Luxe

LUXE

SEPTEMBER 2017

Making History

by Mindy Pantiel

Custom Details and thoughtful furnishings give a West Village Maisonette a sense of gravitas and comfort

 

Most designers would look at a windowless room in a historic 1906 building and immediately start layering with mirrors and other reflective surfaces to create the illusion of light. But faced with a dark formal dining area in a West Village home, interior designer Glenn Gissler, opted to turn the lack of fenestration into an asset. “We took the position that it’s a space only used at night, so why not create a special environment and fill the walls with decorative murals that depict an imaginary version of New York City history?” says Gissler, who installed Moroccan-style metal fixtures and recessed architectural lighting to cast a romantic glow on hot-air balloons, palm fronds and fanciful characters that dance around the room. “When you dine here, it’s as if you are in the landscape. It’s positively magical.”

The murals were just one part of a larger design scheme that involved recreating a past for the stripped-down maisonette, housed in an early 20th-century building that once served as a women’s hostel. The homeowners, a couple who have two young daughters, also charged the designers, working with builder Dale Faught, with making the spaces in the two-story 6,000-square-foot residence feel welcoming despite the imposing scale. “They wantd to turn down the volume and amp up the detiling to establish a historical connection, but they also wanted it to be livable and happy,” Gissler says.

Providing an immediate link with the past is a new entry door that is an exact replica of the original. Just inside, the walls lining the stair that leads to the main level are painted a warm aubergine—Donald Kaufman’s DKC-90—to fulfill the inviting requirement. Curtains hang across the opening on the landing–“portieres were common back then,” Gissler explains–creating an intimate tansitional moment before the granduer of the first floor is revealed. There, a spiraling staircase enveloped by wood paneling designed by Gissler climbs to a 30-foot ceiling, where a massive Lindsey Adeiman chandelier offers a contemporary counterpoint.

Photography: Peter Murdock
Interior Design: Glenn Gissler & Craig Strulovitz
Home Builder: Dale Faught, Nutech Interior, Inc.

Interior designer Glenn Gissler conceived the perused-oak panels that hug the swooping stair leading to the upper-level rooms. Each piece of the custom runner from Martin Patrick Evan was fabricated individually to accommodate the complex geometry of the curving stair treads. The chandelier is by Lindsey Adelman.

An antique brass globe by Profiles casts a subtle glow on the wool run by Martin Patrick Evan in the entry of a 1906 West Village maisonette. A 19th-century Chinese bench upholstered in Kravet fabric provides a place to remove shoes, while a dresser of the same vintage–both from Pagoda Red, via 1stdibs, in Chicago–is a convenient spot for stowing gloves and scarves. O’lampia sconces light the aubergine walls.

The first-floor landing is encased in the same perused oak paneling as the staircase. A pair of 1980s bronze table lamps from Rago Arts and /auction Center in Lamberville, New Jersey, rest on a 1940s French trestle table from Galerie Sammeriath in Culver City, California. The Moroccan-style area rug is from Marc Philips Decorative Rugs.

“The homeowners wanted to establish a historical connection, but they also wanted the residence to be livable and happy” – GG

All the public spaces fan out from the central foyer, including the decidedly unfussy living room. “In their previous home, the clients had a living room they never used,” Gissler says. “they dubbed it ‘the fancy room.'” The designers avoided the moniker here with a playful blend of furnishings, such as a Bohemian-leaning woven tapestry on the sofa, a midcentury coffee table and a pair of side tables that evoke the Vienna Secession. “On one level, the furniture silhouettes are more classical,” Gissler says, “but there are tweaks—like a colorful contemporary rug instead of a Persian under the baby grand—that tell you: This is not your mother’s prewar apartment.” Plaster crown moldings, a picture rail alongside the piano and baseboards scaled for the room evoke a time gone by, but a bold canvas by Robert DeNiro Sr. brings visitors back to the current century.

Art plays a critical role in the overall design of the home. From the living room, it’s possible to glimpse the sextet of Walton Ford’s large-scale bird editions dominating a wall in the library. “It was decided early on that the prints needed to hang togther, and they were a driving force for the palette,” says Gissler, who in response painted the walls a deep olive green. “In galleries, you always see art on harsh white walls, but I prefer to use color to frame the art.” A cushy upholstered sofa mimics the wall color, while patterns on the lamps and decorative pillows punctuated the tones of terra cotta provide an ethnic accent.

