CALIFORNIA STYLE
POINT OF VIEW DIANE KEATON’S ELEVATED DESIGN IN PACIFIC PALISADES
COOL COLLECTIBLES FROM LOCAL ARTISANS AND GLOBAL TASTEMAKERS
Cover
SPRING 2015
$5.99
Display until May 25, 2015
PLUS NAPA VALLEY SAN FRANCISCO MALIBU BEVERLY HILLS OJAI
Restoration Hardware
W E S T H OL LYWOOD THE GALLERY ON MELROSE AVENUE
Restoration Hardware
8564 MELROSE AVENUE, WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA 90069 MONDAY-SATURDAY 10AM-7PM SUNDAY 11AM-6PM 310.652.0323
open
Š2015 California Closet Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Franchises independently owned and operated. CA Lic.# 977608, 968023, 769652, 571062, 750526, 875172
Exceptional designs for every room
EXCEPTIONAL DESIGNS FOR EVERY ROOM californiaclosets.com |
866.870.4814
Berkeley 1716 Fourth Street Carmel 26366 Carmel Rancho Lane Corona Del Mar 2854 E. Coast Highway La Jolla 7603 Girard Avenue Larkspur 12 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard West Hollywood 8117 Melrose Avenue Los Gatos 349 N Santa Cruz Avenue Huntington Beach 5921 Skylab Road Palm Desert 42-210 Cook Street
open
Roseville 1017 Galleria Boulevard San Diego 7808 Miramar Road San Francisco New location coming soon! Santa Barbara 15 W. Anapamu Street Santa Monica 1735 Stewart Street Walnut Creek 1614 Mt. Diablo Boulevard Westlake Village 4625 Lakeview Canyon Road
California Closets designs more than just closets — we are the experts at creating custom storage systems for any area in your home. Our exceptional designs, exclusive finishes, and inspiring custom accessories will make your home more beautiful and functional than ever. Visit our design studios or call today to arrange for your complimentary in-home design consultation. californiaclosets.com | 800.274.6754
HORIZONTAL MEETS VERTICAL
Poggenpohl
P‘7350 Discover the fascination of a kitchen which stands for what has characterised Poggenpohl and Porsche Design Studio over many years: concentration on the overall line.
Poggenpohl
Poggenpohl San Francisco 650 Townsend Street Suite 90 San Francisco CA 94103 Phone: 415-865-0443 info@sanfrancisco.poggenpohl.com www.sanfrancisco.poggenpohl.com
Poggenpohl Los Angeles 8900 Beverly Blvd. Suite 104 Los Angeles CA 90048 Phone: 310-289-4901 info@losangeles.poggenpohl.com www.losangeles.poggenpohl.com
TOC 1 SPRING 2015 ROOM TO GROW, p.80.
29 INSIDER
64 HANG LOOSE
Revel in the creative space of S.F. interior designer Jonathan Rachman. Alexandra Dwek hosts potlucks with a purpose in Bel Air.
Kelly Sawyer Patricof enlists designer Brigette Romanek to work her magic on her young family’s Malibu Colony beach cottage.
Cox London casts its innovative aesthetic across the pond to L.A.’s Rose Tarlow Melrose House. Dekor&Co. breezes into Ojai. Playful ceramics, Western prints and timeless French furnishings for every space. Plus, blooms that deliver.
40 NATURAL SELECTION
Known for her Vegas flash, designer Megan Tagliaferri takes things down (just a notch) at her own boho-glam Belmont Shore residence.
22 TREND
At home with Oscar-winning actress and design aficionado Diane Keaton.
Who’s who behind the scenes of spring’s C Home—and their go-to picks for California design.
15 DOSSIER
Blush beauties: Pretty-in-pink home accents are making a splash.
24 LANDSCAPE
Off the deep end: State-of-the-art poolscapes from the Hollywood Hills to Montecito.
C 8 SPRING HOME 2015
Four designers at the top of their game share their views on outdoor living.
47 WELCOME HOME
Where nature and nurture coexist.
48 MASTER OF THE HOUSE
58 ABOVE IT ALL
In a South of Market penthouse, Bay Area interior designer David Oldroyd sculpts ultra-refined decor with a cosmopolitan air.
72 SEA CHANGE
80 ROOM TO GROW
For Manhattan-based architect Eliot Lee, building a Napa Valley retreat for his parents has proven to be an ongoing and joy-filled journey.
86 SLEEPING BEAUTY
A neglected Mediterranean estate is transformed into a modern sanctuary.
90 COLLAGE
Hutton Wilkinson takes it to the max.
SCOTT FRANCES/OTTO
12 C PEOPLE
Fendi Casa
JENNIFER HALE
Founder + Editorial Director
LESLEY CAMPOY
President + Publisher JENNY MURRAY Editor
EDITORIAL
BERNARD SCHARF
AMANDA TISCH WEITZMAN
KELSEY McKINNON
Creative Director
Home + Design Editor
Senior Editor
MARGOT FODOR
MARIANNE MICHAELS
JULIE WEBB
Associate Photo Editor
Designer
Photo Editor
LINDSAY KINDELON
ROBERT RICHMOND
Assistant Editor
Digital Image Specialist
LESLEY McKENZIE Deputy Editor
PUBLISHING
Masthead
RENEE MARCELLO Associate Publisher
DEBBIE FLYNN Beauty + Home Director
ALEXANDRA VON BARGEN
CRISTA VAGHI
Jewelry + Watch Director
Southern California Director
AUTUMN O’KEEFE
TAMMI DELANEY
Northeast Director
Business Development Director
ANNE MARIE PROVENZA
KRISTA NATALI
Development Manager
Marketing Coordinator
SANDY HUBBARD
TROY FELKER
Information Technology Director
Finance Associate
CONTRIBUTORS SAN FRANCISCO EDITOR-AT-LARGE DESIGN EDITOR-AT-LARGE
Diane Dorrans Saeks
Andrea Stanford
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR-AT-LARGE SENIOR CONTRIBUTING EDITORS STYLE DIRECTOR ARTS + CULTURE EDITOR
Heather Severs
MARKET EDITOR
Elizabeth Khuri Chandler COPY EDITOR
SPECIAL PROJECTS CONTRIBUTORS CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Kendall Conrad
Melissa Goldstein, Jennie Nunn Shadi Beccai
DIGITAL EDITOR
Elizabeth Varnell
Richard Cordova Stephanie Steinman, Jackie Treitz
Christine Lennon, Suzanne Rheinstein, Brigette Romanek, Michael S. Smith,
Jamie Tisch, Nathan Turner, Mish Tworkowski, Hutton Wilkinson INTERNS
Nicolas Alvarado, Brittany Caldwell, Kelsey McIntyre, Karlie Mejia
C PUBLISHING LLC TEYMOUR BOUTROS-GHALI
Chairman ANDY NELSON
Chief Financial Officer
C MAGAZINE 1543 Seventh Street, 2nd Floor, Santa Monica, CA 90401, 310-393-3800 SUBSCRIBER SERVICE 800-775-3066
MAGAZINEC.COM C-HOME.COM CSOCIALFRONT.COM
The Sliding Door
NEW SHOWROOM Now open in Pasadena!
CULVER CITY 8684 Washington Blvd. / (424) 298-8209 COSTA MESA 3323 Hyland Ave., Unit G-2 / (714) 754-7010 CHATSWORTH 20235 Bahama St. / (818) 997-7855 WESTLAKE VILLAGE 2820 Townsgate Rd., #101 / (805) 497-8686 PASADENA NEW! 2614 E. Colorado Blvd. / (626) 689-2200
Design for inner space.
www.slidingdoorco.com/design-your-own CLOSET DOORS + ROOM DIVIDERS + WALL SLIDE DOORS + OFFICE PARTITIONS
The signature choice for today’s interiors.
