Blue: structural elements (columns and walls), yellow and red: nonload-bearing walls. Modernist logic. Or poetry? Any associations? Piet Mondrian! Two beautiful houses designed by Brazilian modernist architect João Vilanova Artigas.
I could immediately sense the presence of a creative soul - here lives a jewellery designer Julie Wettergren Andersen. These beautiful interiors are a tasteful mixture of old and new: Eames chairs and Octo4201 pendant lamps, rusted mirrors and colonial style wooden bench... and the mahogany coffee table designed by the lady of the house.
This spectacular house in Lidingö (Sweden) is an original 1950s building. Now a cosy family home, it boasts a pretty eccentric past - in the frivolous 70s it used to be a party place and a bastion of lush decadence. The swimming pool in the kitchen area is an obvious remainder of those days, but now the guests invited for sunday family dinners bring their swimsuits along. I wouldn't mind a nice swimming pool like this one :)
I've just discovered one more fascinating interior design based on play-with-perception game: No Picnic office in Stockholm, located in an old stable building. The meeting rooms were concealed behind the mirrored wall, dividing the interior along it's axis. The wall, both see-through and mirrored, creates surprising illusion of space and seems to "disappear". Reflections and objects seen on the other side of the wall overlap at a certain angle. The autors behind this great concept is renowned Swedish design duo Elding Oscarson.
...and I really like this conference table, unusal office idea isn't it?
This spacious house near the Pyrenees was beautifully restored after the disastrous fire, that devoured almost all the interiors - just the bare walls remained. Paradoxically, the catastrophe was an opportunity to revival. A few tall windows were added and the house was filled with light. To emphasize the sense of open space, some dividing walls were designed lower - the ceiling has become a continuous plane. Concrete and marble surfaces create modern look and correspond with tasteful vintage furniture.