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Sanctuary by Gregory Crewdson

Abandoned outdoor film sets are the subject for Sanctuary, Gregory Crewdson's latest project. While visiting Rome, American photographer Gregory Crewdson was invited to tour the legendary film studio Cinecitta, where directors such as Federico Fellini and Roberto Rossellini shot their films. He was fascinated by the elaborate film sets that had became ruins.... Sanctuary is a series of forty-one  haunting black-and-white photographs of crumbling facades and deserted streets, shot at dawn and dusk, at the Cinecitta studios in 2009.

In these pictures, I draw upon the inherent quietness and uncanny aspects of the empty sets. As with much of my work, I looked at the blurred lines between reality and fiction, nature and artifice, and beauty and decay. --Gregory Crewdson








Sanctuary opens September 23, at Gagosian gallery in New York. The book will be released in conjunction with the exhibition.
Images, courtesy the New Yorker


Team Uncool Fashion Loves: The new Arcade fire interactive Video


I know its not very fashion related, but I love the new Arcade fire collaboration with Google for their interactive video for the song 'The Wildnerness Downtown,' off their 3rd brand new album, 'The Suburbs.'

You can see the video at, http://www.thewildernessdowntown.com/

The project was lead and designed by, Chris Milk.

Enjoy it,
CT 2010

Axioms, Capitol, Veranda

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oh, if you missed yesterday's post- go here ,You missed my dear friend Dorothy and her latest decorating project.

I am off for the day to this amazing place here.



 Alexander McQueen's Praying Mantis dress featured at CAPITOL here



 for a party honoring

Dara Caponigro & her new role as Editor-in-Chief of VERANDA

image from CAPITOL, 
read the post from the Capitol blog on Dara Caponigro  here 




read an interview with Dara here

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Some Days - Wang Ningde


Copyright Wang Ningde

Paris is one of those cities that you could discover something fabulous everyday without even trying. On the way to the chiropractor on Friday I discovered yet another wonderful photography gallery in the 3rd. In the heart of the 'rag trade' clothing industry is the wonderful Galerie Paris-Beijing. I had five minutes to kill before my appointment so dropped in.

There are rare occasions when you are totally carried away by images, when your mouth drops open in wonder, hypnotized as though you have never seen a photo before. Voila, that was me in front of Wang Ningde's wonderful images entitled Some Days. His sitters are lost in a trance somewhere between two worlds and so was I. Fifteen minutes late for my appointment!

In the preface to his catalogue Elsa Favreau describes his images beautifully.

"Their eyes are closed, their mouths half open, they doze, practically hypnostised between ecstasy and exhaustion; the landscapes are deserted. imagined or idealised. The photos in Wang Ningde's 'Some Days' series plunge us into daydreaming and bitterness, mid-way between regret and reminiscence of a given moment.

Wang Ningde was born in the seventies, the very time when China began "opening up"  to the outside world. He captures an image of a China undoubtedly contemporary, yet still carrying a weighted memory of the cultural revolution".

If you are in Paris check out Some Days which closes on the 7th September 2010.

Vestiaire de Divas or the Diva's dressing room

Vestiaire de Divas: De Maria Callas a Dalida. The Diva's dressing room: From Maria Callas to Dalida.

The Centre National du Costume de Scene (National Theatrical Costume Center) is paying homage to the Diva, that prima donna endowed with a magnetic aura and exercising fascination over her audience, via an exhibition entitled Vestiaire de Divas (The Diva's dressing room), through December 31, 2010 in Moulins, France.
The Centre National du Costume de Scène(CNCS)  was established in 2006 with the mission of preserving and exhibiting costumes from the performing arts in France. The costumes in the permanent collection — donated by the Bibliothèque Nationale, the Comédie-Française, and Paris’s National Opera — span the second half of the 19th century all the way to the early 2000s. In order to protect the fabrics, the collection is not on permanent display, but the CNCS organizes three exhibitions a year. 


For Romans, then for Italians, the "Diva" was originally a "goddess". At the dawn of the 20th century, she became mortal in the form of an opera singer whose talent, virtuosity and personality combine to form a truly explosive blend, nurturing unparalleled success and popularity.
Vestiaire de Divas, a beautiful exhibition, displays an array of costumes, dresses, jewelry and accessories from the 19th and 20th century, wore by true myths such as, Maria Callas, Sarah Bernhardt, Edith Piaf, Dalida and Edwige Feuillere among them.


The various outfits of Maria Callas


Edwige Feuillere's fan

Sarah Bernhardt's pouch, 1896


Louis Vuitton toiletry case




Maria Callas's dress


Dalida's dress, 1981


Edith Piaf's vanity case


Images, courtesy of Artinfo
and Evenfr

Team Uncool Fashion Likes: Fred Perry Footwear A/W 2010 Dorsey Boot

While in Copenhagen I walked into a beautifully curated shop in Frederiksberg called 'Fred and friends' (you can find them on Gamel Konjeveg in Frederiksberg) and bought a pair of Fred Perry leather boots. Love them and couldn't find them on the Fred Perry website. But you can find them on a couple of websites and in the new A/W 2010 catalogue. Here is one to check them out.

Ct 2010

Rooms. & A Life with ZEST

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honestly, I always say-I have the best clients. They know it. Having worked on numerous projects with them all-it is like returning to visit an old friend each time we start a new project. We may not keep in touch, but when reunited, it is instant chemistry. No time lapsed, any and all topics of conversation resume.

A very rare few were friends the instant we met, even more rare-like the long lost friend we never met but always knew we would . Two such clients- I can say, I immediately KNEW. We knew each other.

