Designer Spotlight

An American Designer in Paris

Elliott Barnes founded his eponymous Paris interior design firm in 2004 (photo by Michael Crotto). Top: The airy layout and minimalist details of an apartment in the city’s Seventh Arrondissement showcase the family’s art collection, which includes pieces by Hiroshi Sugimoto and Anselm Kiefer at right (photo by Martyn Thompson).

On a bright, cold January morning, Elliott Barnes sits at a large table in his offices near Les Halles on Paris’s Right Bank. Crisp winter sunshine streams in the windows of the enfilade of rooms that make up his architecture and design studio, Elliott Barnes Interiors (EBI). It’s the weekend, and the offices are quiet. Barnes is dressed in a casual yet elegant knit turtleneck. At one end of the table are the makings of several design presentations — fabric and material samples laid out in groups. “Just a few of the projects we are currently working on,” says Barnes, who returned late the night before from Los Angeles.

Barnes is the quintessential American in Paris. Born and raised in L.A., he studied architecture and urban planning at Cornell before making his way to France in his early 20s. In 1987, Barnes landed a career-defining job, working for legendary French designer Andrée Putman in her Paris studio. “She was a very strong lady, and I appreciate strong women,” Barnes says. “She was a great boss. We had real respect for her — and we got that back in wonderful ways.”

Barnes initially began working as a project designer for Écart International, the company Putman established with a collection of re-issued furnishings by such early-20th-century designers as Jean-Michel Frank, Eileen Gray and Pierre Chareau, and which eventually grew to include her own furniture and interior design projects.

In 1997, Putman sold Écart, and, finding herself at a crossroads, decided to establish her eponymous firm. “We essentially had to start over,” Barnes recalls. “We had very small offices. Sunday meetings would take place at her home. She would make omelets and a great frisée salad for the team or serve caviar and vodka — and we would work. It was great. Then, of course, it really took off.”

When updating an early-19th-century villa in Cannes, France — the house’s first-ever renovation — Barnes sought to subtly channel the simple authenticity of its Provençal setting. “My statement must pass almost unnoticed,” he says. In the living room, the sofa and coffee table are CHRISTIAN LIAIGRE. Photo by Francis Amiand

Barnes custom-made a solid, spare oak table and bench for the villa’s kitchen and added exposed beams, giving an updated look to a room that traditionally serves as a warm, inviting gathering place. Photo Francis Amiand

A pair of mid-century GRETA JALK chairs sits beside the villa’s swimming pool, which is hidden amid a grove of nearly 600 trees on the property. Photo by Francis Amiand

Another EBI custom table and set of benches offers seating in the villa’s dining room. Like the furniture, the floors are done in oak. Photo by Francis Amiand

“The intention behind this project was not to replicate a faux Provençal, but rather to embody its authenticity,” says Barnes. Photo by Francis Amiand

By the early 2000s, Barnes found himself at his own career crossroads, feeling the moment had come to open the offices of EBI. The strength of Barnes’s idiosyncratic style — pared-down spaces bordering on minimalist, yet enlivened by subtle interplays of texture — quickly gained him recognition. One French design critic described Barnes’s work early on as “textured minimalism.”

In keeping with the rustic roots of the Cannes villa, Barnes covered the walls in lime plaster. The arched doors, meanwhile, contribute to the air of informal tranquility throughout. Photo by Francis Amiand

“I think that hits it,” he agrees today, adding that he likes to think his work is always intuitive, every project informed by its own unique qualities.

In the 10 years since establishing his firm, his projects have ranged from high-end residences in Paris, Tokyo, Bangkok, Vienna, Cannes, Dublin and Geneva to a Ritz-Carlton hotel in Germany, shops, institutional spaces and the renovation of legendary Paris Jazz club Duc des Lombards. Upcoming Parisian projects include a 45-room boutique hotel for a private investor in a Haussmanian building in the 16th Arrondissement — a place “for the ‘citoyen du monde,’ for the initiated,” says Barnes, “for those who are free and at ease in any city.” As for a new Paris restaurant near the Bourse for the American culinary sensation Daniel Rose, he says it will be a “rigorously French place.”