PEOPLE
WHO’S WHO BEHIND THE SCENES OF THIS MONTH’S ISSUE, PLUS THEIR FAVORITE CALIFORNIA PLACES
Hutton Wilkinson “I think of myself as a maximalist designer, meeting with equal enthusiasm the challenges of decorating an apartment on Russian Hill or a historic estate in Bel Air,” says Hutton Wilkinson, CEO and creative director of Tony Duquette Inc. The influential interior and jewelry designer’s worldly tastes and California mood are featured in “Collage” (p.90). C SPOTS • La Luz Del Dia Restaurant in Downtown L.A. • Huntington Botanical Gardens in San Marino • Mendocino for the cliffs and town
Degen Pener Megan Tagliaferri “This residence was created to capture our California-modern and earthy beach lifestyle in our cherished Belmont Shores neighborhood,” says interior designer Megan Tagliaferri, who opened up the doors to her eclectic abode in “Sea Change”
“Working on the pool story made me eager for summer to get here! And I hope my next house has a pool because the designs I discovered doing this story
C People
are ones I never would have imagined,” says editor and author Degen Pener of “Into the Blue” (p.24). Pener is a contributing culture editor at The Hollywood Reporter, and has previously worked for publications such as Angeleno, InStyle and Santa Barbara Magazine. C SPOTS • The Chemosphere residence by John Lautner in Los Angeles • Lotusland in Montecito • Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur
(p.72). As the principal designer and partner of FLO Design Studio, her global-glamour approach spans from restaurants and health spas in L.A. to casinos and hotels in Las Vegas. C SPOTS • Shopping on Abbot Kinney • Carmel for Mother Nature and
Amanda Tisch Weitzman “Working on the C Home issue makes me appreciate living in such a diverse and culturally forward place. I love the juxtaposition of a grand San Francisco penthouse with a cozy beach home in Malibu,” says C’s Home + Design Editor, Amanda Tisch Weitzman. She also has a line of place mats and coasters, Tisch New York, debuting this spring at Barneys New York. C SPOTS • Harbinger in West Hollywood • Huntington Park in Pacific Palisades • The Hamon Tower at the de Young Museum
C 12 SPRING HOME 2015
WILKINSON: ROGER GANA JAMES. TAGLIAFERRI: LAURE JOLIET
relaxation • The Greek Theatre in L.A.
MODERN LUXURY FURNITURE
Policleto Mega expandable glass table by Reflex Angelo
Wave sofa by Formenti Divani
Italy Design
MissoniHome Collection
Neolitico table by Reflex Angelo
Italydesign’s 14,000 square foot showroom features one of the USA’s most original and inspired collections of architecturally designed home furnishings hand-selected from Italy’s most prestigious brand names and artisan producers. Choose from a large inventory of in stock items or special order a unique, custom designed piece.
MADE IN ITALY • ALIVAR • BONALDO • CATTELAN ITALIA • FASEM • KRISTALIA • IL LOFT • LAGO • LAPALMA • MISSONIHOME • NAOS • REFLEX • TONINO LAMBORGHINI CASA
italydesign 1260 Powell Street, Emeryville, CA 94608 510.420.0386 www.italydesign.com
Showroom open by appointment
SHOWROOM HANDMADE CARPETS & TEXTILES
101 HENRy ADAMS STREET #101 415.626.1103
Madeline Weinrib MADELINEWEINRIb.COM
DOSSIER Unusual Suspects
Meet the strange beauty that is Cox London BY MELISSA GOLDSTEIN
LISA ROMEREIN
Dossier (opener)
The Serpent table by Cox London is cast in bronze and features guinea-fowl feathers laid under a glass top.
SPRING HOME 2015
C 15
DOSSIER
C
FROM LEFT The Oak Leaf mirror by Cox London hangs over the Otto console and Scalloped coffee table by Rose Tarlow Melrose House. Cox London’s Bronze Grotto lamp. The Goddess lamp by Cox London features a brass sun cradled by a hand-forged bronze iron base.
ox London designers Nicola and Christopher Cox live in a world in which medieval-inspired altars double as dining tables and chandeliers resemble bronzed lava flows. Enter L.A. designer Rose Tarlow, who discovered the pair’s Brutalist-meets-classicist workshop while on a trip to London in 2012. “We had instant respect for her attention to detail,” says Nicola of the esteemed decorator, synonymous with a clean-lined, refined sensibility. “She knows her game better than most.” The feeling was mutual: Tarlow invited the husband-andwife team to exclusively launch their line stateside with Rose Tarlow Melrose House last spring, marking the first time she’s represented a brand outside of her own. “Rose’s aesthetic has always been the best—often eccentric, but beautiful,” says Nicola, a New Zealander who met Christopher (who hails from a long line of antiquarians) while studying fine art sculpture at London’s Wimbledon College of Arts. Citing influences ranging from Giacometti to Mondrian, Cox London’s latest works “straddle several centuries of style”—from the Ferro Vitro chandelier, a steel-forged three-dimensional constructivist grid replete with handblown glass cubes, to the Bibliothèque, a freestanding wall unit of cast-glass wired lanterns, hand-beaten brass cupboards and steel mesh storage areas. But you ain’t seen nothing yet: “The coming year will be more experimental than ever,” promises Nicola. rosetarlow.com.
Dossier (turn)
Home Run
Interior decorator Isabelle Dahlin, owner of home store deKor in Echo Park, is serving up a second dose of high design with her new Ojai boutique, deKor&Co. “I have always wanted to live in Ojai since I visited here about 16 years ago,” says Dahlin, who partnered with Rachel Marlowe, a writer and editor, to open the 2,500-squarefoot space stocked with bohemian touchpoints including alpaca throws, a Face Stockholm makeup station and a tea bar. Dahlin sought to conjure the town’s tranquility in the environs: “It’s an amazing and very healing place,” she says. “We tried to make the shop have the same feeling—where you could hang out and relax.” 105 S. Montgomery St., Ojai, 805-272-8675; dekorandco.com. CLOCKWISE FROM TOP Dahlin and Marlowe outside their Ojai boutique. A mandarinand-clove scented candle. Inside the design-wise lifestyle shop.
C 16 SPRING HOME 2015
WRITTEN BY JENNIE NUNN. COX LIFESTYLE: LISA ROMEREIN. DEKOR: ALEX MOONEY
OJAI
M AR TYN L AW RE N C E BU LL A RD THE S I LV E R K I N G DO M C O LLE C T I ON F OR
us.christofle.com | 8424 Melrose Place, West Hollywood | 323.330.1229
Christofle
DOSSIER
GO WEST
Stripe rug, starting at $400. Sonora Canyon dining chair, $3,585. Rollins charger, $225.
LAGUNA BEACH
National Treasure “I’ve always believed everything has a story,” says photographer Curtis Speer, who turns his lens toward inanimate objects often overlooked in day-to-day life. “It’s an effort to allow people to be present in a fast-moving world,” adds the Laguna Beach-based artist. Mounted in maple and raw-walnut frames handmade in L.A., his large-scale prints take on a painterly sensibility with classic Americana themes and golden California light. Available at Harbinger, 752 N. La Cienega Blvd., W.H., 310-858-6884; harbingerla.com.
Dossier (bits)
American Conscience, No.3, $3,600.
Sky High
Handcrafted in a village in Myanmar, interior designer Joan Behnke’s artisanal lacquered Floating Cloud tables add a vibrant and worldly touch to any home palette. Available at Micucci, Pacific Design Center, 8687 Melrose Ave., W.H., 310-360-7323; micucciarte.com; joanbehnke.com.
A trio of Floating Cloud tables, $2,200 each.
STAY AWHILE
Spanning nearly four decades of boundary-pushing hospitality, residential and nightlife design, Ian Schrager: Works (Rizzoli, $75) details the worldwide empire of the man behind such glittering addresses as Gramercy Park Hotel, Studio 54 and Mondrian Los Angeles, with musings by the likes of starchitects John Pawson and Jacques Herzog. Cover image of guest-room windows at the Saint Martins Lane hotel in London. Oversize flowerpots of roses at Mondrian Los Angeles.
