a swank new Venice hotel, 74 RSVP TOP LEFT: JAMES FENNELL a celebration of Brit wit Tom Dixon, An artful alfresco party at the Los Formica for the 21st century, new stores Angeles County Museum of Art brings from Knoll and Habitat, and more glamour to light. By Deborah Sharpe 62 12 ELLEDECOR.COM

Explore and Shop www.cartier.us - 1-800-cartier Ballon Bleu de Cartier New 33 mm collection, automatic movement ©2013 Cartier

CONTENTS 76 SHORTLIST 96 DANIEL’S DISH The 12 things that innovative and A classic international dish, chicken iconoclastic Danish architect Bjarke Milanese, gets an easy update thanks to Ingels can’t live without a surprising ingredient. By Daniel Boulud 80 IN THE SHOWROOMS 100 ELLE DECOR GOES TO THE 80 LOIRE VALLEY What’s new to the trade This historic region, once the play- 82 UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM ground of aristocrats and royalty, British designer Anouska Hempel on retains its stunning array of châteaus creating lushly layered rooms that are and gardens, even as its wineries and both theatrical and soothing fine restaurants delight new generations 84 TRUTH IN DECORATING of pleasure seekers. By Ian Phillips Pillows by Designers Barrie Benson and Stefan 158 RESOURCES Perennials. Steil on 10 plaster pieces that add a cool Where to find it edge to any room. By Tim McKeough 160 ETCETERA 91 TOOLBOX Whether you’re storing paper clips Smart products for stylish homes or precious jewels, think inside the box. A château in France’s Loire Valley, with grounds designed by Louis Benech. BOTTOM: RICHARD POWERS 128 14 ELLEDECOR.COM



CONTENTS 142 WHAT’S NEW at ELLE DECOR ONLINE Looking for more ideas, inspiration, and information? Be sure to check out elledecor.com for all the latest OFFICE ATTIRE Does our roundup of stylish studies moti- vate you to spif up your own home office? Don’t miss more inspiring images, plus tips from professionals and our array of chic desk accessories, including items from, clockwise from top left, Muji, Jona- than Adler, Alexcious, and Ordning & Reda for JCP (elledecor.com/office). The entry of the Paris loft of fash- ion designer Yvan Mispelaere. FEATURES 113 ELLE DECOR STYLE 114 ALL THINGS CONSIDERED A side table A classic, old-world apartment in a by Mr. Brown. prestigious arrondissement on Paris’s Left Bank becomes a connoisseur and book lover’s trove of high-style treasures. By Ian Phillips 122 MOROCCO MODERNE For a creative couple long based in TOP LEFT: MATTHIEU SALVAING; TAPE DISPENSER, NOTES: RACHEL GELB; Marrakech, a move to a new area of the city signals a shift to a more Paris- PLAYFUL CHARACTERS centric approach. By Gisela Williams If the colorful kid’s room in “Morocco 128 RESTORED TO GLORY Moderne” has you longing for more BOTTOM RIGHT: WILLIAM WALDRON pint-size sophistication, check out our A grand 18th-century château in the slideshow of children’s rooms that Loire Valley gets a garden worthy of the most design-savvy adults would envy, 21st century, courtesy of landscape such as a playroom designed by Robert designer Louis Benech. By Jane Garmey 84 Couturier, above (elledecor.com/kids). 16 ELLEDECOR.COM



CONTENTS WHAT’S NEW 114 at ELLE DECOR ONLINE The sitting room of a Paris apartment designed by François- Joseph Graf. TRAVEL COMPANIONS Does this issue stimulate your wander- lust? Don’t call your travel agent without perusing our guides to the highlights of major European cities—such as Rome’s Villa Borghese, above—as well as insider tips on hotels, restaurants, and cultural life in Brussels, Amsterdam, Milan, Barcelona, and more (elledecor.com/europe). 136 COLLECTED WISDOM 142 HIGH-WIRE ACT The flea-market finds and rare art- Fashion designer Yvan Mispelaere works assembled by a world traveler finds that a derelict circus school in end up in a suitable setting in one a remote area of Paris is the ideal of the most famous palazzos in Rome. place to let loose his flights of design By Craig Seligman fancy. By Dana Thomas 148 IRISH HERITAGE One of the oldest and grandest country 43 estates in Ireland, Russborough House has witnessed nights of glitter- ing excess and decades of neglect, yet it still stands as a stunning tribute to Irish artistry. By Robert O’Byrne FLOOR PLANS TOP LEFT: SIMON UPTON; TOP RIGHT: MASSIMO LISTRI/CORBIS Visit service.elledecor.com to order a print sub- Cool, colorful tile floors pop up scription, pay your bill, renew your subscription, throughout this issue. Tempted to try update your mailing and e-mail addresses, and more. Or write to: Customer Service Department, them at home? We’ve collected some ELLE DECOR, P.O. Box 37870, Boone, IA 50037. One- of the best patterned tiles on the market, year subscription rate $15 for U.S. and possessions; including these from, clockwise from $41 for Canada, and $60 for other international. To order a back issue dated within the past two years, top left, Waterworks, Ann Sacks, New Vases by please go to backissues.elledecor.com. Ravenna, and Clé (elledecor.com/tile). Saint-Louis. 18 ELLEDECOR.COM

Our tribute to women. Pavonina Pavonina. A brilliant tribute to women in all their facets. Glashütte Original introduces a new collection of glamorous timepieces that combine seductive femininity, timeless elegance and highest precision. Timepieces from the Pavonina Collection are available at Tourbillon Boutiques: South Coast Plaza . New York . Las Vegas . Beverly Hills . San Francisco . Short Hills . Chicago . Tel. +1-866-462-4037 and select retail outlets. For store locations please refer to: www.glashuette-original-pavonina.com.