“What I took away from my experience with Andrée is that there is always a solution. A small detail can make a huge difference. And when you know that you are never stuck.”

Barnes’s furniture designs include seating for Écart (now owned by Ralph Pucci) as well as a recent collaboration with manufacturer Philippe Hurel. Titled “Une Après-midi de Paresse” (“A Lazy Afternoon”), the collection plays on themes of relaxation, the passage of time and pleasure. Pieces include an hourglass-shaped stool, a standing mirror triptych, an abacus-inspired screen and an oversized daybed in oak with hidden drawers, covered in leather, that slide open to reveal cases in pear burlwood. The upholstery is a mixture of velour and cotton with an abundance of pillows in satin, wool and cotton.

In the lobby of the Ritz Carlton Wolfsburg, located in Germany’s fifth largest city, Barnes aimed to bring some of the outdoors in, commissioning Salviati of Murano to create a forest of glass bamboo “trees.” The seating and tables are all by EBI Design. Photo by Deidi Von Schaewen

In keeping with the name of the Ritz Carlton Wolfsburg’s restaurant — Terra — Barnes created a scheme using earthy materials, surfaces and colors. Photo by Deidi Von Schaewen

The hotel pool has a view of Volkswagon’s first factory, which was built in 1938 and still functions today; according to VW, the building is the world’s largest auto plant. Photo by Deidi Von Schaewen

Stone floors in the guest rooms create what Barnes calls a “textural break” from the outside world. The headboard, chair and table are all by EBI Design. Photo by Deidi Von Schaewen

In the hotel’s cognac-colored Newman’s Bar, JEAN-MICHEL FRANK chairs surround INDIA MAHDAVI tables. Photo by Deidi Von Schaewen

“I think what I took away from my experience with Andrée is that there is always a solution,” says Barnes, whose talent has been lauded by AD France, among other publications. “A small detail can make a huge difference. And when you know that you are never stuck.”

“Every project always begins with free-association ideas,” he continues, “and it can be totally off the wall.”

One example is his design for the Ruinart Champagne headquarters in Reims, northeast of Paris. He incorporated materials found on the site, including local stone, wood from wine cases and glass from wine bottles, which he turned into a terrazzo floor. “We even managed to make wallpaper from grape peels,” says Barnes. “What I really enjoy is connecting a project to the place.”

For Barnes’s new, and first, collection for French furniture manufacturer Philippe Hurel, he created a folding triptych screen called Triple Je(u).

Les Sables du Temps is a walnut-topped stool made of cognac-covered glass and filled with black sand that can be tipped back and forth like an hourglass, in keeping with the collection’s fixation on the passage of time.

A giant abacus, Les Rivières du Temps, doubles as a decorative object and stands more than six feet high and has 75 individual balls of blown glass.

For a Paris loft-style apartment spread across the top three floors of a Right Bank building overlooking the Seine, meanwhile, both the views and the client’s frequent travels to the Far East informed the design, which abandoned completely the traditional Parisian apartment footprint. “We created a layout where there is no real destination space,” explains Barnes. The elegant, almost empty interiors create a harmonious flow from one room to the next. “You can sleep wherever you want, eat where you want. What is important are the perspectives, light and volumes,” explains Barnes. “I think that corresponds to our lives today.”

In a loft-like three-floor apartment on Paris’s Right Bank, Barnes designed a steel staircase that appears to float in the middle of a corridor. The painting is by Chinese contemporary artist Yan Pei-Ming. Photo by Francis Amiand

Another high-end Paris residence was conceived for clients with an important art collection — and three small children. Barnes maximized light by replacing dividing walls with glass partitions. The subtle gray-white palette throughout leaves nothing to distract from the art, which he integrated into the scheme so that it lives seamlessly amongst the activities of the family. He then punctuated the three-floor space with a sculptural staircase made of twisting blackened steel that is, itself, as dramatic as a piece of art.

