Mark Hampton (born Mark Iredell Hampton Jr., June 1, 1940 – July 23, 1998) was an American interior designer, writer, and illustrator, known primarily for his residential interior design work for clients such as Brooke Astor, Estee Lauder, Mike Wallace, Saul Steinberg, H. John Heinz III, and Lincoln Kirstein, as well as for three U.S. presidents. In 1986, he was inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame,[1] and in 2010, Architectural Digest named him one of the world's top 20 designers of all time.[2]
Early life and education
Mark Hampton was born in Indianapolis and raised in Plainfield, Indiana by his parents, Mark Hampton Sr. and Alice (née Burkert) Hampton.[3] As a child, he spent time with Paul Hadley, a former instructor at the Herron School of Art and Design, and the designer of the Indiana State Flag.[4] Hampton showed early inclinations toward an artistic life, and by the time he was twelve years old, considered himself to be a designer.[5] He credited his success to making an early career choice. His early influences were interior designer Billy Baldwin, and architects Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Phillip Johnson.[6]
While in England in 1961, Hampton met interior designer David Hicks, who became a mentor and longtime friend.[7] Hampton worked part-time, while at NYU, for the interior designer Sister Parish, and then for several years managed Hicks's New York office. From 1969–75, he worked for the interior design firm McMillen, Inc., headed at the time by Eleanor McMillen Brown.[7][8] He opened his own firm, Mark Hampton LLC, in 1976,[3] and during the course of his career, designed the interiors of numerous residences, offices, hotels, private clubs, railroad cars, airplanes, and boats.[1]
In addition to interior design commissions, Hampton licensed his designs in fabrics, trimmings, and furniture. He produced fabric designs for Kravet and a line of fabric trimmings for Scalamandre.[10] In 1988 Hampton began designing a line of furniture for the Hickory Chair company, which produced 250 reproduction furniture styles designed by Hampton at the time of his death.[14] The brand continued its partnership with Mark Hampton, LLC until 2018.[15]
Hampton was uninterested in being known for a personal style,[16][17] however his style has been described as "tailored and classical."[18] As his career progressed, his style evolved from modern and minimalist to a more traditional aesthetic.[19] Hampton considered himself an Anglophile,[20] and was best known for British decor at the height of his career, with an affinity for "English country house colors, Oriental rugs, floral chintzes, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century antiques, both English and American, and botanical and architectural prints."[16]
Hampton has been called "the Cary Grant of design...an urbane and articulate man, and impeccably dressed."[21] In 1991 he was listed on the International Best Dressed List. Hampton was socially gifted and a thoughtful friend who created watercolor sketches for those he cared about.[22] His watercolor of the White House Green Room was featured on President Reagan's and the First Lady's holiday greeting card in 1983.[23]
Hampton believed that "interior decoration is not just about buying things, but helping people with how to use things of beauty."[23] He preferred to work with clients who had their own collections and personal tastes, bringing them into the design, rather than imposing his specific designs on a space. Hampton said that "a room should look great and reflect the owner at the same time. An ideal room walks off with the people."[24]
Bibliography
Books by Mark Hampton
Mark Hampton. Mark Hampton on decorating (New York: Random House, 1989).[25]
Mark Hampton. Legendary decorators of the twentieth century (New York: Doubleday, 1992).[26]
Albert Hadley, Mark Hampton (contributor). Albert Hadley: drawings and the drawing process (New York: New York School of Interior Design, 2004).[27]
Books about Mark Hampton
Duane Hampton. Mark Hampton: the art of friendship (New York: Cliff Street Books, 2001).[28][29]
Duane Hampton. Mark Hampton: an American decorator (New York: Rizzoli, 2010).[30][31]
^Hampton, Mark (1992). Legendary Decorators of the Twentieth Century. New York: Doubleday. ISBN9780385263610.
^Hadley, Albert; Hampton, Mark; Buatta, Mario (2004). Albert Hadley: Drawings and the Design Process. New York: New York School of Interior Design: Elements of Living. ISBN9780976157809.