Editorial Director Executive Managing Editor Hearst Design Group Managing Editor JEFFREY BAUMAN NEWELL TURNER GYNA SOUCY EDITOR IN CHIEF MICHAEL BOODRO Design Director Interiors Editor Features Director FLORENTINO PAMINTUAN ROBERT RUFINO VICKY LOWRY Photography Director Contributing Design Editor Senior Editor/Writer DAVID M. MURPHY ANITA SARSIDI INGRID ABRAMOVITCH Associate Art Director Market Director Articles Editor ALEXANDER WOLF SABINE ROTHMAN PETER TERZIAN Senior Associate Photo Editor Market Editors Deputy Editor, Copy LUIGI MENDUNI ORLI BEN-DOR MEEGHAN TRUELOVE CATHERINE LEE DAVIS Associate Photo Editor Features Copy Editors SAMANTHA EMMERLING KATHRYN MARX ELIZABETH HERR VICTORIA JONES AMANDA WOYTUS Assistant Managing Editor EUGENIA SANTIESTEBAN SOTO ANGELA C. TAORMINA General Manager, Shelter, Market Editorial Assistants Hearst Digital Media Digital Production Manager ALEXIS ANSELMI ALLISON M. MEZZAFONTE LILLIAN DONDERO KATHRYN GIVEN HANNAH MARTIN Digital Director Editorial Assistant DAYLE WOOD JEN DEROSE FABIO MORELLI LORA YOON ELLEDECOR.COM Editor Digital Imaging Specialist Contributing Editor at Large AMY PREISER TRACEY BURROWS CYNTHIA FRANK ELLEDECOR.COM Executive Assistant Assistant Editor ANNIE ARMSTRONG OLIVIA RASSOW International Coordinator MONIQUE BONIOL Group Production Director CHUCK LODATO Group Production Manager JULIE BOSCO Associate Production Manager DEIDRA J. ROBINSON Consulting Editor DANIEL BOULUD Special Projects Editors KATE RHEINSTEIN BRODSKY, TAMZIN GREENHILL, MELISSA BARRETT RHODES, BETTINA ZILKHA Contributing Editors JORGE ALMADA, DEBORAH BANCROFT, KATE BETTS, KEVIN CARRIGAN, NINA GRISCOM, KATHLEEN HACKETT, NANCY HASS, MAC HOAK, JAY HOLMAN, LULU DE KWIATKOWSKI, ROBERT LITTMAN, TIM MCKEOUGH, KEITH MEACHAM, JULIA REED, NINA SANTISI, DEBORAH SHARPE, PAUL SINCLAIRE, KIM VERNON, BUNNY WILLIAMS, WILLIAM YEOWARD, SUSAN ZEVON Published by Hearst Communications, Inc. President & Chief Executive Ofcer STEVEN R. SWARTZ Chairman WILLIAM R. HEARST III Executive Vice Chairman FRANK A. BENNACK, JR. HEARST MAGAZINES DIVISION President DAVID CAREY President, Marketing & Publishing Director MICHAEL CLINTON Executive Vice President & General Manager JOHN P. LOUGHLIN Editorial Director ELLEN LEVINE Publishing Consultants GILBERT C. MAURER, MARK F. MILLER HEARST MAGAZINES INTERNATIONAL President, Chief Executive Ofcer DUNCAN EDWARDS Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Ofcer & General Manager SIMON HORNE Senior Vice President, International Publishing Director JEANNETTE CHANG Senior Vice President, Editorial Director KIM ST. CLAIR BODDEN Executive Director, Editorial ASTRID O. BERTONCINI Creative Director PETER YATES Fashion and Entertainment Director KRISTEN INGERSOLL All correspondence should be addressed to 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019. Tel: 212-649-2000. The ELLE and ELLE DECOR trademarks and logos are owned in Canada by France-Canada Editions et Publications, Inc. and in the rest of the world by Hachette Filipacchi Presse (France), each Lagardère Active Group Companies. ELLE and ELLE DECOR are used under license from the trademark owners. Copyright © 2013 Hearst Communications, Inc. Printed in the USA. To order back issues dated within the past two years (please note the issue dates), go to backissues.elledecor.com. For information on reprints and e-prints, please contact Brian Kolb at Wright’s Reprints, 877-652-5295 or [email protected].



