William T. Georgis Transforms a Miami Manse Using Collectible Design and Exuberant Art
Tasked by longtime clients with a speedy redo of a waterfront residence, the architect and designer delivers elevated, artful rooms infused with a spirited vibe
It takes a nimble design imagination to pull off a family-home makeover that melds the Latin verve of Miami, mambo, and the lush gardens of Roberto Burle Marx with impeccable craftsmanship and ultrarefined materials, not to mention a selection of wryly subversive art. For architect and designer William T. Georgis, a virtuoso at integrating the offbeat and the elevated into unforgettable interiors, bringing all of those elements together “in a heady soup,” as he puts it, was right in his wheelhouse.
During the height of the COVID pandemic, longtime New York–based clients of his joined the rush to Florida and bought a house in Miami Beach overlooking Biscayne Bay. The tropical modern–style residence had plenty of bedrooms and ample living spaces for the couple and their kids to spread out and, if they desired, entertain guests. Eager to move in quickly, they opted to leave the upstairs bedrooms as they were and have Georgis & Mirgorodsky, the firm Georgis heads with his partner, Ilya Mirgorodsky, focus on upgrading the ground floor.
Over the past two decades, Georgis has completed several projects for the clients and most have been intensive, some requiring years to finish. That deep engagement and the familiarity that comes with it was a major asset in this case. “There’s a shorthand when you’ve been working together for so long,” says Georgis, explaining that his directive was, essentially, “You know what to do—just do it.”
Georgis definitely knows how to make an impression, and he didn’t waste any time here. Just beyond the front door, a shallow entryway opens into a sprawling living room that is arrayed with a rhythmic composition of distinctive vintage and custom furnishings that seem to float across an expanse of carpet in radiant blues. “It’s kind of a nod to David Hockney’s paintings of swimming pools,” says Georgis, who worked in tandem with Mirgorodsky and Carly Frey, one of the firm’s interior designers, on the project.
Curvy, organic shapes and plush fabrics abound, from Pierre Paulin foam club chairs covered in daffodil-yellow alpaca to Giovanni Travasa rattan seats from the 1960s upholstered in furry, off-white shearling. Elegant brass, wood, and leather details enliven a variety of tables, highlighted by Jean Arriau nesting tables topped with lapis stone and one of Marcin Rusak’s poetic tables inset with flowers encased in milky resin.
But the living room’s indisputable star and visual anchor is the Double Double Yentl (My Elvis) by Deborah Kass. In this ingenious send-up of Andy Warhol’s Pop Art classic, the artist replaces Elvis with Barbra Streisand posing as a young male Talmudic scholar in the 1983 movie Yentl. “I just love Deb Kass’s chutzpah,” says Georgis of the work, which presides over one end of the space. “The idea of Barbra Streisand and Yentl in Miami with a kind of tropical Latin backbeat makes me very happy.”
The clients have a notable collection of feminist art, and Kass’s work, which often lampoons the white-male-dominated version of art history, plays a defining role throughout the house. In the dining room, one of her text paintings features a quote by artist Louise Bourgeois—“A woman has no place as an artist unless she proves over and over again she won’t be eliminated”—in a spiral of multihued lettering. The work adds a playful spikiness to the space, where Georgis designed the table with an exquisite top of woven handmade paper between layers of glass, surrounding it with classic modern Warren Platner wire chairs and installing a twisting John Procario Freeform light sculpture above.
Georgis did his most significant architectural work in the reconfigured kitchen, installing bespoke cabinets, some with laminated woven-fabric fronts, and Lapitec counters in pure white. He also created a chic breakfast area, where a leafy midcentury Barovier & Toso chandelier cascades down over a groovy Emmanuel Babled table and Eero Saarinen Tulip chairs.
“The style is brassy and brash, very Miami. It seems real, like it belongs there”
William T. Georgis
The home’s main hangout spaces include a family room outfitted with a comfy, TV-watching sofa by Todd Merrill Studio and generously scaled, alpaca-clad loungers that swivel. An organically shaped Hugo França cocktail table sculpted from the trunk of a Brazilian pequi tree and a rug with a tropical-green coffee bean pattern help the room feel “very Caracas, Havana, Miami,” says Georgis.
There’s also an exuberantly stylish game room, highlighted by a custom carpet whose swirling fantasia of colorful biomorphic patterns was inspired by the gardens of the late Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx. As it was intended as a space for the whole family, Georgis designed kid-friendly elements such as a pair of panda lounge chairs in cushy shearling of dark brown and taupe. For the grown-ups, he created a glamorous corner drinks area, all trimmed in bronze and lined with crackled bronze-colored mirror, while a 1950s Stilnovo Sputnik chandelier radiates above a freestanding bamboo-wrapped bar. “The style is brassy and brash, very Miami,” says Georgis. “It seems real, like it belongs there.”
Deborah Kass makes an appearance here, too, with a text painting that spells out “enough already” in candy-colored script. You might say the canvas also resonates with the project’s relatively modest scope. Georgis had only the ground floor to work with, but in terms of making a rollicking yet refined design statement, it was, well, more than enough.
A version of this article first appeared in print in our 2024 Fall Issue under the headline “Double Time.” Subscribe to the magazine.