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Posts Under: art

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Bright Accessories to Refresh Your Rooms

Domino Mag Shot

Inspiration for interior design can come from high fashion, art, music, landscapes, and other cultures. This shot from Domino magazine nearly sent me into a frenzy, lusting after bright pops of color to update my rooms.

The warm weather must have something to do with it as well–all of the colorful, vibrant flowers peeking up out of the ground, the cerulean blue skies, and playful summer fashions in haven’t-seen-since-the-80s hues. Did you see the Chris Benz S/S 08 collection? Crazy neons! I love them…it’s like Prozac for the mind and soul.

Instead of painting an entire room, such as above, it is less time consuming (and less permanent) to add a few colorful accessories that will provide ample visual punch to any room. Here are a few of my favorites.

3potatofourpillows.jpg
Denyse Schmidt Pillows
$50-$60
ThreePotatoFourShop.com

Little Caymen Plates CB2
Little Caymen Plates
$0.95 each
CB2.com

velocityartanddesignclock.jpg
Artecnica: KnoWhere Clock - You & Me
$81.00
VelocityArtandDesign.com

DWR Camponibili
Componibili 12.5 in. Stacking
$105.00-$167.00
Design Within Reach

Supernatural Chair from Moss
Supernatural Chair by Ross Lovegrove
$208.00
MossOnline.com

Buddhas by Vivre
Sitting Buddha by YO CO
$450.00 each
Vivre.com

Urban Outfitters Curtains
Two Tone Voile Curtain
$19.99-$36.00
Urban Outfitters

–By Kate Bailey

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Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Modernist Art Pottery in Retro Shapes and Lush Colors

Teco

OK, so I have a little problem: I’m a bit obsessed with ceramics. Especially ones with unusual glazes and arresting profiles. I can’t get enough, yet I already have too many to fit in my petite home. But, really, that’s the beauty of pottery. You can always find more room for it! If you run out of tabletops, place a few on a bookcase. If you run out of shelf space, sit them in your windowsills. No more ledge space? Get an artful planter for the floor. And on and on it goes. To me, a piece of pottery is like sculpture–but with more use value.

So you can only imagine my excitement at discovering Teco. Designed by acolytes of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie School, these strikingly modernist vases were originally produced between 1899 and 1920 by the American Terra Cotta & Ceramics Company (i.e. TeCo). Now, the Prairie Arts Studio (run by husband-wife team Bryan and Lisa Kelly plus Lisa’s brother, Eric O’Malley) is putting a select few back into production. Slip-cast formed and glazed by hand, the seven shapes come in six retro-ish hues.

Check ‘em out here: Teco Art Pottery Collection, through Prairie Arts. –Jen Renzi
Teco Pottery 4

Teco 3

Teco 4

Teco buttress

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Saturday, April 26th, 2008

The Most Luxurious Eco-Friendly Furnishings Ever

HugoFrancaR20_3

One incredibly balmy evening earlier this week, I dropped by R Gallery’s opening of “Hugo França: The Story of the Tree.” It was a truly marvelous, don’t-miss-it show. The Brazilian designer carves stunningly elemental–and incredibly large-scale–furnishings from discarded Amazonian Indian canoes and fallen Pequi trees, some dating to 1,000 years old. Among the beautifully sculpted pieces on display were low-slung coffee tables, languorous chaises, and enormous room dividers.

The installation includes an insightful video that sheds light on França’s creative process, which is equal parts brute force (chain saws, chisels) and pure imagination (he has an otherworldly, almost spiritual communion with the trees and an ability to “see”–and then expose–their inner form). The utterly simple lines belie the complexity of the laborious handcraftsmanship that goes into making them.

Sadly–and unfairly–Brazil still gets a bad rap when it comes to earth-consciousness; deforestation and an active timber black market have marred the country’s reputation. The work of many contemporary Brazilian furniture designers goes a long way to correcting that. The ones I’ve met have been universally respectful of Mother Earth, embracing sustainable practices long before they came into vogue and celebrating nature’s inherent beauty with exquisitely poetic work. França included.