Be inventive. When details are unusual, even subtly unusual, that’s exciting. “The kitchen is part of the décor of the overall home now. The details, the choices you make for it tell the story of what you love. Get excited about materials, and blend them in interesting ways. Consider open shelving, not just for pots and plates but for pottery and other statement pieces. Bring in artwork. Embrace clean lines, but make it dramatic. Details can be simple but sophisticated and surprising, too.” Designer Matthew Patrick Smyth Winner of the 2011 Stars of Design Award for Interior Design Watch Matthew as he shares how details large and small all add up, and see more experts, at jennair.com/details



VICE PRESIDENT, PUBLISHER AND CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER BARBARA HERTZ FRIEDMANN Associate Publisher DAVID HAMILTON Executive Director, Fashion and Luxury CARL KIESEL Executive Director, Home Furnishings KAREN MARX ADVERTISING SALES New York 300 WEST 57TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10019 Executive Director, Beauty and Lifestyle MARY ZEGRAS Showroom Sales Director SARAH SMITH Account Representative ROBYN SCHECHTER Account Manager, Direct Response SUSANNAH SACHDEVA Sales Assistants REEVE BALLARD, NICOLE PAWSON Advertising Services Manager JUDY BRAUNSTEIN BRANCH OFFICES CHICAGO: Midwest Sales Director DONNA SCHULTZ, Tel: 312-251-5372, Fax: 312-251-5369, [email protected] DETROIT: Director CLAUDIA A. WEHRLE, Tel: 248-614-6150, Fax: 248-614-6006, [email protected] LOS ANGELES: CHA TEKELI, Chalamode LLC, Tel: 310-829-1200, [email protected] SAN FRANCISCO: JANET LAUTENBERGER, Tel/Fax: 415-393-8082, [email protected] NORTHEAST: ALEXANDRA M. SHUMWAY, WNP Media, Tel: 781-329-1942, [email protected] WESTERN U.S. REGIONAL SALES: JOANNE MEDEIROS, Tel: 323-571-2102, [email protected] SOUTHEAST: Blaze & Associates, YVONNE RAKES, Tel: 678-395-4869, [email protected]; JIM BLAZEVICH, Tel: 704-321-9097, [email protected] SOUTHWEST: VIRGINIA DAVIS, The Ingersoll Company, Tel: 214-526-3800, [email protected] CANADA: D. JOHN MAGNER, York Media Services, Tel: 416-598-0101, [email protected] ITALY: Lagardère Advertising Milan, Via Bracco 6, 20159 Milano Decoration Director ALESSANDRA BANDINI, Tel: 39-026-2-69-44-41, [email protected] UNITED KINGDOM: Hearst Advertising Worldwide UK, 72 Broadwick Street, London, W1F 9EP International Senior Sales Executive JOANNA OPOKU, Tel: 44-20-7439-5380, [email protected] HEARST DESIGN GROUP Senior Vice President, Group Publishing Director KATE KELLY SMITH Group Finance Director CHRISTOPHER J. TOSTI Associate Publisher and Group Marketing Director SEAN K. SULLIVAN Group Home Furnishings Director KAREN MARX Group Digital Director BRENDA SAGET DARLING Group Digital Manager CHRIS AGOSTINELLI HEARST DESIGN GROUP MARKETING Executive Director, Marketing LISA LACHOWETZ Marketing Directors ELIZABETH GOWEN, DONALD SCHMOLL Special Projects Director SUZY RECHTERMANN Creative Director WENDI DAVIS Art Director GLENN MARYANSKY Integrated Marketing Director JENNIFER C. LAMBROS Senior Marketing Manager ESTHER DEMING Marketing Managers MATT HARE, MEAGHAN TRIMARCHI Senior Events Manager AIMEE HONG Associate Marketing Manager AIMEE COUTURE Associate Integrated Marketing Manager AMANDA ABAJIAN Marketing Coordinators DELISHA FIELDS, JANA SEGAL CIRCULATION Consumer Marketing Director HEATHER J. PLANT Vice President, Retail Sales JIM MILLER Senior Director, Retail Sales and Marketing WILLIAM MICHALOPOULOS CEO Lagardère Active DENIS OLIVENNES CEO French & International Magazine Publishing Divisions BRUNO LESOUËF Executive Vice President International FRANÇOIS CORUZZI Brand Management of ELLE DECORATION SYLVIE DE CHIRÉE, FRANCK ESPIASSE International Director of ELLE DECORATION CRISTINA ROMERO Director of International Publishing Licenses & Syndication MICKAËL BERRET Coordinator AUDREY SCHNEUWLY INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS Argentina ELLE DECORATION, China ELLE DECORATION, Croatia ELLE DECORATION, Czech Republic ELLE DECORATION, England ELLE DECORATION, France ELLE DECORATION, Germany ELLE DECORATION, Greece ELLE DECORATION, Holland ELLE DECORATION, Hungary ELLE DECORATION, India ELLE DECOR, Indonesia ELLE DECORATION, Italy ELLE DECOR, Japan ELLE DECOR, Norway ELLE DECORATION, Poland ELLE DECORATION, Romania ELLE DECORATION, Russia ELLE DECORATION, Serbia ELLE DECORATION, South Africa ELLE DECORATION, Spain ELLE DECOR, Sweden ELLE INTERIÖR, Thailand ELLE DECORATION, Turkey ELLE DECORATION INTERNATIONAL EDITION SALES Publicitas North America, 330 Seventh Avenue, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10001 Luxury and Fashion Manager OLIVIER BERTON, Tel: 212-330-0732, [email protected] INTERNATIONAL AD SALES HOUSE: LAGARDÈRE GLOBAL ADVERTISING FRANCE 124 rue Danton 92300 Levallois-Perret France INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL DIRECTOR NELLY STREICHENBERGER, [email protected] BRAZIL OLIVIER CAPOULADE, [email protected] CANADA DANA FRANCOZ, [email protected] CHINA WENDY LIN, [email protected] FRANCE-BELGIUM PHILIPPE LEONARD, [email protected] GERMANY JULIA MEINHOLD, [email protected] GREECE COSTIS FRONIMOS, [email protected] HOLLAND PETER LANDSHEERE, [email protected] HONG KONG MARIAM WANG, [email protected] INDIA RACHNA GULATI, [email protected] ITALY ALESSANDRA BANDINI, [email protected] JAPAN MAYUMI KAI, [email protected] KOREA JUN-WON SUH, [email protected] MALAYSIA AUDREY CHEONG, [email protected] MEXICO AMELIE FERRO, [email protected] MIDDLE EAST IVAN MONTANARI, [email protected] SCANDINAVIA KARIN SÖDERSTEN, [email protected] SINGAPORE PEGGY THAY, [email protected] SPAIN MELINDA SNIDER, [email protected] SWITZERLAND PHILIPPE GIRARDOT, [email protected] THAILAND STEVEN FONG, [email protected] TURKEY EMIN TAN BILGE, [email protected] UNITED KINGDOM AMANDINE DUFOUR, [email protected] UNITED STATES JEFFREY MOLINARO, [email protected]

