Friday, May 19, 2017

John Saladino–Part Two

John Saladino–Part Two


 

After doing a bit more research – this is an update to the previous story about Ellen and Portia and the Saladino Villa, along with some history about John Saladino’s new house. And then I promise, no more Saladino, for a while at least!

According to several news reports, including Richard Mineards who writes a real estate/gossip column for the Montecito Journal, Ellen & Portia actually bought the villa from Tom Sturgess, the wealthy Texas businessman – NOT Saladino.   Almost a year before Ellen and Portia bought the villa, it was Tom and his wife Heather who purchased Villa di Lemma from Saladino for either 16 or 18 million - depending on different reports. 

The Sturgesses lived at the villa for a while and even hired Lorraine Letendre  to redo the house.    Though it isn’t known why Ellen didn’t buy it outright from Saladino since she reportedly wanted it and had visited with him several times, she ended up paying around 28 million for the estate – making Sturgess even wealthier – he netted a quick 10 million in less than a year on the villa.

 

image

Tom Sturgess’ designer Lorraine Letendre has BIG named clients like Jennifer Lopez.   She was recently in Architectural Digest for designing Michael Bay’s house, above. HERE.

Thinking about the transaction of Saladino selling the villa to Sturgess for almost half of what Ellen paid Sturgess, it’s just a shame.  Saladino is the one who took the risk, buying up the decaying villa: on the day he bought the estate – 250 rats were killed.   Saladino spent a small fortune renovating the property – no detail was deemed too insignificant to ignore.  It was a masterpiece, an accomplishment that few could undertake so magnificently…and yet, the greatest of riches went to Sturgess who was basically a glorified middle man.  Seriously.   The care that Saladino undertook during the renovation – doing things like rerouting flues of tiny fireplaces – all to bring this stone house back to what it originally once was and more - and in the end, the riches, the spoils, went to Sturgess.

That is a shame.    

Once Ellen bought the estate, she hired architect Howard Backen, along with her designer Tommy Clements, to build a guest house on the property – “something more contemporary in style, maybe incorporating steel and glass windows, mixed with corrugated metal.”

Hmm…maybe something like this? 

 

image

One of the barns on Ellen’s former horse ranch.

 

image_thumb5

A new aerial view of the villa does shows new construction at the front of the property.  Perhaps this is the guest house and maybe a stables for Portia’s horses?

Actually Tommy Clements who works with his mom Kathleen is very talented.  Kathleen moved to L.A. from New Orleans where she owned the popular shop Sister Agnes on Magazine Street.    She made a splash a few years ago when she launched a furniture line – I’m sure you will remember this to die for piece from her collection:

 

image

Design blogs loved this settee – with its striped mini slip.

 

image

This spread in Veranda, designed by Clements, caught my eye because I can’t resist a gorgeous ballerina tie.

 

image

Ellen & Portia’s house in Trousdale done by Clements Design.

But, it’s Tommy’s work with Ellen that has amped up the attention to their firm.  Clements Design’s portfolio is really beautiful – so it makes me feel that the villa might end up alright when they are finished with it. 

Besides Saladino getting cheated out of millions in the sale, the other sad thing about this story is that Ellen is a serial house buyer.  She has bought and sold more houses than seems normal, to be honest.  It is truly strange how many houses she has bought – furnishing them all incredibly well - and then moving on.  What a waste of money, money that could be donated to people who don’t even have a roof.  Last year she bought the Brody house which is supposed to be the best house in L.A.  (That’s someone’s personal opinion. To me - it’s very contemporary.)  She paid almost $40 million for it and declared this was it.  It was the best house in L.A. and there was nowhere else for her to go – even if she wanted to.  A few months later, real estate bloggers were stunned when she sold the Brody house for $55 million to Sean Parker of Napster/Facebook fame.  She then quickly bought a floor in a highrise for $16 million and then sold that a few months later. All this was done while she sold her ranch and bought the villa and sold the Malibu house she bought from Brad Pitt.  Wow.   The last report was she bought BACK a house she sold in 2007, but even that is questionable and who cares really?  It’s all very strange and seems to mask some kind of basic unhappiness or restlessness.  Tommy, her designer, disagrees and says Ellen’s serial house buying is because she wants new design challenges.

 

image_thumb[10]

The Brody House, critically acclaimed as the “best house in L.A.”   OK.  If you say so.

 

image

Ellen & Portia’s former horse ranch

When Ellen bought the horse ranch – and then spent a few years completely decorating all its houses – Portia was happy and wanted to stay there and ride her horses which she credited with healing her mentally.  Not Ellen.  It seemed almost as if Portia didn’t even count, as if her happiness didn’t matter – I’m sure that isn’t true, but it sounded that way.  In Elle Décor – Ellen said she would move, but she’d have to fight Portia on it because this is Portia’s “dream property.   This we may just hold on to.”  

