![]() They are as convivial as their designs.īryan O’Sullivan with the Harvest dining table, £37,200, and Macaroon chairs, from £4,560 © Giulio Ghirardi But then you can’t imagine O’Sullivan and O’Neill, who works at Bryan O’Sullivan Studio (BOS for short), creating anything dour. It’s a striking scene replete with a full-length Jelly Fish mirror (£44,400, edition of 10) – pure Hollywood by way of Ken Russell – and chairs upholstered in a foliage print by artist and textile designer Claire de Quénetain. There are a few straight lines in the mix but nothing black – instead you’ll find a broad curved sofa in lush, soft pink, colourful handblown-glass shapes connected to make overhead pendant lights, and the Cosmo lamp, named after O’Sullivan and husband James O’Neill’s baby son, with a hand-hammered silver base inset with gems (£17,400). ![]() Way up near the top of one tower, Bryan O’Sullivan’s home – recently furnished with his debut collection of furniture and lighting – is a breath of fresh air. Some of London’s most ardent, ascetic modernists live in the brutalist surrounds of the Barbican, occupying rooms full of monochrome Perriand and Prouvé.
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