& here- the best of women, the best of clients, the best of friends to me- the divine Dorothy. She grew up on Park Avenue, went to finishing school at Finch, later- married and moved to Boston, summered in West Hyannisport with her family, then returned to New York to work, and headed South after several other stops along the way. She is what I would love to be at her age-I never will-I hardly measure up Now. Dorothy has a Zest for Life that is unmatched, but her Rooms-they give her a run for her money.



It is said painter PAUL SWAN was the The Most Beautiful Man in the World that may be so-but
Dorothy says, "No. I don't see it." She did know him though-he painted a portrait of Dorothy, her mother and sister in his heyday. Sold, the family lost track of the life size painting for years, later finding it in a resort lobby holding court. The painting has returned to private ownership, not in the family, but it surely makes an overwhelming impression to anyone that sees it.


Portrait of Dorothy, (l. ) her mother and sister- by Paul Swan



I've talked about Dorothy before here and will again, I hope-sharing some of her stories. Today it's Dorothy and her most recent design project-only it was about five years ago now, yet it seems like yesterday. Just as it did the day , Dorothy walked into my office to inquire about my design services-what? about 16 years ago. Our first project was Dorothy's move from up North to down South way. Reinventing her furniture and all the lovely things she brought  to fit into a townhouse perched right on a posh golf course. It was a labor of love- hardly a labor even. It all worked so beautifully-
But that was then-

This is our latest incarnation done up for another swank locale-on the move again.



Fully "tented" 
Though the original intent in this Sunroom was to go full out with the coral and white wide stripe-it seemed to overwhelm the space.
Lose the Stripe- replace it with a crisp cotton duck and use the stripe on the bias to band the valance and the panels.. The iron and porcelain chandelier enjoys its forth hanging-at the least- in another of Dorothy's homes. The wide silk DEDAR stripe is on one of the chairs pulled up to a skirted table for impromptu dining. The fabric on the skirt is by Kelly Wearstler for F.Schumacher, Imperial Trellis.




More views- The Living Room with more of the Louis XV style caned chairs done in green linen and green & yellow check boxed cushions. The walls in the Sunroom and Living Room match the curtains a sunny white- Parchment.
Many a mismatched pair has grace rooms I decorate-here- old gilded brackets hold two of Dorothy's jades.Dorothy's work  Scherenschnitte (pronounced shair-en-shnit-teh) which literally means 'scissors-cutting' hangs over a  lacquered Regency style piece.








Gin Rickey or -elegance with a twist of lime.
We took Dorothy's already elegant and beautiful furniture and antiques and applied some ZEST. Here mostly LIME. The chair and sofa are covered in G.P & J Baker Peony and Blossom linen print. Limeapple- I call it- with dashes of deep coral peony. A chair in the forefront got the yellow rose treatment and Imperial Trellis makes another appearance in the Living Room on an ottoman. I left the covering on the old lilac gray petitpoint chair and replaced its tired gimp with a new Scalamandre trim of coral, gray and cream. Dorothy loves that little, but ever so needed, and transforming touch. The parquet floors are covered with a sisal and wool woven Stark Carpet rug. Dorothy's collection of Italian watercolors and drawings have a prominent place in the room.










Flo Clarke
Little credit can I take for my favorite piece in the Living Room. Dorothy's decorator, New Yorker, Flo Clarke takes that honor. Dorothy elaborates on Flo:

"She had  a kind of little atelier ,if that is the right word, where she had in her employ artists and painters. She was the one who had the man who did my coffee table. She was the first one I knew who used smoked glass which was big at the time. Also it was there that she put together the unimportant five sconces to become the two on the wooden ribbons that I have now and became two large ones. Also she found, when they sold the Julliard mansion, the carved wood from that library and brought it all up to Boston and reassembled it for our library there. But she would also take what you have and redo it..  That little white settee was a nothing with a plaid cover and she redid  it to be that white scalloped thing with white knitted ball trim etc.. I am trying to think of other things she thought of using what one already had..  She was also good at conning men into spending more than they expected. Oh,She was good."







Flo Clarke's monumental sconces









In Pinks-or coral.
The CORAL certainly is not done justice in my photographs but you get the picture. I insisted we use the full length portrait in this tiny Sitting Room painted Coral. Just off the Living Room-it is really a part of that room, with the luxury of mixing things up a bit. Changing the walls to this color, repeating the Imperial Trellis on the window curtains- puts this room at the top for my own personal favorite spot in the whole place. Dark bottle green bookcases fill the opposite side of the room. Notice the little "nothing" settee of Flo's creation from years ago. Maintaining Flo's good design details- the covering is now a hessian cotton with Scalamandre white cotton tufts along the scallop edges.








Dorothy's Maxims



Dorothy cut out and decoupaged the lamps long ago, new brown paper bag shades add fresh wrapping


a wire basket of Lemons sits on a center portion of stretchers under a table





D. and her husband with one of their winning thoroughbreds




a Gin Rickey please-
This narrow mellow apple green suede table swagged with brass studs was added to a hallway off the Sitting room to accommodate a simple bar for get-togethers. It works perfectly in the limited space and anchors the old framed prints of English thatch cottages hanging above.





Ladies of the Club Some of the most wonderful pieces Dorothy has are these cuttings of antique fashion plates from Ackermans or Godeys. She has a collection of them in one of the bedrooms. Along with these framed fashion plates there are a few touches of green and other little feminine-but tailored touches as well- an upholstered headboard in a Decorator's Walk floral chintz and a valance that matches, along with eyelet white curtains-both banded in a tiny green Scalamandre silk check.


This is one of the plates she did for me in with my dog Moses here.  
















Dorothy
She is always up to something. Her latest jaunt was down to Panama to traverse the Panama Canal-something she has always wanted to do. What next?




the intrepid Dorothy with her designer.


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