“You’ve got to let your project be what it wants to be — push things around a little bit to see where it wants to go,” explains Barnes. “Projects have lives, they have their own dynamic, I see my role as helping these things push themselves along.”

On the loft apartment’s light-filled top floor, a space devoted to quiet and tranquility, Barnes designed the circular bathtub to recall Japanese onsen. Photo by Francis Amiand

A sofa, chairs and table by CHRISTIAN LIAIGRE echo the lines and colors of a work by ZHANG HUAN in the loft apartment’s living room. Photo by Francis Amiand

A Japanese minimalist spirit is present throughout the apartment, including in its kitchen, which is furnished with Arne Jacobsen Ant chairs. Photos by Francis Amiand

In one of the bedrooms resides a Jean Michel Frank chair produced by Ecart International, the company first founded by Barnes’s mentor Andrée Putman. Photo by Francis Amiand

Chairs, a table and fireplace surround by CHRISTIAN LIAIGRE populate the serene first-floor living room, while the carpet is Tai Ping. Photo by Francis Amiand

That the American-born designer would end up living and working abroad makes perfect sense. When Barnes was a child, his father, a doctor, served as the head of the Los Angeles County Public Health Department. He landed a job in the Middle East when Barnes was four – and, anticipating that they would send their son to a Swiss boarding school, Barnes’s parents enrolled him at the Lycée Français de Los Angeles. Ultimately, his father did not go abroad, but Barnes remained at the French school for 10 years. “From a young age, I was comfortable in an international context because my friends were Swiss, Italian, Iranian, Iraqi, African,” he recalls. “Even as a kid, I always wanted to move to Europe.”

ONP_Martyn Thompson (3) - 053112_0266
Barnes placed Pierre Jeanneret chairs around an antique Indonesian table in the dining room of the Seventh Arrondissement apartment. A canvas by Zao Wou-Ki hangs beside a Chinese medicine cabinet that functions as a wardrobe. Photo by Martyn Thompson

Now a Paris resident for nearly 30 years, Barnes says he is newly fascinated with his hometown. “I’ve got my eyes on L.A.,” he explains. “I find there is a really interesting energy there right now.”

Going from his Paris offices on the Right Bank and walking over the Seine to the Left, Barnes says he feels an unlikely connection between his adopted city and hometown.

“As you come out of the Louvre crossing the Pont des Arts footbridge — if you look to the left and then right — you suddenly have this huge expansion of space. It’s that same notion of space that I love so much about L.A.”

Elliott Barnes’s Quick Picks on 1stdibs

Pair of Harvey Probber Sofas
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Pair of Harvey Probber Sofas

“These canary-yellow Probber sofas would make a great complement to the Wabbes bibliotheque. They defy gravity and have simple lines but provide great comfort. For me, they symbolize the dawn of space exploration in the 1960s.”

Diego Giacometti
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Diego Giacometti "La Rencontre" Rug

“This Giacometti rug speaks to the sofa and Wabbes piece. It gives perspective on the floor and tells a quiet story of moving through frames and frontiers.”

Leon Rosen for Pace Collection Scalloped Brass Waterfall Cocktail Table
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Leon Rosen for Pace Collection Scalloped Brass Waterfall Cocktail Table

“A beautiful piece and a nice complement to the Giacometti rug. The side shows support while the center floats.”

Adjustable Chrome Floor Lamp
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Adjustable Chrome Floor Lamp

“I like the simplicity and anonymity of this lamp. The leather shade brings softness to the rigor of the composition.”

Pair of Leather Lounge Chairs by Pascal Mourgue
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Pair of Leather Lounge Chairs by Pascal Mourgue

“And to close out, a pair of French modern low chairs in the tradition of Mies and Breuer. Light and comfortable, the chairs have frames that can be seen as speaking to the frames in the rug and the bibliotheque.”

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