RACHIS side table by Hamel + Farrell / RAMO mirror by Jean de Merry / YVAN arm chair by Jean de Merry As seen through the eyes of Nicholas Alan Cope & Dustin Edward Arnold CHICAGO DALLAS LOS ANGELES NEW YORK / 877.DE.MERRY / JEANDEMERRY.COM



mark dvorak & gary spain COLLECTORS/CURATORS SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA The timekeepers, reflecting on the nature of time as they're surrounded by the world's most prized historical, industrial and shop clocks.

EDITOR’S PAGE ROOM TO GROW How different are American homes from European ones? While I remain a devoted fan of American decorating and American decorative arts, I have to admit that I often look at European interiors with a twinge of envy. And this issue, which focuses on homes in Ireland, England, and France (and one as far afield as Morocco, although even that has a distinctly Gallic air), has provoked more than a couple of jealous thoughts. The most immediate difference, of course, is architecture. American homes tend to lack the sweeping high ceilings, paneling, ornate plasterwork, enfilades of rooms, and strik- ing patterned tile floors that are signature elements of so many of the homes we feature this month. But these homes, and their own- ers, provide lessons and inspirations that can apply anywhere. They share a passion candlesticks and crystal chandeliers, have for rich color, an acceptance of history and all been documented at a scale of one inch to wear (objects we might consider beat-up, a foot. Each vignette, none much larger than they think of as having a beautiful patina), an 17 inches wide, is marvelously specific. appreciation for groaning bookshelves, and Clearly Mrs. Thorne was a woman in thrall a relaxed approach to inhabiting—and really to the decorative arts, with a voracious curi- using—every room, even the grandest ones. osity, extensive historical knowledge, and On a recent trip, I stumbled upon the clear- vast determination. But the reason these est and most charming demonstration of rooms, relatively unknown even to many how interior design has evolved both here design aficionados, continue to exert a pow- and abroad: the Thorne Miniature Rooms at erful pull is that Mrs. Thorne also under- the Art Institute of Chicago. These 68 small- stood that it is the particularities of a space scale masterpieces, commissioned by Mrs. and a style that make a room fascinating— James Ward Thorne and meticulously hand- and that’s true on every continent. crafted between 1932 and 1940, begin in 13th- century England and end in 1930s California. Virtually every period and style in between is represented: late Tudor and Shaker, Louis XV and English Georgian, French Empire and California modern. Attention has been Michael Boodro, Editor in Chief lavished on the tiniest details. Wall murals [email protected] and paneling, Persian rugs and silver tea sets, Follow me on Twitter: @MichaelBoodro Two of the Thorne Miniature Rooms. ABOVE: An English great room of the late 16th century. LEFT: A Massachusetts dining room, circa 1720. FROM TOP: KEVIN TACHMAN; ©THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO (2) 28 ELLEDECOR.COM

