Elle Decor - USA (2019-09)

(Antfer) #1

110 ELLE DECOR


WHEN THE AMERICAN FASHION DESIGNER ANNA SUI


moved into her turn-of-the-century Greenwich Village


building almost two decades ago, she found a close friend


and, eventually, a second apartment. Her next-door neigh-


bor was Murray Lerner, an Oscar-winning documentarian


known for his films on Jimi Hendrix, the Doors, and Itzhak


Perlman. The two bonded over their shared love of rock


music, and Sui even used her neighbor’s wrought-iron bal-


cony as an alternate entrance to her apartment whenever


she forgot her keys. (“He was always up late,” she says.)


Sui always told her neighbor that she wanted his place


if he ever left. Sure enough, when Lerner moved out a


few years ago, she took over his space and embarked on a


three-year renovation to create a home out of two distinct


spaces. Connecting the two apartments was a challenge,


since they are technically part of two different buildings


that share a facade. Sui’s solution was to insert two hidden


doors on either side of the library that allow her to move


from one apartment to the other. The inconvenience is


outweighed by the benefits: Sui gained a dining room,


a living room, a master bedroom, two bathrooms, and,


perhaps most crucially, considerable closet space.


Building your dream home is an enterprise of patience


and tenacity—both qualities Sui has possessed since she


was little. Born and raised in Detroit, she is the daughter


of two Chinese parents who met while studying in Paris.


When Sui was a young child, she attended a wedding in


New York and returned to Michigan declaring, “I’m going


to be a fashion designer.” In the 1970s, she moved to New


York to attend the Parsons School of Design; she started her


eponymous line in 1981 with a five-piece capsule collection


of space-agey Lycra separates she sold to Bloomingdale’s


and Macy’s.


From the start, Sui gained notice for her uncanny ability


to mix disparate, obsessively researched references into har-


monious splendor. It’s a talent that resonates not only in her


clothing designs but also in the decor of her apartment addi-


tion, inspired by the chinoiserie apartment in Auntie Mame.


For example, in her fall 2019 runway show (which she cheer-


fully dubbed “Poptimism”), Sui blended a Warholian pal-


ette with influences ranging from vintage psychedelic rock


posters to Motown. Similarly, in her new library, she com-


bined Chinese cloisonné screens (refashioned as cabinet


doors) with a 1930s églomisé desk and a lacquered love seat


re-covered in yardage from a textile sample.

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