This poetic Parisian town house was in fact designed to be the privileged meeting place between a Florentine sculptor and her husband, a financier in London. A refuge for two "refined, elegant, yet at times surprising", created by Anne-Sophie Pailleret, who was able to perfectly translate the client's dream of intimacy in the one hundred and seventy square meters on the top floor of an elegant Haussmannian building , in the sixth arrondissement.
The first, dazzling contact of the landlady with the French interior designer - who came out of the prestigious Ecole Boulle and long-time assistant to Jean-Louis Deniot - took place through the pages of a magazine. After a few meetings, the two women began a four-handed job, the final result of which is a residence capable of speaking the language of both: enveloping and confidential, caressed by a persuasive palette in shades of gray and pink, in synergy with the slate roofs of the Ville Lumiere and the delicate light that filters through the south-facing windows. A palette lit by golden flashes on frames, lamps, chandeliers and tables.
Property, Wall, Room, Architecture, Interior design, Building, Ceiling, Column, Floor, Wallpaper,The hallway is lined with Malabar wallpaper, by Cole & Son .Another unconventional choice was not to display paintings on the walls, delegating an accentuated pictorial quality to décor solutions . It happens in the kitchen area, where the kitchen block features matt black inserts with white streaks, a timely reference to the master of European Gesturalism Pierre Soulages . Likewise, the entrance and corridor are adorned with the charismatic two-tone graphics of the wallpaper.
- Interiors: Anne-Sophie Pailleret
- Photos: Stephan Julliard
- Words: Qianqian