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ON THE SCENE ROBERTO early-20th-century house, BEGNINI which he is turning into a small hotel. Casa Roberto Despite his two Italian (casaroberto.uy) is residences—including his scheduled to open its doors apartment in Rome’s in November, with four historic Palazzo Doria rooms in the wunderkam- Pamphilj, featured on mer style of his Roman page 136—Roberto Begnini residence. The building will isn’t tied to his native also house an interior country. Recently he’s been design studio and a gallery spending time in Montevi- that sells vintage and con- deo, the capital of Uruguay, temporary furnishings from where he’s restoring an around the world. LOUIS BENECH The landscape architect French Gardens, to be behind the gardens at a published next month by Loire Valley château (see Papier and Co. One page 128) has taken on highlight is his design for projects around the world, a property in St. Tropez, from Chicago to Egypt to above. “All my gardens are New Zealand. But the core unique,” Benech says, “so of his work lies in his native I feel like a chameleon. France. A sampling of his But I hope to create peaceful A 1912 elevation lush creations can be seen places that make the peo- of Casa Roberto. in Louis Benech: Twelve ple living in them happy.” POPHAM SIMON DESIGN UPTON “Travel is definitely a cata- of this issue, is located in London resident Simon issue, including the Paris lyst for new designs,” says the Gueliz neighborhood Upton has been photo- apartment on page Caitlin Dowe-Sandes of the of Marrakech; their studio, graphing interiors for ELLE 114. “Doing shoots in Paris, cement tiles she creates Popham Design, below DECOR for more than 10 there’s the added delight with her husband, Samuel. left, is just a few minutes years—he estimates that of seeing what’s behind Their antiques-filled bunga- away. “It’s so easy for us to he must have shot nearly the windows and balconies, low, featured on page 122 reach Europe, even for a 100 stories. Two are in this what is hidden in court- long weekend,” she adds. yards and behind walls,” Their newest tiles were he says. When he’s not inspired by an exhibition of on assignment for us or such Op art the couple saw in British publications Berlin and a vintage Goan as World of Interiors and fabric. Other recent pat- House & Garden, he works terns, including Headlight, on his own art photogra- left, and Long Shadow, phy, which can be seen TOP LEFT: © ERIC SANDER (2); TOP RIGHT PORTRAIT: GIANNI FRANCHELLUCCI; BOTTOM RIGHT below, are a graphic twist on at simonupton.com. “I love classic Moroccan style. to shoot landscapes on PORTRAIT: ISABEL PARRA; BOTTOM LEFT: COURTESY OF POPHAM DESIGN (3) an 8″ x 10″ camera, partly as a good excuse to get outside,” he says. “I also do still lifes of flora and fauna, which I am slowly making into a body of work.” His shot of a peregrine, left, is part of a series on falconry, soon to be featured in a book and an exhibition. 32 ELLEDECOR.COM

EMOTIONS SHOULDN’T BE DESCRIBED, THEY SHOULD BE EXPERIENCED. p. Paola Navone - ph. ANdrea Ferrari Dallas · Houston · Los Angeles · Miami · New York | [email protected] | www.baxter.it/us

MAILBOX TWEETS Love the new issue...so much color! TeckieGirl, @TeckieGirl First issue of my @ELLEDECOR subscrip- tion arrived this week. Tucking into it on the terrace w/ glass of wine, cheese & hubby. #bliss Whitney, @Cofeebuzzer Reading June @ELLEDECOR and am excited to try Daniel Boulud’s strawberry-rhubarb mille-feuille recipe! #frenchpastries Stephanie Sam, @calibabe82 Todd Romano looking so handsome— love him! Swifty’s New York, @Swiftys_NYC Every potential design client needs to read “Succeeding by Design” in this month’s @ELLEDECOR. SEPTEMBER 2013 Although I will agree that decorator Heather List, @HeatherList Todd Alexander Romano’s New York City apartment is timeless [“Dressed The faceted-mirror letter installation to the Nines,” June], the photo of him [on the June cover] had me at hello. #love smoking a cigarette was so passé. @ ELLEDECOR. Please—it’s not 1938. Rebecca, @lovelivesmall Dede Mays, via e-mail Ever since reading the Eloise books as FACEBOOK a child, I’ve had a fantasy of living at On the June cover: The whole room is the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan. Steven gorgeous. Love that fireplace! Gambrel’s design of a pied-à-terre in Ta Tanisha Meadows the grande dame [“Panache at the Plaza,” June] is a grown-up’s version of that On “Succeeding by Design”: I love dream. Each room is a study of colors, this article. The most inspired interiors textures, and moods, with gorgeous come from collaborative, trusting, ABOVE: The living artwork and sumptuous materials. and fun-loving relationships between room of a house designed by Jefrey Catherine Brandt, Boston designer and client. Bilhuber in Tuxedo At Home Interior Design Park, New York. RIGHT: Your April issue was such a delight that The June issue cover. I renewed my subscription. “Paris on the On Todd Alexander Romano’s kitchen: Hudson” was by far the most excep- This is so bright and energetic, MAIL tional home I have seen featured in any I think I could skip my morning cofee. The Tuxedo Park, New York, home in your magazine. I keep a photo from the story Rachel Schofield story “Game for Anything” [June] is a under an old glass paperweight, and it colorful escape from the sterile and the keeps me focused on the aesthetic On a drawing room designed by John staid. These rooms encourage comfort that I hope to achieve in my own home. Saladino: Sensual and sophisticated... and conversation. It’s refreshing to see Jill Waldmann, Cromwell, CT the painting really sets the tone. a variety of colors that reflect warmth Deb Lawrence and sophistication at the same time. A Manhattan Lauren D. Hall, Punta Gorda, FL dining room On Steven Gambrel’s kitchen: Heaven! by designer John That bench, a book, cofee—sunny Saladino. This time you’ve outdone yourselves. or rainy, every day would be perfection. Your June issue is loaded with taste, Susan Langworthy subtlety, and inspiration. Naturally, WILLIAM WALDRON (2); SIMON UPTON (COVER) I have a personal favorite: John Saladino’s work in “Repeat Performance” Write to us: Mailbox, ELLE DECOR, 300 West 57th Street, 27th foor, New York, NY is masterful. He continues to raise the 10019. E-mail: [email protected]. bar in design excellence. And ELLE DECOR Follow us on Twitter: @elledecor. continues to make me happy. Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/ Esther Horvath, Dallas, GA ELLEDECORmag. 34 ELLEDECOR.COM

