Photography by Jessica Sample “I am not an abstract modern art girl,” Los Angeles i nterior designer Estee Stanley declares. “I like people and animals on the wall, it makes a house feel more cozy.” In her comfortable yet elegant home — a 1920s Spanish two-story duplex she reconfigured as a family residence for her husband, film and TV producer Bryan Furst , kids Teddy, 7, and Flora, 4, and English sheepdog Scout — the art is both whimsical and edgy. There are photographs of Andy Warhol in a Marilyn Monroe wig and makeup, drawings of little girls by the Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara , clusters of birdhouses, faux taxidermy and real trophy heads — Pete, the elk, who overlooks the staircase and Joe, the stag, who greets visitors in the living room.