Scroll through Erick J. Espinoza's Instagram feed, and you might think you've traveled back in time to the 1930s — not the art deco version, but the version filled with hooked rugs, weather vanes and candlesticks betokening the era's American Colonial Revival, perhaps with the color saturation cranked way up.
"There's something so lighthearted about Americana. Even really serious and intense works of American folk art are still whimsical, graphic and humorous," said Espinoza, who is the 32-year-old creative director at the Hamptons design studio founded by Anthony Baratta. Espinoza especially loves the geometric patterns of game boards and quilts.
Espinoza's own house in Danbury, Conn., is a kaleidoscopic ode to a style he calls "pop art country." His equestrian-themed red, white and black bedroom is a particular tour de force.
For a growing number of designers, dealers and budding collectors in their 30s, Americana is back — with a twist. Consider them the Bicentennial millennials.
In the mid-1970s, on the heels of Watergate and the war in Vietnam, American housewares manufacturers such as Ethan Allen used the 1976 Bicentennial celebrations to unleash a wave of nouveau Colonial Revival designs. Overlapping as they did with that decade's craft mania, old-fashioned objects such as spinning wheels, flags and eagle-themed wallpaper enjoyed an uncanny moment of cultural relevance.
Michael Diaz-Griffith, executive director of the Design Leadership Network, a platform for interior designers and architects, said he has been anticipating a renewed interest in Bicentennial style for more than a decade.
A native of Alabama, Diaz-Griffith spent eight years working in various capacities at the Winter Show, an antiques, art and design fair held each January in New York City's Manhattan borough, cheering on people his age (he is now 36) who were falling in love with very old, very quirky objects even as postwar modernism seemed to be getting all the attention. In June, he published "The New Antiquarians: At Home with Young Collectors" (The Monacelli Press).
"Millennials aren't minimalists," he said.