Cy Twombly, Interior Designer ?
Cy Twombly (1928 – 2011) lived in Italy for a large part of his life, where he met fame with his large-scale, highly coloured works which merge the personal and the mythological. His interiors were less well known but equally impressive. Joseph Holtzan, editor in chief of Nest magazine, described Cy Twombly as a “great interior decorator”, adding “the artist’s Roman quarters were the birth of a new style of interior decoration”.
Twombly’s interiors, like his art, look simultaneously to the past and to the future. Twombly’s passion for Greek and Roman history and mythology is very much present in his Roman rooms, with their large collection of classical busts and statues.
« For anyone accustomed to Roman palazzo interiors, the Twombly’s apartment comes as a shock. Instead of the usually heavily-curtained chiaroscuro, the red damask midday-midnight, the inherited accumulation of superb and indifferent works of art, here for a change are rows of all but empty rooms…the whole as beautiful as a tree in winter or a shell on the beach”. Roman Classic Holiday, Vogue 1966.
“The paintings of Twombly are like large Mediterranean rooms, warm and bright … that the spirit wants to populate” Roland Barthès
GET THE LOOK
1 | Install vibrant patterned flooring
Evoke classic Italian architecture with red and white, checkered or patterned tiles.
Cristina Celestino has designed a beautiful Italian-inspired collection for Fornace Brioni, and Clé Tiles have created a cement tile directly inspired by Cy Twombly’s apartment.
2 | Mix ancient and modern
Here a bust of Nero is pictured in front of Gerhard Richter’s “Frau Marlow”.
3 | Keep it simple
“Twombly’s canvases remain absolutely airy spaces … it’s like a subtle energy that allows you to breathe easier”. Roland Barthes.
In a similar way, the framework of the via del Monserrato apartment was pale and pared-back. Layers of old paint were stripped off the doors, revealing a long vanished coat of pale blue with silver moldings. The decoration “complements rather than crushes the human beings moving in its midst”. Roman Classic Holiday, Vogue 1966
4 | Opt for noble materials, marble or stone
5 | Bring in an element of surprise
Cy Twombly, Interior Designer ?
Cy Twombly (1928 – 2011) lived in Italy for a large part of his life, where he met fame with his large-scale, highly coloured works which merge the personal and the mythological. His interiors were less well known but equally impressive. Joseph Holtzan, editor in chief of Nest magazine, described Cy Twombly as a “great interior decorator, adding “the artist’s Roman quarters were the birth of a new style of interior decoration”.
“The paintings of Twombly are large Mediterranean rooms, warm and bright … that the spirit wants to populate” Roland Barthès
GET THE LOOK
Evoke classic Italian architecture with red and white, checkered or patterned tiles.
Cristina Celestino has designed a beautiful Italian-inspired collection for Fornace Brioni, and Clé Tiles have created a cement tile directly inspired by Cy Twombly’s apartment.
2 | Mix ancient and modern
Here a bust of Nero is pictured in front of Gerhard Richter’s “Frau Marlow”.
3 | Keep it simple
“Twombly’s canvases remain absolutely airy spaces … it’s like a subtle energy that allows you to breathe easier”. Roland Barthes. In a similar way, the framework of the via del Monserrato apartment was pale and pared-back. Layers of old paint were stripped off the doors, revealing a long vanished coat of pale blue with silver moldings. The decoration “complements rather than crushes the human beings moving in its midst.” Roman Classic Holiday, Vogue 1966
4 | Opt for noble materials, marble or stone
5 | Bring in an element of surprise