At Large  January 13, 2026  Trent Morse

The Art of Design: A Rediscovery of Vienna's Interior Style

Courtesy Antonella Amesberger

Suite inspired by modern-dance pioneer Grete Wiesenthal, designed by Antonella Amesberger for Vienna's Alstadt Hotel.

More than a century after they were founded, the Vienna Secession and Wiener Werkstätte movements have shot back into the interior-design limelight. With their geometric patterning, deeply saturated colors, and obsessive focus on craftsmanship, these iconic European styles are being rediscovered by today’s designers putting together spaces that unapologetically traverse genres and eras.

“Born around the start of the 20th century, the Vienna Secession is considered by many to be the first truly modern design movement and the foundation of such popular later styles as Art Deco and Bauhaus,” says Anthony Barzilay Freund, editorial director of the e-commerce platform 1stDibs. “The Wiener Werkstätte’s rich color palette and playful geometries feel both fresh and timely, and Josef Hoffmann’s lighting, in particular, is the perfect bejeweled ornament to finish off any room.”

Current-day designers like Antonella Amesberger, Fabrizio Casiraghi, and JAM are leveraging these historical aesthetics in new ways, proving that while period rooms may belong in museums, elements of the Secession and Werkstätte can energize all sorts of rooms. The movements’ influence has reached trendy boutique hotels and decorator showhouses alike, cementing their global renaissance.

Today’s designers mix the movements’ motifs with Arts and Crafts, midcentury modern, and even Moroccan styles. In London, the Milan-born, Paris-based Casiraghi collaborated with Green River Project to design the bar at the Grand Hotel Bellevue, a space defined by an understated Milanese palette and nods to the Vienna Secession and Swedish Grace, the Nordic version of Art Deco. Casiraghi also placed a Hoffmann pendant and Fledermaus furniture in his own Paris apartment.

Meanwhile, Carmen Haid—a multi-hyphenate designer, curator, and entrepreneur based in Paris, London, and Marrakesh—has revived and morphed Secessionist motifs in her products and interiors. “The Vienna Secession movement has had a profound and enduring influence on my work,” she says. “My connection to this rich design heritage began during summers spent in Austria at my late grandmother’s Atelier Mayer, which she founded in 1927 as part of the Wiener Werkstätte.”

Haid resurrected Atelier Mayer in 2007 as Europe’s first online boutique for luxury vintage fashion. “In 2022, Atelier Mayer was reborn with a new focus, shifting from fashion to vintage objects, furniture, and textiles while maintaining the original ethos of celebrating craftsmanship, heritage, and design,” she explains.

The pieces are sold online and in a Marrakesh showroom “inspired by traditional Moroccan butcher shops, which feature distinctive red-and-white tiled patterns,” Haid says. “Our interpretation uses a black-and-white tiled motif, reflecting the bold, linear graphics characteristic of the Vienna Secession movement, as seen in the works of Josef Hoffmann, Dagobert Peche, and Koloman Moser.” Haid and her Atelier Mayer team have produced ceramic dishes, embroidered pillows, and sofas covered in Wiener Werkstätte-esque stripes. “I worked with an artist who does restorations for the Islamic Museum of Art in Morocco to create special Wiener Werkstätte–inspired patterns for doors and windows,” she adds.

In 2023, Haid collaborated with Moroccan architect Idriss Karnachi to convert an abandoned warehouse into the Mandarin Oriental Marrakech’s M.O. Studio, festooning the building in linear bands inspired by Carl Witzmann, a Viennese Secessionist known for his masterful stagecraft. For the design of a kitchen in London, she looked to the intricately painted repetitions of the most famous Secessionist, Gustav Klimt.

Courtesy Hana Salley-Potisk

Rooms in architect Hana Salley-Potisk's apartment in Vienna.

The Vienna Secession, founded in 1897 by Klimt, Hoffmann, Moser, Joseph Maria Olbrich, Max Kurzweil, and other Austrian innovators, aimed to launch an art epoch that was revolutionary, accessible, and liberated from constraints. These creators’ interests were diverse, combining influences of French Art Nouveau, German Jugendstil, English Arts and Crafts, and Japanese printmaking. What united the avant-garde group was a shared rejection of the conservative tastes of the Austrian art academies. Their new aesthetic celebrated repeating geometric patterns, nature motifs, eroticism, fantasy, and the harmonious integration of art and life in a Gesamtkunstwerk, or total work of art. They sought to merge the fine arts of painting and sculpture with architecture, interior design, furniture, printed matter, fashion, music, drama, and dance. Their manifesto: “To every age its art, to art its freedom.”

