Kips Bay Show House Through The Years

Steven Stolman’s book, 40 Years of Fabulous, highlights the worthy cause, memorable rooms, and interior designers that have made this event the best of its kind. Here he reflects on the show’s early years and lasting legacy, and we pick a few of our favorite flower-filled rooms

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Like flower shows, dog shows, garden tours and antiques shows in high school gyms or tents, the decorator show house is a convention of polite society that harkens back to a gentler time, when ladies wore white gloves and men donned hats to the office. Or when people got dressed up for air travel and the theater. These happenings, designed to give interior decorators a platform to showcase their talents and their wares, continues to fascinate and inspire, drawing the oh, so social to their gala openings and general admirers of all things beautiful to their open-to-the-public hours.

For more than four decades, the pinnacle of this convention has been the Kips Bay Decorator Show House in New York City. Started in 1973 by several dedicated supporters of the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club, it’s ironic that something so patrician and refined was born at the very time when interior design was leaving the world of traditional décor in favor of more modern expressions. Gone were velvet-covered sofas and silk damask curtains with tassels and fringe. In their place: mirrored walls, vast expanses of lacquer and acres of shag carpet accented with huge chrome gazelles and paintings of the number “2.” There were conversation pits, “bethrooms” (ridiculous combinations of bed and bath) and undulating platforms sporting chairs shaped like hands—or lips. Let’s just say it was a time.

Early on, the Kips Bay Decorator Show House was very much a grassroots affair. It didn’t matter that the core supporters came from the privileged world of New York high society; everyone just dove in with a kind of “let’s put on a show in the barn” enthusiasm. “You would see one of the DuPonts in rubber gloves cleaning the loos!” remembers designer Sandra Nunnerley.

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English country elegance by Van Hattum & Simmons. | Photo by Phillip Ennis

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Exotic Moorish elements enliven a sitting room by Alexa Hampton. | Photo by Timothy Bell

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A room inspired by high fashion by Amanda Nisbet. | Photo by Max Kim Bee

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A sumptuous sitting room gathered from the garden, by Mark Hampton in 1984. | Photo by Phillip Ennis

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Sparkling mirror, ribbon stripes, and silk jacquard compose a bedroom by Nina Campbell. | Photo by Phillip Ennis

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A sprightly sitting room designed by Mario Buatta in 1997. | Photo courtesy of the Kips Bay Boys and Girls Club Archive

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A brooding library by Ann Getty. | Photo by Phillip Ennis

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A shimmering sitting room by Richard Ridge and Roderick Denault.

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Mirrored to perfection by Andrew Raquet in 2004. | Photo by Phillip Ennis

The 2016 Kips Bay Decorator Show House will take place May 12 – June 9, 2016, at The Carlton House Townhouse on 19 East 61st Street in Manhattan. For more information, visit kipsbaydecoratorsshowhouse.org.

EXCERPT AND IMAGES REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM FORTY YEARS OF FABULOUS: THE KIPS BAY DECORATOR SHOW HOUSE BY STEVEN STOLMAN, GIBBS SMITH, 2015