April 16, 2024

latelybar

Do you know Interior

Phaidon’s ‘By Design’ Showcases Stunning Interiors Around the World

The flat and flavorless interior design trends of decades past have officially exited the building, according to the design editor Billy Norwich.

“In the Eighties, a person would get a job with an expense account, fly off to some major city, and they’d be checked into The Four Seasons Hotel. And because The Four Seasons didn’t look like where they were from—with the marble and everything—they thought this was the height of design,” Norwich explains. “Then, there was a period in the Nineties where people were saying to their decorators, ‘I want my house to look like The Four Seasons Hotel.’ This made decorators miserable.”

Thankfully, we’ve left behind this blandness and emerged into a much more exciting architectural era, in which personal taste—informed by real-life travel as much as it is by the ability to trawl through Pinterest and Instagram—reigns supreme. “The new international style is all about a global mix of influences,” says Norwich. “A little Eastern, a little Western, a little cowboy, a little Paris fancy, a little British chaise—all of that can exist in one environment.”

Grisanti & Cussen: Riksbyggen, show apartment, Uppsala, Sweden, 2019. Photo by Idha Lindhag, courtesy of Grisanti & Cussen.

By Design: The World’s Best Contemporary Interior Designers (out this week from Phaidon and introduced by Norwich) is about as close as it gets to an encyclopedia of the current state of interior design around the world. It’s both a beautiful coffee table book and a useful reference tool, whether you’re looking to hire one of the decorators featured to renovate your mansion or just need some ideas for ways to spruce up your studio apartment.

Studio Ashby: Floral Court, private residence, London, UK, 2019. Photo by Philip Durrant, courtesy of Studio Ashby.

To pull together the dynamic list, Phaidon reached out to a network of dozens of tastemakers and design experts—including Cabana editor in chief Martina Mondadori, the writer Amy Fine Collins, the stylist Mieke ten Have and the photographer Miguel Flores-Vianna—to nominate the studios they felt were making the most original, impactful work today. The only criteria: designers featured had to be currently working and have made work since 2015. Other than that, they could work in any style or be at any stage in their career. Some nominators focused on sustainability, others made their choices based on comfort, newness, relatability or innovation.

Sophie Dries Architect: Street Art Collector Family Apartment, Paris, France, 2018. Photo by Stephan Julliard, courtesy of Sophie Dries.

The designers featured hail from established design hubs like Milan, London, Hong Kong, and New York, as well as up-and-coming hotbeds like Amsterdam, Sydney, and Los Angeles. Reade
rs have the chance to peek at projects by established names like Rafael de Cárdenas, Tom Scheerer and Bunny Williams, as well as to discover lesser-known talents like the New York-based Young Huh and the London favorite Beata Heuman. Even the Call Me By Your Name director Luca Guadagnino, who has designed private homes as well as stores for the skincare brand Aesop, made the cut.

Romanek Design Studio: The Bu, private residence, Malibu, California, USA, 2019. Photo by Justin Coit, courtesy of Romanek Design Studio.

I asked Norwich what, aside from an abandonment of beige cookie-cutter style, is fundamentally different about the luxury spaces that are being designed today versus 30 years ago. Are there any truly new innovations that have changed the way we interact with space? It’s not so much about a look or a new technology as it is about process, he says: The most talented thinkers are repurposing materials and thinking about sustainability in totally new ways, like the reclaimed terra cotta tiles found in abandoned homes by the Shanghai firm Linehouse. (Although, Norwich quips, “the rich always used to say that buying antiques at auction was environmental.”)

And when it comes to trends or pinpointing one definition of “good taste,” you can forget about it. “Everyone is allowed into the party,” Norwich says. “It used to be in design that there was a clearly defined ‘right’ and ‘wrong.’ In the old days, people would be appalled by something. I don’t think people are appalled anymore. In a way, anything goes.”

“Anything, as long as it has interest and rigor, is worthy of our attention,” he adds. “The era of edicts is over. It’s all a matter of opinion and pleasure.”