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STYLE SHEET FROM LEFT: Marimekko’s designs for Finnair. Vivienne WHAT WE LOVE Westwood’s sketches for Virgin Atlantic. CALL IT A MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN. ITALIAN FASHION HOUSE BOTTEGA VENETA HAS COLLAB- ORATED WITH THE CENTURIES- ELEVATED STYLE Harking back to the era when fying was the epitome of glamour, OLD GERMAN PORCELAIN MAKER several airlines are making travel a study in style again. Finnish tex- KÖNIGLICHE PORZELLAN- tile company Marimekko recently adorned the exteriors of Finnair MANUFAKTUR ON A COLLECTION jets with its iconic poppies, and the cabins with its punchy prints on tableware and blankets (finnair.com). For Virgin Atlantic, Vivi- OF ELEGANT PORCELAIN-AND– enne Westwood has designed sleek fight-attendant uniforms in BURNT-GOLD JEWELRY. THE the airline’s signature red (virgin-atlantic.com). And All Nippon Air- GLEAMING STATEMENT PIECES ways has commissioned Prabal Gurung to dress its attendants in outfits with a bit of traditional Japanese fair (ana.co.jp). FEATURE HANDCRAFTED MEDAL- LIONS CARVED WITH ANGELS, A TRIBUTE TO VENETIAN NEO- CLASSICAL SCULPTOR ANTONIO CANOVA (BOTTEGAVENETA.COM). TAKING THE FLOOR “Brooke Astor meets Courtney Love” is how Peter Som describes FROM TOP: A scene his recent collections, which instill a hint of grunge into his trade- SUGAR from Populaire. mark femininity. The New York fashion designer is now channel- Nail polish by RGB. Tolix A chair. Lolita table ing the same aesthetic in his collaboration with Surya. lamp by Moooi. St Giles A collection of eight rugs based on prints Som de- Blue, Yellowcake, buted on the runway, the carpets range from a hand- RUSH and Nancy’s Blushes tufted chevron to a wool shag, shown, inspired by by Farrow & Ball. the furry and fantastical “soundsuits” by perfor- mance artist Nick Cave that took over Grand Central Terminal in March (surya.com). ILLUSTRATIONS, FROM TOP: SOO HYUN HONG, VIVIENNE WESTWOOD DESIGN; FILM STILL: PHOTO BY JAIR SFEZ, ©2013 THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY, Suddenly, pumped-up pastels are the palette of ALL RIGHTS RESERVED; NAIL POLISH, PAINT CHIPS: RACHEL GELB; RUNWAY MODEL: DAN & CORINA LECCA the moment. The sugar-sweet French film Popu- laire, already a hit in Paris, opens in U.S. theaters September 6. The debut of director Régis Roin- sard, the film follows Rose (played by Déborah François), a failing secretary turned speed-typing champion who inhabits a cotton candy–hued version of the 1950s. Offscreen, industrial design icon Tolix nods to the era, issuing its classic furni- ture in four fresh shades taken from Le Corbusier’s color charts (tolix.fr). Moooi’s Pepto-Bismol–pink Lolita lamp is named for the ’50s nymphet (moooi .com). And new colors from Farrow & Ball (farrow- ball.com) and RGB nail polish (rgbcosmetics.com) FROM LEFT: A fall mimic Rose’s typewriter-ready manicure. 2012 Peter Som look. The Liona rug by Surya.



