
Now this home really is where the art is. Forty-something couple, Lynne, a fashion & textiles expert and Del, an art teacher met as students at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in the eighties and now live in rural Sussex with their 11-year-old son, and Custard the Cat. The couple take a make do approach to interiors, most of the artwork here is second-hand and furniture has either been handed-down, or salvaged and recycled. Del plays art swap with friends when he's looking for something new to hang on the walls, creates stuff for the home using found objects and makes his own pasta (though apparently, Jamie Oliver's cannelloni with semolina flour is a 'fucking arse ache' to make). The screen for the fireplace is made from an old chest of drawers. Obviously they have a better class of skip down in Sussex:

Every surface is dotted with carefully curated doodahs. On the mantlepiece in front of the vintage French mirror sits a ceramic jug by Japanese potter, Takeshi Yasuda, a selection of family photos and a wooden statue bought off a beach artist in Jamaica, 'I asked for one that was unfinished, ' says Del, 'I like it because it's a work in progress.'

Whitewashed walls and neutral carpets make the perfect blank canvas for an interesting mix of artwork and antiques. And proving that less really is more, this ceramic bird cost one pound from a charity shop and the painted metal candlestick holder was picked up at a garden centre.

Second-hand fifties mirror, and mobile from the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York.

As a child growing up in the seventies, Lynne shared a pink-walled bedroom with her younger sister. Their grandma, a devout Catholic, often presented the girls with religious memorabilia - statues of patron saints, plastic plaques, rosary beads - which they displayed on the mantlepiece. 'We had this horrible seventies decor and all this religious stuff including holy water. It was mad,' laughs Lynne, 'The other day I thought blimey, I'm doing it again. I made the connection but it's not a religious thing at all, I'm an atheist! I suppose it's a comfort thing.'
Del tends to take the same approach to artwork as to interiors, with the emphasis on creating something modern from rescued cultural relics. As is evidenced by his latest collection, a series of collages made from old Penguin book covers. And, that's my picture happily sitting on the settee at That's Not My Age mansions so don't get any ideas! Besides, there's an exhibition coming soon.

To contact Del about his artwork: email P-DELLER@sky.com
How interesting and inpiring!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing.
Oh, how wonderful! I love peeking around stylish homes. xxx
ReplyDeleteOh Vintage Vixen so do I but, oh how they make me feel inadequate - if only piles of paper, chewed dog toys and xBox controllers were to be considered art......;o)
ReplyDeleteBlimey I'm going to have to practice my nespresso making skills and start moving on from Ikea to get you round!
ReplyDeleteGreat information and items. I must confess to feeling ready to tackle a canvas again.
Don;t worry GoldenGirl my Ikea hallway with a bit of old stuff is only one step up from its former life as dumping ground of everything.
I too love looking at other people's homes.
ReplyDeleteParticularly like the photo of the ceramic bird and the candlestick holder.
Wonderful stuff, so interesting & original!
ReplyDelete'carefully curated doodads' - I love that. It's how my house would be in the movie of my life (minus messy spouse and children, enormous hairy dog, arthritic dribbling cat, etc) ...
ReplyDeleteI've got total house envy now, if only my flat was as minimal as this.
ReplyDeleteps congrats on the Guardian mention! x
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