“The aim of this project was to respect the building’s rather posh 1960s architectural soul while inserting the client’s sensibility and the realities of 21st-century family living into the way the space functions. A very masculine approach to aesthetics for a very feminine client with a high sensibility for art and design.”
And why “Informalist”? Because of the family’s impressive collection of art from the Spanish Informalism period. Another striking project by Casa Muñoz.
Casa Muñoz took a neoclassical approach to designing this central London apartment for a Mediterranean client. The Madrid-based studio of architects and interior designers have created a haven in the city with traditional pieces married with reminders of home such as the woven straw blinds while modern art brings the spaces to life.
“Our approach was to design each interior space with crisp, yet sparing architectural embellishments, punctuated by layers of unexpected surface materials and a museum-quality art collection … We wanted it to feel ornate, but also feel light and classical, with a hyper-modern edge.”
Designer Dylan Farrell named the project Georgian Modern. I call it a fabulous mix of different styles and eras with a museum-quality art collection.
Photography by Francois Dischinger
An inter-generational change of hands meant not only a contemporary makeover for this Park Avenue apartment but that interior designer Jeremiah Brent was asked to honour the family matriarch, the previous occupant. The starting point was a stellar collection of Mesoamerican pottery and the statues crafted by the husband’s mother.
Photography by Nicole Franzen