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PROMOTION HAPPENINGS Thomas Jayne, designer, Jayne Design Studio; Jim Druckman, Alex Papachristidis, interior designer; Patrick Dragonette, owner, Sabine Rothman; market director, Hearst Design Group; Gary Gibson, president & CEO of The New York Design Center; Thom Filicia, Dragonette; Kim Alexandriuk, interior designer; Timothy Gary Gibson Studio; Shari Korn, general showroom manager, Rose designer, Thom Filicia, Inc. Corrigan, interior designer; Madeline Stuart, interior designer. Tarlow Melrose House; Jobi Blachy, president and CEO, Rose Tarlow Melrose House. NEW YORK DESIGN CENTER DRAGONETTE HOSTS A PANEL AT ELLE DECOR AND ROSE TARLOW WHAT'S NEW, WHAT'S NEXT LEGENDS OF LA CIENEGA MELROSE HOUSE Join the New York Design Center on During the LEGENDS of La Cienega 5th annual The Hearst Design Group was the media September 19, from 2pm – 9pm, for the design fête, Dragonette hosted a lively panel, sponsor of the 2013 LEGENDS of La Cienega’s fi fth annual \"What's New, What's Next,\" Cycling Through History: Why Certain Periods Time Capsule: Past, Present and Future of a showcase of new ideas, materials, and Come Into (and Go Out of) Style Repeatedly… Design Power Lunch at the Rose Tarlow products. The event will feature exciting And What’s Next on the Horizon, featuring Melrose House showroom in Los Angeles. 500 presentations from ELLE DECOR editors acclaimed design professionals. More than industry partners and designers enjoyed a and top industry professionals. For more 100 guests enjoyed the exceptional program refreshing lunch while exploring the exceptional information and to RSVP, please visit discussing design that transcends time. showroom space. nydc.com/wnwn. JOIN US IN SAN FRANCISCO The Hearst Design Group—ELLE DECOR, HOUSE BEAUTIFUL, VERANDA—will bring its Inside Design event series to the San Francisco Design Center on September 12. Created to bring each magazine’s signature voice to life, the series will provide the magazines’ loyal and passionate audiences with an inside look at the latest products, hottest designers, and newest design trends. Michael Boodro, ELLE DECOR editor in chief, will moderate the not-to-be-missed keynote presentation with acclaimed designers. For a full schedule of events, please visit sfdesigncenter.com. SEPTEMBER 12 The Hearst Design Group thanks our Inside Design sponsors: Baker, Decorative Furnishings Association, and Sunbrella. FIND OUT ABOUT ALL ELLE DECOR EVENTS AND PROMOTIONS ONLINE AT ELLEDECOR.COM/HAPPENINGS



INSPIRED ILLUMINATIONS 800 .899 .6 7 5 7 | W W W.WATER WORK S.C O M

WHAT’S HOT! DISPATCHES FROM THE WORLD OF DESIGN LET IT POUR Dutch designer Piet Hein Eek has created a set of geometric pitchers with Art Deco flair. Ideal for serving drinks or displaying flowers, his LARA ROBBY/STUDIO D PRODUCED BY VICTORIA JONES they cost $1,688 each; silver-plated Facet jugs range from 9″ to 13.5″ h. Made of white-glazed ceramic, brass versions are $3,128 each. 212-473-2500; thefutureperfect.com 43

WHAT’S HOT! 1 / SUSPENDED ANIMATION Woven by Colombian artisans displaced by guerrilla warfare, the PET hanging lamps by designer Alvaro Catalán de Ocón take their name from the recycled plastic bottles from which they are made. Nine styles are offered in various colors and sizes. Prices range from $235 for small to $475 for extra-large. petlamp.org 2 / BLACK BEAUTY Inspired by a midcentury bureau with reeded detailing and playful drawer pulls, designer Bunny Williams has created her Button Down Chest. Measuring 45.5″ h. x 36″ w. x 21″ d., the 1 chest costs $3,000 and comes in an ebony fin- ish, shown; a cerused-oak finish is also offered. 212-935-5930; bunnywilliamshome.com 3 / SWEET DREAMS Ralph Lauren Home’s new mix-and-match bed linens include percale sheets, pillowcases, and shams in white with colorful trim, and an array of vivid solids, as well as luxurious blankets and accent pillows. Prices range from $100 for a throw pillow to $595 for a cable cashmere throw. 3 888-475-7674; ralphlaurenhome.com 2 4 / REFRESHER COURSE Celerie Kemble’s bar cart for Maitland-Smith incorporates some of the designer’s favorite materials: Caramel-colored, lacquered leather with white stitching wraps around a gleaming brass frame shaped to resemble bamboo. The 33″ h. x 28″ w. x 18″ d. cart costs $3,597. 336-812-2400; maitland-smith.com 5 / TIME FOR TEA Designer Tom Dixon’s Eclectic tea set, made of brass with a gleaming gold wash, raises the bar on the classic English accessory. The set includes a tray, $210, and, clockwise from left, a teapot, $200; a tall jug, $140; a milk jug, $85; and a sugar dish and spoon, $102. 212-228-7674; tomdixon.com 5 3, 5: LARA ROBBY/STUDIO D 4 44 ELLEDECOR.COM

Explore the secret world of jewelry in Paris The Maison Van Cleef & Arpels has created a school in order to cast a light on the secretive jewelry métiers. Through innovative and varied courses, l’Ecole unveils, reveals and shares its savoir-faire, enabling enthusiasts to become enlightened amateurs. www.lecolevancleefarpels.com

