{"id":113575,"date":"2015-09-29T17:26:11","date_gmt":"2015-09-29T17:26:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/inside-gensler-creative-director-john-bricker-s-west-village-apartment\/"},"modified":"2022-12-05T16:20:13","modified_gmt":"2022-12-05T21:20:13","slug":"inside-gensler-creative-director-john-bricker-s-west-village-apartment","status":"publish","type":"id_project","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/inside-gensler-creative-director-john-bricker-s-west-village-apartment\/","title":{"rendered":"Inside Gensler Creative Director John Bricker’s West Village Apartment"},"content":{"rendered":"
John Bricker<\/a>’s apartment is designed according to the most rock-solid principle there is. “Any good interior should express the person behind it,” Bricker says. That’s not an abstract idea for him, as a Gensler <\/a> creative director and principal who specializes in retail projects.<\/p>\n He has filled his West Village one-bedroom with family heirlooms, travel souvenirs, artwork, and books that speak to him. And speak volumes. As he puts it, “This place expresses my point of view.”<\/p>\n Never cluttered, the result is nevertheless brimming with personality. “It’s an evolving story of places I’ve been and experiences I’ve had,” he says. Evidence of trips to India, Japan, Costa Rica, and Brazil abounds. On the art front, he has collected everything from a beaux arts figure drawing to large contemporary paintings of dogs and a photographic portrait of a drag queen that once appeared in a Gap ad. Furniture that appeals to him runs the gamut from a sideboard made for a Victorian kitchen to the 1980’s glam of John Hutton<\/a>’s klismos chairs.<\/p>\n