Skip to main content

How to transform your home with art

  From - BBC News

  By - Dominic Lutyens

  Edited by  - Amal Udawatta

Artfully Walls A decorated living space with art hanging on the walls, glass table and a yellow couch (Credit: Artfully Walls)Artfully Walls
(Credit: Artfully Walls)

"It's about what speaks to you": Displaying paintings, prints, textiles and sculptures can all help create a fresh living space for the new year – here's how, according to the experts.

January is a popular time of year to refresh priorities – and perhaps our surroundings too, creating a new mood for a new year. New artworks can transform a living space, and also inspire future interests, intentions, or the desire for fresh goals. Even repositioning our existing paintings, prints and photographs can revitalise a home and feel like a new start.

Artfully Walls Art that is carefully chosen and displayed can help pull the look of a room together (Credit: Artfully Walls)Artfully Walls
Art that is carefully chosen and displayed can help pull the look of a room together (Credit: Artfully Walls)

Imaginatively chosen and displayed art can both revive cherished memories and prompt feelings of wellbeing – and it can change the whole ambience of a space. Abstract art, for instance, evokes moods in a non-literal, suggestive way – a large painting or print dominated by loose, expressionistic mark-making can give a home a romantic, free-spirited feel, while a more hard-edged, graphic style gives a space a modern, urban feel.

Acquiring and displaying art isn't the preserve of homeowners, either; in fact, it's a great way to make a rental home feel more personal, without having to redecorate – and your pictures can move on when you do. It's this flexibility that makes art such a useful element of home décor – artworks can be arranged, then reconfigured to change the character of a room. "A piece doesn't have to be in one location forever," says Katherine Kittoe, founder of Kittoe Contemporary, an online and physical art gallery and art consultancy that promotes emerging and established artists. "A re-hang of artworks every few years – similar in principle to re-hangs in large public galleries, though obviously on a more modest scale – can be hugely rewarding and refreshing."

Adam Art Advisory Abstract artworks by Aimee Parrott create a calm, comforting mood (Credit: Adam Art Advisory)Adam Art Advisory
Abstract artworks by Aimee Parrott create a calm, comforting mood (Credit: Adam Art Advisory)

This, though, raises the practical but important question of how to repair walls dented by holes left after hanging. "Small nails are your best friend – they're easy to patch up with spackling paste when it’s time to move out," says Cathy Glazer, founder of Artfully Walls, a curated site for art-buyers in the UK and US. "Lightweight pieces can be hung with thin nails and hooks from a basic picture-hanging kit. Most standard picture-hangers hold up to 30lbs. It's easier still to lean art on ledges or on stacks of books, mantelpieces or consoles for a very casual look."

Of course, when art is added to a home, it must coexist with furniture and homeware accumulated over time. Yet it needn't vie for attention with existing elements or get visually lost among them – it can be artfully displayed adjacent to homeware with similar qualities, for example echoing the bold, colourful pattern in a rug or the sensual curves of ceramics. And it can be shown with ephemera – from postcards to family snaps – to create aesthetically pleasing juxtapositions. 

Wall-hung art can counterbalance the bulky, imposing look of furniture that occupies a permanent spot, such as sofas, according to Sophie Goldhill, co-founder of Liddicoat & Goldhill and its interior design arm, Hector Interiors

: "A striking painting can serve as a visual focal point paired with sofas and tables, and can offset the weight of larger pieces that could otherwise dominate a space," she tells the BBC.

Selina Snow A staircase can provide a great gallery space for a cluster of artworks (Credit: Selina Snow)Selina Snow
A staircase can provide a great gallery space for a cluster of artworks (Credit: Selina Snow)

And introducing a new artwork into a room can make the space more cohesive, Goldhill adds. "Art offers an opportunity to link different design elements, such as contrasting materials or colours, in a space, ensuring it doesn't feel disjointed. A thoughtfully chosen piece of art can reflect or complement tones in fabrics or wood, tying the room's design together."

Opting for usable art can make buying and displaying artworks fun and accessible. A set of coasters and placemats – created with images by UK photographer Martin Parr and sold by art platform Plinth – is a good example. The aptly food-themed creations feature kitsch, close-up photos of cocktails filled with maraschino cherries, ice cream or tea in traditional cups and saucers.

Art of living

Food is also a major theme in the work of UK artist Selina Snow, whose joyful pieces depict mouth-watering delicacies from around the world – from colourful sushi to the humble full English breakfast. Snow has built up an eclectic collection of art and personal memorabilia that includes paintings and prints by her late father, Peter Snow, an artist and theatre designer, and myriad posters, textiles, objects and artefacts acquired on her travels. These are displayed in her home in the New Forest, Hampshire, alongside her own artworks, against a mainly neutral backdrop of grey and white walls.

Selina Snow The artist Selina Snow's home is full of original art, prints, hanging textiles and artefacts (Credit: Selina Snow)Selina Snow
The artist Selina Snow's home is full of original art, prints, hanging textiles and artefacts (Credit: Selina Snow)

The buttercup yellow fireplace in Snow's living room has informed the choice of objects displayed on the mantelpiece and the art on the wall above it. A Balinese theatre mask representing a devil's head and a bust by artist Corin Johnson reminiscent of Marlene Dietrich, both of a similar height, stand at either end of the mantelpiece. Above it hangs an abstract painting featuring a pattern of yellow spots that echo the colour of the fireplace. "I like the way the bust and mask balance each other and frame the painting," Snow tells the BBC.

I like to link colours but not obviously – I don't want pieces to blend together so they lose their individual character, but so they enhance each other – Selina Snow

But Snow doesn't see her combinations of objects as simply toning chromatically. "I don't want pieces to blend together so they lose their individual character, but so they enhance each other. I like to link colours but not obviously. I've got a sculpture of a violinist standing on a sulphur yellow table that picks up on a black pattern detail in a painting above it."

