The Times Magazine - UK (2022-04-09)

(Antfer) #1
The Times Magazine 75

extravagant detailing and a mix of bold and
baroque, Williamson’s flat acts as a perennial
testing ground. Recently, the living-room walls
were given a plaster-pink finish, because he
craved a calming anchor that “wasn’t grey or
beige”. The main bedroom is a riot of florals,
forest-green colourblocking and overscaled
foliage for a vibrant but cocooning feel.
“Colour is fascinating to me,” he says. “I
approach it as if I were layering up a painting.
I tend to consider the background first



  • choosing an anchoring tone – then the
    middle ground, those colourful large-scale
    accents; finally, the foreground, the smaller
    details, such as accessories and soft furnishings.
    I liken it to layering up an outfit, starting with
    the statement piece, such as a dress, before
    finishing it off with earrings or a bag.”
    The key, for Williamson, lies not in
    co-ordinating but in creating surprising
    clashes. It’s a mantra that’s evident in the
    homeware collection that he’s just launched
    with John Lewis & Partners, which features
    peacock-studded pouffes, leopard-print
    cushions, colourblock lighting and densely
    patterned bedding. “I designed the pieces to
    elevate the everyday,” he says. “If you’re going
    to buy a cushion, why not have a monkey on
    it, or bed sheets studded with palm trees, for
    that matter? They’ll create their own type of
    harmony, that’s the point.”
    Although his own home has become “more
    refined” over the years, Williamson says the
    lynchpin of his interiors is his travels, plus the
    women who have inspired him throughout his


life, including his mum, muses Jade Jagger and
Sienna Miller and his beloved six-year-old
daughter. “Plus, nothing beats rummaging for
antiques on a Saturday morning. It could be
a car boot sale or a Parisian flea market – I’m
not precious.” As a result, his home is scattered
with one-offs and unusual juxtapositions,
from neon lamps sitting on baroque tables
to Seventies glass pendant lighting, kitsch

ceramics, art deco-style armchairs, gilt-framed
mirrors and spray-painted bedframes.
“My rule of thumb is that anything goes,
in the sense that if you love it, it will work,”
Williamson says. “I never think, ‘This must
match with that’ – instead I like to jolt the eye.
For me, that’s when the magic happens.” n

johnlewis.com; matthewwilliamson.com

Home!


From left: drinks trolley
and Rose Garden wall
mirror, £150, John Lewis
& Partners + Matthew
Williamson; the bathroom,
with tiled flooring
from Bert & May
Free download pdf