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Modern Furnishing Selections by Katonah Museum of Art Executive Director Neil Watson
Neil Watson, Executive Director of the Katonah Museum of Art, and his wife, award-winning YA novelist Judy Blundell (Jude Watson), have meticulously curated their 1920s cottage-style home in Katonah. Having lived in various locations such as San Francisco, Montauk, Manhattan, West Palm Beach, Tacoma, and Delaware, the couple moved into their 1,900-square-foot home in 2005. Their aesthetic philosophy centers on a blend of high- and low-value items, prioritizing pieces that are interesting and well-made. While they indulge in occasional splurges at upscale galleries and shops, Watson demonstrates a keen eye for discovering stylish furnishings from second-hand stores, salvage shops, catalogs featuring excellent reproductions, and even discarded items, including a notable Eames chair rescued from an art museum.
Among their cherished possessions is a rare plywood chair, circa 1950, by American furniture designer Norman Cherner, acquired from a West Palm Beach vintage furniture store. Watson has a notable collection of chairs, including designs by mid-century modern masters Charles and Ray Eames and Harry Bertoia, attributing a certain "karma" to these pieces. Another unique find is a chrome-and-wood side table from the 1930s by Wolfgang Hoffman, son of renowned Austrian architect and designer Josef Hoffman, discovered in Thomas O’Brien's Aero Studios in SoHo. This table now serves as a charging station in their office-cum-playroom.
The living and dining rooms boast 21 light sources, prominently featuring the Zettel’z chandelier by German designer Ingo Maurer. This chandelier, purchased in 2008 from a SoHo showroom, replaces traditional crystal drops with clipped-on Japanese paper pieces adorned with scribbled notes, poems, and drawings, to which artist and illustrator friends, and their daughter Cleo, have contributed. A meaningful gift from Watson to his wife is a banded bowl by pioneering glass artist Sonja Blomdahl, acquired from a San Francisco art gallery in the mid-1980s. This piece was created using the incalmo technique, involving the seamless merging of two separate pipe-blown glass vessels.
Another innovative lighting fixture is the Holonzki wall sconce, also by Ingo Maurer, positioned near the dining-room table. This sconce creates an optical illusion with a holographic red incandescent bulb over a metal socket, while the true light source emanates from above. Watson purchased this piece a decade ago from a high-end furniture store in Seattle, appreciating its blend of humor and beauty. The article also highlights a handcrafted corkscrew from Laguiole, France, a Christmas gift from Watson's wife, celebrated for its exquisite construction and design, indicative of his appreciation for well-crafted items. Finally, an eco-friendly birch bookcase by Argington, originally intended for a toddler's room, was adapted to store Watson's cookbooks and his daughter's art supplies, demonstrating the family's practical and aesthetic repurposing of objects within their thoughtfully curated home.
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