FROM FAR LEFT
C 18
WRITTEN BY MELISSA GOLDSTEIN, JENNIE NUNN AND LINDSAY KINDELON. AMERICAN CONSCIENCE: COURTESY OF CURTIS SPEER. SCHRAGER EXTERIOR: TODD EBERLE
FROM LEFT Barragan
Ralph Lauren’s new Corral Canyon collection of furniture and home wares recalls the sunny beaches of Malibu with hints of the high desert. The rusticglam line—awash in a palette of soft blush pinks and warm chocolate tones— includes tooled leather frames, Southwestern-inspired pillows, raffia trays and a studded Douglas-fir chest. From $45; ralphlaurenhome.com.
everyday.
extraordinary.
Saatchi Art
Use code cmag at checkout for 10% off original art.
Discover a world of art online
Need help? Work with an expert art advisor at no cost. We’ll help you find one-of-a-kind works to suit your style, space and budget. saatchiart.com /artadvisory
DOSSIER WEST HOLLYWOOD
House Call
Furniture and accessories mogul Thomas Lavin unveils a sparkling remodeled space at the Pacific Design Center, and with it, a new addition: a 3,000-square-foot Christian Liaigre showroom. Dotted with signature pieces from the renowned French designer, the enclave is filled with a well-edited mix of items such as the clean-lined St. Germain Chair and the sleek Corvette Desk. “Christian Liaigre is French but his designs are for the world,” says Lavin. Pacific Design Center, 8687 Melrose Ave., W.H., 310-278-2456; thomaslavin.com. Christian Liaigre’s Oceán Sectional and Autan Chaise on display at Thomas Lavin.
SAN FRANCISCO + BRENTWOOD
Bloom State
LOS ANGELES
Floored Forward-thinking L.A. designers the Haas Brothers and David Wiseman lent their avant-whimsical touches to a new series of limited-edition rugs from R & Company and ABC Italia. The creatives traveled to Kathmandu to meet the local artisans who would produce their statement pieces, each emblazoned with mesmerizing organic patterns comprising more than 4 million knots. “The skill of the weavers allows for an astounding level of detail,” says Wiseman. r-and-company.com.
Dossier (bits) FROM LEFT
A BloomThat arrangement. The sleek bar at Fleurish.
Need a floral arrangement for an impromptu dinner party or a last-minute gift? In San Francisco, new florist BloomThat will deliver fresh, just-pluckedfrom-the-garden flowers in jute-wrapped tin vases in 90 minutes or less (from $35; bloomthat.com). For do-it-yourself options, look no further than Fleurish in Brentwood, founded by Amy Marella. Pick up an “iFleur” tablet, or iPad, at the DIY flower bar for a quick step-by-step tutorial, and choose from nine custom Fleurkits stocked with the essentials (from $35 plus $5 studio fee; 11906 San Vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310-575-8755; youfleurish.com). Animal Planet rug designed by the Haas Brothers (edition of 12), price upon request. NAPA VALLEY
Made Well
For utility-meets-chic, look to Amanda Wright Pottery, whose white or black clay creations outfitted with chain links take cues from the Napa Valley-based ceramicist’s former days in fashion and costume design. From $495-$1,495; Cavalier by Jay Jeffers, 1035 Post St., S.F., 415-440-7300; cavaliergoods.com.
WRITTEN BY MELISSA GOLDSTEIN, LINDSAY KINDELON AND JENNIE NUNN. LIAIGRE SHOWROOM: GREY CRAWFORD. FLEURISH: BRETT LUPFER
Christian Liaigre solid bronze St. Germain chair, $17,873.
Environment
DOSSIER trend Pegaso Gallery Design Wonderful Chinoiserie mirror, $4,200, 1stdibs.com.
Tickled Pink
Black lacquer, tones of blue and a hint of brass give blush a modern edge Coleen & Company The Tole Tent Semi Flush pendant, starting at $1,575, coleenandcompany.com.
Dossier (bits)
Madeline Weinrib Jolie carpet, starting at $3,000, madelineweinrib.com.
A reading room in a Brentwood home with a sofa and chair upholstered in textiles from Jaipur, India.
Richard Ginori Oriente Italiano plate, $120, barneys.com.
Kelly Wearstler botanical tray, $495, kellywearstler.com.
Aerin Sea Urchin match striker, $250, aerin.com.
WINDSOR SMITH INTERIOR: VICTORIA PEARSON
Peter Dunham Textiles Kashmir Paisley pillow, $175, hollywoodathome.com.
Serena & Lily Parisian side table, $795, serenaandlily.com.
C 22 SPRING HOME 2015
John Derian Pond chaise lounge, starting at $2,995, ciscobrothers.com.
The Rug Co
DOSSIER landscape
Rios Clementi Hale Studios’ light box-like pool for a client in the Hollywood Hills. ABOVE
Into the Blue
New-wave designs elevate swimming pools to works of art BY DEGEN PENER
B
efore Beverly Hills-based landscape architect Garett Carlson popularized the infinity-edge in the ’80s, California swimming pools were slaves to function. “The old-fashioned pool was 20-by-40 [feet] with light blue tile and a diving board,” says Carlson. Today’s styles have swung far in the other direction. “The really big trend [is] making a pool something spectacular that is more than a swimming pool,” says Jennifer Schab, a senior associate at L.A.’s Rios Clementi Hale Studios. Take a recent project by the firm in the Hollywood Hills: A narrow strip of water along one side of the modern house is an integral design element with multiple functions. It’s a reflecting pool for 60-year-old olive trees plus an architectural feature, drawing the eye out to the city views. At night, it’s lit by LEDs that change colors. “It serves as a kind of giant light box,” says Schab. In Santa Monica, a couple commissioned light-and-space artist James Turrell to put one of his famed skyspace installations over their outdoor dining area, providing a stunning backdrop to the pool. One of the pioneers of inspired pool design was Thomas Church, whose 1948 kidney-shaped pool for a Sonoma residence—featuring a sculptural island by artist Adaline Kent—is a landmark. Today, his love of unconventional shapes is embraced by Santa Barbara landscape architect Susan Van Atta, who conceived of a narrow ellipse for the pool at her own residence. Of course, if budget doesn’t allow for commissioning a worldclass artist or even starting over from scratch, there’s one easy way to update an outdated rectangular model: “Bring it down to 12 feet wide,” says Carlson, “and it’s a really modern, slick lap pool.” •
Dossier (bits)
CLOCKWISE FROM RIGHT Thomas Church’s 1948 kidney-shaped design. A sleek, slender pool by Roche + Roche Landscape Architecture in Napa Valley. Landscape architect Susan Van Atta’s perfect ellipse at her home in Montecito.
C 24 SPRING HOME 2015
TOP LEFT: JIM SIMMONS. TOP RIGHT: JACKIE NICKERSON. MIDDLE AND BOTTOM RIGHT: ANDREA JONES/WWW.GARDENEXPOSURES.COM. BOTTOM LEFT: JOHN KLYCINSKI
James Turrell’s skyspace installation reflected in a pool in Santa Monica.
Village Properties Riskin
Exceptional Padaro Lane
CTrunk Show PROMOTION
S PRIN G FORWA R D IN ST Y LE
ITALYDESIGN
Lem Stool designed by Shin and Tomoko Azumi, produced in Italy by Lapalma, price upon request; 1260 Powell St., Emeryville, 510-420-0386; italydesign.com.
SERENA & LILY
Palmetto Duvet and Shams, $78-$288; 3457 Sacramento St., San Francisco, 415-580-7078; serenaandlily.com.
BROWN JORDAN
Connexion Lounge Chair and Ottoman, $695-$1,695; 3323 Hyland Ave., Costa Mesa, 949-760-6900; brownjordan.com.
C Trunk Show
ENVIRONMENT Drift Chair by Jean-Marie Massaud (shown here in cashew leather), starting at $2,595; 8126 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles; 3315 Hyland Ave., Costa Mesa, 866-981-3976.
CALIFORNIA CLOSETS
Custom wine bar, price upon request; 800-274-6754; californiaclosets.com.
THE MOST EXPERIENCED NAME IN NEW YORK REAL ESTATE IS BECOMING THE MOST ASKED Elliman FOR NAME Douglas IN LOS ANGELES.
ELLIMAN.COM ©2015 Douglas Elliman Real Estate.
