Monday, 7 September 2009

Step four:

Larger than life is just the right size.


Anna Piaggi, wearing a dress designed by Jean-Charles de Castelbajac, cape by Angela and Giovanni Grimoldi, and hat by Stephen Jones. Photographed by David Bailey for Another Magazine.



Anna Piaggi at work, photograph by Bardo Fabiani, 2004.


Anna Piaggi: Fashion-ology


Anna Piaggi's Fashion Algebra: D.P. in Vogue


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Now playing: Salt-N-Pepa - I Am The Body Beautiful
via FoxyTunes

Sunday, 6 September 2009

Sunday traditions


Tom Tom Club - Genius of Love



Magazine 60 - Don Quichotte



West India Company - Ave Maria



Time Zone - World Destruction



George Kranz - Din Daa Daa



The tea dance, more in the vein of Sylvester rather than Noel Coward.


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Now playing: Sylvester - Do You Wanna Funk
via FoxyTunes

Saturday, 5 September 2009

Breakfast of champions



A Regency mahogany pedestal breakfast table, the rectangular tilt-top having rounded corners, ebony stringing and a reeded edge, raised on a tapering vase shaped column to four square cut out swept supports with brass caps and casters.




A large Regency satinwood breakfast table, the brass banded edge inset with red leather, supported on a fluted column, concave platform and gilt wood and gesso carved paw feet, with fitted casters.



Just as all kitchens needn't be fitted kitchens, tables in the kitchen needn't always be kitchen tables.


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Now playing: Supertramp - Breakfast in America
via FoxyTunes

Friday, 4 September 2009

Winter requisites



Gucci laced up creeper styled boot with zippered side closure.




DSquared ankle boots.





Ambre Russe by Parfums d'Empire
A blend of leather, birch wood and amber. With top notes of vodka, champagne and Asian pepper. Available from London's Les Senteurs.

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Now playing: Ocean Colour Scene - The Riverboat Song
via FoxyTunes

Thursday, 3 September 2009

Au revoir salonnière



Pierre Balmain and Ruth Ford, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, November 1947


Ruth Elizabeth Ford (1911-2009)

When Cecil Beaton's biographer Hugo Vickers visited her at the Dakota in 1981, she detained him at the door of her apartment. "Now, there's something I must tell you which embarrasses me very much," she said. "Cecil once described me as one of the 10 most beautiful women in the world." She then slipped back into her apartment and the door closed behind her.

Taken from her obituary as it appeared in The Daily Telegraph on August 17, 2009.




Portrait of Charles Henri Ford in Poppy Field painted by his lover Pavel Tchelitchew, 1933


The Brookhaven, Mississippi native had originally followed her brother, the artist Charles Henri Ford, to New York in the 1930s.

After I saw New York, what the hell was I going to do in Mississippi? Marry a shoe salesman?, she once asked.

Aside from her numerous modeling, film, and stage credits Ruth Ford was better known for the salon that she created in her apartment in the famed Dakota building. It was here that she entertained literary greats such as Faulkner, Albee, and McNally to name but a few. It was also here that a chance meeting between Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents would lead to their collaboration with Leonard Bernstein on West Side Story. And finally, it was here she would become a recluse - speaking to friends only by telephone. It's easier this way, she said. I don't bother to dress.




Trailer for Adventure in Iraq (1943) with Ruth Ford as Tess Torrence



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Now playing: The Beauty Room - Shades of Yesterday
via FoxyTunes

Wednesday, 2 September 2009

Nice is as nice does













Manor House at Clifton Hampden

On the market for the second time ever since its construction in 1846, a fine manor house on the river Thames with outstanding views. 5 reception rooms, up to 12 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms. 2 flats, one cottage, outbuildings, two boathouses, nearly 1000m of Thames frontage (two banks) 29.5 acres.

Looks as if the nice Danish couple who bought the house from Christopher Gibbs are selling up after completing a thorough restoration.








Restoration. Interior desecration. Potato. Potato.

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Now playing: The Beat - Too Nice to Talk To
via FoxyTunes

Tuesday, 1 September 2009

Almost the same but not quite


A William IV rosewood tea table, with hinged top enclosing a pale rosewood circular inlaid interior, on a baluster column, circular platform and carved paw feet.



A William IV rosewood folding card table, circa 1835.



Even though both tables are roughly from the same period and are made of roughly the same material, each strikes quite a different note.


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Now playing: The Smiths - Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others
via FoxyTunes

Monday, 31 August 2009

Mise en scène












Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948)
Art Direction by Perry Ferguson
Set Decoration by Howard Bristol and Emile Kuri

The perfect setting for any of the little dramas that life may dictate. Despite some of the department store furnishings, the set decoration is seamless and subtle without any of the jarring pops of colour that have now become so unnecessarily commonplace.



