Interiors — Spaces that Reflect Culture, Work, & Daily Life
FLIGHT HALL
GALLERY BENCH
ROYAL ALCOVE
POSTAL HALL
OCULUS ATRIUM
MONDRIAN STRIDE
CATHEDRAL GAZE
STAINED PRISMS
STATUE SPOTLIGHT
CANDLE TABLE
BRAUHAUS MURAL
DOWAGER’S CANOPY BED
GLAMPING REST
EXECUTIVE BEDROOM
BUTTERFLY PARLOR
HEIR’S GILDED TABLEAU
DYNASTIC TARTAN GALLERY
HEIR’S TWIN LAMPS
DOWAGER’S WINDOW PLANT
HEIR’S WINDOW NOOK
DOWAGER’S TEA TABLE
DAGGERS DRAWN CANDLE
CAWDOR VIOLET CANDLE
CAWDOR FAMILY FEUD
MONASTERY REFECTORY
CAWDOR COPPER PANS
CHAMBORD SHOOTER
ANCESTRAL ARMS FAN
MOONGATE STAIRS
CAWDOR COPPER HOOD
VERSAILLES HOTEL ROOM I
FLORAL WINDOW
PINK TWINS
BREEZY CURTAINS
SUBURBAN WINDOWS
DYNASTIC VIOLET WINDOW
This Interiors collection offers a glimpse into how rooms reflect the people who use—or once used—them. Most of these photographs are unpopulated, yet each space suggests presence, function, and memory.
Included are the mid-century offices of Johnson Publishing Company in Chicago, hotel rooms in Lima and Las Vegas, and workspaces in the Time Life Building. There are ceremonial spaces like a banquet hall and temple in China, ornate palace interiors in Vienna, and quieter locations like a trophy room in Chambord, France or an abandoned high school in Ducktown, Tennessee.
Some spaces are designed and polished, others are worn or in transition—but all offer insight into daily life, culture, and identity through architecture, layout, and detail. These photographs don’t aim to document perfection, but rather to observe what spaces hold and leave behind.
This is just a small selection from a larger archive. Reach out to see additional images or discuss specific needs.