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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Exclusive home in Barcelona, Spain by Alex March Studio

 
February 20th, 2023 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Alex March Studio

The most elegant residential Barcelona, in the quiet area of Turó Park, treasures some jewels of interior design whose owners rarely open their doors. We look out as privileged observers to a house of generous dimensions, with a total of 260 square meters, by the hand  of Alex March, author of its interior design.

The need of its owner was to give it a renewed air: “my client wanted to have another relationship with her space, an inspiring, timeless, elegant, cheerful, balanced home, with soul and character”  explains Alex March who highlights the sensitivity for  art of the owner: “she is in love with art and, in particular, with the works of the artist Iñaki Moreno”.  In addition, in this project, the will to preserve, recover and rejuvenate the pre-existing elements of the house, located on a farm of the 20s, has been a priority.

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

  • Architects: Alex March Studio
  • Project: Exclusive home
  • Location: Barcelona, Spain
  • Photography: Daniel Schäfer

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Mediterranean style with European and African influences

In essence, the house is a space represented by clear Mediterranean influences. A  very lively and warm Mediterranean  character is palpable, enriched with a mixture of European and ethnic influences, mainly African.  The interior design of this house responds to a great work of color, something usual in much of the work of Alex March’s studio.

Also common is the mixture of styles and eras, as well as the balanced selection of unique pieces of art and design, in the interior design projects of Alex March Studio.  For this house, a mixture of furniture and decoration elements has been chosen, where figurative art, surrealism and expressionism converge with abstraction in art, craftsmanship and numerous pieces of unique furniture. Some of these pieces are unique, belonging to authors practically unknown today or sometimes, without known author, others by iconic Catalan authors, also from the rest of the Iberian Peninsula, combined with pieces by iconic European authors of the twentieth century.

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Some lamps are unique and exclusive pieces for the project, designed by Omar Sherzad (Omalight), most of the paintings bear the imprint of contemporary artist Iñaki Moreno, the carpets are made of Iranian wool (Turkestan). The plants (Casa Protea) provide the ideal touch of freshness in all rooms of the house.

Surrealism in the center of the room

Undoubtedly, the star piece of the room is the large table-sculpture Leda, designed by Salvador Dalí, from BD Ediciones.  It is  a large coffee table 190 cm long in brass,  with a hand-shaped foot and leg with a heeled shoe,  on which  stands out an egg in Carrara marble, a design taken from  the painting “Femme à tête de roses” (1935) thanks to the extreme detail of Dalí’s painting.

The house exudes an atmosphere of elegance and passion for art and  design, although in the living room  and dining room this feeling is where it is most accentuated.

On the central wall of the living room, a pair of black and white paintings fills the room with agility and dynamism. On one side, the sofa  has been strategically placed in the opposite direction to the entry of light, creating an intimate and cozy effect. Next to this and on a white table, a unique piece  designed by Alex March himself, stands out  the table lamp of the Bach series, designed in 1970 by the couple of architects Federico Correa and Alfonso Milá.

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

For the opposite side,  a Cabinet designed by the  great visionary of modern interior design, the French architect and designer Charlotte Perriand in  1958, acquired in Antigues Matèries,  has been chosen. With the intention of giving  this piece the importance it deserves, theyhave selected only two decorative pieces  on this piece of furniture: a painting made from original pieces by the Italian artist Piero Fornasetti and a sculpture by Julio Bono.   To achieve greater warmth,the natural wood floor is dressed with an Iranian wool carpet.

An eclectic-style dining room

As in the living room,natural light bathes the entire dining area.  The starting point is abase of raw walls, with a solid oak wood floor. The carpentry  has been left in the  original wood, it has only been pickled and varnished in transparent, thus showing the beauty of its organic nakedness.

The iconic Batlló bench,  designed by Antoni Gaudí, acts as a majestic connecting thread between the living room and the dining room. It is a faithful and numbered reproduction of one  of the pieces of furniture that Gaudí originally designed for the main dining roomof Casa Batlló, produced by BD Ediciones.  On this bench, a painting of the 70s, of unknown author, shines thanks to a chromaticism that harmonizes with the rest of the elements.

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

The dining table, in natural wood, is a 1960s design by Jordi Vilanova. This piece  of pure lines and dark tonality, contrasts with the abstract shapes and white of the Houdini chairs with arms, iconic pieces designed by Stefan Diez.  Every decorative detail is worth admiring in this house, such as the  exceptional jarrones on the Is-Dher table by HE Shk. Hind Majid Al Qassimi for BD Barcelona, three connected vases of glazed stoneware in three different finishes: 24 carat gold, platinum and a beige engobe.

A bedroom between Africa and the Mediterranean

Far from opulence, the bedroom is a haven of calm and balance that offers a pleasant rest.  The absence of curtains,  in addition to providing a very natural aesthetic, fits the habit of homeowners to take advantage of sunlight to wake up.

It is committed to a chromatic range that moves between white and raw tones and different browns of natural wood. African reminiscences are achieved with pieces such as the wooden floor lamp Phare,  by Omalight and a sculpture by José Berlanga (1981).

To highlight atimeless classic of the design of the twentieth century, the armchair of Charlotte Perriand “Bauche 1946”, in wood  and straw, brings  the rustic touch to the room along with a stool in solid wood of the 50s.

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

Image Courtesy © Daniel Schäffer

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Categories: House, Interiors, Residential




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