2H | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 2, 2003
 

THE HERALD  


DESIGN

PROFILES IN DESIGN

Terrence Tullgren goes where life takes him

 


In his circuitous career, designer travels the world before settling in Miami where his exotic custom-made beds have become a sensation.

NOT A FANTASY: Bed designed by Terrence Tullgren is softly lit; the metal is gold-and-platinum-toned, and the headboard and finials are decorated with rose quartz.

 

   
BY DAISY OLIVERA
dolivera@herald.com


      Terrence Tullgren has traveled a circuitous road to reach his interior design career. His clients, like his on-a-whim life decisions, have taken him all over the world. From designing apartments in Argentina to decorating 18 condos in the Majestic on Miami Beach to jeweled beds – he takes everything in stride.
      In a 30-year career, he has worked in the garment industry, founded a jewelry company with exercise guru Richard Simmons, acted in commercials and feature films in Brazil, designed movie sets and been a gem dealer before finally settling into interior design 13 years ago. “If you are a true designer you can design everything,” he says.
      After getting a degree in marketing, he attended the Instituto Tecnologico de Monterry in Mexico to study Spanish. His teen years were spent attending different schools in Europe, an experience he thinks may have fueled his wanderlust.
      From Mexico, he moved to Los Angeles to be with his sister. “Before I knew it I had a job as west coast manager of Esprit, a popular women’s sportswear firm,” he said. “The trend in clothes was pastel colors and I got the idea to do pink and blue cloisonné jewelry to tie the pastels together.”

“I WAS MESMERIZED”
      Enter Richard Simmons. Tullgren and Simmons had been in an acting class together at Florida State University and met up again in Los Angeles. “He did the designing, I did the marketing,” Tullgren said. “After a while that didn’t work so we parted ways and I started designing the jewelry myself.” The geometric pins were hot sellers under the name, Simpatico.
      By that time, his sister had moved to Switzerland so Tullgren, once again restless, followed, But he had always wanted to act in films. “I heard that Brazil was the third-largest film producing country so I moved there,” he says matter-of-factly. “I started doing commercials, then acted in films.”
      While in Brazil, he visited one of the many gem mines there. “I have always been very spiritual and because of the connection with energy and crystals I went to see the mines,” Tullgren said. “I was mesmerized so I started buying the natural specimens of tourmaline. They were huge, one to two feet wide in their natural state.”

DIFFERENT STYLES: Tullgren's beds are crafted using wither metal or upholstery, as in this example.

“NATURALLY…”
      Back in Los Angeles, Mimi London, one of the era’s top decorators, was immediately interested. “Those huge stones were being bought left and right to be put on a table, you name it,” Tullgren said. He began selling polished gems and the seed was planted. “I started thinking I could incorporate them into décor somehow,” he said.
      Fate stepped in again after Tullgren moved to Florida. Friends in the furniture business needed his fluent Spanish to translate instructions to their furniture maker in Hialeah. Before long, Tullgren was designing furniture for their firm, Continental Classics. “Naturally, that led to my being hired to do interiors, and I opened my own firm in 1990,” he said.
      The concept of using jewels in bed design came to him two years ago. “I wanted to incorporate spirituality in my work,” he said. “Each stone has its own energy property and I custom design the beds for the person’s needs, either their attraction to the beauty of the stone or the energy they wish to attract.”
      The Art Nouveau Fantasy beds are handmade of metal. A more contemporary style is upholstered. On the metal beds, the semiprecious stones – lapis, amethyst, rose quartz – are softly lit from behind. For the button-tufted upholstered headboards, the polished stones are button-shaped and incorporated into the tufting, which comes in 50 colors of silk shantung.
      The metal bed was on display in the window at Andrea’s Las Olas Linens and Bath, a high-end bed linen store in Fort Lauderdale.

WELL-RECEIVED
      “It was extraordinary and ornate. We’d never seen anything like it, and we had many inquires, but it was very expensive,” said Beverly Barnett, the store’s general manager, The $20,000 bed was sold to a client of Tullgren’s in Los Angeles.
      Then he came out with the upholstered version, Barnett said. “It’s more affordable and it’s been very popular because of the many fabrics and semi-precious stone choices. We sold maybe five in less than a year,” she said.
      Tullgren’s next project is two interior design television shows that are in development. “You have to go where life takes you,” he says.

ABOUT
TERRENCE TULLGREN

• Company: Terrence N. Tullgren Enterprises, 7933 West Drive Suite 818, Miami Beach, FL 33141
786-223-0902
tntinteriordesignfirm.com
www.jeweledfurniture.com
guidetohomedecorating.com
• Personal: born in Missouri, grew up in Chicago, Lighthouse Point and Europe.
• Education: Florida State University degree in marketing, Instituto Tecnologico de Monterrey in Mexico, major in Spanish. Attended schools in Italy, Greece, London, Paris, Rome, Austria.
• Design philosophy: “Each person has his own sense of design. My mission is to manifest that. I want them to follow their intuition, I help direct their feelings.”
• Inspired by: A teacher in Europe. “She opened my eyes to design and she was a jewelry fanatic – had a tremendous impact on me. Also by my friend, French actress Yvette Mimieux. We met when we were very young, then years later we would hop on her jet and go to Paris. She is a master at creating exotic interiors.”