/Sarah Walker The Curated House

About Sarah Walker The Curated House

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far Sarah Walker The Curated House has created 396 blog entries.

The Cosmopolitan Closet Of Your Art Deco Dreams | Les Ensemblier at Kips Bay Show House 2016

“Design must seduce, shape, and perhaps more importantly, evoke an emotional response.” I love this quote from artist April Greiman and couldn’t agree more. Good design is about more than just beauty. That’s why the foundational design philosophy at iconic Canadian design firm Les Ensembliers resonates so deeply with me. Their mission is to build meaning into beauty, and they do so with a refined elegance that is truly breathtaking.

So when your mission is to imbue meaning into your design work, where do you begin when starting with a concrete box, no architectural details, no client’s story to tell in the space, and only one month to design and execute? If you are the brilliant partners at Les Ensembliers – architect Maxime Vandal and interior designer Richard Ouelette – you begin with the classical elements of style, proportion and space planning and a trusted partnership with the construction team at Best & Co.

“We had to imagine our own story for the dressing room, so we envisioned what we would do if we were designing Lauren Bacall’s private retreat, the secret place where she would keep her most prized collection of treasured things. It became a secret garden, like the inside of a jewel box.”

KipsBay2016_LesEnsembliers_B_004_Build

KipsBay2016_LesEnsembliers_H_008

As with any highly treasured jewel box, exquisite finishes tell the story. With classical space planning establishing the room’s perfect proportions, Vandal and Ouelette turned their attention to the decadent Art Deco-inspired details. The narrative began with the spectacular peacock finish on the door fronts of the closets, a collaboration with the talented Pellegrino Ebeniste. Inspired by a fabric woven out of the plumes of more than 200 birds, Les Ensemblier took the more compassionate route by choosing to create this custom finish instead. I’m sure you’ll agree, the end result (as seen in the close-up image above) is truly magical.

KipsBay2016_LesEnsembliers_A_016_New

Were this the only stunning finish in the space it might read as too strong an element, but woven together with the Ralph Lauren Pearl Ray Shagreen wallpaper on the walls and the radiant Ralph Lauren Marella Plaster wallpaper in the insets of the ceiling treatment, it reads as a cohesive story told over time.

The ceiling treatment – one of my favourite design elements in the room – was inspired by a historically referenced Art Deco geometric pattern that Les Ensembliers then deconstructed to create the modern classic pattern. The elegant plaster work serves as the perfect visual balance to the strong geometry of the gorgeous Gabriel Scott light fixture.

Ceilings are often forgotten design opportunities, but in this case, the ceiling was designed to centre the room, making the space feel longer and taller by creating a focal point that lifts the eye (and the spirits) with a sense of wonder and delight.

KipsBay2016_LesEnsembliers_K_008

The stunning vintage rug from Joseph Carini, with it’s blush and turquoise hues, infuses the space with femininity, history and style, giving voice to the well-traveled life Les Ensembliers imagined for the lady of the house. Design choices like this one serve to evoke the Europe-meets-the-Americas aesthetic that Les Ensembliers understand as uniquely Canadian. It is an aesthetic that values design history while charting its own course for the future, and Les Ensembliers are firmly at the helm.

KipsBay2016_LesEnsembliers_D_014

The antechamber to the lady’s dressing room continues to tell the story of a well-traveled life. Inspired by fine luggage from the house of Goyard in Paris, the built-in dressers speak to the luxury travel cases of a bygone era with their textural wallpapered insets, stunning black horn Ochre handles, and decadent purple-velvet-lined drawers. The Fortuny hand-painted silk chandelier – one of my all-time favourite light fixtures – creates a soft and elegant counter-balance to the fiercely fashion-forward style of the Gabriel Scott fixture in the adjoining space. I adore the mix.

KipsBay2016_LesEnsembliers_C_017_Build

Suffice it to say, Les Ensembliers stole the show at this year’s Kips Bay Decorators Showhouse. The buzz about their decadent space reverberated across every floor of the home as guests explored the showcase, and rightfully so. With offices in Montreal, Toronto and New York, you can expect to see their spectacular work finding pride of place across the globe. I, for one, am waiting with bated breath to see what this incredible dream team will design next.

Be sure to pop back to The Curated House next week for more inspiration on how interior design can tell your story. Until then, may your dreams be fuelled by wanderlust and your days be filled with love.