Equal Housing Opportunity.
N OW OPE N • G R AC E HOM E • PA L M S PR I N G S elegance. comfort. style & Grace.
Grace Home
F
U
R
N
I
S
H
I
N
G
S
interi or d e s i g n & h om e c o l l e c ti ons BR ENTWOOD VILLAGE 11632 barrington court los angeles, ca 90049 310-476-7176
gracehomefurnishings.com
UPTOW N DESIGN DISTR ICT 1001 n. palm canyon drive palm springs, ca 92262 760-904-6337
INSIDER Out of This World
S.F. interior designer Jonathan Rachman mines tradition and travel to give his modern interiors international elegance and wit
AUBRIE PICK
BY DIANE DORRANS SAEKS
Inside (opener)
The designer (in his Dogpatch studio) dramatizes the decor with the juxtaposition of “Billy the Goat,” a rare vintage display character from the defunct luxury department store I. Magnin, sculptural mannequins and an antique Indonesian cabinet.
SPRING HOME 2015
C 29
INSIDER
FROM FAR LEFT Jonathan
cool mist blurs early-morning Russian Hill at a stately shingled residence where Jonathan Rachman is hard at work: As his assistants unwrap silver, he aligns a petite mossgreen velvet sofa beneath an antique gold-framed Swedish mirror, and deftly swoops an armful of ivory garden roses into an antique crystal vase. “My passion is to work with stylistic underpinnings of classical design but to make it unexpected and less formulaic,” says Rachman, whose iconoclastic San Francisco
C 30 SPRING HOME 2015
firm, Jonathan Rachman Design, is shaking up the establishment. Originally from history-rich Sumatra, Rachman made his first design-business foray with a floral and accessories boutique on Clement Street, Fleur’T, which attracted the likes of Marc Jacobs, Sarah Jessica Parker, Madonna and Oprah, thanks to his self-professed “relaxed spontaneity” aesthetic. These days he works from a design studio in the Dogpatch district, servicing clients from California to New York to Bali and Singapore, who come to him for his particular blend of Old and New World. “I like a sense of history, but rooms must be current and contemporary,” he says. Prizing harmony and functionality but with a weakness for eccentricity, handcrafted Asian textiles and surprising art, Rachman is also an unabashed Anglophile, using menswear tweeds and twill or herringbone fabrics inspired by London tailoring for pillows, curtains or a table covering. As a lifelong collector of precious objects, his clients’ rooms and his atelier are textured with a curious and lively trove of the vintage, salvaged and rare. “It’s references and traces of the past that add meaning and biography to a room,” he says. Beyond his residential commissions, Rachman is currently busy with myriad side projects, including the new JRD fabric range The Sisters for San Mateo-based Bolt Textiles, and a glamorous J. Rachman collection of Italian leather goods and embellished glassware that is launching in the summer. The prolific decorator seems to feed off the packed schedule: “I’m just getting started,” he says. jonathanrachman.com. •
Inside (turn)
TOP (3): AUBRIE PICK. BOTTOM LEFT: DAVID DUNCAN LIVINGSTON
A
Rachman’s atelier collections include portraits, vintage surgical lamps and quizzical eyeglasses. BELOW The San Francisco Decorator Showcase room that launched his career in 2012.
Ike Kligerman
INSIDER
Inside (turn)
Sweet Charity
At home in Bel Air, Alexandra Dwek indulges her passions for entertaining and helping others
W
CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT Alexandra Dwek at home. The table setting. Each guest brings a dish of their choosing. Partygoers gather in Dwek’s pool house for a presentation on the evening’s featured charity.
hen Alexandra Dwek sent out the invite to her inaugural charitable potluck dinner initiative, Friends with Causes, her mission was lofty: to create a new paradigm for giving back to the community. “There are a lot of small charities that I care about that I can help,” says Dwek, an active member on the board of nonprofits including The Music Center’s Blue Ribbon, and former president of The Colleagues, which channels its efforts into fundraising for Children’s Institute, Inc. Two years ago, she came up with the concept of a potluck dinner series hosted at her Colonial-style Ferguson & Shamamian-designed manse in Bel Air, benefiting a rotating featured charity of her choice. Causes range from Santa Monica’s Upward Bound House, which helps homeless families, to My Friend’s Place in Hollywood—an organization targeting youth on the streets—and, most recently, Lipstick Angels, which offers makeup artist services to patients fighting chronic disease. “I didn’t want to ask people to spend a lot
C 32 SPRING HOME 2015
of money,” says Dwek, so in addition to bringing a dish, philanthropic-minded guests—which include the likes of Wendy Burch, Brooke Davenport and Julia Sorkin—are asked to make a suggested donation of $100 (“the equivalent to a nice meal in Los Angeles,” explains the hostess). Often, after hearing about the charity’s mission during predinner drinks and a presentation, attendees are inspired to give more. Guests gather in Dwek’s airy kitchen designed by Michael S. Smith for a feast served buffet-style (which runs the gamut from private chef-prepared entrees like homemade pasta with pesto and black truffles to crab cakes from The Ivy and freshbaked oatmeal raisin cookies from Thyme Café and Market) before taking their seats around Dwek’s two grand 18thcentury dining tables. “The trick is to start out small,” says Dwek, whose dinners began with a guest list of 15 and have nearly doubled in size since then. The newest name at the table? Dwek’s 17-year-old daughter, Cairo. “She’s participating because she’s looking to start a chapter for girls her own age,” says Dwek. The gift that keeps on giving, indeed. •
MOR WEIZMAN
BY LESLEY McKENZIE
PLANTATION CUSTOM FURNITURE
LIGHTING
ACCESSORIES
DESIGN
Plantation
1-800-513-1621 LOS ANGELES
S
PLANTATIONDESIGN.COM
SAN FRANCISCO
SANTA MONICA
w w w. c s o c i a l f r o n t . c o m
THE PLACE TO SEE AND BE SEEN
C Social Front
C S OCI AL F R ONT
Online Daily Diary Posts and California’s Upcoming Events
Nine reasons to open a Donor-Advised Fund at MCF
Low Fees
Tax Benefits
Minimal Administration
Some of the lowest administrative fees in the country
Significant advantages over private foundations
No start-up costs; no minimum contribution; no distribution requirements
Global Reach
Issue Knowledge
Marin Community We’ll help you support causes anywhere in the world
We have deep resources and knowledge experts in the issues you care most about
Personal Advisor
Smart Investment Strategies
Flexible Funding
We tailor the exact relationship you want to make your experience as fulfilling as possible
Achieve superior returns on your philanthropic investment
Open a fund with cash, securities, real estate, or personal property
Want even more? Call Brian Van Weele at 415.464.2515
Marin Community Foundation marincf.org
C HOME
An insider’s tour of California’s stylish homes and gardens ALL
HOMES
SPACES
LIFESTYLE
RESOURCES
FOR SALE
BASIC INSTINCTS The Beverly Hills family residence of fashion designer Jenni Kayne and realtor Richard Ehrlich offers exalted quietude for reflection and play
C Home
HOMES
MODERN
BEACH
COUNTRY
WWW.C-HOME.COM
STYLISH LISTINGS Contemporary Seaside Estate with 270 degree views. Designed by noted architect, Brion Jeannette, this private seaside sanctuary captures ocean, Santa Catalina Island, harbor and beach views from all living areas. This magnificent estate wraps around the only unobstructed point on Ocean Avenue. www.3729OceanBlvd.com 3729 Ocean Boulevard Corona del Mar, California $29,999,000
The Georgina Jacobson Group 949-285-8380 georgina@georginajacobson.com
open
South Coast Plaza
South Coast Plaza
Featuring: pottery Barn, room & Board, Diptyque, Frette, west elm and assouline
south coast plaza
celebrates california living aSSouline • BaCCarat • BlooMingDale’S hoMe • Crate anD Barrel hoMe Store • Diptyque eMMo hoMe • Frette • herMÈS • Jo Malone • the lanD oF noD • MaCy’S hoMe Furniture Store MitChell golD + BoB williaMS • pBteen • pottery Barn • pottery Barn KiDS • reStoration harDware rooM & BoarD • Sur la taBle • VerSaCe • weSt elM • williaMS-SonoMa • z gallerie
partial listing
Visit southcoastplaza.com for furniture and accessory details.
