There are people you meet in life that are instant kindred spirits, ones you feel like you have known forever. Usually there is a common link -- such as a love of design and movies. Such was the case when I met Joe Ruggiero.
I had the pleasure of meeting the multi-faceted interior designer and television personality at the High Point market last October and our paths crossed again at his lecture at my friend Donna Hysmith's
Designers Gallery in Nashville recently. His incredible career has spanned a variety of multi-media disciplines within the design profession for the past 27 years ranging from design consultant on
Good Morning America, host and producer of a number of shows and specials on HGTV (
Homes Across America), Editor in Chief of Home Magazine and Director of Advertising at Ethan Allen -- and this list just barely scratches the surface. My favorite gigs are his HGTV specials on international design where he
literally traveled the globe reporting on one incredible residence after the next based on the best of French, Italian, Japanese, Irish, Portuguese, Mexican, Scandinavian and Spanish design. The ultimate dream job!
Today he designs the JR Home collection that includes the Domino line of all seasons wicker for
Woodard, an
upholstery line with Miles Talbott, the
Sunbrella textile line, a wood furniture collection with
Caperton and an outdoor furniture line with
Terra Furniture.
His Maxfield sofa is reminiscent of the classic Harlow movies of the thirties -- streamlined, modern and sophisticated while low to the ground and comfortable. The Bergen chair is influenced by all the twenties and thirties travel themed escapist films where ocean liners played a predominant role. Art Deco, French Deco and Moderne ocean liners were notably featured as both a backdrop and plot device in films such as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musical Shall We Dance (1937), The Big Broadcast of 1938, Transatlantic (1931) and Reaching for the Moon (1931).
One of Harlow's most stylish films was the 1933 comedy Dinner At Eight
Harlow in Life Magazine
The Bergen chair was a Pinnacle Award winner in furniture
and as Joe notes, "inspired by French design but paired down to the bare essentials."
Ginger Rogers publicity photo for Shall We Dance
Barrymore Chair
(think thirties actor John Barrymore, grandfather of actress Drew)
Joe's travels have taken him literally all over the world and he was particularly influenced by his visits in Kyoto which later became the muse for his Geisha fabric as seen on the kimono and interiors below. While in Kyoto, he purchased kimono fabrics from garments of the early 1900's and a collection was soon born. "I have always loved the simple design principles of Japan and have been inspired in the design of all my home furnishings," he details.
His collection reminds me of the film
Memoirs of a Geisha (2005). Production designer John Myhre (of
Chicago fame) designed a section of the pre World War II city of Kyoto on a horse ranch near Los Angeles. Seen below is the
tatami room for the geisha and the baron's lair. The geisha district was miraculously built in 14 weeks and strongly influenced by the novel of the same name, traditional dance and Kabuki theater as well as actual historical and cultural references.
The JR collection's Chop Block Mist Sunbrella fabric also found its way on the television hit
Melrose Place. Seen below is the star Heather Locklear.
Chop Block Mist
For more on the Joe Ruggiero Collection, see his website
here.
Photo Credits: Architectural Digest/Columbia Pictures Company, MGM, Life Magazine.