About Artemest
Tamara Feldman
  • Miami

Born in Mexico City, Tamara Feldman was shaped by the city’s vibrant architecture and culture, as well as by formative experiences in Valle de Bravo, where her mother’s creatively free home and her artist grandmother’s meticulous paintings deeply influenced her path. A lifelong painter, Tamara later lived and studied in Tokyo, an experience that continues to inform her work.


Since founding her studio in 2011, her interiors have become known for blending the clean structure of Japanese design with the warmth and rich natural textures of Mexican aesthetics. Her projects have been widely published, and in recent years she curated The Bedroom for Artemest’s L’Appartamento during Salone del Mobile (2024) and received notable recognition at the 50th Anniversary Kips Bay Decorator Show House New York (2025). She has collaborated with leading residential and commercial clients and is currently working on a new commission for ICA Miami.

Project Images

L'Appartamento by Artemest | Ph: Tomaso Lisca

Collector's Home | Ph: Douglas Friedman

Ph: Kris Tamburello

Kips Bay Showhouse | Ph: Genevieve Garruppo

Ph: Kris Tamburello

Kips Bay Showhouse | Ph: Genevieve Garruppo

Ph: Gabriel Matarazzo

Ph: Kris Tamburello

Ph: Genevieve Garruppo

Ph: Gabriel Matarazzo

Ph: Kris Tamburello

L'Appartamento by Artemest | Ph: Tomaso Lisca

My earliest memory is watching my grandmother paint. She had an extraordinary ability to capture something as subtle as the embroidery of a tablecloth. I learned early that craft lives in the smallest details; the stitch, the edge, the surface. Those moments carry memory, and they’re what make a space feel alive.

Tamara Feldman's Picks

Related Projects

The Bedroom by Tamara Feldman Design

The Bedroom by Tamara Feldman Design

The bedroom of L’Appartamento, curated by Tamara Feldman Design, blends the designer’s Mexican heritage with the essence of Residenza Vignale. The room’s saturated palette, enriched by terracotta and wood details, evokes the atmosphere of a Mexican hacienda. The aim was to create a nature-inspired interior with botanical plants, wood, and stone, combining Italian design with Mexican charm. The colors of the foliage visible through the large window—yellow, green, and golden tones—complement the terracotta walls. This concept is best expressed in the Giopagani bed, upholstered in a fabric depicting a dense forest.

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