San Diego Fwy (405) at BriStol St., CoSta MeSa
800.782.8888
SouthCoaStplaza.CoM
Natural Selection Four California-based designers share their al fresco projects and sentiments on outdoor living
SCP Edit
TRIP HAENISCH
An outdoor screen set above the pool at Haenisch’s Beverly Hills home.
Optoma HD26 projector, $699, amazon.com.
“
David Sutherland Lakeshore armless chaise, sutherlandfurniture.com.
C 40 SPRING HOME 2015
Heidi Merrick pillow, $235, heidimerrick.com.
Tuuci Hexagon Shade umbrella, $1,720, and stand, $553, dwr.com.
HAENISCH: SUSAN B. LANDAU. OUTDOOR SPACE: PEDEN + MUNK
“
California living is all about bringing the outside in and the inside out. I love to heat the pool and swim at night. Having an outdoor screen allows me to watch “Monday Night Football,” TV or a movie. It is the perfect way to relax. During my last party, we [screened] The Rocky Horror Picture Show, one of my all-time favorites.
An equestrian ring and barn-slash–art studio are adjacent to the lounge area of this Smith-designed project.
SCP Edit
SMITH: CINDY GOLD. OUTDOOR SPACE: MELANIE ACEVEDO
Williams-Sonoma Home linked-circles garden seat, $450, williams-sonoma.com.
RH Belgian slope-arm outdoor lounge chair, from $1,995, restorationhardware.com.
WINDSOR SMITH
“
Suzanne Kasler Morris lantern, $496, circalighting.com.
I fell into California nearly 30 years ago for a pass-through visit that literally never ended. We are so fortunate to have perfect days most of the year, and for that reason our outdoor living spaces are every bit as essential as our indoor rooms. This incredible Sullivan Canyon estancia is a sublime example of that. The covered loggia is on an axis with the barn. Perfection occurs when architecture and design supports lifestyle so seamlessly.
“
Janus et Cie Amalfi Star cocktail table, $4,987, janusetcie.com.
An outdoor dining area at a Pacific Palisades home designed by Marks.
SCP Edit Treestump Woodcraft bowl, $475, barneys.com.
Richard Wrightman Chatwin dining chair, $2,800, desousahughes.com.
JEFFREY ALAN MARKS
“
Nickey Kehoe Modern concrete and resin planter, $475, 1stdibs.com.
First and foremost, I design for comfort. Whether it is indoors or outdoors, the furniture and antiques are always spacious and inviting; the space must be welcoming for both [its] owner and guests. Outdoor living is the California lifestyle, and I take advantage of the fact that living outdoors is something we are able to do year-round. You want that living space to be a natural extension of, and to coexist with, your indoor space.
“
C 42 SPRING HOME 2015
ALLAN MARKS: MELISSA VALLADARES. OUTDOOR SPACE: DOUGLAS FRIEDMAN
Treillage English Street Light lantern, $1,675, treillageny.com.
KEN FULK
“
I live in what I like to refer to as the Tree House—a glorious redwood structure designed in 1959 by Warren Callister in San Francisco. It is surrounded by painterly Japanese-inspired gardens with huge doors opening to my own private forest. The line between indoor and outdoor is so blurred that it is difficult to determine where the gardens begin and the house ends. We frequently entertain on the terrace, which offers expansive views from bridge to bridge. The city looks like Oz twinkling down below. All this, and a coyote who lives across the street. Where else but in California?
“
RH column table, starting at $1,315, restorationhardware.com. Interlude leather Greer tray, $525, hdbuttercup.com. Alberto Pinto Potager gold buffet plate, $398, tableartonline.com.
FULK AND OUTDOOR SPACE: DOUGLAS FRIEDMAN CREDITS
SCP Edit
A view of Fulk’s tree-lined terrace creates a feeling of being in the woods.
Inner Gardens castcement urn, $1,850, 1stdibs.com.
South Coast Plaza
South Coast Plaza A plAce in the sun aSSouline • BaCCarat • BlooMingDale’S hoMe • Crate anD Barrel hoMe Store • Diptyque eMMo hoMe • Frette • herMÈS • Jo Malone • the lanD oF noD • MaCy’S hoMe Furniture Store MitChell golD + BoB williaMS • pBteen • pottery Barn • pottery Barn KiDS • reStoration harDware rooM & BoarD • Sur la taBle • VerSaCe • weSt elM • williaMS-SonoMa • z gallerie
partial listing
Featuring: pottery Barn and west elm
Visit southcoastplaza.com for furniture and accessory details.
San Diego Fwy (405) at BriStol St., CoSta MeSa
800.782.8888
SouthCoaStplaza.CoM
Serena + Lily
inspiration delivered. san francisco
|
east hampton
|
serenaandlily.com
DOUGLAS FRIEDMAN
Kelly Sawyer Patricof at home in Malibu. HANG LOOSE, p.64
WELCOME HOME Founders Letter
When we conceived of C Home it was because we knew that our editors (with 10 years of experience with C—California’s first lifestyle magazine) could scour the state and present the best in interiors, gardens, designers, furniture and objets d’art. Many try to highlight life in the Golden State, but we believe that only locals can really tell the story…and what a story it is. The way we actually live here is unique in its own right. The outdoors is as much a part of our living space as the indoors, and a successful home works when the two blend seamlessly, as evidenced in the remarkable residences we’ve featured thus far. Our first three subscription-only issues last year proved a rewarding experiment. The response was so overwhelming that with this issue we’re opening it up to a broader base and branching out with newsstand copies. To have icon Diane Keaton on the cover of our first widely distributed issue is thrilling to say the least. Her singular style is fascinating to witness in her sartorial choices, but to see this one-ofa-kind perspective and demonstrated passion for architecture and design manifested in her Pacific Palisades project is to really get a glimpse of the woman herself. If that’s not enough, we also bring you distinct homes from Long Beach to Beverly Hills; from Malibu to Napa; and places in between—each brimming with beauty, each thoughtfully considering its environs. You will want to take note and, if you are like me (or Keaton, as evidenced in her wonderful office), rip a few pages out to put in your inspiration folder.
Jennifer Hale Founder & Editorial Director
SPRING HOME 2015
C 47
Master of the House
At home with Oscar-winning actress and design aficionado Diane Keaton BY MELISSA GOLDSTEIN PHOTOGRAPHED BY LISA ROMEREIN
Feature (tbd)
Feature (tbd)
CREDITS
The House That Diane Built This sltoeij asdlkfj a asdu foer the el bhead in the anyfor thething She atha ldoieh sdo that hse ineswhen This sltoeij asdlkfj a asdu foer the el bhead in the anyfor “The staircase sweeps up and curlicues so I thought: Let’s just keep it
simple and throw BY something that’s kind of graphic,” Keaton says of the BY NAME TKAUTHORL PHOTOGRAPHED LISA inROMEREIN
entryway, furnished with a wood crate filled with pillows and an antique Spanish chandelier. OPPOSITE Keaton and her beloved golden retriever, C 00 Emmie, share a moment on the bluff outside her Pacific Palisades home.