Sure.  Within a few months the ranch was gone.  I have a feeling the Saladino Villa will be gone before long too.  We will hear that Montecito was just too far a drive for weekend visiting from L.A.

 

NEXT…

image_thumb[1]

I was looking at pictures of the horse ranch and thought I spied the woodman – you know the wood sculpture found on the villa’s front porch?!  Is that it – do you see it standing in the middle section – on the left console?

 

image_thumb[11]

The woodman on the entry porch at the villa.  Sure looks similar.

 

 

image_thumb[2]

And here in one of the guest houses at the ranch – I found this chaise!

 

image_thumb[14]

And here is that same chaise, now at the villa.  It’s not Restoration Hardware – it is 19th century French.

 

image_thumb[15]

The Basquiat stumped me because I had never seen it  in any published pictures of Ellen’s houses.

 

image

There is this Basquiat/Warhol collaboration they own.

 

image_thumb[16]

But, on the Clements Design web site – unmarked photographs of Ellen and Portia’s Trousdale House shows the Basquiat was once in that library before it was moved to the villa.

I do think that these few pictures  of Ellen and Portia at Saladino Villa were premature and not staged – I doubt her designer authorized their release.  I’m sure by the time Tommy Clements is finished with the project, it will look great – albeit not quite as great as it did when Saladino furnished it!   But it won’t matter really, because they will have moved on by then anyway – judging by their past record.

 

NEXT…

The house that John Saladino moved into on the Birnam Wood golf course was so pretty – it was furnished so well, so attractively by the people who owned it before he did.    It turns out that Saladino bought the house from interior designer Bruce Gregga and his partner, antique shop owner William Laman.   Gregga, an inductee in the Interior Design Hall of Fame, originally hailed from Chicago and moved to Montecito after vacationing there.  The two have lived in several beautiful houses which have been published in magazines such as Architectural Digest, CHome, and Veranda. 

Here’s a look at Gregga/Laman’s magazine pictorial:

 

image_thumb[18]

BEFORE:  The real estate pictures – nice enough.

 

image_thumb[19]

But they could be prettier….like these:

 

image

  VERANDA:  These suzani pillows get changed out later and this is before the colorful blue rug was placed here. The CHome photoshoot below is my favorite:

 

image

CHOME:  When Gregga and Laman bought the 40 year old house, they did some remodeling – the windows were made taller and more graceful, doorways were enlarged, while walls were replastered and moved.  Antique herringbone wood floors were added.  These two round windows were added by Gregga, inspired by Venetian architecture.  Love this photograph!

 

image

VERANDA:  In the window – another small settee.

 

image

Against the side wall, Regence commode and Jean Michel Frank chairs.

 

image

Against the back wall of the living room – 18th century console and the Botero painting that Gregga bought in 1958 before he was discovered.

 

image

TODAY:  And the living room under John Saladino – he painted the walls a bit more creamy to go with his rug.  The vase outside becomes a focal point in the room.

 

image

CHOME:  A view of the entry hall how Gregga designed it.

 

image

VERNADA:  In the entry – Gregga laid new marble floor. 

 

image

VERANDA:  In the hall Gregga placed this beautiful French empire antique bed.

 

image

CHome – the Gregga dining room.

 

image

TODAY:  And Saladino’s.  Well, if this is a contest – I’d have to give the prize to Saladino.  I just love what he did to basically an empty shell.   This is just so “John Saladino” – which is suppose is why I love it.

 

image

In Veranda, the earlier version of the Gregga library shows the study with a French desk at the side.

 

image

CHOME:  Later, the French desk was replaced with a bamboo version and a rug was added.   The paneling was dark when Gregga bought the house – he lightened it and changed the feel of the room completely when he added the fireplace (below.)

 

image

CHOME:  The fireplace that Gregga added.   Compare the library to now, under Saladino’s ownership:

 

image

Saladino’s bronze fabrics seem to blend in more with the paneling than Gregga’s red.  The white in the painting has just the right pop and acts like a white pillow on a black sofa.  The scale of the light fixture brings the high ceiling down to a more human scale – a trick of Saladino’s.  I have to say – I much prefer Saladino’s library, though I do like them both.  I do love Gregga’s arrangement with two chairs next to the fireplace, which must be very cozy in the winter.

 

image

BEFORE:  I adore the real estate pictures of Gregga’s guest room – the white sofa, the crisp navy bedspread, the wicker chair. 

 

image

And in CHome, another view.  Love this!!!!

 

image

TODAY:  As decorated by Saladino.  He carries the same color tones from the library in here.  The room looks completely different because of the color scheme.

 

image

BEFORE:  The real estate photograph of the master bedroom shows off Gregga’s Billy Baldwin etageres.

 

image

Veranda shows a better view of the bed with the ikat spread.

 

image

AFTER:  The master bedroom as designed by Saladino is set up more as a sitting room.  The bed is half sofa – a sort of Knole design.

 

image

CHOME:  The sunroom 

Available link for download