Selina Snow The mantelpiece in Snow's home (left) is adorned with an eclectic mix; in the bedroom, the sculpted headboard is echoed in the flower painting above it (Credit: Selina Snow)Selina Snow
The mantelpiece in Snow's home (left) is adorned with an eclectic mix; in the bedroom, the sculpted headboard is echoed in the flower painting above it (Credit: Selina Snow)

She also pairs very different pieces that nevertheless share the same motifs. In Snow's bedroom is a wooden headboard carved with flower shapes by her late husband, sculptor Richard Austin; above it is a painting of flowers.

Snow puts postcard-sized reproductions of paintings in inexpensive frames to elevate them and make them stand out. But for original artworks, she recommends investing in a professional framing service in order to preserve them well.

Roberto Ekholm, a London-based artist, curator and art advisor, who has mounted art shows in his own home, raises a similar point: "Be careful how you look after the medium. Don't let direct sunlight fall on framed paintings. You might have to install a UV protective window film over glass in brighter spots."

Artfully Walls Multiple paintings displayed together work well in a maximalist interior, giving a cosy feel (Credit: Artfully Walls)Artfully Walls
Multiple paintings displayed together work well in a maximalist interior, giving a cosy feel (Credit: Artfully Walls)

Ekholm also points out that while sculpture might be associated by many with monumental works in galleries, it has a place in the home, too. "It can be limiting using only tables, plinths or floor space to display sculptures," he says. "At home, I like to arrange mine on affordable free-floating shelves at different heights and in various sizes, which creates an interesting domestic display

While Snow and Ekholm have art collections that grew organically, aided by long-standing art-world connections, many people establish theirs from scratch. So what criteria should apply when you're acquiring your first original artworks? "Visit art exhibitions and auctions to explore what kind of art resonates with you," advises Kittoe. She cites the London Art Fair (on later this month), Affordable Art Fair and British Art Fair as good places in the UK to source art, as well as art trails and open-studio events.

Courtesy of Liddicoat & Goldhill A pair of circular artworks hung side by side creates a focal point in this living space (Credit: Courtesy of Liddicoat & Goldhill)Courtesy of Liddicoat & Goldhill
A pair of circular artworks hung side by side creates a focal point in this living space (Credit: Courtesy of Liddicoat & Goldhill)

Kittoe also suggests making use of a "try before you buy" service: "Many galleries allow you to see works in your own space before committing to the purchase. This can be useful as homes are so different to a brightly lit gallery, and this arrangement allows you to see the works at different times of the day and try them in different parts of the house. When hanging several pictures together, play with potential configurations by laying them out on the floor before committing them to fixed spots on the wall."

In the end, go with what feels right for you. As Cathy Glazer puts it: "Whether it's travel posters, collages or fleamarket finds, your collection should reflect what resonates with you. But if you're unsure where to begin, it can help to adhere to a theme, for example a grouping of botanicals, portraits or black-and-white photography. Choosing art can feel intimidating but it's not about right or wrong, it's about what speaks to you." 


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why did Homo sapiens outlast all other human species?

  From - Live Science By  Mindy Weisberger Edited by - Amal Udawatta Reproductions of skulls from a Neanderthal (left), Homo sapiens (middle) and Australopithecus afarensis (right)   (Image credit: WHPics, Paul Campbell, and Attie Gerber via Getty Images; collage by Marilyn Perkins) Modern humans ( Homo sapiens ) are the sole surviving representatives of the  human family tree , but we're the last sentence in an evolutionary story that began approximately 6 million years ago and spawned at least 18 species known collectively as hominins.  There were at least nine  Homo  species — including  H. sapiens  —  distributed around Africa, Europe and Asia by about 300,000 years ago, according to the Smithsonian's  National Museum of Nat ural History  in Washington, D.C. One by one, all except  H. sapiens  disappeared.  Neanderthals  and a  Homo  group known as the  Denisovans  lived alongside...

New Zealand loses first naval ship to sea since WW2

  Aleks Phillips   BBC New  ,   Michael Bristow,    BBC World Service Edited by - Amal Udawatta US Navy HMNZS Manawanui capsized after running aground off the coast of Samoa The Royal New Zealand Navy has lost its first ship to the sea since World War Two, after one of its vessels ran aground off the coast of Samoa. HMNZS Manawanui, a specialist diving and ocean imaging ship, came into trouble about one nautical mile from the island of Upolu on Saturday night local time, while conducting a survey of a reef. It later caught fire before capsizing. All 75 people on board were evacuated onto lifeboats and rescued early on Sunday, New Zealand's Defence Force said in a statement. Officials said the cause of the grounding was unknown and will be investigated. Reuters All 75 people on board have now safely been rescued The incident occurred during a bout of rough and windy weather. Military officials said rescuers "battled" currents and winds that pushed ...

From a Trump presidency to 'game-changing' lawsuits: Seven big climate and nature moments coming in 2025

      From -BBC World News   By-  Jocelyn Timperley and Isabelle Gerretsen   Edited by - Amal Udawatta Getty Images Some key events coming up in 2025 have game-changing potential for our planet. Here, two of the BBC's environment journalists analyse what they could mean for the climate and nature. As countries unveil new climate targets, Donald Trump enters the White House for a second term and a potentially game-changing ruling for future climate lawsuits unfolds – 2025 is set to be a big year for climate and nature.  Speaking in his  New Year's message  in late December, secretary-general of the United Nations  António Guterres said that the world is witnessing "climate breakdown – in real time".  "We must exit this road to ruin. In 2025, countries must put the world on a safer path by dramatically slashing emissions and supporting the transition to a renewable future," he said, stressing that "it is essential – and it is possible...