DESIGN C'mon, Get Happy Armed with a belief that colors can't clash, designer Jonathan Adler wants our souls to sing. BY LYNNE KONSTANTIN onathan Adler believes our homes should rize his style as schizophrenic. His work references muses make us happy. From his passion for pottery as diverse as the Scandinavian graphic designs of 1960s to furniture and textile design, to his latest Marimekko, the sleek, playful silhouettes crafted by 1950s foray as author, he has built an empire to Hollywood designer Tommi Parzinger and pretty much help us achieve that necessary joy. everything about Madonna. "I want things to feel familiar His whimsical, groovy tchotchkes, as he calls them, have and fresh at the same time," explains Adler. "I like to call brightened the sets of Will & Grace, Sex and the Clip, and the it happy chic, which describes the basic spirit of what I do. Today show. Last month, Bon Appetit magazine named him Chic design is usually very unfriendly and off-putting — Designer of the Year. His stylish fans include fashion yet we all want to be chic. But I really don't like the idea of designers Marc Jacobs, Isaac Mizrahi unfriendliness. So I try to add a layer of and Cynthia Rowley. He designed the friendliness and playfulness to chic." recently renovated Le Parker Meridien Case in point: His first pottery col- Palm Springs hotel. And with seven lection, designed in college, was quilt- boutiques across the country, including ed — a la Coco Chanel. New York City, East Hampton and DESIGN EVOLUTION Miami locations (his newest opens in Growing up in the small farming com- Chicago this month), a catalogue and a munity of Bridgeton, N.J. (where, he Web site, Adler, 38, is making it very notes, many Russian-Jewish emigres easy for all of us to outfit our entire settled into livelihoods as egg farmers), homes with the deliciously vibrant col- Adler had his first taste of throwing ors, boldly geometric patterns and ceramics on the wheel (clothed in a often elegant lines of his settees and Rush concert T-shirt, he recalls) at armchairs, throw pillows, bedding, summer camp when he was 12. "My handcrafted ceramic pots, dinnerware, parents sort of expected to come get lamps, doggie bowls and more. me at the end of the summer and find More mod than minimal, modernist Above: Designer and ceramicist Jonathan a vital, tanned athlete," he told one yet handcrafted, Adler's luxe creations Adler has transformed clay from hippie to resist definition — he can only catego- hip. Top: Clean Danish modern meets Park Avenue luxury in the Morrow Settee, Continued on page 17 named after Doris Day's character in Pillow Talk. JNPLATINUM • NOVEMBER 2005 • 15