Living Etc

THE MEANING OF STYLE

ACCLAIMED INTERIOR DESIGNER RUSSELL SAGE TALKS BROKEN RULES, SECRET INGREDIENT­S AND LOOKING GOOD IN ANY LIGHT

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Russell Sage on creating a space in which you love to live

the Savoy hotel in London once threw a party, just before the First World War. If you’ve ever been to The Savoy you’ll know it glitters, and it did so even more back then. Yet the brilliantl­y rambunctio­us organisers paid no heed to the fixtures and fittings, and instead covered the space in rubber, filled it with water and sailed guests around on boats, sipping decorously on champagne. Have you ever heard of anything more fun? Wildly, truly eccentric, a moment of whimsy just for the pure joy of it, breaking the rules of supposed fine taste quite simply so a ruddy good time could be had by all.

I think Brits have always broken the decorative rules. Look at our old country houses, bursting with chinoiseri­e and Italianate marble not because they were authentic to the space, time period or building’s original features, but because the owners were collectors who wanted to make people smile. When Sir John Soane built his house in Holborn, now the Sir

John Soane’s Museum, he did so to have a space in which to display his Hogarth collection, so he could host fabulous dinner parties, beam at his guests and say, ‘Can I show you the Egyptian tomb in my basement?’. Imagine the delight he would have seen in their faces. That sense of wonderment, caused by design, is the true definition of style.

The pursuit of that feeling is what I base all my work on. At The Fife Arms, the hotel I designed in rural Scotland for Hauser & Wirth, we hung a Picasso pride of place simply because we were excited to show it off. The property houses 16,000 works of art, not so as to pay them stuffy reverence or create a hushed gallery, but because we want people to be able to experience them, to share them with the world. In the garden of my own house in Somerset I have two four-metre Indian vases, while two stuffed giraffes guard the hallway. You’d never find these in any interiors book, but I have them because they bring me joy.

You see, style doesn’t have to be about finesse, or hospital corners, or sticking rigidly to a sense of what ought to be done. My village is far from chocolate-box perfect – against a backdrop of gorgeous cottages you’ll find rusting cars in driveways, the odd plastic bag wrapped around a barbed wire fence and UPVC windows gleaming against old stone, but to me that is part of its appeal. I’d be heartbroke­n if it was all tidied up. Unlike other tourist spots, where residents have to get their external paint choices signed off by an associatio­n (this happens all over Gloucester­shire), here anything goes, allowing for true creativity and expression.

After everything we have been through this summer, design is about the desire to bring people together. If your home is not a sanctuary then you’re going to be in trouble, and this is where style comes into its own, the secret ingredient that elevates a room from looking good to feeling good, too. I’d suggest the following. Pick a sofa not because it looks nice in a photo, but because it speaks to you personally and makes you want to run to it and jump on it and lie back into it. Use restful colours that help you – specifical­ly you – relax. My hero Karen Beauchamp, a former creative director of Cole & Son, once told me that if a colour is to feel like home then it should have a touch of the earth to it. So instead of going with banana yellow, opt for one with a hint of brown in it; instead of choosing bright white look for softer, more restful pigments. I’m drawn to cognac leather tones right now, palettes that look good in any light. Nothing so bright it smacks you between the eyes when you want to be watching telly.

But above all, style means a good representa­tion of you. Agonise over decisions; ponder whether you can live with some furniture or a colour for the next 20 years. Does it suit your lifestyle, does it make you feel comfortabl­e? Do you really love it, and does it make you happy? Be drawn to things – and people – that do. Create a space in which you love to live. For this is where style is found.

russellsag­estudio.co.uk

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