Design Diary: Come to My Garden

It is so rare to have an apartment in New York like this one. The 15-foot-high ceilings make it feel like a loft, but the garden makes it feel like a house.

We spent yesterday unpacking and laying out the tile for the master bath walls. We chose Ocean Beige, a linear vein cut travertine field tile, honed and filled, that reveals the natural sedimentary layers visible in the quarry face. It’s from Artistic Tile. My salesperson at their West 21st Street showroom is Janet McHugh, the best tile salesperson I’ve ever had.

Ocean Beige Vein Cut Field Tile

The pattern makes it feel like a desertscape, which is perfect for this client because she splits her year between New York and Scottsdale. It was hard to tell what it looked like in the apartment, so I had them lay out the entire bath in the garden!

Tile laid out in the garden

The client came over and approved it. The tile should all be installed by the end of tomorrow. More to come . . . .

Very desert-like

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Look at that Vase, Just Look at It

The End of History, 548 1/2 Hudson Street, New York

The first place I look for decorative accessories—especially vases—is The End of History, an amazing shop on Hudson Street in the West Village. They have the best variety of vintage hand-blown glass and rare ceramics in colors, shapes, and textures I’ve never seen before. I seldom walk out of there without having bought something, which lots of times ends up in my apartment. I’m also strongly attracted to vases in the still life in art—Morandi is a huge favorite—you could say I’m obsessed with them, something over which I bonded with Stephen Saunders, the owner of The End of History.

Stephen grew up on the Isle of Wight off the south coast of England in a family of antiques dealers and auction house owners. Recently I sat down with him to learn about how he started his company and to discuss our mutual obsession with vases.

Barry: How did you get started in this business?

Steve: One of my earliest memories of the business is me sitting on the lap of my Uncle—the one who owned the auction house—on the lawn of a big Georgian country house during a sale. They were holding giant Chinese vases out of the window for my Uncle to see and I kept telling him to bid on them. But he said we couldn’t get the vases, because it was the furniture that the Americans wanted!

Barry: How old were you?

Steve: Five or six. So I was obsessed with vases from an early age.

Barry: I would say your were precocious, but that was the age my mother took me to Breakfast at Tiffany’s and that’s the moment I decided I would live in New York.

Barry: Then what?

Steve: I joined the local Boy Scouts just because they were known for running the best rummage sales on the Island. By the time I was eight years old I was already picking and selling to my cousin up in London, where he had an antiques shop on the Portobello Road.

Barry: When did you move to the States?

Steve: In 1980. I worked in the fashion industry, but I was always buying and selling antiques on the side.

Barry: What pushed you into starting this business?

Steve: There was a moment in the early 90s when I was finding exquisite Italian glass and ceramics for a song. One day I found a piece of Alfredo Barbini glass with a 1951 price tag of $351 still on it. That’s close to $4,000 in today’s dollars. It was the light bulb moment: I realized that these were luxury Italian goods made for the American market. So I bought every piece I could find and filled several large storage rooms with glass and ceramics till I finally had enough to open The End of History in 1997.

Barry: What formed your design aesthetic?

Steve: At the time The End of History opened, New York was praying only at the altar of high minimalism. It’s not that I hate minimalism, but who wants to live in a white box with no stuff? Everything back then was clean surfaces with Wenge wood—remember that?—being the only color allowed. The explosion of color and form at The End of History helped change the game and set the tone for the use of decorative accessories in early 21st century interiors.

Barry: It’s true, if you look at today’s shelter magazines there are lots of pieces from The End of History and similar resources. Every room has a grouping of colored glass.

Here are some of my favorite pieces from the store.

Two “Gemmo” vases by the German porcelain company Heinrich, designed in 1954 by Karl Leutner and made using a diamond wheel to cut the porcelain. I love the tiny etched dots on the yellow piece.

A 1960s gold decorated vase with a dancing figure by Hans Achtziger for the German porcelain company Hutschenreuther. This is spectacular.

The taller vase is 1950s Italian by Bitossi; the smaller orange vase is 1960s German by Scheurich. Great color.

Three 1950s Italian ceramic boxes by Bitossi. I always need great boxes for variety. Man does not live by vases alone.

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Design Diary: Sheetrock of Ages

So many people have been asking how the Project is going on the Upper West Side that I thought I’d share some progress pictures. We are on schedule and problem free–so far.  Mark, the construction manager, and Dan, his job captain, have been great to work with and are able to see any potential problem before it happens, which is invaluable.

Frank Gehry was my instructor at school, and the angled ceiling panels above the living area are something of an homage to him. I was freshly inspired by his New World Center in Miami, which I had just visited when I started working on this project.

The panels float free of the 15 and 1/2 foot ceiling, and clerestories on either end give you a sense of endless space flowing from one room to another.

Ceiling detail where the living room meets the bedroom

Soffit meets floating ceiling

Clerestories alove the main rooms allow complete visual connection

The HVAC, plumbing, and electrical are all done, and the workmen have been sheet-rocking for a  couple of weeks. Next week we are expecting the new sliding doors, and the wood floors will be coming soon after.

The ceiling in the foyer floats off the wall. And all the walls float off the floor.

I’m waiting for the shop drawings for the cabinetry, and the kitchen will be shipped from Italy in June. It’s exciting to see these elements come together.

Since we’ve had such great weather, the garden is substantially done. It’s turned into a serene private park; the grasses in the center will all grow together into a carpet of green. The owner has a wonderful wall sculpture to install, and we’ll be adding furniture too. It promises to be a unique oasis in Manhattan.

Garden view from the living room

The 10-foot mirror in the garden makes it seem even bigger.

 

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