observer home spring 2010
TRANSCRIPT
spring 2010
Family StyleA Young Family’s Park Avenue
Apartment Combines Luxury With Great Style and a Personal Touch
Seven Kids, Country House and a Bravo TV Show ■ Inside the World of Real Estate Staging
W W W . D W N Y . C O M
Client: Davis & WarshowProject: Teapot adDate: 03.22.10Version: v.1.1
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Everything Your Home Desires
4 the home observer spring 2010
ContentsAn antique biedermeier
chest and muted colors
bring a sensuality to
sandra Nunnerley’s bedroom
in an east side townhouse (p. 42).
FeAtUres
34 Nine is enough
Robert and Cortney Novogratz, along with their seven kids, have moved more than 15 times, renovating and flipping properties in the city. Their 100-year-old country farmhouse is a keeper, though.
42 Art and Commerce
Sandra Nunnerley, a onetime art dealer–turned–decorator, brings her connoisseur’s eye to an Upper East Side townhouse.
48 small is beautiful
Russell Bush has lived in a tiny, one-bed-room, prewar apartment for more than 30 years. The size hasn’t stopped him from collecting all of his favorite things.
52 A Family Affair
In a Park Avenue apartment that once belonged to Barbara Walters, a young family’s urbane taste creates a very contempory-looking classic.
60 rustic hideaway
Juan Montoya’s Dutchess County retreat encompasses 110 acres, lake included.
66 A Nest Grows in brooklyn
Artist Patrick Dougherty searches for the perfect saplings and then weaves fantasy shelters. His arrival this summer at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden will be greeted by much tweeting from both species.
72 same but Different
Lusting after one of those glamorous Saarinen pedestal tables? Fear not. We show you how to live happily ever after with substitutes.
For this modish bird feeder
from momA and bench from room
and board in soho, see pages 10 and 12.
seven children, six bikes
at the Novogratz house
in Great barrington (p. 34).
Cover photograph by tim Street-porter
HQ 101 Washington Street Paterson, NJ 973-279-3000 | 1105 Mt. Kemble Ave. Rt. 202 Morristown, NJ 973-425-5500
greenbauminteriors.com
6 the home observer spring 2010
in the shops
10 Decked out
This season’s fresh crop of outdoor furnishings. By Marianne Rohrlich
ColleCting
14 staged, startled and photographed
A selection of current photo gallery shows, including edgy newby Hasted Hunt in Chelsea. By Alex Taylor
real estate
18 When all the World’s real estate is staged
Not content to ask clients to use their imaginations when viewing their empty new buildings, developers employ professionals to create super-model apartments. By Chloe Malle.
22 the mighty starchitects
A brief history, including some pointed hobnobbing with the A-listers. By Tim Street-Porter
23 my life With the power brokers
The highs and lows of a beat reporter following the stratospheric Manhattan market. By Max Abelson
on the shelves
24 Zaha’s aha! moments
A review of Zaha Hadid Complete Works. By Chloe Malle
28 a Feast of all things ponti
A newly repackaged book on the design legend. By Tim Street-Porter
32 a Clearing in the Woods
A photo-driven book on 25 contemporary gardens. By Nancy Butkus
in the neighborhooD
80 mucho musto
The dean of downtown nightlife lives—who would have guessed?—in Murry Hill. By Annie Kelly
architecture outlier Zaha hadid with designer Karl lagerfeld.
ExclusivE us Distribution bY
country Gear ltd.2408 Main strEEt, briDGEhaMpton, nY 11932
631.537.1032
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Prints & Multiples APRIL 26–27Viewing: April 23–25Inquiries: +1 212 636 2290
APRIL 201020 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10020 +1 212 636 2000
NEW YORK
left:LOT 10Martin LewisSubway Steps (M. 90)drypoint, 1930$18,000–25,000
right:LOT 12Martin LewisTwo A.M. (M. 101)drypoint, 1932$10,000–15,000
INSTANT APPEALIconic images by the 20th century’s most talented artists
Those in search of works by the 20th century’sforemost talents need look no further thanour April sale of Prints & Multiples, whereyou can find masterpieces for your homewith estimates starting at $1,000. Look foreye-catching works by Andy Warhol, PabloPicasso, Edvard Munch, George Bellows andMartin Lewis, whose spontaneous momentsof daily life in New York City offer a nostalgiclook at a bygone era.
editorial director NaNcy Butkus
editors aNNie kelly aNd tim street-porter
art director BarBara sulliVaN
production director tyler rush
contributors max aBelsoN chloe malle Joshua mchugh mariaNNe rohrlich alex taylor sara VilkomersoN photo editor peter lettre copy editor chris croNis
associate publisher Betty shaw ledermaN the home observer account managers daVid gursky michelle morgaN daVid wolff
sales assistant elaNa delasos
publisher Jared kushNer
editor, the new york observer kyle pope president, observer media group christopher BarNes
senior vice president stepheN goldBerg executive vice president Barry lewis the new york observer915 broadway, 9th Floornew york, ny 10010212.755.2400www.observer.com
8 the home observer spring 2010
we’ve happily added some new contributors to this issue. marianne rohrlich, of new york times personal shopper fame, scouted the city for colorful outdoor furnishings (pp. 10, 12). alex taylor, contributor to artnews, checked out the new photography show at cutting-edge chelsea gallery hasted hunt (pp. 14, 16). observer culture editor sara Vilkomerson interviewed cortney novogratz, mother of seven, about their family retreat in great bar-rington and their new bravo show (p. 34). chloe malle, observer residential real estate reporter, navigated the world of staging for condo developers (pp. 18, 20), and another reporter down the hall, max abelson, reminiced about his days with a special new york breed—high-end realtors (p. 23). Finally, the intrepid husband-and-wife duo, tim street-porter and annie kelly, took us uptown and down, uncovering many dream apartments. their new book, rooms to inspire in the city (rizzoli), is due out this month.
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10 the home observer spring 2010
Decked OutWith longer days and warmer nights, the desire to stay outside can be downright overwhelming, just like when we were kids, ignoring our mother’s call to come home. The new crop of colorful furnishings for outdoor living provides the perfect excuse to stay out after dark, light up the barbecue and check out the night sky. by marianne rohrlich
Plated and Popped
Sorrento, Melamine dinner plates in a choice of four colors are $5.95 each or $19.95 for a set of four at Crate & Barrel. Crateandbarrel.com or call 8009676696 for store locations.
Perch
The Shadowy Chair by Tord Boontje is made in Senegal of woven nylon cord on a steel frame and goes for $2,898 at Anthropolo-gie. Anthropologie.com or call 8003092500 for store locations.
shine a Little Light
Solig, a set of three 2-inch-wide, battery-operated LED lights are $2.99 (they shine for about 90 hours and are not rechargeable) at Ikea stores. Ikea.com or call 8004344532 for store locations.
modern Wing
A folding bird feeder of white painted steel is $50 at MoMA. Momastore.org, 8008514509; 81 Spring Street (at Crosby Street), or 44 West 53rd Street. Faux Fleurs A 10-inch square
patch of fake green grass, with or without flowers, is $20 at CITE. Citenyc.com, 8667640888; 131 Greene Street (at Houston Street).
in the shops
At Your service
Garcon, a rolling cart with two removable
serving trays, is $69.95 at CB2. Cb2.com or call
8006066252; 451 Broadway (at Broome Street).
BFG Castle Observer.qxd 3/24/10 3:05 PM Page 1
12 the home observer spring 2010
in the shops
A seussical Pot
Sky pots hold plants upside down and have an internal reservoir for self-watering. In three sizes: small, $55; medium, $75; and large, $95. At Flora N.Y. Florany.com or call 212-274-1887; 85 Franklin Street (at Church Street).
salad Days
A large plastic bowl shaped like a lettuce leaf is $9.99 (a small one is $4.99) at Tarzian West.
Tarzian-west.com or call 718-788-4213; 194 Seventh Avenue (at Second Street) Brooklyn.
baby bar-b
Bodum’s 15-inch barbecue grill is $55 at Mxyplyzyk. Mxyplyzyk.com or call 800-243-9810; 125 Greenwich Avenue (at 13th Street) or 10 Columbus Circle (Time Warner Center).
red, rustic and recycled
Emmet, a modern version of a rustic-style sofa, made of recycled plastic, is $649 at Room & Board. Roomandboard.com or call 800-301-9720; 105 Wooster Street (at Spring Street).
by the Yard, olé
Outdoor fabric in-spired by Mexican
textiles is $54-$136 a yard, from Sina
Pearson. Sinapear-son.com or call
212-366-1146; 150 Varick Street (at
Spring Street).
sunshine
A string of eight solar-powered LED
globe lights will stay lit for about nine hours when fully
charged; $19.99 at Ikea stores. ikea.com or call 800-434-4532
for locations.
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Elgot has been the choice of New Yorkers for kitchen and bath design and remodeling since 1945. For inspiration in helping you choose the best appli-ances and fixtures, for unsurpassed know-how to get the job done quickly and correctly, for the expertise that brings together the dream and the finished result
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14 the home observer spring 2010
by Alex TaylorContemporary photography is moving so fast that it’s easy to forget that the medium, invented in the late 1830s, is still in its youth. Has it really only been 170 years? It seems longer. This is part-ly because mass culture and art culture are saturated with images, and because technological tricks like Photoshop continue to crush painting in terms of formal inventiveness and fictive manip-ulation. More changes are on the way, as digital replaces film and further al-ters the meaning of the medium, which used to mean a kind of documentary “truth” but no longer does. This is creating all sorts of impossible philosophical problems for artists, curators and the public to think about. In the meantime, the gallery Hasted Hunt Kraeut-ler in Chelsea organized “Great Photographs of the 20th century: Staged and Startled,” a
small, handsome show of work by eminences including Robert Frank, Richard Avedon, Irving Penn, Helen Levitt, William Eggleston, Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander. The show runs until May 1.
