The Curation of the Unseen: Why the Private Bedroom Is the Ultimate Indicator of Taste
Interior design magazines adore living rooms because living rooms cooperate. They sit beneath carefully positioned lighting. They display furniture where visitors can admire it. They showcase artwork selected for maximum visual impact. They help homeowners communicate taste, status, sophistication, and personality in a matter of seconds. Every chair, lamp, coffee table, and framed print participates in a public conversation. The living room performs, and most people understand the performance instinctively. Bedrooms tell a far more complicated story. For generations, architects treated the bedroom as a retreat from public life rather than an extension of it. The drawing room entertained guests. The dining room hosted rituals of hospitality. The study reflected education and ambition. The kitchen increasingly became a showcase of lifestyle and technology. The bedroom alone remained detached from social expectations. Few visitors crossed that threshold. Fewer still lingered long enough t...