17 ways to hang art salon-style
A young girl’s desk is surrounded by art. More photos and full story here.
(Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)Hanging art salon-style can be a dramatic -- and brave -- way to decorate a wall. Here, we share a range of styles that use mismatched frames, unusual dimensions and seemingly haphazard artworks to interesting effect. Have a fun installation to share? Send a photo to [email protected].
A double height portrait wall in the Mid-Wilshire home of Andy and Johanna McElfresh.
(Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
Andy and Johanna McElfresh’s Mid-Wilshire living room features a wide assortment of art, many of them inexpensive paintings found at flea markets. Full house tour here.
(Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
Fifteen Gray Malin photographs hang over a sectional sofa in his West Hollywood Home. The curtains are from Pottery Barn, the table from West Elm and a fiddle leaf fig tree from Mickey Hargitay Plants. Tour Gray Malin’s house here.
(Christina House / For The Times)Advertisement
Before Obie-winning puppeteer, filmmaker and actor Paul Zaloom moved from this guesthouse in West Hollywood, we shared the way he displayed his collecting obsession and infectious wit. The centerpiece of the room is a striking 1960s earthworm chart credited to Jung-Koch-Quentell.” (Stefano Paltera / For the Times)
Even Paul Zaloom’s bathroom was decorated with art. (Stefano Paltera / For the Times)
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Roger Gastman painted one wall of his home office red to create a dramatic backdrop. “I think about the framing, the color and the pattern of the pieces,” he said of the installation. Most of the works are punk rock fliers, fanzine pages, album covers and framed letters. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Onna Ehrlich Bell and husband Joel Bell’s Rudolph Schindler house in Inglewood has a wall of pictures that suits the young family. (Katie Falkenberg / For The Times)
Jackie Terrell likes to find a throughline that connects photos: “They’re mostly all black and white, and the frames are identical, which neatens it up,” she said. “You have to keep it tidy in some way or else it looks messy.” The subject matter also is consistent. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
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The thrift-shop landscapes and paint-by-number that fill the wall cost about $350 total. Decorator Tamara Kaye-Honey found the sconces at a Pasadena antique mall. The low-slung seating pictured here originally had a floral fabric and was re-covered in hides. (Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)