All the photographers in the exhibition are
well known, and about half have re-ceived lavish retrospective treatment in New York in recent years. Robert Frank, fresh off last fall’s triumph at the Met, is represented by two images from The Americans, his traveling, late-’50s dispatch from the American Empire of Solitude. And yet it’s Avedon, forever gracious, who comes across as the su-perbly adept figure of the last half of the past century. His portraits of power and beauty types combine courtly manners with an almost interrogatory formal candor derived from his use of silver backdrops and sets. Attention from
Avedon equals eminence, even if the subject was as slickly exotic as the German actress Nas-tassja Kinski posed with a happy-to-see-her boa constrictor. The photo, Nastassja Kinski and the serpent, Los Angeles, California (1981), origi-nally ran in Vogue and has been included in the
Staged, Startled and Photographed
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still startling after
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richard Avedon’s
Nastassja Kinski and
the serpent (1981);
and above, Joel sternfeld’s
mcLean, virginia,
December 4, 1978.
201038 th Annual
Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Decorator Show House, originally scheduled for April 30 - May 28, has been postponed until Fall 2010.
Please check www.kipsbay.org for updates on the revised schedule.
Thank you for your continued support of this time-honored tradition and important fundraiser. The Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club Decorator Show House raises critical funds for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, which provides much needed afterschool
and enrichment programs for 13,000 children throughout the Bronx.
Sponsored by:
KipsBay_NYObserver.indd 1 3/18/10 6:17 PM
16 the home observer spring 2010
collecting
“Staged and Started” as a glossy, plus-size print.Also included in the show are a series of contrastable
works by Eggleston and Friedlander, both masters whose subject may be fairly termed the nova of everyday but of wildly different temperaments. Eggleston is a Southern bred raconteur in love with the lush, dye-transfer color. Fried-lander is a rigorous formalist (he works in black and white) who works with a swiveled rhythm and hipster humor. In New York City (1966), the artist appears, as a hovering shad-ow, on the back of a woman’s coat. A photograph by Fried-lander of, say, a dense street scene, rarely gives itself up for first impressions. Come to think of it, neither does life.
Most of the works in “Staged and Startled” fall within the documentary tradition of photography. An exception is a photograph of the celebrity couple Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt by Steven Klein, the newest in the show. Titled Case Study #13 no. 18 (2005), the photo recycles Bonnie and Clyde–style glamour—Pitt points a handgun; Jolie bares a tattooed arm and mugs for the camera—in a stripped-down, blank setting that may either be a cheap motel suite or, more likely, a set for a shoot. It’s anyone’s guess. This is photography surrounded by invisible quotation marks—a distinctly 21st-century picture coming out of the image glut and indistinct memories. Haven’t we seen this before? Haven’t we seen everything before? That is one of those questions photography will have to answer as it heads into a unnerving new decade.
“Great Photographs of the 20th Century: Staged and Startled” continues through May 1 at the Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, 537 W. 24th St., Chelsea, 212-627-0006, hastedhuntkraeutler.com.
Lisette model’a Fashion show, hotel Pierre, 1940-46.
On the Watch ListJames Welling at David ZwirnerFor this show, Welling’s fifth at the gallery, the artist has trained his camera on to Philip Johnson’s 1949 Glass House, that swank suburban hideaway home of postwar architecture in New Canaan, Conn. Departing from some of his more doggedly experimental procedures, Welling photo-graphed the building and it’s surrounding 47-acre compound with a series of color filters between the lenses. The resulting series achieve luminous, almost psychedelic affects as Welling captures the building at morning daybreak and its radiant reflection. These pictures are so sublimely beau-tiful that they become a little useless, too. Come to think of it: Wasn’t that the idea behind Johnson’s design?“Glass House” continues through April 24 at David Zwirner, 525 West 19th Street, Chelsea, 212-727-2070, davidzwirner.com.
Ryan McGinley at Team GalleryWhen the book is written on the youth craze in contemporary art, the 32-year-old McGinley may well merit a chapter. (His friend, the artist Dash Snow, who died last summer at the age of 27, merits a chapter, too, albeit a cautionary one.) Since his debut at the Whitney Museum seven years ago, with photos of young downtown types caught in exquisite states of stupidity, McGinley has had a much-in-demand career as the chief life-style photographer of youth. Since then he’s shot assignments for Vice and The Times. This latest show, of black-and-white nudes, stretches his range. It will be interesting to see how McGinley develops from here.“Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere” continues through April 17 at Team Gallery, 83 Grand Street, Soho, 212-29-9219, teamgal.com.
JoAnn Verburg at Pace/MacGillIn 2007-2008, Verburg had a mid-ca-reer survey at MoMA and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis that covered a career that’s moved from early, con-ceptually under documentary images of the American West to immersive, multi-paneled triptychs of Mediterranean olive trees. Her recent work from the ancient Italian hill town of Spoleto is among her best. Her multilayered photos of the city capture it’s narrow streets, angled al-leyways and classically decrepit stucco fronts. These images are, on the surface, materially minded. They tell a deeper story about the time lapsing and the movement of time, as do portraits of certain Spoleto citizens.“Interruptions” continues through May 1 at Pace MacGill, 32 East 57th Street, ninth floor, midtown, 212-759-7999, pacemacgill.com. —A.T.
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220 East 60th Street bet. 2nd & 3rd Aves. •
Please join us for an art preview and cocktail reception onApril 21 & 22, 2010 • 5-9 pm
18 the home observer spring 2010
When All the World’s Real Estate Is Staged
By Chloe Malle Model, or “staged,” apartments are no new addi-tion to the world of luxury real estate marketing. The artfully staged apartment is a furniture-laden showcase providing prospective buyers the abil-ity to imagine actually living in the space their broker hopes they will decide to call home. Corc-oran agent Leslie Marshall, who handles sales at Third + Bond, a new development that contains one of the model apartments shown on these pages, with interiors “curated” by Pratt students and faculty, told The Observer: “People have a dif-ficult time imagining living in a space if it is just empty, bare rooms. They wonder, ‘Is this room big enough for a dining table?’ Or, ‘Could a king-size bed fit in the master bedroom?’ The model apartment answers those questions for them. It helps people envision themselves there.”
real estate
But as the nuances and complexities of resi-dential real estate development continue to mul-tiply like bacteria in a Petri dish, the motivation behind model apartments varies per project.
Five Thirty-five West End Avenue employed a collaborative (or competitive, depending on how you look at it) approach to its model apartments: Each one of 15 high-end interior designers were assigned the task of decorating one room. The completion of the designs were celebrated with a charity gala, and the finished spaces were on display for a month. Designer In-son Wood, who decorated one the largest spaces, told The Observer: “We had up to 200 people a day, every day. It was so popular! It’s a great way of getting press for the building.”
At 211 Elizabeth Street, the bespoke, historical-ly conscious apartment building in Nolita, archi-
robin standefer, one-half of
roman and Williams, shopped for
all the furniture and objects for
the 211 elizabeth street apart-
ment herself, explaining, “there
is a certain spontaneity to it; the
place got very layered.” Fresh
flowers and expensive hand soap
mark the Calcatta Gold marble
bathrooms as lived in.
NIKKI FIELD REPRESENTING MANHATTAN’SP R E M I E R P R O P E R T I E S
Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. is Owned and Operated by NRT LLC *As featured in the annual ranking by REAL Trends Magazine, sponsored by The Wall Street Journal and lore Magazine
The Field TeamNikki Field, Senior Vice President, Associate Broker, 212.606.7669Kevin B. Brown, Senior Vice President, Associate Broker, 212.606.7748 Helen Marcos, Associate Broker, 212.606.7747Jeanne H. Bucknam, Associate Broker, 212.606.7717Zoe Haydock, Sales Associate, 212.606.7727
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL*
2008 Real Estate Professionals:Top 100 Agents in AmericaTop 10 Agents in New York
14 ROOMS: $4,995,000
7 ROOM DUPLEX: $4,000,000
7 ROOM DUPLEX: $4,500,000
5 ROOMS: $1,800,000
The United Nations Plaza CollectionRiverfront Living in the Heart of Manhattan
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NIKKI FIELD SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, ASSOCIATE BROKER I T 212.606.7669 I NIKKIFIELD.COM
20 the home observer spring 2010
real estate
tects Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch of Ro-man and Williams were asked by the developers to design a model apartment in the building with themselves as the envisioned inhabitants. The finished product featured black, hand-lacquered walnut cabinets, replete with Italian tomato sauce and a tall bottle of San Pellegrino stowed inside, and luxurious area rugs drawing attention to the walnut-herringbone parquet floors. Ms. Stadefer confessed to The Observer: “Steven and I are not that fond of model apartments. They always seem extremely generic with very little character.” So the dynamic design-duo—whose other credits include the Standard and Ace hotels —insisted on one condition. “We told them, ‘We need you to let us make this a very real home as opposed to a home/sales office.’ So we embarked on it and really thought of it with ourselves as the owners. We used ourselves as the benchmark, which is really something that every designer does to a certain extent.”
Inson Wood, one of the
interior designers at
535 WeA, “tried to take
it [the design] very
personally.” the walls
are treated with a five-
layer strie glaze, and the
pricey art is on loan.
At third and bond,
the model apartments
provide Pratt students
with the opportunity to
display their own eco-
friendly designs, such as
the dual-height bench
from David Zachary fea-
tured here.
Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. is owned and operated by NRT LLC. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark. Farm of Jas de Bouffan, used with permission.
