
Expansive views and sun-drenched interiors might be a hallmark of Moderism, but what’s a Modernist with neither views nor sun to do? If you’re German interior designer and stylist Peter Fehrentz, and possessed with both vision and imagination, you develop a property of singular, unexpected beauty—exactly what Fehrentz did with his Berlin pied-à-terre. Utilizing a colour scheme of dark hues—eggplant, charcoal, black—and a startling flourish of pink, Fehrentz, who wanted a “cocoon—a cozy, capsule-like retreat within the lively metropolis,” has transformed a sunless, tiny roomed dwelling into an open-program gem a world away from light and airy Modernism. Fehrentz was right after anything akin to the deep, burnished hues located in Flemish Old Master paintings, and we’d say he managed to get there—masterfully.
Images: Dwell
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