Blending art, antiques, and contemporary design, Briggs Solomon defines a language of elevated simplicity

An artist by training, Solomon opened his first store on Melrose Avenue in West Hollywood, establishing a destination where art, furniture, and design converged. Before turning to interiors, he began his career in fashion, designing women’s sportswear in Los Angeles and selling his collection at Fred Segal. There, his disciplined eye for line, proportion, and simplicity first took form; principles that would later define his interiors. That same sense of composition guided a seamless transition from the body to the built environment, from fabric to stone, from garment to space.
Solomon’s work is guided by a belief in quiet luxury—spaces that feel serene, warm, and deeply human without excess or ornament. He favors natural materials—stone, raw woods, linen, plaster, and bronze—layered with subtle precision to create depth and light. His rooms often feel minimal yet soulful, reflecting a reverence for craftsmanship, comfort, and proportion rather than decoration. Every surface and object is considered, every gesture intentional.
Known for his close collaborations with architects and artisans, Solomon ensures a seamless integration between structure and interior, between architecture and atmosphere. His interiors reveal a holistic understanding of form and feeling—spaces that unfold with calm clarity and understated grandeur.
Over more than three decades, Solomon has earned a reputation for his distinctive ability to blend the old and the new, the refined and the raw. His projects are celebrated for their artful restraint and their quiet power—homes and spaces that honor history while speaking confidently to the present. His work has been featured in Architectural Digest, Elle Decor, Galerie, Veranda, and other leading design publications, and his collections and concept stores have become touchstones for collectors and connoisseurs alike.
For Briggs Solomon, the art and the paint, the clothes and the fabrics, were never separate disciplines, only different expressions of the same artistry. Interior design became the natural continuation of a lifelong study in form, texture, and the quiet resonance of beauty. Through his practice, he continues to articulate an aesthetic of refined restraint where luxury whispers, materials speak, and every detail contributes to a singular harmony of proportion and presence.