Local Experts WorldwideMANHATTAN PROPERTIES
PIERRE HOTEL: Entire tower floor in triple mint condi-tion. 11 rooms with 3 bedrooms, 5,000± sq ft. Spectacularviews in all directions. $25,000,000. WEB: NYO0016598.Roger Erickson, 212.606.7612
485 PARK AVENUE: Luxurious 11-room, full-floor coop. High floor. Large bright rooms with high ceilings,balcony terrace. $12,000,000. WEB: NYO0017028. Brucie Boalt, 212.606.7702
980 FIFTH AVENUE: Exceptionally large 6-room on the20th floor with 2,700± sq ft. Stunning Central Park andopen sunny views. $4,495,000. WEB: NYO0016979. Austin Schuster, 212.606.7797
HAMPSHIRE HOUSE GLAMOUR: CPS. Triple mint 3-bedroom, 31⁄2-bath with sweeping city views in a prewarco-op. $4,290,000. WEB: NYO0016917. Allison Koffman,212.606.7688, Juliette Janssens, 212.606.7670
RITZ CARLTON RESIDENCE: 26th floor, 2-bedroom,21⁄2-bath corner condo with views. $1,795,000. WEB:NYO0016955. Roger Erickson, 212.606.7612, Reg Fairchild,212.606.7771
430 EAST 57TH STREET: Classic pre-war building onSutton Place. Sun-filled 4-room with fireplace, southernviews. $1,325,000. WEB: NYO0016602. Stan Ponte,212.606.4109, Robin Reardon, 212.606.4118
125 EAST 74TH STREET: Impeccable 4-room pre-warco-op with high ceilings, arched entry-way, original architectural details. $1,595,000 WEB: NYO0017019Roberta Golubock, 212.606.7704
MODERN DUPLEX PENTHOUSE: Union Sq. Extensivepanoramic views with 3,000± sq. ft. terrace. 3-bedroom, 3-bath condo. $7,995,000. WEB: NYO0016890. Eric Malley 212.606.7625
29 EAST 64TH STREET: Traditional 6-room pre-war co-op with beautiful renovations. High ceilings, openviews. $3,700,000. WEB: NYO0017039. Jeanne Bucknam,212.606.7717, Nikki Field, 212.606.7669
240 EAST 47TH STREET: Extensively renovated 3,600±sq ft condo. Superb floor plan. 5 bedrooms, 41⁄2 baths, amaz-ing views, high-end amenities. $5,100,000. WEB:NYO0015951. Margaret Cohn, 212.606.7680.
EAST 80S PENTHOUSE: Enjoy the Manhattan skylinefrom a wrap-around terrace in a 6-room post-war co-op.3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $2,195,000. WEB: NYO0015964. Fred Williams, 212.606.7737
THE PIERRE: Fifth Avenue. Landmark, high-floor 2-bed-room, 2-bath. Best deal in Pierre. Natural light from 3exposures. $2,200,000. WEB: NYO0016003. Lois Nasser,212.606.7706, Chris Rounick, 212.606.7643
MANHATTAN BROKERAGES I sothebyshomes.com/nycEAST SIDE 38 EAST 61ST STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10065 T 212.606.7660 F 212.606.7661DOWNTOWN 379 WEST BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10012 T 212.431.2440 F 212.431.2441
22 the home observer spring 2010
The Mighty Starchitects
Jean Nouvel conquers New York. below: Frank Gehry addresses the faithful.
By Tim Street-Porter “Starchitects Conquer New York” is the title of a recent, well-researched blog post on Curbed NY’s Web site. (For the uninitiated: This is an indispensable source for architecture and real estate news and gossip.) The piece’s New York Post–style heading spells out the state of play between the city’s major developers and the architectural community. Not all architects are nerdy like Steve Martin’s stereotypical charac-ter in It’s Complicated. They can be glamorous! Well, a few anyway. Fortune only knocks on the door of a chosen few: those with talent to spare, huge entrepreneurial skills and the right connections. However, the purpose of this excellent blog was to show us that New York is finally getting some exciting new buildings after decades of mediocrity.
In the three decades leading up to the pres-ent century, important new architecture was created in most places (London, Berlin, Paris, Tokyo and so on), but not in New York. (On a walking tour around midtown 10 years ago with Herbert Muschamp, the late architecture critic of The New York Times, we passed Eero Saarinen’s CBS building and agreed that it was the city’s last decent skyscraper; it was built in 1965.) Then, as the new century dawned, New York’s property developers finally discovered that putting big-name, Pritzker Prize–winning designers on the marquee gave a cachet to your next co-op project, as had already proved to be the case in Europe. Good for business, in other words. In the blink of an eye, the international A-listers—Renzo Piano, Fe-lix Calatrava, Jean Nouvel, Sir Norman Foster, Richard Meier, Frank Gehry, Herzog and Meuron, et al.—were all to be seen disembarking at Kennedy, brandishing plans. The results of this enlight-ened business activity can be
seen on Curbed NY’s post (including the New Museum in the Bowery, whose architects, Sanaa, are this year’s Pritzker Prize winners), not to mention myriad projects that tragically never made it to fruition, thanks to the credit crunch (including brilliant high-rises by Calatrava and Herzog & Meuron). New York is now a proud patron of the new architecture; radical buildings by A-list designers are now commonplace in the Big Apple. This is so welcome. Recent architec-ture, hitherto the dull background of our envi-
ronmental consciousness, can now be as hip and sophisticated as the contents of art galleries and store window displays, the ads on billboards and the sar-torial gestures of fashionable pedestrians. And an antidote to the soullessness of so much of our surroundings, like the row of Trump Palaces that line an interminable stretch of the up-per West Side Highway.
“Starchitects,” though? Isn’t this a vulgar way to talk
about successful protagonists of the “Mother of the Arts,” as architecture was traditionally described? Well, yes. There was more politesse in the Renaissance, or whenever that phrase was coined. But they didn’t have dental care then, and the word “hip” didn’t exist, so I’m happy living in today’s world, putting up as gracefully as possible with today’s tabloid-isms. There are some who really do get upset, though, and one of them is Frank Gehry. As reported in Curbed NY, when asked in an interview with the London Independent newspaper if he was a starchitect, he replied, “I don’t know who invented that f*****g word starchitect. I am not a star-chitect. I’m an architect!” Well, perhaps, but Frank has not always been shy of courting his legend. Dur-ing the earlier days of his A-list status, while he exhibited models of his Disney Concert Hall at the Venice Biennale, I witnessed him outside the U.S. pavilion, autographing programs for a line of fans stretching around the entire building, then posing at a window from the inside as more fans outside took his photo. I also remember hanging out with Suzanne Stephens, the distinguished Progressive Architecture editor who, during the early ’80s, had championed the fledgling careers of the New York Seven, a group of young archi-tects, many of whom—including Gehry—are now A-listers. She could barely get the time of day from all the starchitects wafting grandly around the receptions with their entourages. As a foot-note, I asked a very dignified James Stirling, a senior British A-lister, if he ever signed auto-graphs. “I don’t do those,” was his pointed reply.
real estate
I asked a very dignified James Stirling, a senior British
A-lister if he ever signed autographs. “I don’t do those”,
was his pointed reply.
Tim
STr
eeT-
Po
rTe
r; g
eTTy
imag
eS
My Life With the Power Brokers
Last November, after three years of writing about magnificently overpriced New York
residential real estate, I moved to the Wall Street beat. It is sober and civilized by comparison.
What I feel nostalgic for isn’t the real es-tate itself. Even though it’s fun to visit cosmic Manhattan homes —like the hand-built third floor of the Plaza, the $34 million penthouse at 1020 Fifth Avenue or Brooke Astor’s Park Avenue duplex—I only went when they were on the market. So they tended to be hollowed, or staged with fake furniture, and sometimes en-tirely empty. It was very kingly but slightly sad.
What I miss much more are the real es-tate brokers themselves, especially the few at the top. They were eloquent, acrobatic, cruel, connected, imaginative, well bred and ill-man-nered, sometimes all in the same afternoon.
There were all kinds. Kirk Henckels was a good-natured equestrian who always wore a bow tie. Carrie Chiang was a competitive ball-room dancer. John Burger liked talking on the phone about the subtleties of Park Avenue co-op design, even if he was poolside in the Hamptons.
Dolly Lenz was the genius power broker who explained over lunch at the Four Seasons that she doesn’t have tirades; she just cuts people out of her life. After I wrote a story that described how the recession had made her into a mere mortal, she stopped talking to me.
A. Laurance Kaiser IV, whose father died af-ter leaving his Park Avenue club and stepping into a pothole, sold a single duplex at 834 Fifth Avenue four times—first for $225,000; then to John DeLorean; then to Reginald Lewis, the first African-American allowed into a so-called Good Building; then to Carl Icahn’s old chief investor, who paid $33,444,500.
“They lie, the brokers—they lie to brokers, they lie to clients. There’s lying. Lying,” Linda Stein, probably the first New York celebrity real estate agent, told me in the spring of 2007. “There is no high except the money, which is extremely taxable.” She was found murdered by her assistant that October.
And Edward Lee Cave was the pristinely genteel agent whose eponymous brokerage was taken over last year by Brown Harris Ste-vens. “When I first started, all the doormen had white gloves,” he sighed then. “And they don’t anymore. It’s called change.”
—Max Abelson
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By Chloe Malle “Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase is Zaha Hadid’s grandmother.” So declares Aaron Betsky, director of the Cincinnati Art Museum, and au-thor of the recently released edition of the ac-claimed Anglo-Iraqi architect complete works.
Like Duchamp’s Nude, Hadid’s work is collage-like, planar, multi-faceted—and so is this book; a complex layering of plans, photos and ideas, often one indiscernible from the other. As renowned for her unbuilt designs as for her built ones, this sharp-cornered coffee table tome makes little distinction between the two, seamlessly—and confusingly—weaving between the built and the abstract. While organized chronologically by project with Hadid’s formu-laic descriptions of each project, this is not a handheld tour through the architect’s work, but rather a montage of what inspired it and what it, in turn, inspired. With photographs of the models—or, gasp, finished buildings—the excep-tion to the rule, the book is more a collection of abstract paintings and drawings than traditional blueprints and architect renderings.
Her paintings and drawings are angular, post-impressionist works with deftly woven architec-tural tilts. Her drawings imagine the aftermath of the explosion—or implosion—of a modernist Utopia where only fragments remain; mobile, definitive, the only narrative today’s urbanism can provide. Her drawing titled New York, Man-hattan: A New Calligraphy of Plan is a somber take on Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie, this one with large swatches of black space and curled, diagonal lines creeping through.
