Maria Bartholdi won’t admit that she has her great-great-great uncle Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi’s eye for design, even though it’s clear she does.
Bartholdi’s style in her south Minneapolis home splashes with bright and bold colors, embodying that same feeling of fearlessness that emanates from her ancestor’s greatest piece — the Statue of Liberty in New York. Growing up, she dreamed of becoming a sculptor like him, but said she didn’t have the patience to refine her skills.
Bartholdi, a content creator best known for her podcast, “Good Luck High Five,” where she and co-host Meghan Wolff review card and board games, settled with decking out her home in a way that keeps her creative juices flowing.
In her 1920s Craftsman-style abode, bright magenta and green walls jump out over the black fireplace and dining table. Everything centers around one of her first furniture pieces: the sofa in the middle of the living room, she explained.
“It all started with the green chartreuse couch and it exploded from there,” Bartholdi said. “Once you start going, everything falls into place over time. I think it all just builds into itself if you have the right vibe.”
All about that base
That couch inspired her to paint the living room walls green and then the dining room an opposite hue on the color wheel — magenta. Doing that ensured the two rooms flowed together.
“You’ve got to think of the design,” she said. “[Painting the walls like that] draws the eye through the room.”
But with all that color, areas needed a neutral one. So Bartholdi chose black for a granite table in the dining room and when painting a previously white fireplace in the living room.