The Hamilton Spectator

TILES TELL A STORY

- STEVEN KURUTZ

“If I could, I would tile the world,” Gerry Eisenberg said. “Because I think it is the most wonderful medium.”

Eisenberg has not yet paved the streets in 1-inch-by-1-inch squares. But last summer, she did install a large mosaic in her master bathroom. Spidery tree branches rendered in stone tile are accented with 24-karat gold glass pieces incorporat­ed in the form of delicate leaves. The mosaic design, executed by the company New Ravenna, takes up the entire shower wall, with a unifying ribbon of leaves encircling the room.

After renovating her historic 1920 house in Aiken, South Carolina, Eisenberg saved the bath project to do in a special way.

“What is more wonderful than mosaic? What is more traditiona­l?” she said. “But mosaic with gold glass to give it that modern zip.”

Tile mosaics, often associated with churches and the Roman Empire, are hardly modern. But with the current maximalist insurgency in the design world, with the entirely welcome return of colour and pattern and idiosyncra­tic interiors, elaborate tile installati­ons may soon follow wallpaper as an old-fashioned adornment updated and rediscover­ed.

“In these handcrafte­d mosaics, you get pattern on pattern on pattern,” said Cean Irminger, creative director for the Virginia-based New Ravenna, which recently unveiled a new collection of designs, including “Mod Palm,” a tropical motif that blends glossy and matte glass. “It can be super intricate and detailed.” Kim Wozniak, who runs WitsEnd Mosaic, an online tile store that sells to both artists and homeowners, said glass tile is surprising­ly adaptable.

“Everybody thinks of this old Byzantine style,” she said. “But it can really be anything you want it to be” — or go anywhere, not just in bathrooms and kitchens. “Foyers, for example. You can do it like a rug, but it’s inlaid in the floor.”

Eran Chen, founder and executive director of the architectu­ral firm ODA New York, is a fan of glass tile because it is “a true material.”

He explained: “It has a combinatio­n of playfulnes­s, colour, light, but it’s still a natural material. That’s rare.”

In the past decade, Chen said, glass tile has become more affordable and also more creative, with computer programs that allow for the transfer of an image — a favourite postcard, a painting, a photo of your cat — into a custom mosaic.

“It’s personaliz­ing your space in a daring way,” said Chen, who thinks that aspect will appeal especially to millennial­s for whom individual­ity is everything. “Minimalism sometimes makes it more difficult to tell personal stories.”

One daring personaliz­ation through glass can be found in the New York apartment of Babak Hakakian, a partner in Ddc, the high-end contempora­ry furniture company. Hakakian hired Chen to design the loft space, and together they covered the walls of a powder room in bright red glass — “Massimo Vignelli red,” as Hakakian called it.

Hakakian selected glass from the venerable Italian company Bisazza because, he said, it’s harder to achieve real true colours with stone tile, and because he knew the firm’s high-end, artisanal tile would wow guests.

The project wasn’t cheap. Though Hakakian received a trade discount, the glass tile he used costs $84 per square foot, far more than the $5 to $15 price of more basic stone tile. (Bisazza’s glass mosaics, meanwhile, can cost from $20 to $550 per square foot, before installati­on). But describing the effect, Hakakian said: “It’s all the things red is — it’s energizing, vital, fun, lively. It’s really sexy.”

A representa­tive of New Ravenna said homeowners who use the company’s tiles can expect to spend from $300 to more than $1,000 per square foot for a patterned installati­on, depending on the intricacy of the design and the specific tiles selected. As one might expect, 24-karat gold glass will send a budget skyward.

Glass mosaics certainly have the power to stun, especially after two decades of shelter magazine spreads of spare, midcentury modern interiors. To walk into Bisazza’s Manhattan showroom is to feel like a visually starved person being treated to a banquet. There are kaleidosco­pic mosaics of Renaissanc­e-esque floral bouquets, geometric patterns, the giant face of young Napoleon Bonaparte.

Piero Bisazza, the chief executive, said the 62-year-old company has never wavered in its love of colour and pattern.

“You do not change your identity because fashion goes one direction or another,” he said. “We enjoy decoration, there’s no denying it.”

Neverthele­ss, he is finding that fashion is coming to them.

“Flower power is very, very strong,” Bisazza said when asked about his most popular designs. “The pendulum is swinging back to rich — not opulent — but rich interiors.”

Bisazza can refer clients to recommende­d installers, as will most tile showrooms. And a word of warning: for largescale, intricate mosaics, it isn’t a weekend job.

Eisenberg’s tile installer lived in her guest house for seven weeks. Together, they laid out the large wall mosaic tiles on the floor like an interlocki­ng puzzle, so she could see the full-scale design and make any changes (she added more gold leaves and some highlights). But like many homeowners who take the risk and pay the cost for a glass-tile mosaic, Eisenberg is beyond thrilled with the way the bathroom mosaic brings colour and light and a sense of artistry into her home.

“Every time I go in there,” she said, “it’s enchanting.”

 ??  ??
 ?? JENN VERRIER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A mosaic kitchen backsplash by Annie Elliott, an interior designer in Washington.
JENN VERRIER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A mosaic kitchen backsplash by Annie Elliott, an interior designer in Washington.
 ?? KATE THORNTON NYT ?? Mosaic work in the master bathroom of Gerry Eisenberg.
KATE THORNTON NYT Mosaic work in the master bathroom of Gerry Eisenberg.
 ?? FRANK OUDEMAN VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A mosaic powder room in the New York City apartment of Babak Hakakian, by Eran Chen. Mosaics, some with 24-karat gold accents or hand-crafted patterns, prove an antidote to silent white walls.
FRANK OUDEMAN VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A mosaic powder room in the New York City apartment of Babak Hakakian, by Eran Chen. Mosaics, some with 24-karat gold accents or hand-crafted patterns, prove an antidote to silent white walls.
 ??  ?? Homeowner Gerry Eisenberg :“If I could, I would tile the world.”
Homeowner Gerry Eisenberg :“If I could, I would tile the world.”

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