Flipping through the pages of abstracted paintings and Futurist renderings, one thing becomes clear: Zaha Hadid builds flows motion. In fact, perhaps in deference to this, the entire
volume seems to be in flux, a compendium of dynamics and motion. Even the
Walter Benjamin quotation about the invention of film changing the very
nature of time that prefaces Betsky’s introduction is in sharp italics, zealously
pushing the eye to the next page before we have
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26 the home observer spring 2010
on the shelves
finished with this one. But Hadid’s secret weapon is the deliberateness of this flux. This is not diapha-nous, curling movement, this is specific, staccato and determined. As Betsky lyrically notes of her structures, “There are now shards and planes that slice through the landscape to open up a space we did know could exist.”
Ms. Hadid is architecture’s defiant dowager empress. Most renowned for her Vitra Fire Station in Germany and the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, she was the first woman to win archi-tecture’s premier Pritzker Prize in 2004, predating Kathryn Bigelow syndrome by six years. The Con-temporary Arts Center is certainly the most acces-sible of Hadid’s designs (likely one of the reasons it, unlike so many others, actually got built).
Included in this latest edition are designs for her most recent commissions, the Guggenheim-Hermitage Museum in Lithuania and the Aquatics Center for the 2012 London Olympic Games, as well as examples of the architect’s forays into interior design, fashion and even automobiles. The plans for the London Aquatic Center are sinuous and spec-tacular, a hovering blue whale over London’s gray skyline, and her object design, near the back of the volume, is combative and almost frightening. Her black, asymmetrical jelly shoes are best suited as beach footwear for the Witches of Eastwick. And the interior design items—lacquered white amoebas molded into space age settees and carpet designs resembling a Kandinsky painting on acid—wouldn’t be my choice for the living room.
Zaha Hadid: Complete Works is not for the faint of heart. There’ll be no absent-minded coffee table flip-throughs with this one. As in all spheres of her work, Hadid demands more.
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on the shelves
A Feast of All Thing PontiBy Tim Street-Porter
Giovanni “Gio” Ponti was one of the great 20th-century design luminaries; his career, based in Milan—the epicenter of Italy’s design community—successfully embraced publish-ing, teaching and the industrial and visual arts. The 400-page Gio Ponti, published by Rizzoli, is a newly revised version of the monograph published in Italy in 1988, a time when the great man had become a neglected figure following his death, in 1979. Perhaps he had been taken for granted for too long, as
Gio Pontiby Ugo La Pietra Rizzoli, $85
the focus of attention diverted to entrepre-neurial figures such as Ettore Sottsass, whose attention-grabbing range of Memphis furni-ture, launched in 1981, was dominating the headlines. The arrival of the Ponti monograph restored luster to a much-loved design mae-stro whose career spanned more than 50 years of productive brilliance.
This newly repackaged (but not re-designed) version of Gio Ponti has the same catalog-like feel as the 1988 original, and feels a little dated in its production values. There are
Gio Ponti’s own apartment in
milan. below: on the book’s
cover, Ponti is peering through
one of his mass-produced
1950s “superleggera” chairs.
Above: Ponti sketching
at an improvised desk on
a construction site.
30 the home observer spring 2010
just two full-bleed, whole-page illustrations, for example. Nonetheless it is packed with invaluable images of his products, drawing and paintings: a feast of all things Ponti. To fully enjoy this won-derful designer, however, I would suggest adding Taschen’s stylish $9.99 Ponti to the shopping cart as a companion volume. With one of Ponti’s signa-ture ’50s interiors on the cover, and a sophisticated explanatory text, this diminutive soft back is a per-fect Ponti amuse-bouche. Importantly, it includes recently taken color photographs of the terminally chic ’50s villas in Caracas (Oscar Neimeyer was an inspiration here) and the brilliant 1960s Parco dei Principe hotels in Rome and Sorrento; the big volume feels bereft without these key images. This brave little book will hook you on Ponti, leaving you ready to tackle the serious heft (and riches) of its companion. (Finally, check out the new Trien-nale NYC Museum at 40 53rd Street, the site of the old American Craft Museum, whose opening show in May is on Gio Ponti.)
Even if had Ponti been an architect and noth-ing more, his place in history would have been secured with his 1956 Pirelli Building in Milan, one of the most rational and elegant skyscrap-ers ever designed, of which Ponti himself said, “Nothing can be added and nothing can be taken away.” However, as we learn in Gio Ponti, this was just one of his many hats in a career span-ning more than 50 years. Editor Ugo La Pietra provides an introduction and lead-ins to the chapters (arranged by decade), and there are es-says by Italian design luminaries, as well as text by Ponti himself. It opens with the 1920s, notable for Ponti’s early success as head designer of ce-ramics for Richard-Ginori, an episode that won him the grand prix at the Paris “Exposition des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes” in 1925. Also notable in the ’20s chapter were sophisti-cated designs for houses and furniture, as well
He created costumes for La Scala opera and designed his own clothes, even appearing on Italian
best-dressed lists. He was a prolific product designer, and drew
an automobile for Alfa Romeo.
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31the home observer spring 2010
on the shelves
as his creation of the legendary Domus magazine in 1928, which he continued to produce, on and off, until his death. Besides the multitude of photographs of Ponti’s productions, there are his draw-ings; he drew ceaselessly and captivat-ingly throughout his life, demonstrating further his stylistic genius as a form-maker. Ponti also served as a university professor, and was the author of nu-merous books and innumerable articles. He created costumes for La Scala opera and designed his own clothes, even ap-pearing on Italian best-dressed lists. He was a prolific product designer, and drew an automobile for Alfa Romeo. As a furniture designer he was already es-tablished in the 1920s, featuring motifs that anticipated those of the 1940s, and his vibrant ’50s collaborations with For-nasseti are especially notable.
A sense of joie de vivre infused ev-erything Ponti turned his attention to, and this alone makes Gio Ponti irresist-ible. Which is just as well: Much of the writing is difficult and vague. Italian commentaries and postulations on design tend not to make much sense, emanating as they do from the opaque cauldron of Milanese intellectualism. Which reminds me of an article I once wrote for Domus that was translated and published in Italian, and then re-translated into English at the back of the magazine for English-language readers. When I read the latter, I was surprised to find that my straightfor-ward text, with its carefully constructed analogies, had emerged from the blend-er wonderfully atmospheric and poet-ic—I remember wishing I could write like that—but making no sense at all.
on the shelves
the lobby of the hotel Parco
dei Principe in sorrento.
10 the home observer SPRING 2009
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32 the home observer spring 2010
elements like low stone walls, fields of tall switch grass and an isolated tree or three; the overall effect is breathtakingly beautiful, with a decidely Shaker appeal. She wants the visitor to become aware of “the bark on a tree, to just stop a sec-ond.” These 12 acres, void of all ornamention, just shimmers with its quiet beauty.
The garden at Mount Sharon in Virgina pulls out all the stops. Designed by Charles Stick for a private client, it incoroporates four terraces of formal parterres, gushing fountains, rose-smothered pergolas, Italian statuary and clipped hornbeam trees à la Française. Because the property also encompasses long views of the rolling Virginia hills, it achieves the perfect yin-yang of garden design—wide open areas complemented by manicured and detailed in-
Modern Gardening
A Clearing in the Woods:Creating Contemporary Gardensby Roger Foley, The Monacelli Press$50
By Nancy Butkus This book invites you to take a spin around 25 of the most luxurious contemporary gardens in America—courtesy of veteran garden photogra-pher Roger Foley. His cinematic photographs capture the distinct beauty of each garden, from the soft blur of seaside grasses in a Long Island meadow to the man-made limestone grottoes of a Coral Gables extravaganza. The acompanying text, also written by Foley, lays out the design brief and the guiding inspiration and mentions many of the primary plants and trees utilized, but more on this a bit later.
Edwina von Gal, a gardening superstar whose clients include Calvin Klein and Steven Spiel-berg, created a minimalist landscape for her own home in East Hampton. She relied on simple
on the shelves
edwina von Gal’s minimalist
east hampton garden, where
the visitor becomes “acutely
aware of the beauty of the
basic elements of nature.”
33the home observer fall 2009
timate spaces like the Chinese Chippendale-style pavillion. But this is also where an editorial flaw in the book becomes painfully apparent: There is not one caption in the entire 200-page book. All of the plant information is presented on the open-ing spread; after that, you’re on your own. I kept turning back to the text, desperate to know what I was looking at: Is this the winding path that leads to the Ellipse pavillion? And what are those multi-trunked trees with blotchy bark in the double-perennial border? Garden plans, especially when presenting multi-acre properties with different “rooms,” would also have helped.
The Coral Gables garden designed by Raymond Jungles (for a landscaper who works in the tropics, could there be a better name?) is a masterpeice of built environment. The 2-acre garden, surrounded by eight adjacent properties, is a series of sink holes, ponds, streams, waterfalls and a lake, all cut from the local limestone. Excavating down 20 feet, Jungles was able to create a Disney-like fantasy, utterly private, with dramatic changes of scale and carved-out niches for sitting, and looking like Mother Nature’s very own, well, jungle.
The other 23 gardens in the book are just as varied and spectacular, ranging from the Texas hill country to a Tulsa garden with an English slant. The only big omission: captions!
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34 the home observer spring 2010
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For locals in Great Barrington, Mass., it’s known as the house with the yellow shutters. “People were like, ‘Are you really go-ing to keep them?’” laughed Cortney Novogratz. “I love New England, but things there are pretty chill and conservative, and you see a lot of antiques and dark floors. We wanted to bright-en it up and do the complete opposite.” Ms. Novogratz, 38, and her husband Robert, 47, are not just the owners of the NYC-based design firm Sixx Design, they’re also soon-to-be reality stars once Bravo starts airing 9 by Design on April 13, which follows this busy couple and their seven children—Wolfgang, 12; twins Bellamy and Tallulah, 11; Breaker, 9; twins Holleder and Five, 4; and baby Major, 15 months (at the start of 9 by De-sign, Ms. Novogratz is eight-and-a-half-months pregnant)—as they renovate and design achingly-cool properties in Lower Manhattan and beyond.
