Hampton Designer Showhouse Review
michael braverman :: on the hamptons
The point of it all is tasteful excess. Showhouses are not meant to be too well mannered or conventionally elegant. We don’t really buy showhouse tickets to be bored with restrained good taste and we don’t go for practical tips on decorating. Nobody actually lives that way. We want to be treated to a bit of fantasy, something magnetizing and seductive, exorbitant in its budget and extravagant in its results. Give us a head-rush kind of house in a drop-dead setting in the Hamptons, where indulgence is as much a part of life as westbound traffic on Sunday nights, and you’ve got a perfect storm of decorative profligacy. That’s why we can’t wait each year for the opening of the Hampton Designer Showhouse, a benefit for Southampton Hospital. Anticipating the gala opening in July, we just attended a cocktail party at antique dealer Bermingham & Co., where the names of the participating designers were announced. The guests were exceedingly well behaved. We did not notice a single glass deposited on the rare and precious tabletops, but then again most of the people drinking from those glasses were in the decorating world and know how to treat a big-ticket antique. This is the eighth annual showhouse, and the venue is an enormous new spec house in Sagaponack. In a real estate market, even a slow one, where average spec house sizes range from stupendous to colossal, that’s to be expected, and for the showcase purposes it’s just right. And you can count on every inch of the place decked out to dazzle. The showhouse opens with a gala preview party on July 19th, and runs until August 31st, which is Grand Prix day at the Hampton Classic. We can all get some rest after Labor Day, which comes early this year. A ll the designers will be working hard to gain recognition (and business), to make us aware of who they are, to entertain us, and most importantly to raise money for Southampton Hospital. If you are a designoholic and interested in the names and details, read on and give them a little applause: Mrs. Alessandro di Montezemolo and Mrs. Mildred Brinn are the honorary co-chairs of the showhouse. Mario Buatta is honorary gala chair. Showhouse veteran Gary Crain is honorary design chair and James Alan Smith is decorative arts chair. Marketing and management are handled by Tony Manning as usual. Interior designers: Decorative Artists: Landscape Designers:
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