A Wiltshire village country house filled with paintings and heirlooms

It may be packed with paintings, but this Wiltshire house is far from an austere showcase, with 20th-century pictures, quirky curios and treasured heirlooms giving it a welcoming charm
A Wiltshire village country house filled with paintings and heirlooms
Simon Brown

James collects what he describes as ‘timeless and sophisticated Georgian and Arts and Crafts furniture’, which he likes to mix with lighting and pictures from the past 100 years. In the kitchen, an early 20th-century Heal’s table with ladder-back chairs by Ernest Gimson is placed under a Damien Hirst spot painting. For the dining room, James found six leather chairs by the 20th-century Danish designer Kaare Klint to go with a round Regency rosewood table, which Sarah had inherited. In general, however, explains Sarah, ‘James has worked on the bones of the house and I the flesh, the clutter.’


MAY WE SUGGEST: Frances Palmer's house in Connecticut is built around her many creative passions


They also enlisted the help of the interior designer Camilla Guinness, who was invited to rummage through a cupboard stuffed full of antique textiles and find uses for them round the house. Camilla also brought in some African Kuba cloths to hang in the drawing room, on a wall adjacent to paintings by Edward Burra and Graham Sutherland – an artist who has strongly influenced Sarah’s work. They painted the drawing room walls in ‘Setting Plaster’ by Farrow & Ball, chosen because it is ‘warm, flattering on the complexion and good against strong-coloured pictures’, says Sarah. The other rooms in the house are also painted in soft hues: the dining room in willow green and the upstairs rooms a pale camel. ‘This neutral background makes it easier to move the pictures around,’ explains James. By way of contrast, the television room is painted a bright post-box red.

As I leave, Sarah’s daughter shows me a vitrine full of amber obsidian and smoky quartz. This is a house arranged in a relaxed, unselfconscious way, where there is always something interesting to look at – whatever age you are.

Camilla Guinness Interiors: camilla@camillaguinness.com
Sarah’s work is featured in the recently published book ‘Sarah Graham’ by Ruth Guilding (Ridinghouse, £35)