American Art Collector

GOOD Vibrations

DARRIN JENSEN-PETERSON AND MICHAEL PETERSON’S PALM SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, OASIS HAS A NEUTRAL PALETTE TO COMPLEMENT THEIR VIBRANT ART.

- BY JOHN O'HERN PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY FRANCIS SMITH

Darrin Jensen-Peterson and Michael Peterson lead active lives in Salt Lake City and escape to Palm Springs, California, to relax. Their midcentury modern home in Utah was “a dream for purists,” Darrin explains, “but we’re not purists.” They restored the exterior of their home to its original state but completely revamped the interior. They have done the same in Palm Springs.

They began to vacation in Palm Springs and on an early visit took a double-decker bus tour of its midcentury treasures. Opinions run high on how to maintain or restore the homes in the area. The collectors recall the tour bus operator pointing out to his passengers loud enough to be heard by the homeowners they passed, “Now that’s

what you don’t want to do.”

Michael explains, “You don’t find many people are from here. People come here, love it and start to rent and later buy a vacation home. Then they move here permanentl­y. Then there are people who are waiting to position themselves to be able to live here permanentl­y. People are here because they want to be here.”

Michael and Darrin followed that scenario, visiting for 10 years and often joking that they would move to Palm Springs toward the end of their lives—“when we would be put out to pasture,” Michael says. Today, their home in Palm Springs is named “The End” despite the fact that they have settled into the community at the peak of the careers. Darrin relates, “When we came here we knew no one. We have found a community of people in a short amount of time, some of whom have become our closest friends.”

“In Salt Lake we work,” Michael says. “Palm Springs is a getaway. It’s a happy place. It’s a nice getaway for me, and Darrin can exhale here.”

When they decided “The End” could be now rather than far in the future, they purchased a midcentury home and took it down to the studs to create their own oasis. They wanted to have fun with their new home and opted for a nostalgic old Hollywood vibe.

“We had never spent a lot of time in the galleries of Palm Desert,” Darrin relates. “When we started looking we came across some of the best galleries we’ve seen around the world.

The first piece they bought was an extraordin­ary constructi­on by Claudia Meyer. Interestin­g enough in the daylight with its multicolor­ed squares it comes alive at night

 ??  ?? 1 Yaounde Smokes a Cigar, 2015, oil on canvas, by Noé Two, the French graffiti artist, hangs in the living room
1 Yaounde Smokes a Cigar, 2015, oil on canvas, by Noé Two, the French graffiti artist, hangs in the living room
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