The Novogratz family, when not renovating, moving or filming their own Bravo TV show, escape to a 100-year-old
farmhouse outside Great Barrington. This is a place they can really call home
Tim
Gea
ney
high and low mix in the
loft-like downstairs. the blue
swivel chairs were bought for
$50 and then reupholstered.
An expensive Cappellini table
is surrounded by Kartell
Ghost chairs. Floors and
walls were painted white to
brighten the space.
Clockwise from
bottom left: Cortney
(holding major), Five,
tallulah, holleder,
breaker, robert,
Wolfgang, and
bellamy
By Sara Vilkomerson
35the home observer spring 2010
Nine IsEnough
36 the home observer spring 2010
While the family just celebrated their one-year anniversary in their current 8,000-square-foot West Village townhouse, it’s the Great Barrington 100-year-old house they purchased eight years ago that is their oasis of choice. “To be honest, I think [the house] is the how we’ve been able to add more chil-dren and continue to live in the city,” said Ms. Novogratz. “We love the city, don’t get me wrong, but there are times you re-ally need to step out of it, and the house has been incredible.” Due to the nature of their business—which has expanded to designing hotels on the Jersey shore and an upcoming project in Mexico—the family, which live in a property as they reno-vate before “flipping” it, have adjusted to having their living quarters constantly change. In fact, they’ve moved more than 15 times, reportedly even three times in one year … twice (“I’m sure one of my kids will grow up and buy a place and never leave it,” Ms. Novogratz joked). “We get to enjoy the house, and then it’s time to move on to the next project,” she said. “I wouldn’t stop doing this because we move quite a bit—we choose to do this, and it’s not for everyone, but it’s fun. We get to do what we love and get to spend time with the kids.”
top: simplicity was key for the kitchen where the
family spends a lot of their time. Colorful art
contrasts with the white laminate cabinets, which
were fitted with expensive hardware.
Above: Yellow shutters and porch curtains made with
umbrella fabric brighten the farmhouse facade.
37the home observer spring 2010
the chair with the faux
zebra upholstery once
belonged to Cortney’s
grandmother.
38 the home observer spring 2010
Above and right: the children’s
bedrooms are all painted in bright,
bold colors with white or neutral-
colored bedding. their trophies
and keepsakes are displayed in the
country house to avoid clutter in
their city residence. the paintings
of women adorning one wall
are flea market finds.
opposite: robert and Cortney’s
bedroom also uses bold color com-
bined with graphic art.
39the home observer spring 2010
40 the home observer spring 2010
41the home observer spring 2010
But the New England home, which the family uses year-round and occasionally rents out to help fund family vacations, is a constant. “It could be we only spend two nights, or three weeks, but we feel recharged when we come back to the city. We eat so healthily—in the summertime everyone has gor-geous gardens,” Ms. Novogratz said. “We constantly just kind of relax when we’re up there.” Except when it’s time to pack up 7 kids to go skiing. “For me to take seven kids out West? Forget it,” she said. “[Up in Great Barrington] it’s just five min-utes from our house—I can get [the kids’] boots on in the car.” She paused for a moment. “It can be a little overwhelming, but we know how to manage it.”
the large wooden plat-
form allows for a lot of
horseplay and is inspired
by the docks in the
nearby berkshire lakes.
opposite: the sunroom
is everybody’s favorite
room in the house
to settle in with a
good book.
42 the home observer spring 2010
photography by tim street-porter
It must seem a long way from New Zealand for Sandra Nun-nerley, who has followed a gently winding path around the world to find herself in New York as a successful decorator. She first studied architecture in Sydney, but soon became fas-cinated with the art world, eventually moving to New York via Europe, to work at the legendary Marlborough Gallery in the landmark Fuller Building on the Upper East Side. Here, Nun-nerley promoted the Color Field painting school (a Kenneth
Noland painting from that period hangs in her living room to-day.) “I really loved the art world,” explains Nunnerley, “espe-cially during the 1980s, with the photorealists like Don Eddy.”
But then she started thinking about decorating as an inter-esting career move, “It wasn’t an option in New Zealand when I was growing up,” she says. A large Manhattan corporate de-sign firm (now closed) proved an ideal learning environment. Soon, Nunnerley was heading their special projects depart-
Art and Commerce
Sandra’s Nunnerly townhouse apartment is filled with bold art and muted tones, reflecting a life lived in on three continents.
By Annie Kelly
43the home observer spring 2010
A large print by richard
serra anchors the
living room. Furniture
designed by Nunnerley.
opposite: Decorator
sandra Nunnerley
in her living room, in
front of a painting by
Kenneth Noland.
A black Jansen table
sits at the living room
window, surrounded
by Jean-Michel Frank
chairs. A Jean Royere
light fitting hangs
above upholstered
furniture designed by
Nunnerley.
46 the home observer spring 2010
ment, and was encouraged to branch out on her own. “I was fortunate that my work was published right away. I also did Kips Bay and other showhouses,” she explains, which gave her a chance to meet fellow designers. “I’ve had great mentors as well, people like Albert Hadley, and art dealers Leo Castelli and Holly Solomon.”
Today Nunnerley runs a “high-end boutique residential decorating firm, with really great clients. There’s nothing that escapes her eye, from a building elevation to the trim on a pil-low.” She loves her home on the Upper East Side. “I came to this townhouse from a 53rd floor apartment, and I don’t miss the view at all.” With her art collection, and cool tailored in-teriors, it is easy to see why Nunnerley prefers her “indoor” views, and in summer the large tree behind the building is full of birdlife from nearby Central Park.
The apartment opens directly from the elevator, and a large living and dining area spreads out to the right. An elegant black-laquered Jansen dining table sits by the front window—for large dinner parties it can be wheeled into the center of the room. Jean-Michel Frank dining chairs are spread discreetly against the walls, ready to be pulled up at a moment’s notice for a meal. The sleek, modern kitchen, set into an alcove, separates the public and private spaces. This was once two apartments, but Nunnerley has seamlessly incorporated them so that she has two bedrooms, both with a view of the back garden. Here an endless stream of friends from all over the world come to stay. “Every year I love to travel, adventure-travel, places like Africa and Burma—and everywhere I go, I find fabrics,” explains the decorator. These fabrics can be seen around the apartment, as pillows and placed over ottomans, contrasting with her favorite muted linens and cool-toned silk velvets.
Today, she finds she has come full circle, as her offices are in the same Fuller Building that housed the Malborough Galler-ies during her first years in Manhattan. “I can walk to work!” exclaims Nunnerly.
A portrait of Nunnerley
by mcGough and
mcDermott hangs above
a Japanese bowl.
below: A model of a maori
canoe sits in the living
room next to a venetian
glass lamp.
47the home observer spring 2010
the master bedroom,
with its scalamandre
fabric headboard
and empire chest of
drawers, is at the
peaceful rear of the
apartment.
48 the home observer spring 2010
Small Is Beautiful
Russell Bush has lived in this prewar jewelbox for more than 30 years, proving small spaces can deliver big statements.
“I always begin with the fabrics, rather than the furniture,” explains Russell Bush, a dapper, elegant decorator, sitting be-hind a long, felt-covered table at home, wearing a shirt of his own design. His first career was as a fashion designer, which explains his love of fabrics, and why the red lacquer Chinese cabinet in his living space is filled to the brim with the latest from Rogers and Goffigon, John Rosselli, Carolina Irving and Pierre Frey —among others. His next career was with New York decorator Peter Marino; he eventually decided to leave, in hopes of leading a less stressful life, but he soon discovered the opposite: “I really wanted to keep my life simple, but my phone started ringing and I found people wanted my help—I am still working with them to this day.”
Bush lives in one-bedroom prewar apartment on lower Park Avenue, in a building that originated as the Vanderbilt Hotel, built by the Commodore’s great-grandson Alfred Gwynne. It was designed by Warren and Wetmore, who also built Grand Central Station for the Vanderbilts. After 30 years in this el-egant but tiny apartment, Bush still harbors a desire to some-day live in Paris—perhaps inspired by the famous Oscar Wilde remark: “When good Americans die, they go to Paris.”
photography by tim street-porter
bush’s home office
opens onto a book-filled
workroom. one of a pair of
madeleine Castaing chairs
sits in front of the table.
49the home observer spring 2010
50 the home observer spring 2010
The front door opens directly to the main living space, passing a small kitch-en, masquerading as a built-in cupboard. In his home office space, Bush has set up a long table that doubles as a dining table, draped in an olive-green felt cloth cut with a decorative edge. Books are everywhere, in towering stacks at the entrance to the room, filling the book shelves, and even cleverly concealed behind the four screens in each corner upholstered with “Les Colonnes” from Braquenie (found at Pierre Frey fabrics). “Screens make great storage spaces!” exclaims the decorator.
One of a pair of treasured 19th-century chairs from the great French decorator Madeleine Castaing sits near the table. “I would visit her at her store in the sixth arrondissment ev-ery time I went to Paris,” explains Bush, “ and I saw them in a storage room. Of course, nothing was ever really for sale unless she liked you.” After expressing a wary interest in them during several trips to Paris, the purchase was negotiated, and today they add a touch of exoticism to the small space.
When Bush was growing up in the Pennsylvania coun-tryside, he was inspired by a Vogue magazine story on Cecil Beaton’s two houses and vowed that he would live like that
someday. Years later he spotted a bed in a friend’s apartment that he recog-nized as being from the Beaton estate. Somehow he persuaded the owner to part with it. So now, even though the purchase of Ashcome House escaped him (it was bought by Madonna in 2001 for a small fortune), at least he sleeps in Cecil Beaton’s bed. Today it is covered in a leopard print bedspread and over-looked by a portrait painted by Law-rence Mynott of Beaton’s great friend,
Stephen Tennant.What’s next for this cultivated decorator? More personal
projects. Bush has always been fascinated by 19th-century photography and has started to try “almost everything from daguerreotypes to digital, wet-plate collodian images, hand-painted silver gelatin prints using oil paints, and polaroid lifts and transfers,” says the designer. He especially loves to print in the traditional silver gelatin way, providing the same type of reseach challenge that he invariably undergoes for each deco-rating project.