The show is up through June 14. If you can’t afford one of the pieces (which run into the tens of thousands!), order a copy of the catalog. Photographed by Tuca Reines, it’s a work of art in itself. –Jen Renzi

HugoFrancaR20_1

HugoFrancaR20_2

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Friday, April 25th, 2008

Buying at Auction 101: Saturday@Phillips

Terje Ekstrom

Scared of auctions? Don’t know when or how to raise the paddle? Not sure how to sign up in the first place? Wondering whether you need a lot of money? Curious about how it works when you win?

Then get thee to Phillips de Pury + Co’s Saturday Sale pronto! The next one is tomorrow, April 26, with sessions at 10 AM and 2 PM. Go! Even if it’s just for an hour!

Really, I cannot say enough good things about this newish series, launched a year and a half ago as a sort of “starter” auction targeted at first-time buyers. Sales typically feature an assortment of lots from all departments–from modern design objects to jewelry to fine art–with lower starting bids than their usual fare. Tomorrow’s sale has an emphasis on art toys (think: limited-edition vinyl Godzillas) and watches, but still includes the usual complement of Thomas Demand photographs, Damien Hirst prints, Roy Lichtenstein art plates, and furnishings by the likes of Raymond Loewy and Terje Ekstrom (above). Check out the catalog for details on each item. (You can also bid online! Although that’s not as fun.)

My advice for auction neophytes: Go, register (very easy) for a paddle, then sit and enjoy. Don’t even bid the first time, unless you feel moved. Just get into the vibe of the thing and start to notice the tenor of how bidding escalates and get a feel for how closely estimates match selling prices. I always learn a ton, and discover all sorts of intriguing name and unusual furnishings I’ve never seen before.

Even if you are a well-seasoned art buyer, it’s a fun and lively event, with an unpretentious, feel-good vibe. And great bargains. –Jen Renzi

Roy Lichtenstein plates

Godzilla

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Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream For…Smoked Salmon and Bagel Ice Cream?

Miwa

Yes, the headline above is true.

Tonight I braved an interactive food-based art happening to see my friend Miwa Koizumi perform at the Umami festival in SoHo. The festival, which runs through April 18, is pretty intriguing stuff. Lifted from its website:

“Umami was created as a meeting ground to people who use food as a medium and who present their audience with a multi-sensory experience in the dining room, or gallery space. Our objective is to open avenues of collaboration between these artists and culinary professionals.”

Very cool. But also quite strange. Miwa was performing a “gastronomic interactive installation” alongside a wacky, carnivalesque troupe of ladies who were yelling and screaming while doing weird things with vegetables, I’m not sure what, exactly. (We think maybe they were commenting on early-20th-century Lower East Side culture but we could be totally wrong.)

Miwa, wearing an “Ice Love New York” (get it?) T-shirt of her own design, was serving homemade ice-cream based on immigrant foods. Last night it was borscht. Tonight it was smoked salmon and bagel, which she dished out in separate scoops. Rather than blend the two together, you were supposed to take a taste of one and then a little nibble of the other. I cannot describe what it is like to bite into a spoonful of creamy white ice cream, your brain expecting vanilla and tasting…the EXACT likeness of bagel. She made it by dissolving a bagel in milk, then whipping it up in her ice cream maker. Brilliant. Mad. Yummy. Totally screwed with my head.

Miwa has been incorporating food and eating rituals into her work since her art school days in Paris. She’s done a faux-spa with edible treatments and pieces based on pommegranite seed vapors and handmade soy milk–it’s all sort of Grant Achatz meets Rikrit Tiravanija. In France, she found gallery-goers more gung-ho to sample unusual creations; Americans, meanwhile, have proved a bit more timid–interested in looking but not always tasting, which means missing out on the full meaning of her art. Thus she cooked up the idea to use always-popular ice cream as her medium; who could turn down free ice cream? It’s high-concept art that goes down easy.

To read more about her work, check out her website. Or see below for teasers of some of her other noteworthy projects: lighting sculptures at BDDW plus eco-friendly sea creatures made from repurposed plastic bottles.

–Jen Renzi

Miwa and fan at a similar performance at Flux factory in December:

Miwa 2

Her PET bottles, plus a poetic description from her website: “On trash: Since I moved to NY four years ago, I have started to see garbage as small creatures. Everywhere I go they are waiting for me. I pass by and they want to talk with me.”

Miwa Pet

Her porcelain lighting at BDDW:

Miwa BDDW

Miwa BDDW2

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