The Buccaneers’ Designer on Bringing a Fresh Eye to Historical Interiors

The Buccaneers’ Designer on Bringing a Fresh Eye to Historical Interiors

Period dramas have a reputation for being a little ‘dusty’, design-wise. We’re all too used to a gray-toned London serving as a backdrop for even our favorite historical soap operas, but dark drawing rooms and stuffy heritage homes don’t necessarily offer heaps of inspiration for the interiors-obsessed among their audience.

However, shows like Apple TV+’s The Buccaneers are reimagining what the period drama means through its set design. With a maximalist, saturated color palette, the sets that the headstrong protagonists inhabit reflect the sense of disruption to the status quo that the characters, themselves, bring to the story. Based loosely on Edith Wharton’s unfinished last novel, this transatlantic drama tells the story of a group of wealthy American girls who are dropped into the rigid hierarchy of Victorian London. But, how does the set design tell this story?

Livingetc sat down with Markéta Kořínková, the production designer of the second season of The Buccaneers to talk about rewriting the rules of period drama set design, one gilded hallway at a time.

a traditional country house with bright green walls and blue seating with an ornate rug and large portraits

(Image credit: Courtesy of Apple TV+)

Season 1 had already set the stall for The Buccaneers’ visual storytelling, Markéta tells us. “[It’s a] late Victorian world with a contemporary twist — bold block colors, breathtaking landscapes, and stunning locations. We took this DNA and infused it into the new settings of our season,” the production designer explains. “Most of the season is set in new places, but we inherited the iconic Tintagel castle exteriors (and a couple interiors), so we were expanding this world, adding new gardens with a wedding marquee, rooftop scenes, and a whole suite of interiors: the Duke’s quarters, the Dowager Duchess’s rooms, a mausoleum, and a beautiful guest bedroom where Nell and Mrs. St. George have the most heartbreaking conversation.”

Where Do You Look for Inspiration for the Sets for The Buccaneers?

an illustration of a set for the buccaneers tv show

(Image credit: Courtesy of Apple TV+)

“It’s a bit of a cocktail. I start with paintings and illustrations (notable mention to Eduard Vuillard, Félix Vallotton, John Singer Sargent and, well, many others), old films ranging from classic Hollywood to the Czechoslovak New Wave (The Daisies) to the ’90s (Age of Innocence, Martin Scorsese). Fashion editorials present and past (I love Tim Walker), architectural history, antique catalogues, historical photography (Flashbak), and blogs (Messy Nessy Chic, Library Time Machine), museums and archives (V&A, Sambourne House). I also take a rather immersive, part flâneuse, part psychogeography approach — wander through city streets, reading up on their history, hunting for hidden traces and pockets of time, imagining what they might have looked like — how did it feel to be there — and dream up our film world.”

How did you balance the more traditional design elements while keeping that contemporary feel in this period drama?

a man and a woman standing in an italian home with a baby basinet in front and plates on the wall in the kitchen

(Image credit: Courtesy of Apple TV+)

“This was a delicate balancing act. We created a world set in the late 19th century, and infused it with contemporary aesthetics and a touch of fairy-tale fantasy — building a world that had its own inner logic and rules. We knew we could be bold, but the contemporary elements should never distract or disorient; everything is there to serve the story, the feeling, the characters. We were also aiming to create an elegant, classy look — no ugliness was allowed.

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