Claridge’s has unveiled a new addition to the legendary Mayfair hotel, with the opening of The Painter’s Room, a new bar on the ground floor of the Art Deco landmark.
Conceived by interior designer Bryan O’Sullivan, with a creative installation by artist Annie Morris, this intimate setting is set be home to the next generation of ground-breaking cocktails at Claridge’s. With a back story rich in art and design, The Painter’s Room is named as a homage to the same space at Claridge’s that was created in the 1930’s with murals by renowned artist Mary Lea. This becomes the third bar at the hotel joining the dark and glamorous Fumoir and the iconic Claridge’s Bar.
Located in the space that bridges Claridge’s celebrated ballroom and the Talking Heads Gallery by Artist in Residence David Downton, The Painter’s Room has been reimagined by Bryan O’Sullivan, inspired by old photos from the archives in the 1930’s.
The aesthetic pays tribute to the hotel’s Art Deco design heritage, with pale pink onyx featuring prominently. The bar, in this blush-coloured stone is the centrepiece, and is complemented by a feature skylight in peach and cream coloured glass. The metal work in this skylight takes inspiration from the signature deco design doors of Claridge’s, and in the centre is a show stopping, intricate Deco light.
British artist Annie Morris has been specially commissioned to create an installation which runs across the entire space. A painted monochrome mural above the pink onyx features her whimsical characters, in addition to her first ever stained glass piece, which will be at the heart of the bar.
Morris was inspired by the historic relationship between bars and artists, and how artists sit, observe, sketch and chat in bars and the mural reflects the free sketch style with which one would scribble on the back of a menu. The characters nod to the style credentials of Claridge’s and the Golden Age, with some wearing top hat and others smoking. The stained glass, made from hand blown glass, features rich hues which juxtapose with the simple grey lines of the drawings on the walls, and was originally dreamt up as a watercolour painting, which is reflected in the final piece. The entire installation has taken a year to conceive.
“The art of hospitality is always at the heart of everything we do,” says Paddy McKillen, co-owner of Maybourne Hotel Group. “Recreating this precious space for the next generation of Claridge’s guests with Annie and Bryan, long-standing friends of our Maybourne family, has been a true labour of love.’