Syrie Maugham (née Gwendoline Maud Syrie Barnardo,
10 July 1879 -
25 July 1955) was a leading British interior decorator of the 1920s and 1930s and best-known for popularizing rooms decorated entirely in shades of white.
Birth
She was born in
Hackney,
England, a daughter of
Thomas John Barnardo, the founder of the
Barnardo's charity for
destitute children, and his wife, the former Sarah Louise "Syrie" Elmslie.
Career
In a career that lasted from 1922 until her death, Syrie Maugham became a legendary interior designer credited for designing the first all-white room. She established her own interior decorating business, Syrie LTD., at 85 Baker Street, London in 1922, and as her reputation grew, so did her business. She later opened shops in New York and Chicago, and designed homes in
Palm Springs and cities all over America.
Syrie was born during the
Victorian Era, a time characterized by dark colors and small spaces. Syrie rejected these norms to create rooms filled with light and furnished in multiple shades of white and mirrored screens. In addition to mirrored screens, her trademark pieces included: books covered in white vellum, cutlery with white porcelain handles, console tables with plaster palm-frond, shell, or dolphin bases, upholstered and fringed sleigh beds, fur carpets, dining chairs covered in white leather, and lamps of graduated glass balls. Maugham also started the trend of stripping and repainting French provincial antiques with a secret craquelure technique. This technique remains a popular treatment seen in many modern interior designs.
Although it cannot be said that Syrie was the first interior designer, she did bring more freedom and creativity to the design profession. Elsie de Wolfe was quite formal, correct, and respectful, but Syrie drew from a various mixture of sources ranging from Picasso to baroque antiques. She reinvented classic furniture with crackled paint applications. She used strange colors. And she did the first all-white room.
She is most well known for the music room at her house at 213 King's Road in London and the salon at her villa at
Le Touquet, a society resort in
France. The music room was actually the only room designed in all white, but many other rooms were primarily white with accents of color in the draperies or pillows. The salon was decorated entirely in shades of beige, relieved only by pale pink satin curtains. Although she made her fortune and fame with her white decors, by the mid 1930s she had largely given up the white decors to create interiors with baroque accessories and color schemes punctuated by bright green, shocking pink, and bold reds.
Cecil Beaton remembered leaf-emerald wallpaper, magenta cushions, and Schiaparelli pink.
Her contemporaries included
Elsie de Wolfe and Lady
Sybil Colefax. Her clients included
Wallis Simpson, the
Prince of Wales, the actress
Marie Tempest, the Texas politician
Oveta Culp Hobby, the
Reader's Digest founder
DeWitt Wallace, the couturier
Elsa Schiaparelli and Capt.
Edward Molyneux, art patron
Edward James, American socialites such as
Mona Williams,
Babe Paley, and
Bunny Mellon, the playwright
Clare Booth Luce, and British socialites such as
Margaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll and the Hon.
Stephen Tennant.
Marriage to Henry Wellcome
In 1901, on a visit to
Khartoum with her father, she met
Henry Wellcome, an American-born British industrialist who had made his fortune in
pharmaceuticals (his firm became
Burroughs Wellcome). She was 22 and he was 48, and they married soon after. In 1903 they had a son, Henry Mounteney Wellcome, who apparently had a learning disability that kept him apart from his family for most of his childhood and youth.
The Wellcomes' marriage was not happy, and Syrie reportedly had numerous affairs, including with the department store magnate
Harry Gordon Selfridge, Brig. Gen.
Percy Desmond Fitzgerald, and the novelist
William Somerset Maugham. Eventually, after some years of separation, she became pregnant with Maugham's only child,
Mary Elizabeth, who was known as Liza. When the child was born in
Rome,
Italy, she was given Wellcome's surname. Wellcome then publicly sued for divorce, naming Maugham as co-respondent.
Marriage to W. Somerset Maugham
Syrie Wellcome and W. Somerset Maugham married in 1917 in
New Jersey, although he was predominantly
homosexual and would spend much of his marriage apart from his wife. They divorced in 1928. Her divorce settlement from Maugham was their house at 213
King's Road, fully furnished, a
Rolls-Royce, and 2,400 pounds a year for her and 600 pounds a year for Liza.
In his 1962 memoir
Looking Back Maugham virulently criticised his former wife, which caused a public outcry. After Maugham's death in 1965
Beverley Nichols, a former lover of Maugham's and a close friend of Syrie's, wrote in rebuttal a defence of her called
A Case of Human Bondage (1966).