While most spaces incorporate a sense of modernity, the ambience in the kitchen is pure turn-of-the-last-century. New ceiling beams painted to match the deep blue recessed-panel cabinets and a wall of hand-wrought subway tiles with wide grout lines imply age. “One wall of cabinets was designed to resemble an old hutch that could have been there for years,” Strulovitz says. To break banquette wraps around a custom double-pedestal table, supplying a cozy family hangout.

Nearby, a trip up the central stair leads to a patchwork of rooms, including the master suite, children’s rooms, play areas, and guest quarters. In the master bedroom—a commodious 750 square feet—a large portrait of Alex Katz handily brings the sitting area into focus and satisfies the scale of the room. Cheerful patterned draperies and a lush custom-woven carpet layer on the warmth, and there is ample room for a tall freestanding sculpture by Richard Filipowski. But unlike the walls in the entry and the first-floor office, where a deep hue establishes a dramatic mood, this room has shades of blue, gray and lavender that are suitably calming.

Thanks to the designers’ thoughtful use of color and millwork, coupled with appropriate furnishings and flourishes, the bare bones of the residence blossomed into a family home that effortlessly balances sophistication and comfort. Says Gissler, “It is a home that was designed to be lived in.”

In the living room, Gissler layered on a variety of furniture styles, including a Monte Carlo sofa and a dark gray Duchess of Windsor armchair wearing Kravet fabric, a Cambridge armchair covers in Quadrille fabric, and a skirted ottoman dressed in Stroheim velvet, all from Jonas. Carved-wood James Mont lamps from 1stdibs sit on oak side tables from Mark Newman in Palm Spings, California, and the coffee table is by French Art Deco Furniture. The perforated copper lanterns are by Dennis Miller Associates. Over the sofa is Tough Girls by Amy Sitman.

Interior Design Master Class

INTERIOR DESIGN MASTER CLASS

2016

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Alchemy

by Glenn Gissler

Alchemists have existed in every major civilization—along with great artists and artisans—all engaged in an attempt to transform base metals into gold. Similarly, a good designer possesses a knowledge of elements that when amalgamated create magic in an interior.

Two of my favorite elements are fine art and objects.

Every surface of an interior is important, but the alchemy of design comes into play when the designer introduces and orchestrates fine art and objects, humble or precious, simple or ornate. Art in the interior is the great transformer, the secret formula for achieving superlative design.

The selection and placement of an art in an interior is extremely important, possible the single most important decision a designer will make. You can arrange and rearrange things almost infinitely, creating fresh, startling design perspectives and tableaux. The talismanic power of an object is enhanced by its position and the objects adjacent to it. The whole, forged by the intuitive selection and arrangement of objects in an interior, is exponentially greater than the sum of its parts.

I often assist my clients in purchasing art—in some cases forming a nucleus on their collection—and I encourage clients to buy the very best art and objects they are willing to afford, but caution that if everything they purchase is at the highest level, the provocative potential—the poetry—of juxtaposition is neutralized.

The quality of interior design cannot be quantified; it does not have a price tag. Art and artifacts evoke a moment in time. It doesn’t matter if it’s “original”; it might be a nineteenth-century plaster cast of a Roman bust or the real thing. A beautiful object possesses an aura, an energy you cannot fake.

Art and objects alone do not make the room, although they may ignite its magic. The culmination of all the endless design decisions can be the most perfectly understated background, giving the illusion that nothing, neither heavy-handed nor weak, was done. The designer must learn to distribute resources to create design alchemy, a process which need not be enormously costly, but may pay great dividends to the client in the future in terms of increased value. Yet this is merely a fringe benefit; the presence of art creates an added value. Clients of relatively modest circumstances may be willing to send a surprising proportion of their money on art and objects simply because they perceive their incalculable aesthetic—and even spiritual value—in the interior.

Seeking visual relationships between artifacts of different eras and places is important to the alchemical process. A gifted photographer will uncover an affinity between two things that may have escaped me, see something I haven’t yet seen, as in the white, curving swathe in the middle of Richard Avedon’s photograph of Dovina and the elephant and the adjacent tall, white, curving caste on the mantlepiece. Sometimes between like and unlike, there is a hidden correspondence, as in a “fancy gilded X-legged Regency stool that is nevertheless clean and modern in its lines, which might be felicitously juxtaposed, say, with modern gold-leafed Carlo Scarpa vase. Although sometimes I transmit my own sensibility to my clients, I am always open to the inspired object, be it Bauhaus or Baroque. The fascination of form is to be found in all eras—all styles—but there is one caveat: eclecticism in the wrong hands is permissions for chaos.

