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Inside a Classic California Canyon Home Filled With Sensational Design

AD100 designer Oliver M. Furth and his partner Sean Yashar pushed for a space that is both livable and visually dazzling
Inside a Classic California Canyon Home Filled With Sensational Design
The merry mélange in the living room includes a custom sofa covered in a Rosemary Hallgarten wool, a pair of Joel Otterson chairs, a 19th-century Japanese lacquered table with Adam Silverman sculptures, a Sergio Mazza pendant light, a Joel Stearns cardboard chair next to a Kueng Caputo marble stool, and a Ryan Belli illuminated wall sculpture. Artworks above fireplace by Justin Beal and Mary Weatherford (front).Art: Anne Libby/Night Gallery. © Mary Weatherford/Gagosian. Justin Beal. Studio Furthermore.

The dining room is another triumph of design mix-mastery, with the focal mirrored table and Jansen chairs joined by an Ettore Sottsass sideboard, a Campana Brothers rope chair, and a Fabien Cappello papier-mâché planter, all set against glazed cork walls and an antique Persian Serapi rug that nods to Yashar’s Persian heritage. On the lower level, the primary bedroom—a calm, rigorous composition of whites, grays, and black—serves as a striking foil to the unapologetically pretty sitting room wrapped in a paprika-hued Sister Parish fabric. “It’s my way of subverting traditional decorating, taking the idea of a toile room and reimagining it in a fresh, California way,” Furth says of the lounge’s fanciful finery.

In the primary bedroom, vintage Milo Baughman chests with Misha Kahn lamps from Friedman Benda flank a Mongiardo Studio parchment bed beneath an Isamu Noguchi lantern. Philippe Starck chair, Ron Rezek floor lamps, and Frette linens. Drawings by Louise Bourgeois.

Art: Louise Bourgeois. © 2023 The Easton Foundation / licensed by Vaga at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY.

In the end, what’s most compelling about Casa Furth/Yashar is not the stunning pageant of objets de vertu but the finesse with which the objects have been deployed and the strange, unregarded affinities that give life to the rooms that harbor them. “We weren’t trying to disrupt anything or burn the house down,” Yashar asserts. “We worked with the architecture we had, and we challenged our favorite artists and designers to push themselves and their work. We kept saying, ‘We want it bigger, bolder, more complex.’ Clearly, they delivered.”

This classic California canyon home appears in AD’s October 2023 issue. Never miss an issue when you subscribe to AD.