1. Mosaic House, Brooklyn (Susan Gardner). “I had no idea what I was doing when I started,” she says. “So I just began letting the mosaics do the talking. It took on a narrative of its own.”
2. Gue(ho)st House, North-eastern France (Christophe Berdaguer & Marie Péjus) The unusual name of the futuristic project was inspired by artist Marcel Duchamp's wordplay project: A Guest + A Host = A Ghost and pays tribute to the prior functions of the building - prison, school & funeral home.
3. East Hampton, New York (Willem de Kooning) This photo, part of a spread in Architectural Digest, shows the organized chaos of this artist’s workplace, and his approach to painting.
4. Perry Green, Hertfordshire (Henry Moore) Slightly roomier than his working space further down the estate, the studio has been recreated using photographic archives and houses the sculptures, materials and benches the artist was surrounded by at the time. The original studio is still open to the public and, though remarkably small given the scale of Moore’s work, is packed tight with a chaotic medley of maquettes, tools and sketches – just as the artist left them.
2. Gue(ho)st House, North-eastern France (Christophe Berdaguer & Marie Péjus) The unusual name of the futuristic project was inspired by artist Marcel Duchamp's wordplay project: A Guest + A Host = A Ghost and pays tribute to the prior functions of the building - prison, school & funeral home.
3. East Hampton, New York (Willem de Kooning) This photo, part of a spread in Architectural Digest, shows the organized chaos of this artist’s workplace, and his approach to painting.
4. Perry Green, Hertfordshire (Henry Moore) Slightly roomier than his working space further down the estate, the studio has been recreated using photographic archives and houses the sculptures, materials and benches the artist was surrounded by at the time. The original studio is still open to the public and, though remarkably small given the scale of Moore’s work, is packed tight with a chaotic medley of maquettes, tools and sketches – just as the artist left them.