W
E ALL WANT TO LIVE IN Diane Keaton’s world. For some of us, it’s the actress’s on-screen digs that tempt; say, the 11-bedroom oceanfront shingled Southampton estate; or the white clapboard two-story in Pasadena with the rose-strewn picket fence (see: Nancy Meyers’ Something’s Gotta Give and Father of the Bride, respectively). For others, it’s any of the real-life marvels she’s renovated and sold, including the 1926 Wallace Neff-designed Spanish-style domicile in Beverly Hills and the Lloyd Wright-built Mayanesque landmark Samuel-Novarro House in Los Feliz. The point is, the actress, author, fashion icon, and architecture and design enthusiast dwells, works and moves in beauty. Which makes it all the more compelling that she moves a lot. “One thing I really can’t stand is thinking that anything is set in stone,” she says. “I don’t ever want to live like that.” Keaton found herself between residences two-and-a-half years ago when she made an offer on her current abode, a traditional Connecticut-style shingled farmhouse set off a windswept bluff in Pacific Palisades. At the time she’d recently purchased a lot in Sullivan Canyon—upon which she is currently in the process of building a ranch-style compound—and planned to rent in the interim. But renting posed a problem: “You can’t mess around with things,” she explains. “I thought, ‘Oh, I don’t want to buy it. I’ve never owned a spec house,’” she adds. “But then I did because…well, where else was I going to live?” She asks the question with an imploring purpose, as if she really expects you to weigh in, then laughs that authentically tickled-by-it-all Diane Keaton laugh. She became enamored with her nest, precisely because she didn’t see it coming: “I moved in and fell in love,” she says. “I wasn’t trying to find the perfect house. I was just looking for a nice place to live and feel comfortable.” For her, comfort means living in black-and-white, a sartorial and stylistic trademark. “People [should be] the color in a home,” she says. “People coming and going really do punch [things] up.” This being Diane Keaton, her high-contrast scheme, which mixes beloved Spanish antiques with eccentric curios, rustic decor and industrial statements, is plenty punchy: from the Pop Art-styled polka-dot-painted walls in the guest room; to a self-described “tack room” vignette in the hallway, replete with striped James Perse towels and playful wooden Boston terrier doorstops; to her vast collection of photographs—David Wojnarowicz’s haunting Untitled (Buffalo), Garry Winogrand’s suburban vision Albuquerque, New Mexico 1957 and a steamy Bruce Weber portrait of a young Matt Dillon among them. “Of course Matt Dillon,” she says. “He’s gorgeous.” Still, there are saturated winks: fresh orange banksia blooms and blue ticking pillows in the bedroom, and a deep green miniature wooden house in the sitting room—part of a wider assemblage inspired by Pinterest. “I’m on that Internet all the time and just stealing ideas,” she says of the collection. “I’m a thief. And I have a lot of romantic dreams of what people hope for in a >>
C 50
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
In the sitting room a pair of photographs, David Wojnarowicz’s Untitled (Buffalo) and Garry Winogrand’s Albuquerque, New Mexico 1957, serves as a focal point. Of the Winogrand, Keaton says: “To me that’s the life I grew up in as a kid; it’s a tract house with a kid running down a driveway alone. I just find it to be one of the great photographs.”
C 00
Feature (tbd)
CREDITS
Keaton’s guest room is decorated with hand-painted polka dots. “It’s dominating. I’m sure that some of my friends who sleep over are like, get me out of this room!” she says. “Enough with the polka dots!”
C 00
Feature (tbd)
Keaton’s industrialflavored office is a hive of activity. “Even though everything’s on my computer I’m constantly dealing with paper,” she says. “Sometimes you want to see it and hold it.”
Feature (tbd)
<< home, so it’s very moving to me.” Her office, an airy retreat in the basement furnished with a monumental 12-foot-wide steel-topped desk with a vintage railroad wheelbase, and an explosion of tear sheets that blanket the floor, is her sacred lair. “I always had a problem with Spanish homes because the living room is [the focus],” she says. “For me, the office is where I am.” Keaton’s made good use of the space; since moving in she has produced the follow-up to her 2007 title California Romantica (an ode to California Mission and Spanish Colonial architecture): the 2012 book House, a lush investigation of farm and factory buildings brilliantly reimagined by the likes of Annabelle Selldorf and Adam Kalkin. She also published a memoir, last spring’s Let’s Just Say It Wasn’t Pretty, which name-checks such high-profile former paramours as Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson and Al Pacino. “It’s a house where I’ve had new ideas and played around,” she says. “But my prevailing memory will be that it’s a family house.
It’s warm and fun and I watched my son [Duke] and daughter [Dexter] get two years older here.” Living by the water full-time “changes everything,” Keaton says, and has brought her back to her own formative years growing up in L.A.: “My dad loved the ocean and he made it even more romantic for me. Every weekend we would go to Doheny Beach; I always think of him when I walk on that bluff and look down.” It’s the bluff that will be hardest to leave when construction on her new address in Sullivan Canyon is finally complete—not that there’s an end date: “The next time I talk to you it will still be being built,” she jokes. “I’ll be like that Winchester [Mystery House] woman.” Of course, Keaton, of all people, revels in the unknown: “This is where I am right now and this is what feels good. But I won’t always be here—we aren’t always going to be anywhere really,” she says. “To me it’s magical to see how different things look in different places. I think that’s [how] we have to look at ourselves: Put us in a different place, we’re different.” •
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
The bedroom is furnished with an antique Spanish bed frame and images including a snapshot of Keaton with her son, Duke, and a photograph from Ruven Afanador’s “Torero” series. OPPOSITE A “tack room” vignette in the hall comprises C 00 striped James Perse towels and canine doorstops.
In the bedroom, an apothecary cabinet is topped with a sampling of Keaton’s extensive collection of hats. A diptych of copies of Herb Ritts’ photographs of Sandra Bernhard’s mouth provides a dynamic backdrop.
Feature (tbd)
Feature (tbd)
Outside Keaton’s office, a factory light frames a photograph she found at L.A. design shop Obsolete. “There’s something textural about it that I really think is beautiful,” she says.
C 00
ABOVE IT ALL In a South of Market penthouse, Bay Area interior designer David Oldroyd sculpts ultra-refined decor with a cosmopolitan air
BY DIANE DORRANS SAEKS PHOTOGRAPHED BY MATTHEW MILLMAN
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
In the dining room, a Dale Chihuly sculpture hangs above the custom-carved walnut dining table. Classic 1959 dining chairs by Ole Wanscher are upholstered in textured Calvin C Fabrics. 00 At left is the living room. The floor is Flavigny limestone.
Feature (tbd)
Designer David Oldroyd set all walls at an angle to enliven the space.
C 00
F
ROM THE 60TH FLOOR of a luxury high-rise in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood, the distant Farallon Islands seem close enough to spot their resident rare birds through good binoculars. On a clear day it might even be possible to zoom in on the Carneros vineyard where your favorite wine is produced. But it’s the penthouse’s sunny and animated vista to the east and south, with tankers bobbing in the bay and planes aloft over SFO, that captured interior designer David Oldroyd’s clients’ attention. “When the family first entered and saw the wide-open raw space, they requested that the interiors should not distract from the endless panorama,” says Oldroyd, director of design firm ODADA. With unfettered eyelines as his brief, Oldroyd set out to create a complementary custom-detailed tableau that would look entirely effortless, embracing a color palette that hovers between cloud white, foggy pale taupe and palest sky blue for an effect that is lighter than air. There’s a sense of quiet luxury, with a triangular bleached pommele sapele gallery wall, sculptural and monolithic, at the entrance; an ethereal gold-painted verre églomisé screen separating a bedroom and a bathroom; and silk carpets composed of abstract swirls shimmering in the afternoon light. Oldroyd selected curving dining chairs to animate the angularity of the space, and obsessed over the jigsaw-puzzle shapes of the limestone flooring, seeking out trapezoidal custom-crafted bronze door pulls to mimic the floor plan. “It’s the ultimate pied-à-terre,” he says with satisfaction, before diplomatically pointing out that selling points abound outside too: “The family can enjoy the cultural riches of the city and catch up on the newest restaurants—and the ballet is 10 minutes away.” •
Feature (tbd)
ABOVE The custom breakfast table is teak with a lacquered metal base. The pendant light is by John Pomp Studios. The 1960s-era chairs are by Danish designer Johannes Andersen. BELOW FROM LEFT In the low-key kitchen, midcentury teak barstools with rosewood footrests are by Erik Buch. In the bedroom, a 1950s Italian alabaster lamp stands on a wall-mounted lacquered side table by Oldroyd.
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
On the 60th-floor terrace, with views over the bay to the east and the piers of Mission Bay below, Oldroyd created a practical, weatherproof composition with a quartet of aluminum Brown Jordan chairs surrounding a Brown Jordan metal table. OPPOSITE Custom-made sofas and a low table are made of glass fiberâ&#x20AC;&#x201C; reinforced concrete.
