Peter Mikic Revives a Côte d’Azur Estate Once Home to Brigitte Bardot

The designer contrasts the villa’s classic Mediterranean façade with an interior bursting with bold color, dynamic details, and edgy art

Pathway lined with tall cypress trees leading to a charming villa with a bright blue sky in the background.
A water feature channels through the middle of a cypress-lined path leading to a villa that designer Peter Mikic created for a client in Saint-Tropez, France. He worked with local architect James Johanny-Beaupère on the residence, which sits on a property previously owned by actress Brigitte Bardot.

First impressions can be deceiving, especially when designer Peter Mikic is in the control room. The Australian-born, London-based talent, heralded for his exuberant take on contemporary glamour, recently completed a design for a new villa in the foothills of Saint-Tropez, France, that’s chock-full of surprises. The property even has a notable pedigree: It was once owned by Brigitte Bardot, the goddess of French film who made her home in this sybaritic Mediterranean village for more than six decades before her death in December.

Based on its sunflower-yellow plaster exterior, terra-cotta tile roof, and pale-blue shutters that appear faded from years in the sun (but are in fact painted a Farrow & Ball shade called Light Blue No. 22), the traditional-looking residence evokes the timeless, relaxed pleasures of the Côte d’Azur. The interiors, however, tell a more intriguing, more rigorously refined story. It’s un art total, or total work of art, informed by such modernist gems as Piero Portaluppi’s Villa Necchi Campiglio in Milan as well as the homeowner’s dazzling collection of midcentury furniture.

Man in light blue shirt and white pants sitting on stone wall in a lush garden with tall trees in the background.
Peter Mikic.
Luxurious living room with green sofas, gold chandelier, abstract painting, and large windows with brown curtains.
The salon is arrayed with vintage furnishings, including floor lamps and sconces by Max Ingrand for FontanaArte on either side of a Dana Schutz painting, a Carlo Scarpa Venini chandelier, and a mirrored Gabriella Crespi cocktail table. Mikic picked up the green of the Vincenzo De Cotiis sofas in his design for the custom rug.

“He wasn’t looking for loungy TV rooms—he likes to entertain. He’s sporty and adventurous,” Mikic says of his client, an art-collecting businessman for whom he has designed other homes in addition to a restaurant-cum–members club in London. “He wanted it to be smart.”

He’s definitely not afraid of color. He wanted to venture out and push the boundary a little”

Peter Mikic

This is a home conceived with bold ideas. The entry features a helical staircase of Mikic’s design, carved from massive blocks of limestone. Unfurling like a seashell, it rises above strikingly patterned marble flooring that resembles strands of lozenge-shaped jade interwoven with the same heavily veined Breccia Pontificia marble that frames the doorways to the salon and the study on either side. The doors themselves are chic custom creations in glass and brass derived from a window that Mikic and his client saw on a field trip to Milan.

Modern interior with spiral staircase, marble columns, colorful patterned floor, and balcony railing.
For the entry, Mikic devised a spiraling limestone staircase and a geometric-pattern floor.

The designer originally planned for white walls in the salon, but because the space was so big—just under 1,000 square feet—“it felt cold,” he recalls. He opted instead for light-mustard plaster that casts a warm glow beneath a plaster ceiling whose circle-in-square pattern echoes the entry’s geometric flooring.

Mikic chose soft fabrics in monochrome such as mohair and velvet to allow the eye to focus on the owner’s midcentury treasures. Here, armchairs by Paul Dupré-Lafon and Joaquim Tenreiro join more recently conceived sofas by Vincenzo De Cotiis around a sculptural Gabriella Crespi brass cocktail table, with a gleaming Venini amber-glass chandelier by Carlo Scarpa suspended above. Paintings by Dana Schutz and Tracey Emin on the surrounding walls add contemporary punch. “We wanted a harmonious room that felt cozy when you walked in,” he says.

Luxurious interior with modern art, piano, and elegant decor in a spacious room with a checkered floor leading to another area.
Set against the salon’s walls of custom-colored plaster, a painting by Tracey Emin overlooks a glass table ringed with vintage Jean Royère chairs and a Hurvin Anderson work hangs next to the Yamaha piano. Mikic designed the parquet floors and the brass-and-fluted-glass doors that open to create an enfilade with views into the study opposite.

