Designer Spotlight

Why Drew McGukin’s Colorful Home Differs from Those of His Clients

Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft living room
Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft portrait

Drew McGukin‘s love of bold color and pattern, plus a certain 1970s vibe, is on clear view in his own home, a loft in New York’s Chelsea Flower District, where canary-yellow USM cabinets define the perimeter of a work space. Top: In the loft’s living room, his own McSwivel lounge chairs and a Swaim sofa sit under two large aboriginal paintings. One of the two vintage Gordon and Jane Martz table lamps came from Lawson-Fenning.

People think I’m a lot cooler than I am,” says 41-year-old interior designer Drew McGukin. “As a person, though, I’m very shy.” It’s true that McGukin’s manner is reserved, even a touch formal, despite the casual blue T-shirt and jeans he wears. He sits ramrod straight in his chair, looking very earnest behind horn-rimmed glasses, a single white streak rising from his forehead amid a thick, wavy mane of salt-and-pepper hair.

But if McGukin is shy, he has compensated for it with a commanding intelligence and an ability to articulate his ideas sharply and clearly — a rare quality among younger designers, who often struggle to describe their work. And his aesthetic is anything but recessive. His style is forthright and high impact, characterized by strong colors and graphic patterns deployed with confidence and skill while avoiding eyeball-straining shades that can be visually overwhelming.

McGukin is sitting at a long table in the front of the loft he calls home, in Manhattan’s Chelsea Flower District. The apartment, which sits in a former fur factory built in 1922, previously housed the offices of Drew McGukin Interiors before he moved the business into larger digs across the street, although he still uses it for client presentations. Canary-yellow storage cabinets define the perimeter of this area of the loft, beyond which is the living room, done in animal prints — leopard sofa, ocelot ottoman, green tiger klismos chairs and a rug that looks like abstracted snakeskins. Photographs by Cindy Sherman, Diane Arbus and Berenice Abbott, as well as aboriginal art — one of his passions — hang on walls or are propped against them.

Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft kitchen

Moroccan urns, vintage artworks and a mix of dishes and accessories give the kitchen decor a collected feel. The 1980s chandelier came from 1stdibs; the custom copper island was designed by McGukin and crafted by James Devlin.

An open kitchen — swathed in copper and featuring a custom island made by James Devlin — separates the loft’s more public spaces from its bathroom and bedrooms beyond. The bath is clad in Voutsa’s colorful, ebullient Fiona wallpaper, with a matching shower curtain. The walls, headboard and bedframe in the sleeping quarters received an even wilder treatment, papered in the same company’s George Chinoiserie, a pattern of flying, swirling, intersecting geometric shapes in psychedelic colors against a sunflower-yellow ground. “No client I’ve ever had would let me do this,” says McGukin. Still, he does get his clients to do a lot that’s plenty bold.

McGukin was raised in Carrollton, Georgia, the son of a land-surveyor father and a floral-designer mother. Both instilled an entrepreneurial spirit in their son. After high school, McGukin earned his bachelor’s degree at the University of Georgia, majoring in communications and minoring in painting and drawing. He began selling real estate during his last year of college and spent a decade in the field. “That’s where I really began to understand space,” he says. “It was a launching pad.”

Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft bedroom

A Voutsa wallcovering and curtains to match almost steal the show in the loft’s bedroom, where a vintage lamp atop a mid-century-modern dresser sports another Voutsa pattern. Photographs from McGukin’s collection — not least the early-2000s work from Skylar Reeves’s “Gender Act” series to the right of the vintage lamp — mix with a painted portrait of the designer and more aboriginal works.

McGukin followed this up with a two-year program at the New York School of Interior Design. In 2009, he entered a Pottery Barn student challenge, winning a lunch with Manhattan interior designer Jamie Drake that helped him envision a career in the business. After working for nine months in the offices of designer Matthew Yee, he was convinced by his partner to take a leap of faith. “He gave me an ultimatum,” recalls McGukin, who was 32 at the time. “He said, ‘You can get a job fetching coffee for some badass designer and apprentice your way up, or you can clean out our second bedroom and start your own business.’ ” In 2010, McGukin opened his eponymous firm.

McGukin describes his style as “fresh, contemporary, approachable and comfortable.” That could be said of many designers, of course. “But the thing we work toward is that the work is principled. I always tell my staff that it’s unfair to judge someone’s taste. The question is ‘Does it follow design principles — line, rhythm, texture, proportion and so on?’ If you’re building on principles, it can be most any style.”

Drew McGukin Puts His Clients’ Souls into Their Spaces

Interior designer Drew McGukin San Francisco living room

In the living room of a San Francisco home, New York–based designer Drew McGukin flanked one of a pair of Martha Sturdy drip-painted tables with his McSwivel chairs. The étagères are his own custom design; the wallcovering is Kelly Wearstler for Lee Joffa, and the rug is from Mansour. All photos in slideshow by Brett Beyer

Interior designer Drew McGukin San Francisco Foyer

In the house’s entry, a Lindsey Adelman chandelier hangs over a Kelly Wearstler center table and stools. The Brazilian mid-century-modern chest is from 1stdibs.

Interior designer Drew McGukin San Francisco kitchen

McGukin sourced the kitchen’s stools from Thomas Hayes Gallery. The overhead light is by Lee Broom, and he designed the custom cabinets himself.

Interior designer Drew McGukin Chelsea New York living room

For the living room of a Chelsea home, McGukin selected a vintage cut-velvet fabric to upholster a custom chaise of his own design. The Frank Lloyd Wright coffee table is from 1stdibs.