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
HANG LOOSE Feature (tbd)
Kelly Sawyer Patricof enlists designer Brigette Romanek to work her magic on her young family’s Malibu Colony beach cottage BY CHRISTINE LENNON PHOTOGRAPHED BY DOUGLAS FRIEDMAN
A pair of Becker paddleboards beside a bistro table and chairs set with pillows from fashion designer Gregory Parkinson’s forthcoming debut home line. OPPOSITE Patricof, in a silk shirtdress by Rochas, stands with her Linus Bike at the front of her house.
C 65
F
A graphic rug from Lawrence of La Brea and a cocktail table made from an aged tree stump (which Romanek found in Kelly’s hometown, Vancouver, BC) anchor the living room. Romanek helped the Patricofs assemble a collection of vintage pottery and objets, many of which she found at the West Hollywood antique shop Inheritance.
OR MOST OF THE YEAR, Kelly Sawyer Patricof appears to be everywhere at once. As co-president of Baby2Baby, an L.A.-based nonprofit that provides child-care essentials to 80,000 children in need, she organizes fundraisers and the collection of donated goods all over town. As creative director of modish fashion boutique chain Satine, she travels around the world seeking out the latest must-have womenswear designers. And as a mother to two young daughters, she and her husband, film producer Jamie Patricof (whose recent projects include Tim Burton’s Big Eyes and the upcoming Mississippi Grind starring Ryan Reynolds), manage a steady schedule of birthday parties and sporting events. But during the summer—and any weekend she can carve out some time away—she’s in exactly one place every day: a cozy 1950s beach cottage in the Malibu Colony that the couple purchased three years ago this summer. “We will drive up here on a Friday, park the car, and won’t get in it again until we have to go back,” she says. “The girls ride bikes everywhere. We can walk to the Colony for lunch. And what usually happens is that I sit down on the sofa and don’t move for hours!” With help from their creative friend, handbag designer and interiors mastermind Brigette Romanek, the Patricofs transformed the whitewashed one-story ranch-style cottage into a family refuge for the kids and the perfect place for hosting, with a lawn spacious enough for a crowd and a back patio with a large stone fireplace. The goal was to make the home equal parts family-friendly and cocktail-party ready, and Romanek used the clear azure Malibu sky as a launching point, choosing pale blue chambray upholstery, paint and even wall-towall carpet in the girls’ room. A neutral, layered scheme also prevails; the kitchen is a study in white-on-white, with utilitarian dishware readily accessible thanks to open shelving, and a bull’s skull placed just-so on the countertop, to keep things interesting; in the living room, milky-hued cabinetry displays a multitude of vintage pottery and objets. “The door is always open in that house,” says Romanek, whose daughters are the same age as the Patricof girls, and who has become a close friend since she and her husband, director Mark Romanek, moved to Los Angeles from London three years ago. “People come and go all the time, and they love to entertain. But it’s also a beach house!” she adds. “There will be sand on the floor and kids running around, and that’s the way it should be.” •
Feature (tbd)
Feature (tbd)
C 67
Patricof and Romanek take a break in the dining room, where a West Elm light fixture hangs above a custom white oak table with matching benches. OPPOSITE Patricof incorporated some vintage finds from her home in Hollywood, including a drive-in sign and a bull’s skull in the open, family-friendly kitchen.
C 68
MAKEUP: SARAH USLAN AT JED ROOT USING CHANEL ROUGE COCO
Feature (tbd)
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
CLOCKWISE FROM BELOW The girls’ shared bedroom features an Ikea loft bed, turquoise reading lights from The Land of Nod, and pale robin’segg Farrow & Ball paint in Blue Ground. In the bedroom, organic cotton sheets are dressed up with a throw from Peter Dunham’s Hollywood at Home, and an upholstered bench and custom pillows from Cisco Home. The tray tables, used as nightstands, are from Design Mix Furniture in West Hollywood. Photo of Muhammad Ali by R. McPhedran. A chair from Blu Dot in the small office, adjacent to the master bedroom.
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 70
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 71
Feature (tbd)
SEA CHANGE
Known for her Vegas flash, designer Megan Tagliaferri takes things down (just a notch) at her own boho-glam Belmont Shore residence BY HEATHER JOHN FOGARTY PHOTOGRAPHED BY LAURE JOLIET C 72
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
Designer Megan Tagliaferri paired a Calico gold-foil wallpaper in the entry with a richly textured velvet love seat. OPPOSITE Gold-dipped agate coasters are stacked on petrified wood atop a resin table.
C 00
B
ELMONT SHORE, A QUIET, sandy enclave of Long Beach, is worlds away from the glitz of the Las Vegas Strip, where Megan Tagliaferri of FLO Design Studio got her start designing interiors for casinos and hotels such as the MGM Grand and Hard Rock. “I’m a Portland [Oregon] girl, very earthy,” she says. “And then I went to Las Vegas, so there’s that glam element. Mixing those two tells a lot about me.” She was drawn to the coast by her husband, Jeff, a former professional baseball player and Southern California native. He had played college baseball in Long Beach, and they both fell in love with the idea of raising their family there, enchanted by the laid-back vibe and community of artists the locale attracts. “It feels like a sanctuary,” she says. Known for her splashy hospitality projects, Tagliaferri conversely classifies her residential aesthetic as “California mod spiritual.” Nowhere is this more evident than in her own 3,800-square-foot Cape Cod-style waterfront house, where an eclectic mix of textures and art reflects her singular vision. Works by the likes of Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha, Christopher Wool and Mark Hagen share space with an array of healing crystals and a clever mash-up of Danish Modern, vintage Knoll and soft antique Moroccan textiles. “My work is infused with visual and emotional textures,” she comments. “That’s where the true richness comes in.” To wit, Tagliaferri used a Japanese-style Wabi wallpaper by Calico on the walls in the entry—a backdrop for a custom FLO love seat upholstered in velvet by Brochier. In the dining room, walls are skinned with sumptuous striped Élitis wall covering beneath a ceiling of solid walnut wood slats, while the bar area features leathered granite countertops, herringbone oak floors and white walls as a canvas for a copper installation by artist Walead Beshty. “I’m drawn to high style, but also love spaces where you can cuddle up,” Tagliaferri says—a key distinction for the mother of two, ages 8 and 5. The residence features myriad lounges and patios, making it a prime example of indoor/ outdoor family living—right down to the priceless feature that came with the house: “I can sit up on the balcony and watch the children play in the sand below,” she says. “We listen to the waves together.” •
C 74
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
A dramatic work by artist Christopher Wool is the focal point of the living room. A custom FLO tufted sofa, B&B Italia Metropolitan chairs and a gold spindle table from Lawson-Fenning surround an onyx coffee table.
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 76
CLOCKWISE FROM FAR LEFT Knoll Warren
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
Platner dining chairs upholstered in mohair surround a custom FLO Design Studio table beneath a Lindsey Adelman brass chandelier. In the childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s playroom, a graphic Cole & Son wallpaper mixes with a tepee and colorful Mara Hoffman rugs. A glazed ceramic sheepskin by MaiThu Perret hangs above a vintage rosewood desk from the Netherlands with a vintage Lucite chair covered in olive velvet. The bar greets guests as they walk in the door, and features a copper installation by Walead Beshty and a vintage Lucite and glass poker table. A Diptyque 34 Boulevard Saint Germain candle perfumes the bathroom. Kelly Wearstler wallpaper is the backdrop for a custom concrete sink and an RH mirror.
C 77
In the guest room, a Moroccan wedding blanket covers a Room & Board Architecture bed, beside which a vintage Moroccan brass lamp sits atop a walnut nightstand from Design Within Reach. OPPOSITE A luxurious Picasso soaking tub from Hydro Systems contrasts against sandalus quartz stone slab walls.
Feature (tbd)
C 00
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
Feature (tbd)
Room to Grow
For Manhattan-based architect Eliot Lee, building a Napa Valley retreat for his parents has proven to be an ongoing and joy-filled journey BY MAILE PINGEL PHOTOGRAPHED BY SCOTT FRANCES C 80
In the mountains of Napa Valley, the home of Tatwina and Richard Lee (designed by their son, architect Eliot Lee) makes the most of its spectacular setting.
