ABOUT Albert Sultan creates interiors that make you stop in your tracks. With an eye for the unusual, Sultan scours the globe for rare vintage pieces of sensual shape and form and refashions them into show pieces, bold accent statements that complement an overall design scheme. “I take an existing piece that is already novel, and pair it with exotic materials to create something wholly new,” explains Sultan. Typically, each element of one piece of furniture comes from a different part of the globe – the fabric from Australia, the chair from Minnesota, etc. The artful fusion of time, place and pattern is what gives way to his vision. An Art Deco-era chair becomes a throwback to the 70s; a classic French Napoleon chair is given a pop rock feel. I mean…does it get any more fabulous than that?! See below! Robin Baron: What is your signature look? Albert Sultan : My spaces are layered in pattern and color. Shapes play off of shapes. A sexy retro chair can inspire a similar shaped pattern on a wall. Bold colors are used fearlessly. Break the rules! Einstein reinterpreted physics as we know it. Similarly, I aim to make you look at ordinary things you may have seen everyday in a whole new light. And like Einstein, my first name is Albert!
RB: What are you up to right now? AS : I am proud to share some before and after pics of my designed reading room at the Old Westbury Gardens showhouse . My theme is Winter Solstice. Think of a reading/cigar room in Superman’s North Pole Ice palace. This is a luxurious retreat that retains an inviting accessible charm. Almost everything in the room has been hand refinished in some way by me. The Tony Duquette light fixture, on loan from Remains Lighting , is a showstopper!! Given my own penchant for theatrical and fantastical design, using a fixture by this legend of stage and film design was appropriate. Old Westbury Gardens Showhouse , through Sunday, December 18, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm
This three story Sultan-designed stairwell was a showstopper in a New Jersey Shore designer showhouse last summer
RB: How would you d escribe your own home décor? AS : My own home décor is bold, eclectic, sexy and layered. As an artist and designer I need constant stimulation to be creative. My philosophy at home is “More is More!” Almost every piece in my home has a history. The “Tulip Chairs” in my living room are a pair of 1950s parlor chairs. I paired them with a fabric from an Australian company. The pattern on the fabric mimics the unusual shape of the chair frame. I look at these chairs every day and get excited. The soft feminine lines of the chairs are a counterweight to the two bold industrial landscape panels carved out of scrap metal I have hanging on my living room walls.
RB: What do you love most about your home and why? AS : My home was originally owned by my grandmother for decades. The space stayed on in the family serving as a home successively for my sisters before they married and now me. I can still remember as a boy visiting my grandmother on the holidays and the fresh scent of middleastern foods wafting throughout the apartment. This space is infused with generational love.
RB: What is the one thing in your home that everyone always comments on? AS : People always comment on my zebra stenciled doors. People often times will paint walls, wallpaper them and adorn them with art. But doors? They are relegated to being obscured, necessary evils of functional living. To me they are just another surface waiting to be transformed.