The Wiener Werkstätte, established in 1903 by Hoffmann, Moser, and others after the Secessionists split over whether or not they should commercialize, took the Secessionist principles further, emphasizing high-quality craftsmanship and utilitarian beauty. Making everything from furniture and serviceware to textiles and graphic design, these innovators wanted to raise the status of the applied arts. Although the Werkstätte’s ambitious vision led to financial struggles and its eventual closure in 1932, its influence endures.

Nowadays, Klimt’s paintings fetch astronomical sums at auction—five of his canvases have sold for more than $100 million each—while Hoffmann’s furnishings and patternmaker Dagobert Peche’s intricate wallpapers are in high demand. On 1stDibs, searches for Vienna Secession and Wiener Werkstätte designs have risen by 35 percent in the past year, with Wiener Werkstätte alone increasing 55 percent.

Naturally, the integration of such pieces is most evident in the city where they were conceived. AIME Studios’ interiors of the Hoxton Hotel in Vienna, for instance, marry Wiener Werkstätte influences with Carl Appel’s sleek midcentury furniture. For Vienna-based architect and interior designer Hana Salley-Potisk, moving home after a stint in London meant diving headfirst into the legacy of the Vienna Secession and Wiener Werkstätte. “The principles of prioritizing quality over quantity and emphasizing craftsmanship are fundamental to my design approach,” she says. “I find particular inspiration in the Wiener Werkstätte. The movement breathed personality and vibrancy into simplified geometric forms.”

Her own apartment in a 19th-century building, recently featured in Architectural Digest, exemplifies her approach: a minimalist gray kitchen contrasts with patterned wallpaper and wardrobes in the bedroom. “I also incorporated classic bentwood furniture as a subtle nod to Thonet and to Josef Hoffmann’s designs from that era,” she says.

Salley-Potisk emphasizes the role of women, including Jutta Sika and Therese Trethan, in the Wiener Werkstätte. Architect Antonella Amesberger, likewise, found inspiration in Wiener Werkstätte women when devising a one-of-a-kind suite for Vienna’s Altstadt hotel. The room is dedicated to modern-dance pioneer Grete Wiesenthal, who wore Wiener Werkstätte costumes in performances. Amesberger incorporated line drawings of Wiesenthal’s movements, hand-printed on textiles for the curtains and upholstery. “Grete continues to dance on the fabrics through the suite dedicated to her,” she says.

In the United States, the Vienna Secession has similarly captivated interior designers producing style-traversing spaces. At the Brooklyn Heights Designer Showhouse last fall, Joe McGuier and Megan Prime, co-principals of the firm JAM, designed the Midnight Study, combining Vienna Secessionist, Arts and Crafts, and contemporary forms. “We loved working with the original Wiener Werkstätte wallpaper by Dagobert Peche,” says McGuier. “The botanical print and the warm colors were the perfect jumping-off point to design the rest of the room.”

Elsewhere in the showhouse, Lynn Kloythanomsup, of Landed Interiors, installed a Vienna Secession pendant light attributed to Hoffmann in a bedroom evoking a bucolic drive through the English Cotswolds. Even Queer Eye star Jeremiah Brent has embraced the style. “The works of art that changed everything for me were part of the Vienna Secession — the height of luxury, innovation, and creativity,” he mused in a recent interview with the Financial Times. “There’s a hint of something unexpected in every piece.” He admires the Secession era so much that he held his book launch for The Space That Keeps You at New York City’s Neue Galerie, a museum specializing in early-20th-century Austrian and German art and design.

Given Brent’s high profile, his vocal embrace could signal that Vienna Secession and Wiener Werkstätte designs will increasingly trickle into the mainstream. After all, it happened with Art Deco, Arts and Crafts, and Art Nouveau in the last decade. Perhaps now is the time for these Viennese visions to lunge out of the past and into our 21st-century homes.

*This article originally appeared in Art & Object Magazine's Spring 2025 issue

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