Interior designer Drew McGukin Chelsea New York dining room

A custom table and chairs stand in front of a window embraced by a bespoke L-shaped wall mirror — a McGukin original. A classical sculpture sits on the window sill.

Interior designer Drew McGukin Soho New York living room

In a Soho apartment, an artwork by Olaf Breuning hangs over a custom couch of McGukin’s own design. The table lamp in the foreground is Martha Sturdy, and the floor lamp in the background Michael Dawkins.

Interior designer Drew McGukin Soho New York Kitchen

The Soho home’s kitchen features a Thomas O’Brien leather captain’s chair plus more counter stools from Thomas Hayes.

Nevertheless, a few threads do weave through the many projects of varying scope that he is juggling at any time. “I like bold decisions,” says McGukin. “Taking chances is what design is about.” This approach is evidenced in his unabashed approach to color and pattern. A chaise in a Chelsea loft living room, for example, is upholstered in a graphic diamond pattern of teal, rust, mustard yellow, camel and chocolate, while the dining room walls are painted a deeply saturated Persian blue. In a San Francisco residence, the dining alcove has patterned charcoal-gray drapes and chairs covered in a midnight-blue leopard-print design, and the living room walls buzz with the energy of an art installation, thanks to wallpaper that sports labyrinthine line drawings. And in a Chelsea high-rise apartment, one of the few walls that is not glass in an open-plan room is covered in a white and citrine wallpaper, while nearby, carnival-colored toss pillows enliven a sofa and turquoise chairs surround the dining table.

Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft living room

The living area’s daybed is by Mies van der Rohe, while the artworks hung on the bookshelves are by Drew Tal. The figures on the shelf above the cabinet at left are ceramic interpretations of the Chinese zodiac, each with a different animal head.

“I grew up in a nineteen seventies house,” says McGukin, explaining his love of strong color, as well as of furniture forms inspired by that era. “Our living room had a chevron-patterned sectional sofa and a spiral staircase, and the whole thing was painted rust. I have an employee who likes to say, ‘If it’s seventies, I guarantee you Drew’s going to like it.’ ” This proclivity also shows up in a fondness for corduroy upholstery and sculptural chairs, such as a chunky, faceted specimen of his own design jokingly referred to as the McSwivel.

Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft living room dining room kitchen office

The loft’s Edward Wormley dining table and chairs are from Converso. A Milo Baughman table sits in the work area in the foreground.

Interior designer Drew McGukin New York loft bedroom

The large piece hanging from the bedroom’s shelves is by Kaveri Raina, and the piece on the bottom right is a Diane Arbus photograph.

Another thread running through his work is the use of industrial lighting and materials, as in the blackened-steel fireplace surround next to that multicolored diamond-patterned chaise in the Chelsea loft. “I like the raw against the polished and classic,” he observes. “It’s a great juxtaposition.”

Beyond these commonalities, however, each project is unique. “I want to push people to have a design experience,” McGukin says. “I can give you my energy, my expertise and my opinion. But I can’t give you my soul. I want to put the soul of the client into the space. My favorite thing is when clients have something they don’t want to get rid of. Sometimes, it’s not great, maybe even ugly. Finding how to incorporate Grandma’s weird rug can be a challenge. Of course, you also have to be a good editor. Grandma gave it to you because she’s moved on from it — and maybe you should too.”

McGukin, like all designers, filters a client’s desires through his own training and vision, but it is the infusion of that client’s soul that makes each project singular. “I’m not afraid to let the client have the better idea,” he says. “In the end, the work has to stand on its own and not be attached to a particular designer.”


Drew McGukin’s Quick Picks on 1stdibs

Sabrina Landini Flight dining table, new
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Sabrina Landini Flight dining table, new

“Not your average dining table! It has a sculptural point of view.”

Kin & Company Thin chair, new
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Kin & Company Thin chair, new

“The elegant bend here creates an effortless sense of style. Shape is everything.”

Edward Wormley for Dunbar Alexandria chair, 1950s, 20CDesign.com
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Edward Wormley for Dunbar Alexandria chair, 1950s, 20CDesign.com

“Classic mid-century meets tradition. The Southern boy in me loves a good one-off armchair.”

Supaform Disused Collection pendant lamp, new
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Supaform Disused Collection pendant lamp, new

“I love the linear quality of this piece. It’s beautiful to see designers play with light and shadows.”

Pia Wüstenberg vase, new, offered by Galerie Philia Furniture
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Pia Wüstenberg vase, new, offered by Galerie Philia Furniture

“This is a stunning combination of materials and overall composition. The organic top feels flirty.”

Max Ingrand for Fontana Arte mirror, 1960, offered by Avery & Dash Collections
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Max Ingrand for Fontana Arte mirror, 1960, offered by Avery & Dash Collections

“Sexy, clean and chic, with fresh color”

<i>food for violet soul</i>, 2010, by Stephen Cimini, offered by Zattista
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food for violet soul, 2010, by Stephen Cimini, offered by Zattista

“I love the soft, layered technique and washed color temperatures. Good geometry is never tiresome.”

Working model attributed to Clement Meadmore, 1980s, offered by Galere
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Working model attributed to Clement Meadmore, 1980s, offered by Galere

“This sculpture leaves you wanting to touch it — how can that not be a good thing?”

Goatskin sideboard, 1970, offered by French Art Deco Furniture Inc.
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Goatskin sideboard, 1970, offered by French Art Deco Furniture Inc.

“Rounded ends, confident stature, unmistakably functional — yes!”

James Devlin bronze and marble umbrella stand, new
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James Devlin bronze and marble umbrella stand, new

“Such a classic detail, but with a modern twist”

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