A former menswear designer, he launched his interiors firm, Peter Mikic Studio, in 2006, and his joy—and skill—in deploying color is evident. He splashed the oak-paneled study with red, the homeowner’s favorite color. Floor-to-ceiling ruby velvet curtains complement bespoke silk rugs in a matching shade, while a Jean Royère iron chandelier painted in a fiery hue hangs above an assortment of stylishly mismatched vintage pieces, including Royère seating and a Jacques Adnet desk. Radiant abstract artworks by Beatriz Milhazes and Damien Hirst punctuate the walls.

Modern bedroom with yellow and white decor, large bed, armchair, wooden wardrobe, and window view of garden.
For a sunny pool house bedroom, Mikic devised the oak closets and vanity with brass details, as well as the vanity chair; the velvet-upholstered bed, dressed in Peter Reed linens; the leather-clad nightstands topped with midcentury Italian lamps; and the rug.

Effervescent hues infuse other rooms, too, including bedrooms in citron, tangerine, crimson, and bronze. “He’s definitely not afraid of color,” Mikic explains. “He wanted to venture out and push the boundary a little.”

Outdoor lounge with a modern turquoise sofa, red tables, and a bar in a covered patio area with colorful decor.
A swirling sculpture by Lynda Benglis. Shaded by a canopy lined in iroko wood, the pool house lounge features a bar in Jadore quartzite and is furnished with a de Sede sofa and Kettal tables.
Modern kitchen view through open glass doors with wooden cabinets and green countertop, adjacent to a colorful dining table.
In the outdoor kitchen, an Achille Salvagni chandelier hangs above bespoke cabinetry in brass, teak, and lava stone. Mikic designed the dining tables with lava stone tops and paired them with Richard Schultz chairs for Knoll.

Venturing out, by the way, is exactly what one must do to find the kitchen. A plein air affair at the request of his client, the kitchen is sheltered by a roof and glass doors that can be closed but are typically flung wide open to the surrounding dining terrace. Lined in teak and brass, the kitchen resembles a yacht, a Mikic specialty, as he has designed several. “We all thought it was crazy,” Mikic recalls, “but in the end, to be outside making your coffee is a pleasure, and it changes the entire mood of a dinner when it’s all outside.”

Abstract metallic sculpture surrounded by lush greenery and colorful flowers in an outdoor garden setting.
A swirling sculpture by Lynda Benglis.
Sculpture in a reflective pool with tall trees and a villa in the background under a clear blue sky.
An Antony Gormley figure is poised at the edge of a reflecting pool.

Past the outdoor dining room, the pool house bar, and the vast pool lined with Bisazza glass mosaic tiles, more pleasures can be found in the garden, which is populated with not only cypress, olive, and palm trees but also an array of arresting sculptures, which the owner collects as passionately as he does iconic furniture designs. A life-size iron body form by Antony Gormley overlooks a reflecting pool, while one of Annie Morris’s sculptures of colorful stacked orbs blooms from a garden bed. Other works—by Isamu Noguchi, Lynda Benglis, Mathieu Lehanneur, and Robert Indiana—are just as thoughtfully placed.

Colorful geometric sculpture in a garden landscape with trees and a cloudy sky in the background.
A two-tone sculpture by Robert Indiana.
Colorful stacked rock sculpture in a garden with trees and plants in the background under a blue sky.
One of Annie Morris’s “Stack” sculptures rises from lush plantings.

“It’s all about discovery and allowing his guests to find these treasures in the garden,” Mikic muses. “The whole property is very interactive. It’s spacious but contained. It feels easy. Designing from scratch enabled us to see exactly how it could all work together.” The results are deceptively easy with a mastermind like Mikic at the helm.

Luxurious villa with a spacious pool, surrounded by patio chairs and lush landscaping under a clear blue sky.
Custom-designed umbrellas shade Richard Schultz chairs and tables for Knoll beside the pool lined with Bisazza glass mosaic tiles.

A version of this article first appeared in print in our 2026 Summer Issue under the headline “History Play.” Subscribe to the magazine.