WHAT’S HOT! 1 1 / ALL SEWN UP The Portuguese embroidery firm Patrício & Gouveia adds a striking white appliqué to its linen tablecloth for E. Braun that comes in green, shown, or yellow. It measures 2 70″ w. x 108″ l. and costs $4,000; match- ing napkins are also available. 800-372-7286; ebraunnewyork.com 2 / BLAZE OF GLORY Iranian designer Soheila Shayegan’s Mazandaran wool kilim is named for the province where her rugs are woven. Fire, shown, is 11′ l. x 9′ w. and costs $9,300. 3 It can be ordered in any color and size. 011-39-02-8901-1553; albertolevi.com 3 / TABLE OF ELEMENTS Swedish design team Claesson Koivisto Rune looked to both Arab and Scandinavian influences for its Marrakech table of cement tiles within a metal frame. The 40″ sq. x 30″ h. piece is $306 4 and comes in several colorways, including icicle/azure, shown. Rectangular and hexagonal versions are also offered. 011-46-491-280-10; bergaform.se 4 / SIGHT LINES Saint-Louis, Europe’s oldest glassmaking firm, brings a colorful touch and a minimalist sensibility to its trio of enamel-painted crystal vases, Les Trois Cycles. Each vessel measures 9.5″ h. x 4″ dia. and costs $5,300. 212-835-6448 5 / ROCK STEADY London’s dynamic design duo Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby were inspired by Japanese gar- den stones for their Tobi-Ishi table for B&B 1, 3, 4: LARA ROBBY/STUDIO D Italia. The 64″ w. x 29″ h. piece has a wood top and a polyurethane base, and is coated in a glossy blue, shown, or red lacquer. It costs $9,370. 800-872-1697; bebitalia.com 5 46 ELLEDECOR.COM

The art of things chosen well rather than often. I M A G E : T H E L A U R A K I R A R C O L L EC T I O N w w w. b a k e r f u r n i t u r e . c o m 1 8 0 0 592 25 37

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WHAT’S NEXT PARIS’S LOST HORIZONS In the middle of the 19th century, Napoleon III, erally, in rubble. They are also thrillingly beautiful. ruler of the French Empire, appointed urban plan- (He developed his artist’s eye while photographing ner Baron Haussmann to tear up the warren-like, alongside members of the Barbizon school of paint- medieval streets and houses of Paris and replace ers.) “Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris,” CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: ©THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART; THE J. PAUL GETTY MUSEUM, LOS ANGELES (2) a boon for Charles Marville, an ambitious maga- stark landscapes of the Bois de Boulogne, and heart- CLOCKWISE a new exhibition of more than 100 works at the them with the orderly boulevards, stately apart- ment buildings, and trim parks we know today. The National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., dis- plays the breadth of his work: moody cloud studies, project was ferociously divisive, but it proved to be stopping scenes taken from the spires of Notre- zine and book illustrator who had recently taken up the developing medium of photography. Marville’s Dame. And the show’s sumptuous catalog reveals heretofore unknown facets of his biography— early pictures of artifacts in the Louvre, the sculp- tures of Chartres Cathedral, and other works of art including his long- FROM TOP: Sky lost birth name— and architecture soon won him a commission from Study, Paris, the city to document the old, fairy-tale Paris that unearthed by the 1856–7. Fontaine des Innocents, museum (Septem- was rapidly disappearing. 1858. Horse Marville’s richly detailed photos offer a rare ber 29 to January 5, Market, c. 1867. glimpse of a city in dramatic transition—often, lit- 2014; nga.gov). PRODUCED BY PETER TERZIAN 49

WHAT’S NEXT PAST MASTER He was part of Italy’s second wave of the Ca’ Foscari palazzo in Venice, he modernists, but with his obsession placed an elegantly proportioned with preservation and his love of the glass wall behind a screen of neo- handcrafted, Carlo Scarpa (1906–78) Gothic columns, blending the past could be considered the quintessen- and the present. His renovations of the tial architect for the 21st century. city’s Correr Museum and the Acca- He was a son of Venice and the demia Gallery show that no detail was Veneto, so for him history was as too small: the hinge of a display case, much in the air as oxygen, something the structure of an easel. And through- essential and inescapable. In his first out his career, Scarpa worked with the major project, the 1935 renovation of artisans of Murano, each year creating stunning glass vases and objects, often reviving forgotten techniques or devising new ones. For the designer, making an object was a sacred thing, no matter what its scale or cost. With 350 images and drawings, Carlo Scarpa, by Robert McCarter (Phaidon), documents the architect’s dramatic modernism—the sweeping red staircase of his Banca Popolare in Verona, his sleek concrete-and-wood Olivetti showroom in Venice—even as it celebrates his poetic vision, closing with the famous Brion Cemetery out- side Treviso that fittingly served as Scarpa’s final masterwork before his A 1926 A gallery at the vase. untimely death. Correr Museum in Venice, 1952–60. The courtyard of the Italian pavilion at the Venice An interior wall at Biennale, 1951–52. the Banca Popolare in Verona, 1973–78. BEAUTY SLEEP THE OWNERS OF THE FOURTH, A SPACIOUS NEW MANHATTAN BRASSERIE, ASSEMBLED A SUPERGROUP OF RISING DESIGNERS FOR THE DAZZLING DINING ROOM. JONAH MEYER OF SAWKILLE CO. CRAFTED CHERRY FURNITURE, AND PAUL AND VENNIE VEGA FASHIONED A TIMBER, STEEL, AND LIMESTONE INTERIOR HUNG WITH DRAMATIC PHOTOS BY JAMES SAL- ZANO. BUT THE SHOWSTOPPER IS AN INSTAL- TOP: COURTESY OF PHAIDON PRESS (4); LATION BY BRINTON JAECKS: A RING OF 10 BOTTOM: LUIGI MENDUNI WOOD BED FRAMES SUSPENDED FROM THE CEILING THAT PROMISES AN ANYTHING-BUT- TIRED MEAL (ONEFIVEHOSPITALITY.COM). 50


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