Feature (tbd)
C 00
M
OPPOSITE, FROM TOP The rear façade of the main structure boasts a 22foot retractable glass wall. The undulating ridgeline creates hidden dimensions that add to the property’s secluded vibe.
Y PARENTS WERE LOOKING to build a weekend house as a quick getaway from Berkeley,” says Eliot Lee, a partner with the New York firm Steven Harris Architects LLP. Situated about halfway up the mountains overlooking Calistoga, the narrow ridgeline lot required an intricate design befitting the topography. “We were all immediately struck by the terrain,” he adds. “From day one we resolved to avoid any major earthwork and to preserve the existing flora.” Working with his wife, architect Eun Sun Chun, the pair devised a series of spaces to rest gently on the site. “Our main home [in Berkeley] was built in 1911,” explains Tatwina Lee, Eliot’s mother, who purchased the property in 2001 with his father, ophthalmologist Richard Lee. “It’s a stately monster and I just didn’t need another one of those. We gave Eliot a program for how the new house could flow along the ridge: Live over here, play outside over there, but the vernacular is his.” At a relatively modest 3,000 square feet, the three-bedroom, 3.5-bathroom home is furnished with vintage midcentury pieces by influential designers like Marcel Breuer and Serge Mouille, along with contemporary elements from Modulightor in New York. But the emphasis remains firmly on outdoor living, something Eliot’s parents longed for, not only with the outdoor dining room and pool but with an impressive vegetable garden that anchors one end of the property. “They really let us run with our ideas,” he says. “The process moved along freely because we knew how they lived.” The finished result, a rammed earth, concrete and steel design, influenced by the work of Luis Barragán and Oscar Niemeyer, more than satisfies its owners, who spend several weekends there every month. “I always find an excuse to stay an extra day,” says Tatwina. With children and grandchildren on opposite coasts, it has also been the perfect gathering place—so much so, that there’s an addition in the works with original contractor Roy Beaman. “This house is the draw—it keeps us together,” she says. •
FROM TOP The master bedroom features a work by Chinese artist Zheng Chongbin. A Dacor range, David Weeks Studio pendant and Cherner Chair Company chairs define the kitchen. The lap pool.
C 00
SCOTT FRANCES/OTTO
Feature (tbd)
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
“WE GAVE ELIOT A PROGRAM FOR HOW THE NEW HOUSE COULD FLOW ALONG THE RIDGE: LIVE OVER HERE, PLAY OUTSIDE OVER THERE, BUT THE VERNACULAR IS HIS.”
Feature (tbd)
C 84
CLOCKWISE The living room, furnished with the help of designer Towfiq Awwal of Rees Roberts + Partners. Naturalistic landscaping by Eric and Silvina Blasen leads to the guest room. A corner of the living room offers a place for contemplation.
Feature (tbd)
C 00
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
SLEEPING BEAUTY A neglected Mediterranean estate is transformed into a modern sanctuary
BY HEATHER JOHN FOGARTY PHOTOGRAPHED BY LISA ROMEREIN WHEN CHAD EISNER FIRST LAID eyes on the 1930 Mediterranean manse atop Tower Road in Beverly Hills—an estate that once belonged to the late Ron Wilson, interior designer to the likes of Cher, Princess Diana and Johnny Carson—he couldn’t help but note the fairy-tale resemblance: “It was like a crumbling castle,” recalls the interior architect and designer behind C.W. Eisner, Inc. “Everything was gold leaf and swags.” Eisner had been working with longtime clients Danica and Charles Perez to find an updated home for their family that would complement the couple’s art collection, which includes works by Robert Graham, Christopher Wool and Albert Oehlen as well as Danica’s own surreal photographs. “Unlike many of the cold and contemporary boxes we looked at, this house had spirit,” he says. “You could feel it when you walked in the door.” Danica fell in love with the 11,000-square-foot property instantly. “It had the possibility of becoming a modern Mediterranean villa. It’s so romantic—it’s a Romeo and Juliet house,” she says of the terrace-wrapped blueprint. “Everywhere you look there’s a view.” Eisner opened up walls to reclaim space and light and modernize the interiors. “The art was a big inspiration,” he says. He chose a toned-down palette, bleaching out the oak floors and painting walls in Benjamin Moore White Dove to allow more vibrant pieces by emerging artists to, in his words, “hold their place.” Clean-lined, era-straddling decor fills out the floor plan; a chrome club chair from Milo Baughman and Art Deco Harris dining chairs by Joseph Jeup keep company with contemporary pieces such as a 1970s Venini Spazio Murano glass and chrome table with a high-lacquered top and custom pieces designed by Eisner himself. “Even though it’s all current and contemporary, it’s also comfortable,” he says. Today the bright and airy transformation has given new life and vision to the once-neglected estate—complete with a cinematic ending. “It’s a magical place,” says Danica. “A lot of good Old Hollywood parties happened in this house, and we’re continuing that tradition.” •
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
In the living room, interior architect Chad Eisner created a floating marble fireplace, which is flanked by Holly Hunt club chairs and a sofa, coffee table and accent tables all by C.W. Eisner.
C 87
The breakfast nook is furnished with vintage Jacques Adnet leather chairs, a modern Roll & Hill Agnes chandelier and an Ilya Zomb oil-on-linen painting. The tranquil entrance. Eisner added a pop of blue leather to custom barstools for contrast with the kitchenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s onyx stone countertops and stainless Sub-Zero/Wolf appliances. Pratesi linens cover a Therien & Co. Argos Bed in the master bedroom.
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE
Feature (tbd)
ABOVE AND LEFT Danica Perez (pictured) is passionate about her modern art collection, which includes a Jon Pestoni oil painting that hangs above a custom Coraggio mohair sofa and three wood-with-brassinlay stools by Azadeh Shladovsky.
C 00
A Minotti dining table, with Joseph Jeup chairs in rich blue Edelman leather, sits beneath a 1950s Murano chandelier attributed to Cenedese. Perez uses her maiden name, Danica Bujic, for her photography work; two of her images hang on the dining room wall.
CREDITS
Feature (tbd)
C 00
COLLAGE LAUDED DESIGNERS SHARE THEIR CALIFORNIA MOOD
Collage
“Using a hallway in my Beverly Hills home, I set the stage for my vision of the maximalist lifestyle. I incorporated decorative elements all designed under the Tony Duquette label, such as the Baker white pagodas, a Remains Lighting California Sunburst light fixture and the coral grotto chair. This more-is-more approach to the art of living and the living arts also materializes in one-of-a-kind pieces of jewelry. I feel that my vision for a maximalist life defines a new epoch for the 21st century.”
C 90 SPRING HOME 2015
KARYN MILLET
HUTTON WILKINSON
Auctioneers & Appraisers of America’s Finest Estates & Collections
Doyle New York
Inaugural West Coast Auction Fine Jewelry / May 21 L’Ermitage Beverly Hills
We invite you to contact us for a private auction evaluation of your jewelry and fine watches. Our Specialists are always available to discuss the sale of a single object or an entire collection. Nan Summerfield, GG SVP/Director, Beverly Hills Office 310-276-6616, DoyleLA@Doyle.com
JEWELRY
•
DESIGN
D OYLE
W AT C H E S
•
FINE ART
•
•
AUTOGRAPHS
BOOKS
AUC T IO NE E RS & A P P RA ISE RS
•
FURNITURE •
•
D E C O R AT I O N S
PHOTOGRAPHS
•
PRINTS
• •
ASIAN WORKS OF ART COINS
•
S TA M P S
959 5 WILSHIRE B LVD, B EVERLY HILLS, CA 9 0 2 1 2 DOYLE .COM L# 19101168
TA M I A M I
Brown Jordan
1945
VISIT OUR RETAIL SHOWROOM AT THE SOUTH COAST COLLECTION 323 Hyland Ave. Costa Mesa, CA | 949.760.6900