La Villa Verte - Michele Koh Morollo
Transcription
La Villa Verte - Michele Koh Morollo
The ‘Lotus green’ living room displays a mix of pieces, mostly of Caumont’s design. From left, Khai Dinh armchair, black Litbanc daybed, Alexandra tray and grey Anna table. A vintage floor lamp and a collection of photographs, including originals taken by Henri CartierBresson, and vintage posters on the wall complete the mix La Villa Verte Text / Michele Koh Morollo Images / Nguyen Hai Dong, Sarah Nguyen HOME / Ho Chi Minh City A small collection of objets trouves and a Charles carved brass candleholder sit on a grey Anna table. To the side is a Josephine armchair, both by Caumont H o Chi Minh City has a rich French heritage, so it’s no surprise that French Count and designer Bruno de Caumont recently set up shop — and home — here. scooter-ridden main thoroughfares, and Caumont says that living there is like stepping back in time. The design concept was inspired by the verdant green colour of a lotus flower that someone had offered him when he first visited the house, as well as by the historical period in which the house was built. A descendant of Ange-Jacques Gabriel, the French architect who designed the Petit Trianon in Versailles, made famous by Marie Antoinette, and the Place de la Concorde in Paris, Caumont originally planned to be an international lawyer. However, he was waylaid by his love for period furniture, which led him to set up a stall selling French antiques at Paris’s Marché Paul Bert flea market, then to become a much-lauded interior designer and later furniture maker. Caumont believes that only designers with nothing to say use white as their colour scheme. Known for a bright and bold palette, he painted most of the interior walls lotus leaf green, then chose complementing shades of green, blue, orange, yellow and pink — the colour of the lotus flower — for other wall sections. A more neutral grey was used as a fil rouge for the doors, window frames, railing and wood sections. ‘In Paris, you can’t just be an interior designer. You need two titles to get people’s attention. You have to be an interior and fashion designer, an interior designer and artist or an interior and furniture designer,’ he says. ‘I looked up interior design pictures from Saigon in the 1950s. I observed that there was a lot of space in the middle of the rooms, so I worked with this idea. Ten years ago, my interiors were much more crowded — you practically had to walk between pieces of furniture. I wanted to create something purer and less cluttered with my home here,’ he says. Vietnam was the key to Caumont’s second string. Realising that he couldn’t work at a flea market for the rest of his life, he journeyed to Vietnam in 2006, the country his grandfather once lived in, to set up a factory for his own lacquer furniture. Almost all the furniture pieces in La Villa Verte are from Caumont’s latest collection Annam, which consists of 25 Asian-inspired lacquer furniture pieces. The purple chair in the second-floor office and the red vase pedestals in the dining room were influenced by the antique styles of Vietnam. Caumont has also recently begun designing and manufacturing hand-tufted wool rugs, and a cheery circular orange and purple piece inspired by French Polynesian tattoo patterns makes a striking visual statement against the black and white tiled floor of the living room. Caumont explains that silk was used in traditional lacquermaking in Vietnam from almost 2,000 years ago, as it is extremely malleable, preventing the lacquer from cracking when the wood expands and contracts with age and lack of humidity. These days, it is often omitted to cut costs, but not at Caumont’s factory. ‘First we apply two layers of silk, then ten layers of lacquer, and the lacquering is done by hand. We then apply metal ornaments, beads or castings. The wood we use is mostly acacia and beech wood,’ says Caumont. ‘Good interior design involves strategic application of colour. You shouldn’t be able to see the signature of the designer when you step into the space, but get surrounded by the atmosphere. You also need to know the personality of the owner and their lifestyle. For instance, there is not much point creating an elaborate kitchen for people who don’t like to cook. It is also crucial that the architectural spirit of the building is first respected, then enhanced.’ On these criteria, La Villa Verte is a triumph. To be closer to the factory, Caumont moved to Ho Chi Minh in 2011 and rented a three-storey 1950s house, which he recently decorated and named La Villa Verte. Located at the end of a private alleyway in Tan Dinh district 1, La Villa Verte is a tranquil respite from the noise of the city’s 172 In the candy-pink dining room, a red Thalos stool and Thalos bench sit either side of a blue Thalos dining table. To the right, two Annam pedestals proudly display locally sourced ceramic vases. On the walls are wrought iron sconces, also designed by Caumont. Looking out to a small courtyard a Khai Dinh armchair sits next to a ceramic elephant stool The kitchen’s black and white tiled floor was inspired by Chanel. On the shelves sits a collection of blue and white china purchased at local markets and on the bench is a lacquered tray by Caumont. Baskets are from Mekong Creations, an organisation that provides employment for women in poor villages along the Mekong An antique vase purchased in a local market sits on a red Annam pedestal. On the walls are drawings of Vietnamese women in traditional clothing, purchased in the historical town of Hue A Caumont-designed Soleil mirror in black finish hangs above a console table purchased from an antique shop in Ho Chi Minh City In the sitting room, a purple Peto drawer console sits against the back wall, flanked by antique oil lamps found in a local market. On the wall is a piece by local artist Nguyen Than Truc. To the left sits a Boetie bench, and to the right an Ahuit coffee table. Both sit atop Sunteeth, a purple and orange hand tufted wool rug from Caumont’s new collection. The chandelier is from the 1930s and was found in Brussels In the ‘blue’ guest bedroom, an Arach bench sits to the left. The bed linen is by Catherine Denoual Maison, another French designer residing in Ho Chi Minh City. Bedside lamps are by Caumont, and the artwork, a landscape of Hanoi, is by Vietnamese artist Ha Manh Thang On the opposite side of the room is an Iris love seat and purple Anna side table. The lacquered tray on top of the footstool is another Caumont creation In the Master bedroom, an Annam pedestal works as a side table. The bed linen is also by Catherine Denoual Maison An antique piece sourced locally serves as a tie stand Another guest bedroom is painted a cheery yellow and has mosquito netting draped from the ceiling. To the left, a purple Annam chair sits below a large oval mirror, another Caumont design. Bedding by Catherine Denoual Maison The blue and white tiled bathroom was inspired by Andrée Putman, and features a blue Annam nesting table Looking up the stairwell with original 1950s railing. The lantern is by Caumont and the vintage framed photos were sourced locally A small vignette in the master bedroom: a purple Annam armchair with a Catherine Denoual Maison cushion sits below a collection of art and an elaborately framed mirror found in a local market In the study, a purple Annam dining table serves as a desk In the ‘Lotus green’ ground floor courtyard is an outdoor setting with a Bambou tea table, all by Caumont. The Chinese lanterns were found in a local market