Everyone seeks rooms that  are inviting and pleasurable, designed for living life in all its complexity and depth. Art and objects may cause the visitor to pause, they may, at the same time, prompt an inhabitant to see a new visual relationship, previous undiscovered, a dense web of relationships and resemblances, an interior world endlessly enriched and enriching. And the result is pure gold, brought forth by design alchemy.

Cottages & Gardens 2015

COTTAGE & GARDENS

OCTOBER 2015

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Architecture can exist at the scale of cities or at the scale of tabletops

by Sharon King Hoge

Creating the original showroom for a fledgling designer Michael Kors was the project that launched Glenn Gissler on a career that included innovative work in lofts, beach houses, Westchester mansions and urban pied-a-terre. A greek Revival farmhouse acquired in Conneticut just over a year ago is his latest personal project.

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Aspire

ASPIRE

FALL 2016

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Greener Pastures

by Kate Missine
Photography: Gross & Daley Photo
Interior Design: Glenn Gissler

Transforming a new residence into a true home is a challenge that goes beyond picture-perfect decor

 

On a somewhat short timeline, a two-bedroom, two-bath loft in Greenwich Village for a single father and his middle school-aged daughter was designed move-in ready, emergina s a livable, artistically striking space where no detail was compromised.

“There was some urgency to have it warm, comfortable and settled quickly,” says Glenn Gissler, whose architectural training and wealth of knowledge in the decorative arts and turn-of-the-century style regularly land him among the top designer lists and magazine pages. “There was a fair amoutn of books and a lot fo art to be accommodated.”

The artwork- some from the client’s personal collection and other pieces acquired for the space – takes the spotlight in the warm cocoa-hued living room. A diverse mix of historic and modern (“not contemporary but classic modern,” Gissler notes) ranging from Donald Judd to Andy Warhol to Kiki Smith pops dramatically against the contrasting dark chocolate walls in Gissler’s trademark play of color and chiaroscuro.

“If you put light-colored artowkr on a light-colord wall, it becomes nearly invisible,” shares Gissler. ” A darker wall color recedes and becomes the frame, making the lighter elements come foward.”

The frolic of light is one of the designer’s specialties, and one that came in particularly handy in the loft, where natural lighting wasn’t abundant. “Like many lofts, it didn’t have a great amount of daylight, so lighting was a key element,” explains Gissler.

“We used lamps to create intimate spaces, directional lighting to illuminate artwork.” Dimmmers allow for atmospheric control whether for entertaining, television watching or relaxing.

“One of the challenges of a loft is that you’re always in the same place,” Gissler comments. “If you haven’t done your dishes or made your bed, you see it, always.” To counteract the open plan, we worked to build “layers,” which created separate spaces to be “revealed as you experienced the loft, not from the front door.”

Gissler’s favorite layer is in th eliving room nook, a cocooned corner framed by velvet-tufted sofas and a pair of rope Klismos chairs by T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings. “It’s a cozy space that’s unique in scale,” he points out, “especially the dark wall with the large-scale artwork.” Further in, touchable textures, stacks of books and more art set a relaxed mood in the TV room. A vibrant kitchen punched up with lacquered blue cabinets gives modern definition to the white-washed brick walls, leading into a dining room’s massive oak table paired with Anglo-Colonial style chairs.

“Some lofts can be cold because everything is so modern and the space is large,” says Gissler. “We used different vintages and different scales to create a much more domesticated feel.” Eclectic pieces span a range of styles and eras, and speak to a breadth of tastes and character. An antiquity circa 300 BC neighbors a Mexican cermical vessel on a T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings coffee table, inspired by classical Greek proportions. “His pieces have classic sensibilities but are contemporary for the day,” Gissler remarks. Furthermore, shelves from 1950s Denmark hold a vinage Italian bookstand displaying a Frank Stella print, and white Russel Wright American Modern dishes lend the kitchen a quirky retro vibe.

All part of an easy, natural interaction, zingy dtails carry on the mixed-era juxtaposition into the bedoorms – a funky, early European modern Zig-Zag chair from the 1920s; a 1950s Italian side table; and a 17th century linen Irish chair on cabriolet legs. In the daughter’s cheery room, her own artwork brings personality to the print-covered walls, and bright, colorful accents create a fun, yet functional teen hideaway.

“We wanted to help the family make the transition an dget settled together into their new home,” concludes Gissler. “It came together wonderfully; they love it.”

Antiques & Fine Art 2017

ANTIQUES & FINE ART

SPRING 2017

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Incollect Designer Focus: Glenn Gissler

Photography: Gross & Daley Photo