Sarah-Signature

By |June 29th, 2016|0 Comments

UPROOTED | A Stunning New Coffee Table Book For The Floral Obsessed

Mike Hines specializes in making people happy. As one of the foremost floral designers in the US, his designs are iconic, but Mike is inspired by the same things that drew him to flora and fauna as a child: curiosity and wonder. It’s this childlike love for beauty that shines through his work with an unabashed and refreshing mix of splendour and savage, simplicity and story, and this is what draws me to his breathtaking work.

mike-hines-uprooted-7 mike-hines-uprooted-6 mike-hines-uprooted-three

Few floral designers I know have the courage to allow a single varietal of bloom speak for itself, but Hines embodies the truth that da Vinci so eloquently articulated:

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.

mike-hines-uprooted mike-hines-uprooted-one

Hines‘ compelling new coffee table book UPROOTED – brilliantly photographed by Doug Human – explores the origins of beauty in a very unique way. Mike says:

“Roots beget flowers. Roots also begin families, relationships and emotions. When we uproot, we expose. We get to the nitty-gritty point of origin and are able to dissect our many worlds simply by paying attention to ourselves and from whence we came. Without the almighty root we would have no stability. In a wold of exposure and unknowns, if we are able to uproot ourselves and take a hard look inward, we are then, in fact, able to see our outer world in a sharper, more vivid way.”

mike-hines-uprooted-four

It’s this kind of bold self-reflection that I believe translates into such courageous and inspiring design, and the resulting images found in UPROOTED are nothing short of spectacular.

mike-hines-uprooted-two mike-hines-uprooted-five

Be sure to check in next week when I’ll be highlighting a very special design project that will leave your jaws on the floor. In the meantime, why not savour the beauty of Mike’s work and follow his lead with some courageous self-reflection? You never know the strength you might find within.

Sarah-Signature

By |June 22nd, 2016|0 Comments

Kips Bay Showhouse 2016 | Kati Curtis & The Path To Enlightenment

Kati Curtis

Transported. That is the first word that came to mind when I laid eyes on the space that my friend Kati Curtis designed for this year’s Kips Bay Boys & Girls’ Club Decorator Showhouse. Even through photos, the visual experience felt like a personal journey, and to my ears, the soundtrack was undoubtedly “The Lark Ascending.”

As it turns out, I was indeed picking up on what Kati was communicating through her work which she has aptly titled “The Path To Enlightenment.”

Kati Curtis

Kati Curtis

The journey Kati crafted for us begins on the 3rd Floor of the modern New York City townhouse. Curtis wanted the experience to feel like the visual feast for the senses one might encounter walking into the Garden Of Eden – layers upon layers of beauty and detail, representing the distractions that often meet us on our path to enlightenment. The centrepiece and visual narrator for the entire journey through the 3 floors of Curtis‘ design is the stunning deGournay St. Laurent wallpaper, which was selected, customized and installed for this project in a mere 7 weeks, something of a major miracle in the design world.

Each designer comes into their designated space at the Kips Bay Showhouse with far less time than usual for a project of this scale. That may be the understatement of the century. Curtis learned of her honoured appointment on March 17th and was photographing for the New York Times by May 7th, but she didn’t let that brief window of time stop her from shooting for the stars. The question she asked herself was simply “what would I do in my wildest dreams?” and then, with all the daring and bravado of a skilled and experienced artist, she dove in head first.

Kati Curtis

Sculptural but strange, the staircase itself was perhaps the biggest design dilemma when Curtis first entered the totally unfinished new construction, and she found herself engaged in a dialogue of sorts with this raw concrete element. Should she highlight it or find a way to make it disappear? Her final design choice is brilliant: a high gloss finish in Farrow & Ball’s Hague Blue which reflects the iridescence of the Murano glass chandeliers and captures reflections of the wallpaper, furnishings and skylight above. The vibrant blue is repeated in the waterfall surround on the sexy, modern burled-wood chest which anchors the main focal point of the 4th Floor, a more masculine vignette with almost intimidatingly strong high-back gothic chairs flanking it on either side.

Kati Curtis

Kati Curtis

The first two of the three floors of the staircase that Kati designed also offer discovery moments by way of a meditation alcove on the 3rd Floor and an adjoining hallway that Curtis filled with black and white photos of the children for whom this charitable fundraising Showhome is created each year.Kati Curtis

Kati Curtis

Kati Curtis

Clad in a deep purple burgundy bamboo motif Dedar wallpaper, the adjoining hallway on the 4th Floor became a gallery where Curtis chose to display the colourful and vibrant works of New York artist Martin Sumers. Sadly, Sumers work had remained undiscovered in his lifetime, but through friend and gallery owner Gillian Bryce of Gillian Bryce Fine Art in Atlanta, Curtis discovered and fittingly reclaimed this New Yorker’s work and “brought him home.” Kati’s keen eye understood the value of Sumers’ incredible works, which are now in high demand by savvy art collectors as the values for each of his pieces continue to soar.

Kati Curtis

As with any spiritual journey, the final ascension throws off the beauty of distractions that were previously present in the form of the cranes, peacocks, flora and fauna on the lower floors. The visual journey ends with a delicately fluttering kaleidoscope of butterflies that disappear into nothing but the tea-stained ground of the spectacular deGournay paper, perhaps a metaphor for the peace and clarity Curtis hopes to achieve for herself and her clients through her work.

Kati Curtis

The Kips Bay Boys & Girls’ Club Decorator Showhouse is in its final days of showing to the public. If you’re in New York, be sure to make time for a visit to drink in all of the delicious details in person. Thank you, Kati, for sharing your transcendent vision with all of us.

Be sure to pop back next week for more design inspiration for living a beautiful life! Until then, enjoy the weekend with the ones you love.

Sarah-Signature

By |June 8th, 2016|1 Comment