This charming little apartment shows that if space is lack-ing, style becomes the essence. Beaton and his friends would have approved. —A.K.
Cecil beaton’s bed, bought
at auction in england,
takes pride of place in the
bedroom.
opposite: A set of four
18th-century mezzotints
by thomas Frye hang on
the passage wall.
51the home observer spring 2010
52 the home observer spring 2010
Back in 2005, New York decorator Timothy Whealon got a call from a stylish couple in their mid-30s who needed help with a new apartment. “They heard about me from a mutual friend, and they liked a published house I decorated,” he explains. The couple were moving from a downtown loft, but didn’t want to sacrifice their hip urban lifestyle in the transition to their new Upper East Side apartment, with its formal and conventional layout. After all, it did once belong to Barbara Walters, who is from quite another generation. When he walked over from his
A Family AffairA young couple with two children find
serenity and style in a Park Avenue Classic 8 that once belonged to Barbara Walters
photography by tim street-porter
nearby office to take a look, Whealon realized that not much rearranging was needed—the three main rooms lined up in an attractive enfilade, and three of its four bedrooms had great views over Park Avenue.
“The big changes were really cosmetic, “ explains Wheal-on’s assistant, Sarah Klug, “but we totally redid the kitchen, bar and bathrooms. Every room in the apartment has new wall treatments which include decorative painting, combing and wallpaper.” This is obvious right from the entry, which has
53the home observer spring 2010
the dining room is anchored
by a hurvin Anderson painting.
opposite: A demilune table
occupies a corner of the
main living room.
54 the home observer spring 2010
55the home observer spring 2010
In the living room,
bridgewater chairs in Lee
Jofa’s herbert’s Carnation
Weave flank a sturdy
brown sofa. An abaca rug
provides texture.
56 the home observer spring 2010
been hand-stenciled in a dramatic tree pattern, based on 18th-century wallpaper in Sweden’s Drottningholm Palace, the cur-rent home of the Swedish Royal Family. The main dining and living rooms lead off to the right, where Whealon has given the couple a fresh contemporary style of decorating that suits their new uptown lives. Especially as they have now had two children in quick succession. “Their mother kept the original guest bedrooms as they were, she just gave them children’s beds and added her own personal touches,” adds Whealon.
The dining room came together all at once when the couple bought a graphic painting by Hurvin Anderson, which an-chored the whole apartment, as it can be seen from all of the main rooms. The living room is a fresh and pretty space, with
comfortable armchairs upholstered in Lee Jofa’s Herbert’s Carnation Weave, which flank a sturdy brown corduroy-vel-vet sofa. Whealon brought the formality of the room down with a rustic abaca rug, and gave the walls a pale cream yellow treatment to keep it fresh. This room leads onto a comfortable library with reclaimed pine paneling, designed by architect Leonard Woods; it includes bookcases full of books and baby pictures. A cowhide ottoman holds piles of magazines and flowers, and a round table by the window struggles to support mounds of books.
The master bedroom is incredibly peaceful, considering it overlooks busy, traffic-filled Park Avenue, and Whealon deco-rated it to be a calm space, adding the large comfortable bed.
the library, paneled
in reclaimed pine wood,
has a view through to
the dining room at the
other end of the
apartment. the sofa
is covered in velvet
mogador in Foret from
old World Weavers,
and the ottoman is
covered in a
pale cowhide.
57the home observer spring 2010
Above the living room
fireplace hangs a
glass-framed mirror
from the 1920s.
58
“My client had a lot of interest in this room; she loved the new Lulu DK fabric, which we used for the curtains and ot-toman,” says Whealon. “I wanted to bring more geometry into the room, so we added a blue-and-cream David Hicks carpet.” Whealon painted the walls a pale blue, then de-cided to give the woodwork a warm, cream-colored trim to balance the cool hues of the room. He hung an early 20th-century raw crystal chandelier to bring a bit of glamour and reflected light into the space.
After months of work, this is now the sophisticated apart-ment of a well-traveled couple who were lucky enough to find the right decorator to help them create a family home in enviable comfort and style. —A.K.
Styled by Carlos Mota, whose new book Flowers, Chic and Cheap, is coming out on May 4 from Random House.
The former guest
bedroom was adapted
by the client for her
new baby.
Below: The powder
room was wallpapered
to create a jewel-box
feeling in
this tiny space.
59the home observer spring 2010
For the tranquil master
bedroom, Whealon designed
the bed and used Paradiso
fabric by Lulu DK for
the curtains and bench.
60 the home observer spring 2010
photography by tim street-porter
Designer Juan Montoya’s work—often seen in the pages of Architectural Digest—is unerringly elegant and refined, but when it comes to his country retreat, the designer turned to a more rustic palette. Montoya, born in Bogota, Colombia, has a degree in environmental design from Parsons and was, for a while, a practicing artist and sculptor—which informs and in-fluences his current work. A true cosmopolitan, he has apart-ments in Paris, Miami, New York and Bogota. When asked how he manages to spend time in all of them, he replies, “I
have work everywhere, and it is convenient for everyone if I have a place nearby.” In addition, Montoya has a new furniture collection for Century, as well as fabric, carpet and accessories collections for other manufacturers—not to mention design projects that stretch from Punta Mita, Mexico, to France, San Francisco and, of course, New York.
Hidden in the hills of the Hudson River Valley, Montoya’s country retreat on 110 acres overlooks his own lake. He dis-covered the property back in 1981, and over the years has ex-
Rustic HideawayJuan Montoya’s 110-acre retreat in the Hudson
River Valley—with its very own lake— is a rich mix of earthy materials and Asian antiques
61the home observer spring 2010
the main living room
is a rich mixtures of
Asian influences.
opposite: the stone-
walled main house
overlooks the lake.
62 the home observer spring 2010
In the dining room, mon-
toya used stone from the
property for the floor.
opposite: the guest house
was originally planned as
the designer’s studio.
63the home observer spring 2010
tensively reworked the rather plain original house beyond rec-ognition. Today the sweeping driveway leads up to the main house, past the lake and into a granite brick courtyard. The guest house on the left, added some years ago, sits on top of a stone loggia, which serves as a sheltered spot for cars.
Entered from the stone staircase, the main house is multilevel, with a highly eclectic décor reflecting Montoya’s cosmopolitan life. He has created a rich, rustic opulence, us-ing an earthy palette of browns, beige and orange, crisply ac-cented with white. His skill as an architect is revealed through his sense of spatial relationships and the varied combination of textures—the reed-covered cathedral ceilings, sisal carpet and dark, reclaimed wood —making the house feel distinctly Asian, despite the very European mix of furniture.
The three bedrooms have views of the hillside, where large boulders are randomly scattered. The two smaller bed-rooms sit side by side; their beds are hung with blue tick-ing, and the low-beamed ceilings give the rooms the feel of a
64 the home observer spring 2010
much older house. On the top floor, the master bedroom sits in an “A” framed space, with its own deck, overlooking the surrounding forest.
On a lower level, Montoya has positioned a large living space, punctuated by a tall tropical fig tree that reaches up to a skylight. This is a rich, masculine room, where dark fur-niture echoes the woodwork and overhead beams. A large central stone fireplace anchors the rustic mood. Evident throughout the house is the designer’s love of books, and at one end of this space, Montoya keeps most of them corralled in a small library. On the ground floor, a stone-walled dining room has views through a rustic loggia, next to a busy and much-used kitchen. Here, Montoya’s partner, Urban Karls-son, often cooks meals at home for the couple, who, despite all their travels, manage most weekends to escape to this qui-et corner of New York State. —A.K.
the guest bedroom,
with twin four-poster
beds in the main
house, has a nautical,
scandinavian feel.
opposite: montoya
based the design of his
swimming pool on a
floor pattern in
a swedish palace.
65the home observer spring 2010
66 the home observer spring 2010
A NestGrows in Brooklyn
Stick artist Patrick Dougherty will weave a giant nest at the Brooklyn
Botanic Garden this summer. It’s a perfect match for the borough’s
environmentalist mindset.
By Nancy Butkus
Not only are Patrick Dougherty’s sculptures 100 percent non-toxic—no paint, no metals, no animals suspended in formaldehyde—they will eventually go back to the earth whence they sprang, as a composted pile of saplings, leaving
no trace behind. Mr. Dougherty, a mild-mannered,
boyish-looking 65-year-old has built more than 200 stick sculptures since 1988, but this is his first New York City commission. Scot Medbury, president of the BBG, looks on the commission, part of the Garden’s centenary celebra-tion, as “an exhibition that is uniquely ours, with plants at its core,” and plans to site it in the Plant Family Collec-tion, the sweeping landscape that, no coincidence, happens to be highly vis-
ible from the Terrace Cafe, a popular eating spot. Garden visitors can watch the nest take shape on Au-
gust 1, when a rotating team of volunteers will begin the giant weave under Mr. Dougherty’s direction. A tractor-trailer load of “weed trees” harvested from different sites in the New York area will be built into a unique sculpture that “fits the site and has the right scale,” according to Mr.
Ric
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d W
un
sch
Pau
l Kod
ama
67the home observer spring 2010
saplings from strawberry guava,
considered a weed in hawaii, and rose
apple, whose fruit in no way resemble
apples, are woven to form a 30-footer
at the Contemporary Art museum in
honolulu.
opposite: the artist in front of a
pair of 30-foot-high willow and maple
sapling sculptures, at the Woodson
Art museum in Wausau, Wis.
68 the home observer spring 2010
top left: these maple saplings—deemed
“irresistable” by the artist—were harvested
from a nearby prison. topping out at 70 feet,
this instillation at the Decordova museum in
Lincoln, mass., was built in 1990.
bottom left: summer Palace (2009), at the
morris Arboretum at the University of Pennsyl-
vania, fits any childhood fantasy, wicked witch
not included.
opposite: be It ever so humble (1999), a
24-foot-high Palladian stick villa, was built at
the College of Art in savannah, Ga.
