Inside Studio Peregalli
AD Architectural Digest India|December 2018

In this excerpted interview from Grand Tour: The Worldly Projects of Studio Peregalli, a book that showcases the work of Laura Sartori Rimini and Roberto Peregalli, American artist couple Rachel Feinstein and John Currin and English fashion guru Hamish Bowles dissect their common experience of having a home designed by the influential Milan studio

Inside Studio Peregalli

HAMISH BOWLES: What drew you to the original house?

RACHEL FEINSTEIN: It was a folly; the whole thing is an interpretation of an old style, which is what our art is completely about. Each house that the architect Frederick Sterner did on this street is a different folly. They were all multiple family row houses—this was not a fancy neighbourhood in 1901, when he started. Sterner came from England, he was young and he wanted to make a name for himself so he personally bought up all these houses and gave each one a different look. He brought uptown people to this area because of the street and that’s why it’s called the “Block Beautiful”. A historian who was studying Sterner came to visit and told us that it was the most intact and original of all the architect’s projects and begged us not to touch it—and we had every intention of preserving it. Then unfortunately Hurricane Irene came along and we had a torrential leak that destroyed the plaster ceilings all the way through the house. So that’s when our friend Tobias Meyer suggested Studio Peregalli.

HB: What convinced you that Laura [Sartori Rimini] and Roberto [Peregalli] were the right architects for the project?

RF: They were already here in New York—doing your apartment. We went over to see your place and we loved it. I mean, obviously everything was exactly what we liked. The thing that struck us so much was the secret door that they had built, where you had to have the wheelchair access to meet the code.

HB: The original door in the 18th-century French panelling that they had adapted and installed was not wide enough to allow for wheelchair access, so they created a wide jib door that appears to cut into the wallpaper and panelling—a clever trick of the eye.

This story is from the December 2018 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the December 2018 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM AD ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST INDIAView All
The Curator
AD Architectural Digest India

The Curator

AD’s Art issue would be incomplete without an essay on Peggy Guggenheim, the philanthropist and visionary who was collecting through the war years, and whose home-turned-museum in Venice has one of the most important holdings of modern art in the world.

time-read
2 mins  |
January - February 2024
Raw  Mango Agama
AD Architectural Digest India

Raw  Mango Agama

TEXTILES HAVE BEEN INTEGRAL TO THE STORYTELLING AT AD IN PRINT. IN A NATURAL STEP AHEAD, FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER, THE AD DESIGN SHOW THIS YEAR OPENED WITH A GARMENT PRESENTATION. THE MOOD, THE MUSIC, THE PEOPLE, THE TEXTILES EVERYTHING WAS MAGIC.

time-read
7 mins  |
January - February 2024
JAIVEER JOHAL'S CHENNAI HOME IS
AD Architectural Digest India

JAIVEER JOHAL'S CHENNAI HOME IS

FLANKED BY THE ADYAR RIVER ON ONE SIDE AND THE BAY OF BENGAL ΟΝ THE OTHER, AND ANCHORED IN A SEA OF ART AMIDST WHICH HE LIVES IN THIS BOLDLY DESIGNED ONEBEDROOM APARTMENT

time-read
4 mins  |
January - February 2024
D
AD Architectural Digest India

D

IN A CHARMING ART DECO BUILDING IN MUMBAI'S HERITAGE PRECINCT, WITH THE BUSTLE OF OVAL MAIDAN ACROSS THE ROAD, COLLECTOR DARA MEHTA LIVES AMONG A STAGGERING COLLECTION OF ART IN A STARKLY MINIMAL HOME THAT IS MEDITATIVE AND RESTRAINED IN ITS INTERIORS DESIGNED BY NETERWALA AIBARA INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE AND ALL FOR THE ART TO SHINE THROUGH.

time-read
4 mins  |
January - February 2024
WELCOME TO THE AMINS BARODA HOME
AD Architectural Digest India

WELCOME TO THE AMINS BARODA HOME

THE CITY OF BARODA-NOW CALLED VADODARA IS INTRICATELY  LINKED TO THE HISTORY OF MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY ART IN INDIA. REFLECTING THIS JOURNEY IS MALIKA AND CHIRAYU AMIN'S ANCESTRAL HOME AND THEIR INCREDIBLE COLLECTION OF ART.

time-read
4 mins  |
January - February 2024
60 Years of Chemould
AD Architectural Digest India

60 Years of Chemould

In telling the story of Gallery Chemould, Jerry Pinto writes a short history of art in the city

time-read
3 mins  |
January - February 2024
Bijoy Jain
AD Architectural Digest India

Bijoy Jain

AT FONDATION CARTIER

time-read
5 mins  |
January - February 2024
Treasure Hunt at Alessi
AD Architectural Digest India

Treasure Hunt at Alessi

Cristina Kiran Piotti visits the Alessi Museum in Omegna, Italy, and discovers India-inspired creations in the archive of an iconic Italian design house.

time-read
2 mins  |
January - February 2024
What's New at the Art Fair
AD Architectural Digest India

What's New at the Art Fair

Design gets a special space at this year’s India Art Fair, with the iconic Carpenters Workshop Gallery curating a section along with Ashiesh Shah.

time-read
2 mins  |
January - February 2024
The Life and Work of KG Subramanyan
AD Architectural Digest India

The Life and Work of KG Subramanyan

In the year of the artist's birth centenary, Mortimer Chatterjee remembers this boundless creative genius across the histories of art, craft and design.

time-read
2 mins  |
January - February 2024