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January 21, 2018

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Edith Wharton’s design legacy is brought back to life in new book

EDITH Wharton, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author famous for novels in the late 19th century, also wrote an influential book on interior design, long considered a bible of American decorating.

“The Decoration of Houses,” written before any of her novels, was radical when published in 1897. Co-authored with Wharton’s distant cousin Ogden Codman, it advocated classical simplicity and balance in contrast to the excesses of the Gilded Age.

The book was “the level-headed, indispensable book on the subject,” said interior decorator Thomas Jayne of Jayne Design Studio in New York City. He called it “the most important decorating book ever written.”

Jayne has written a new book, “Classical Principles for Modern Design: Lessons from Edith Wharton and Ogden Codman’s The Decoration of Houses” (The Monacelli Press), that revisits the classic. He argues that Wharton’s fundamental ideas about proportion and the planning of space still create the most harmonious and livable interiors, whether traditional or contemporary.

His book traces contemporary ideas about design and decor back to Wharton and Codman, showing where the old and new approaches coincide and diverge.

Organized as “The Decoration of Houses” was, with distinct chapters on walls, doors, windows, ceilings and floors, Jayne’s book adds kitchens and the use of color‚ two major aspects of home design today that Wharton and Codman did not address.

Accompanying the text and selected quotes from Wharton and Codman’s original are lush photos of interiors from Jayne Design Studio that demonstrate Wharton and Codman’s design principles. Projects include the restoration of 18th-century public rooms in Crichel House in Dorset, England, a Montana mountain retreat, and an array of New York apartments and country houses.

Just as Wharton’s novels turned a critical eye on the excesses of upper-crust society, her book on design was a reaction to the Gilded Age and Victorian excesses in interiors, which were becoming crowded and fussy, Jayne said.

“This was Wharton’s first book. She had money and means, and had spent her teens and 20s looking at great rooms and homes. No one had ever written a book devoted entirely to decoration, as opposed to architectural treatises and what they then called ‘domestic economy books.’ She offered an unusual combination of philosophical and practical advice. Interior decoration has to function, but she argued for a higher plane of design, with an emphasis on well-proportioned rooms‚ with well-placed and sized windows, and good structural elements like moldings.”

Wharton liked ceilings, seeing them as neglected and perfect surfaces to influence the feel of the entire room. Jayne’s book shows several highly structured and painted ceilings to illustrate Wharton’s views. Both the original book and Jayne’s work point out that beautiful rooms need not be costly.

Jayne added that “tradition is not about the past or elitism. Tradition is now. It’s active and important and democratic.”

His section on kitchens, ignored by Wharton because she never prepared her own food, argues for eat-in kitchens, with a focus on kitchens as a gathering space. And while Jayne ignores ballrooms, which were considered essential in Wharton and Codman’s day, he says the dining room remains important and should be included in any home large enough for one.

“It’s okay to have a room that is only used for parties or special occasions, assuming you can afford the space,” he said. “Dining rooms and ballrooms have the same kind of luxury. Wharton called these kinds of rooms ‘gala rooms.’”

“Living rooms should be living rooms and gala rooms should be gala rooms, but don’t make a hybrid. Each has its place,” Jayne said, echoing Wharton.




 

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