Dougherty. Each of his creations, for insti-tutions and those lucky private clients, is unique and site-specific, but all are hand-made laboriously over a three-week period using techniques heretofore known only to birds and beavers. Mr. Dougherty admit-ted “the base at the bottom is hard to do,” but the morning and afternoon teams of three or four volunteers will find the rest “easy”—assuming they’ll be wearing prick-le-proof gloves and have full-up Nalgene water bottles at the ready! Visitors to the garden will be able to ask questions and observe up close, as Mr. Dougherty consid-ers the building phase just another aspect of his creative process.
The stick sculpture will live in the gar-den for one year, with no special attempts to prolong its existence by propping it up with nails, screws or Krazy Glue. Visitors will have complete access to it until the gar-den staff feeds it into its new Morbark Wood Hog, which will grind it down and send it to the compost pile. An ignominious end to what will have been, for a brief time, a fan-tasy shelter made of sticks and dreams.
Geo
rge
Vasq
uez
R
ob C
ard
illo
Sta
r K
otow
ski
69the home observer spring 2010
70 the home observer spring 2010
mole and ratty will live
happily ever after at toad
hall, woven from willow
saplings—what else!— in
2005 at the santa barbara
botanic Garden.
Childhood Dreams (2007)
turns ominous at the Desert
botanic Gardens in Phoenix.
71the home observer spring 2010
Nel
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pb
ell
Ad
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odri
guez
72 the home observer spring 2010
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Ikea Docksta dining table Available in Brooklyn, Paramus, and Elizabeth stores, $149.
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Lamp Designed by Luis Eslava Studio, the Agatha lamp is made of natural wood veneer. 2modern.com, $1,598 small, $1,836 large.
73the home observer spring 2010
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Ikea Jakob office chair Ikea.com, $139.
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West elm Parsons Desk with Drawers Available in Broadway, Chelsea and Dumbo stores, $299.
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Karl springer Goatskin Desk From Galere, 1stdibs.com, $7,800.
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Cb2 Ada table lamp CB2.com, $59.95.
John Dickinson Lamp From Modern One, 1stdibs.com, price on request.
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rin Chair Designed by Hiromichi Konno from Suite New York, its
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75the home observer spring 2010
HOME Gallery
ANtIQUe & vINtAGe WooDs oF AmerICAWe offer one of the most respected and diverse inventories of reclaimed and recycled wood in America. Dedicated to the Green Earth Concept, our major goal is to salvage and reclaim old wood and incorporate it into new and restorative construction. Our antique flooring products and beams come from salvaged barns and gristmills. Our vintage flooring products come from managed forests or from fallen trees over 100 years old. Our vintage line has widths over 36 inches. We have 2 million board feet in inventory and can do large commercial projects as well as smaller ones. High end consulting services are available for all of your specialty wood needs.
2290 route 199, Pine Plains, NY 12567518-398-0049 [email protected]
Antique & VintageWoods of America
At CArlYle you can: Purchase a new custom sofa or sofa bed that will last for over 50 years. Have that same sofa recovered over and over again, by us. Have your cushions and /or mattress replaced when needed, by us. Have a trusted source for all your heirloom re-upholstery and cushion needs. Over 50 years of expertise, our own showrooms and a local factory make us the wise choice for quality driven New Yorkers.
www.carlylesofa.com
CeNter44, the Midtown Manhattan marketplace for antiques and modernism. 75 dealers and every period are represented at Center44’s showrooms, open Monday-Saturday 10am-5pm, 222 East 44th Street, New York, NY 10017 212-450-7988. Take a look at our website www.center44.com. Nate Berkus recently said “Center44 is my favorite place to shop!”
222 east 44th street, New York, NY 10017 212-450-7988www.center44.com
Almo sPeCIAltY, the exclusive distributor of Liebherr refrigeration in the New York area, introduces the new HWS 1800 integrated wine storage cabinet. Liebherr’s eye-level wine storage concept is sleek and original. The compact size and recessed handle means the unit sits flush with cabinetry giving designers flexibility and the homeowner the perfect, accessible conditions for fine wine. Visit almospecialty.com to learn more.
almospecialty.com
Since 1995 when the family-owned broADWAY KItCheNs & bAths opened its flagship Manhattan store, customers have asked the same question, “I want to redo my kitchen and bathroom, but where do I start?” The answer is “Broadway Kitchens & Baths”. BKB now has 3 convenient locations; Manhattan, Englewood NJ and Stamford Ct. BKB has a simple mission to help the customer make good choices, then execute the renovation on time, and within budget.
www.broadwaykitchens.com
ChrIstIe’s, the world’s leading art business had global auction and private sales in 2009 that totaled £2.1 billion/$3.3 billion. Christie’s is a name and place that speaks of extraordinary art, unparalleled service and expertise, as well as international glamour. Founded in 1766 by James Christie, Christie’s conducted the greatest auctions of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, and today remains a popular showcase for the unique and the beautiful. Christie’s offers over 450 sales annually in over 80 categories, including all areas of fine and decorative arts, jewellery, photographs, collectibles, wine, and more. Prices range from $200 to over $80 million. Christie’s has 53 offices in 32 countries and 10 salerooms around the world including in London, New York, Paris, Geneva, Milan, Amsterdam, Dubai and Hong Kong. More recently, Christie’s has led the market with expanded initiatives in emerging and new markets such as Russia, China, India and the United Arab Emirates, with successful sales and exhibitions in Beijing, Mumbai and Dubai. *All auction sales figures include premium.
20 rockefeller Plaza #6New York, NY 10020212-636-2000www.christies.com
76 the home observer spring 2010
HOME Gallery
With 8 wholesale branches and 7 showrooms, Davis & WarshoW is the NY metro region’s resource for all things plumbing, from the largest industrial valve, to the most elegant faucets and fixtures available. Legendary for superlative service, Davis & Warshow has been named Supply House Times “Wholesaler of the Year” in 1988 and again in 2003. Davis & Warshow is a 100% employee-owned company. For more information on Davis & Warshow, visit www.dwny.com.
www.dwny.com
Il Fanale Lighting Collection from Italy is represented exclusively in the United States by Country Gear LtD. located in Bridgehampton. This lighting collection, is inspired by Old World traditions and design, and created using classical materials of copper, brass, iron, ceramic and Murano hand-blown glass, using handcrafted production techniques. This collection brings together the combination of Old World patina finishes of antique brass and aged copper with the timeless elegance of ceramics and Venetian glass, offering unique lighting for your home, garden or business.
2408 main streetbridgehampton, ny 11932631-537-1032www.countrygearltd.com
Jmb DesiGn Group is a full service boutique Design/Build firm in Locust Valley on the North Shore of LI. As the head designer, Mr. Novak’s meticulous attention to details transforms the concept of his design into reality. Whether residential or commercial, JMB offers the same high level of service. The sister company Wilcox Construction Management affords the client a well run construction project with the advantage of having their architect on the job until completion. To schedule a consult call 516.671.1171
516-671-1171jmbdesigninc.com
For over 60 years eLGot has been Manhattan’s premier source for kitchen and bath design, remodeling and major appliance sales and installation. That’s why discerning New Yorkers rely on Elgot for quality, service and experience. Our staff is always happy to help you choose energy efficient and eco-friendly products to allow you to support green living in Manhattan. From too-tight spaces to arcane building codes to co-op regulations, we’ve seen and done it all! Elgot, 937 Lexington Avenue (68th/69th Sts.), New York, NY 10065. 212-879-1200. www.elgotkitchens.com
937 Lexington avenue (68th/69th sts.), new york, ny 10065212-879-1200 www.elgotkitchens.com
“Live with Fine Design” provided by the Greenbaum team of 18 talented designers. Over 2000 resources and our own Workrooms with 30 Artisans capable of creating your desires. Visit our stores with over 140,000 square feet of magnificent home furnishings only 30 minutes from the City. Visit our website for our complete story
101 Washington street paterson, nJ 973-279-30001105 mount Kemble avenuemorristown, nJ 973-425-5500 www.greenbauminteriors.com
Just shaDes has been in business for over 40 years, so it comes as no surprise that Just Shades offers the largest selection of ready-made shades in New York City. From traditional pleats and silks to the more contemporary parchment shades, we carry a shade for every lighting situation. We cater not only to top designers and decorators, but to individuals looking for that perfect shade. For the hard to please, we also create custom shades from our fabrics or from your own fabrics. 21 Spring Street, NY, NY 10012; 212-966-2757; www.justshadesny.com
21 spring street, new york, ny 10012 212-966-2757www.justshadesny.com
77the home observer spring 2010
HOME Gallery
Lighting by gregory is the nation’s premier distributor of designer lighting and fans. On the web, LBG provides a comprehensive selection of the industry’s finest brand names. And at our famed NYC showroom, Lighting By Gregory is the nexus point for world-renowned designers to share their insight with the everyday consumer. Lighting By Gregory has been at the forefront of forward-thinking lighting design for four decades.
158 bowery,new york, ny 10012 tel: 800-807-1826 www.lightingbygregory.com
marc tash interiors is your source for all your home decorating needs. We do all kinds of reupholstery, fabric slipcovers, and window treatments including Roman, Balloon and Austrian shades. Our reputation was established by providing excellent craftsmanship, reliable on-time service, attention to detail and competitive pricing. As a leader in our field, we can develop home décor solutions for all situations & budgets. Call us to schedule a FREE shop-at-home consultation. You’ll have a very pleasant decorating experience!
1-800-marctash (627-2827)www.marctashinteriors.com
I N T E R I O R SI N T E R I O R S
I N T E R I O R SI N T E R I O R S
Kravet is a fourth generation, privately held family business with headquarters in Bethpage, New York. The company offers the widest range of fabrics in the decorative fabrics industry. Recent acquisitions of several other textile companies have further enhanced the Kravet Inc. brand offerings to the trade. The company continues to focus their efforts on introductions of designer inspired collections, fabric, furniture, trimmings, as well as new categories of carpet, lighting, and decorative hardware.
