
Luxury is More Than MoneyβItβs a Mindset
LβWren Scott once said, "Luxury is a state of mind." That resonates with me because I donβt believe luxury is just about wealthβitβs about how you choose to curate your space, your lifestyle, and your surroundings.
Yes, at the highest level, luxury means private jets, limos, and yachts, but for most people, true luxury is about intention. Itβs about taking pride in what you own, investing in high-quality, meaningful pieces, and creating an atmosphere that feels unique to you.
I recently watched Rich BFF, and she said something that clicked: "Proximity changes your access." She met her husband because she worked in financeβshe was in a space where people of a certain financial caliber existed. That made me think: luxury is often about the environment you create for yourself. The same goes for interior design.
Your home should reflect your aspirations, your energy, and your identity. Whether you have a million-dollar penthouse or a well-curated apartment, luxury is about making intentional choices.
The Art of Curation: Choosing Pieces That Command Attention
Luxury isnβt about buying what everyone else hasβitβs about finding something unique that speaks to you.
Think about itβhow many times have you walked into a home and immediately recognized a piece from Wayfair, Target, or even Costco? Thatβs not luxury. Thatβs mass production. Luxury art collectors and high-end buyers crave exclusivity.
Clint Eastwood said it best:
"Luxury is what money can't buy⦠luxury is being respected, luxury is having something that is irreplaceable."
Thatβs exactly how I see art. A statement piece should be irreplaceable, something that stops people in their tracks and makes them ask, "Where did you get that?"
I never follow strict rules when curating a space. I follow intuition. I create bold, unapologetic artwork that breaks traditional norms and challenges perspectives. My pieces arenβt for everyone, and thatβs intentional.
Layering Textures, Colors & Styles for a Cohesive Luxury Look
One of the biggest interior design mistakes I see is when people try too hard to match everything. Luxury homes donβt play it safeβthey mix textures, styles, and eras.
I personally love the blend of traditional and modern design. Why? Because thatβs how all great styles evolve. Classic luxury and contemporary edge can coexist beautifully when done right.
My signature color palette? Black, red, and white.
- Red symbolizes power, passion, and boldness.
- Black exudes sophistication and luxury.
- White adds contrast and balance.
Charles Kingsley once said:
"We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us really happy is something to be enthusiastic about."
Thatβs exactly why I create artβIβm passionate about it, and I want collectors to feel that same enthusiasm when they bring a piece into their home.
Material matters too. I gravitate toward aluminum metal prints because they enhance color, intensify detail, and create a high-gloss, high-impact look that canvas just canβt match.
Oversized Art: Why Bigger is Always Bolder
One of the biggest mistakes people make with luxury interior design is choosing art thatβs too small for their space.
I used to rush my furniture decisionsβbuying things I didnβt love, settling for what was convenient. But when I started taking my time, scouting for the right pieces, and investing in statement decor, my home transformed.
Thatβs why I always recommend oversized artworkβspecifically 24x36 metal prints.
Why? Because small art gets swallowed by big walls. A bold, oversized piece instantly elevates a space and commands attention.
When you walk into a high-end home featured in Architectural Digest, what do you see? Statement art. Large-scale pieces. Artwork that takes over the room.
Thatβs the difference between a curated luxury space and a generic home.
Lighting & Placement: The Final Touch
If youβre investing in high-end artwork, donβt ruin it with bad lighting.
I always recommend museum-style lightingβsoft, directional, and intentional. You donβt need to spend a fortuneβsites like Wayfair, TEMU, and Amazon have luxury-style lighting for a fraction of the cost.
The #1 mistake people make? Poor placement.
- A sensual, provocative piece? It belongs in the bedroom or hallwayβnot your living room where guests and children might not understand it.
- A bold, abstract piece? Make sure it complements the textures and tones in your space.
- A traditional country-style home with futuristic artwork? If styled incorrectly, itβll feel chaotic rather than intentional.
Luxury is about cohesion. The right art in the right place creates a seamless, high-end feel.
Final Thoughts: Living in Your Own Luxury
I donβt create art just to sellβitβs personal. Every time I hang one of my pieces in my own home, I feel something. I see it change the space. I feel the energy shift.
Luxury isnβt about moneyβitβs about how your space makes you feel.
When you invest in a statement pieceβwhether itβs furniture, art, or lightingβyouβre making a declaration:
"This is me. This is my space. This is my style."
And that? Thatβs real luxury.
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