
It also didn’t exist in real life: the house was built with rendering software, and its design was entirely speculative.

The residence, Villa Saraceni, was the work of designers Riccardo Fornoni and Charlotte Taylor. Furniture by Gerd Lange for Bofinger and Le Corbusier sat invitingly by an ocean-fed pool inside, Picasso ceramics were arranged artfully around a minimalist seating area, and bathed in early-afternoon light. The building appeared to be sculpted from cream-colored adobe, and its rounded, uncovered windows and doors looked out over a peaceful aquamarine sea. Last spring, several months into the pandemic, a series of images appeared on Instagram, depicting a luxury home nestled into the cliffs of the Scala dei Turchi, on the coast of Italy. Space design and rendering by Nareg Taimoorian and Charlotte Taylor

The 3-D-modelling software used to design digital interiors lends itself to certain elements, such as plastics, curves, and soft light.