225 central avenue south, bethpage, ny 11714 www.kravet.com
Lerebours antiques features an eclectic collection of Continental as well as American antique, vintage and mid-century modern furniture, lighting and art. Open Monday thru through Friday 10am-6pm, Saturday and Sunday by appointment. Please view our website, www.lereboursantiques.com. Matthew Patrick Smyth recently described Lerebours Antiques as “one of the nicest shops in NYC.”
220 east 60th st., nyc 10022 917- 749-5866www.lereboursantiques.com
Both of Ligne roset’s Manhattan locations display Europe’s largest collection of brilliant contemporary furniture designs. We are proud to introduce new groups of upholstered chairs created by the late, renowned Pierre Paulin just before his death last spring. Our talented design staffs are always ready to work with you on that one needed piece or on a total plan for your new condominium. For the full Roset collection and Quick Ship program: www.lignerosetny.com.
250 Park avenue south at 20th 212-375-1036 155 Wooster street at houston street 212-253-5629www.lignerosetny.com
the manhattan art & antiques center is New York’s largest antique center, housing 100 galleries on three levels the length of an entire city block with varied collections from America, Europe, Africa and Asia. They specialize in fine furniture, silver, jewelry, tapestries, paintings, clocks and many other objects of art. Featured in the photo from European Decorative Arts Company is a Duvinage and Maison Alphonse Giroux decorative panel. Ivory, engraved brass, maple, pearwood on laminated wood, gilt bronze frame. Signed. French. C. 1877-1883.
second ave. (between 55th & 56th sts.) tel: 212-355-4400 Fax: 212-355-4403 Website: www.the-maac.com email: [email protected] open monday thru saturday 10:30am to 6Pm, sunday 12 noon to 6Pm.
78 the home observer spring 2010
HOME Gallery
Distinctive one-of-a-kind handmade pieces are the hallmark of silas seandel’s furniture. He is known world wide for incorporating sculptural techniques into furniture design. His uniquely original custom pieces have enhanced many private residences, as well as high-end corporate environments. Executed in antique steel, his cocktail table, “Remembrance”, is featured here. His exclusive sculptural furniture is crafted in solid metals such as brass, bronze, steel and copper.
551-3 West 22nd st., new York, nY 10011 tel: 212-645-5286www.silasseandel.com
Beautiful Greenhouses & SolariumsOver 150 years of history in building custom designed greenhouses, solariums, skylights and glass enclosuresUnder Glass mfG. Corp. is the exclusive manufacturer of the original Lord & Burnham greenhouses and solariums.We were established in 1989 after acquiring the Lord & Burnham product line. At Under Glass we are committed to ourMotto: “Elegance and Function”. The growing environment cannot be compromised.
Under Glass mfg. Corp., po box 81, high falls, nY 12440, 845- 687-4700. email: [email protected], www.underglassusa.com
Beautiful Greenhouses & Solariums
Custom Design • Greenhouses • Solariums Skylights • Glass Enclosures
Under GlaSS MFG. Corp.High Falls, New York • 845.687.4700
www.underglassusa.com
Exclusive manufacturer of the original Lord & Burnham product line
Over 150 years of History
metropolitan liGhtinG imports a complete collection of the finest quality designer oriented lighting in all periods and styles. Illuminating fine interiors since 1939.
new York design Center, showroom #512 at 200 lexington avenue, nY, nY 10016 1-800-233-4500 or 212-545-0032 www.minka.com; www.nydc.com.
roberta roller rabbit is a sunny bazaar packed with colorful chic apparel, life style accessories, and furniture and home furnishings. The products feature Indian hand block prints, inspired by the cultural curiosity of New York designer Roberta Freymann. Roberta’s whimsical outlook, vivid imagination and effortlessly sophisticated style translates to each piece. Visit us for design inspiration or just to get away from it all - New York, The Hampton’s, Santa Monica or on the web www.RobertaRollerRabbit.com
www.robertarollerrabbit.com
posters please May 2: 50th Anniversary Auction of Rare Vintage Posters. Includes many of the best & most sought after Art Nouveau & Art Deco posters. Largest collections of Mele, Schnackenberg, Cheret & Automobile posters ever assembled! Special sections on Propaganda, posters on silk, Mistinguett, Buffalo Bill, Aviation & WPA. Featured artists: Toulouse-Lautrec, Cassandre, Colin, Mucha, Steinlen, Livemont, Cappiello, Loupot, Broders, Dudovich, & more! Viewing now thru May 1. 601 W. 26th st., 13th floor new York, nY 10001 212-787-4000 [email protected] follow us on twitter @postersplease read our poster bloghttp://www.postersplease.com/posterblog
Because New Yorkers’ have everything but space: teChline stUdio- furniture that fits. Architect owned, we measure, design, and install our modular systems for a custom fit solution. Our job is to help you make the most of your home and office space. And to find spaces and places for the things that matter.
35 east 19th street, nY, nY 10003 212-674-1813 www.techlinestudio.com
79the home observer spring 2010
HOME Gallery
Wittus – Fire by Design has the finest selection of European contemporary indoor and outdoor fireplaces, stoves, and accessories.
40 Westchester Ave., Pob 120, Pound ridge, ny 10576 914-764-5679 www.wittus.com
WenDell CAstle: roCkin’ – May 6 – June 26, 2010. Wendell Castle’s groundbreaking unification of sculpture and furniture galvanized generations of artists and designers and contributed to the acceptance of design as an art form in its own right. While the organic, curvilinear forms of this new collection link it to many of his past masterworks, there is a confidence and quickness of gesture that suggest a new dimensionality. A fully illustrated catalogue will accompany the exhibition.
barry Friedman ltd.515 West 26th streetnew york, new york 10001t: 212.239.8600 F: [email protected] hours: tuesday - saturday, 10-6
reserve space now For the October 13th
issue of Observer HomeFor advertising information contact
Betty Lederman, Associate Publisher, Home Observer212.407.9359 [email protected]
Established in 1938, JAguAr of Great Neck was the first Jaguar dealership in the Country. Our experience has led to a reputation of value, personal service and after-sale support that is unrivaled. For 70+ years we have been selling to and servicing the New York area with the pride and attention it deserves. Model for model, option for option, no one is more competitive than us. We will beat any advertised price in New York...Guaranteed! Fulfill your passion for perfection with one of our awesome 2010 Jaguar XF or XK models. One is waiting for you at Jaguar of Great Neck.
www.greatneckJaguar.com888-263-4158
80 the home observer spring 2010
in the neighborhood
For the past 25 years, writer Michael Musto has been a fixture on the New York night-life scene, faithfully recording the downtown high life for his Village Voice column La Dolce Musto. Musto hasn’t strayed far from his child-hood Brooklyn home; he rented his first apart-ment in Manhattan after graduating in English literature at Columbia University in the late 1970s and now, many moves later, lives in what he calls the “Switzerland” of New York , Murry Hill (for its neutral vibe.) “People always as-sume I live downtown, not in a one-bedroom co-op in Murray Hill,” he explains, “ but when I leave the apartment, I am equidistant from the midtown Broadway premieres and the Vil-lage Voice downtown.” Musto has owned this apartment for two years, and it’s surprisingly empty of possessions. “During my last move, I
got rid of a lot of clutter. I had collected a lot of kitch: palm trees, a doll collection and even a working fountain.”
The long living room, furnished with a com-fortable sofa, is perfect for entertaining. “Every two weeks, I host a movie club with four friends where we watch really bad movies,” says Musto, “like Jacqueline Susann’s Once Is Not Enough from the Joan Collins Video Selection, and my personal favorite, The Ghost Goes Gear, from the Spencer Davis Group.”
His bedroom has curtains that block out the morning light, as Musto generally attends five to six events a night, usually coming home around 2:30 a.m. He owes his stamina to good habits—“I don’t drink or do drugs, as I need to have a clear head in the morning to write about what hap-pened.” Around the bedroom are various por-
traits: a 1980s-style portrait of himself by Romero Britto, and another on a laminated tabletop (“It doesn’t have legs; otherwise, I would love to eat on a painting of myself”) by Anthony Zito. When he travels for his column, he visits places with a pecularly American sense of aesthetics—Miami, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and Atlantic City. “I love the casino culture, especially as I don’t gamble. I like the shows, the buffet tables and the glitz.”
Back home, he enjoys the empty spaces of his apartment. When asked to describe his personal style, Musto replies, “My taste is store-bought, but the combination is very me and can’t be rep-licated. I call it ‘Early Reign of Terror’!”
—A.K.
Michael Musto’s upcoming book, Fork on the Left, Knife in the Back, is from Alyson Books.
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Mucho MustoDowntown scenester Michael Musto lives the life of a monk (excluding his 3 a.m. bedtime) in his spare Murry Hill co-op
The SBS 26S1 model shown.
Design, Quality and Innovation
Liebherr offers fresh design ideas with its freestanding product line in 24”, 30”, 36”, 48” and 60” widths. With stainless steel sides, the
refrigerator can go anywhere in the kitchen, or taking advantage of cabinet-depth dimensions, can create the look of a built-in without
the price of building in. And, Liebherr’s commitment to responsible manufacturing and energy efficiency is exemplified by the new 30”
CS1660 (shown here) which goes beyond Energy Star® with energy consumption 25% better than federal requirements.
More Fresh Thinking
The Cooling Specialist for over 55 years.
Elgot Kitchen 937 Lexington Ave. 212-879-1200
Krup’s Kitchen and Bath 11 West 18Th Street 212-243-5787
Drimmers @ MCKB 29 E. 19th Street 212-995-0500
Gringer & Son 29 First Ave. 212-475-0600
Liebherr products available at these fine New York retailers:
Distributed by: Almo Specialty - Exclusive Distributor | www.almospecialty.com | 800-836-2522 | [email protected]
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2010-04(Apr)
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The New York Observer
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Attn: Betty Lederman
T: 212.407.9359
Contact Jane Fidler with any questions regarding these materials.ph: 646-230-1946 email: [email protected]
33 East 17th Street, New York, NY 10003 • 646-230-1900
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