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Now playing: Sophie Ellis-Bextor - Murder on The Dancefloor
via FoxyTunes

Friday, 28 August 2009

Something for the weekend


Liquid Sky (1983)




In her book The Scandal of Pleasure: Art in an Age of Fundamentalism Wendy Steiner opines that Liquid Sky is a concise presentation of postmodern concerns. She writes: Here we have all the ingredients of the postmodern romance: parody; voyeurism; fetishism; a pastiche of modes, stylistic levels and esthetic allusions; simultaneous humor and insensitivity about serious issues like the Holocaust, rape, and feminism; the collapse of binary oppositions, as with identical male and female models; the equation of art with assault; the inclusion of the audience in the action and therefore in the ethical responsibility for what is represented; and the outrageous cost of ecstasy.


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Now playing: S'Express - Theme From S-Express
via FoxyTunes

Thursday, 27 August 2009

Bright young things



David Mlinaric (on the left) and Julian Ormsby-Gorge engaged in conversation while attending a party at Chrisopher Gibbs's place. Photographed by Terrence Spencer in May of 1966 for Life.

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Now playing: Cyndi Lauper - Girls Just Want To Have Fun
via FoxyTunes

What to do, where to begin?


Take an ordinary London flat with good details and add:



A Billy Baldwin daybed done in antique Caucasian carpet fragments.




A very large convex mirror with a wide and deep gilded frame, 20th century.




A William IV rosewood folding card table, circa 1835.




A Regency rosewood and gilt metal mounted open bookcase, circa 1815.




A late Regency rosewood stool, early 19th Century.
Reworked into a rectangular form and recovered in antique needlepoint.




A George III mahogany armchair, late 18th Century.
The reeded oval back and open arms above a serpentine seat rail, the padded back, arms and seat with later upholstery, on flower-headed tapering reeded legs and turned feet recovered in Fortuny.




An early Victorian mahogany library bergere, circa 1850.
The scrolled, buttoned back and arms with reeded S-scroll frame, on turned tapering and faceted legs with brass caps and casters, recovered in hand-dyed lambskin.



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Now playing: Nina Simone - The House of the Rising Sun
via FoxyTunes

Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Well-worn high-bohemian


Christopher Gibbs photographed by Victor Watts in his Albany set for Tattler. The day bed pictured belonged to Lord Tennyson.




The interior of Gibbs's now closed Pimlico shop.




Gibbs's Moroccan vision of 81 Powis Square, Notting Hill for the 1970s film Performance starring Mick Jagger.



I'm not interested in creating a dazzling impression of richness. We can make do with surprisingly little in life. It is best to have a few things which are really nice. I don't approve of the mean look, but I do approve of the spare look, where every little bit is telling. - Christopher Gibbs




At Home With: Christopher Gibbs; A Parting Embrace For a Lifetime's Quirks
By Christopher Mason for The New York Times
Thursday, September 21, 2000


Collecting: Lightly battered but in the best possible taste
By John Windsor for The Independent
Saturday, 3 October 1992


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Now playing: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Marakesh Express
via FoxyTunes

Tuesday, 25 August 2009

Joyful modernist



Pierre Paulin (1927-2009) the imaginative French designer responsible for the creation of the Oyster, Mushroom, Tongue and Ribbon chairs.





Original examples can still be found, though the upholstery will undoubtedly need doing.






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Now playing: Brian Eno - 2/1
via FoxyTunes

Monday, 24 August 2009

Remarkable







Carmen & Geoffrey (2005), by filmmakers Linda Atkinson and Nick Doob, chronicles the work of Geoffrey Holder and his wife and partner Carmen de Lavallade.


The film was shot in New York, Texas, Trinidad and Paris and contains rare dance footage featuring them from the 50’s and 60’s, both solo and together. It also includes their work with Ailey, Ross, Horton, Joe Layton, Duke Ellington and Josephine Baker in Paris. There are scenes of their contemporary work, including Carmen’s on-going partnership with Gus Solomons jr and Dudley Williams and both Carmen’s and Geoffrey’s current choreography. - First Run Features





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Now playing: The Andrews Sisters - Rum and Coca-Cola
via FoxyTunes

Saturday, 22 August 2009

Without...



wishing to appear mawkish, thank you.



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Now playing on iTunes: Foy Vance - Indiscriminate Act of Kindness
via FoxyTunes

Friday, 21 August 2009

Eye for the rich and the splendid


The Christie's catalogue for the Geoffrey Bennison sale.



Bennison's Malabar, and its companion Malabar Stripe, used fearlessly and lavishly just as Geoffrey Bennison had intended.


There, under low ceilings, he created rooms that felt more like an Irish-Georgian country house than Mayfair. Pictures were massed between groaning, untidy bookshelves. His own deliciously faded-looking fabrics and old crewelwork draperies were mixed with Moroccan textiles, and all these elements were held together by his favorite Red Riding Hood red, a beautifully subtle scarlet described by Bennison’s friend and fellow antiquarian Christopher Gibbs as the color that lines the insides of old Moroccan chests.

This interior, with its Caravaggesque light, its perfectly judged drama and easy comfort, was in many ways the culmination of the designer’s ideas concerning decoration. His sense of color was unfailingly sure: He would sit for hours in a room just watching the play of light, and he mixed his paints himself. “Never,” he said, “trust a painter or a color chart.” When it came to objects, his philosophy could be summed up in another of his memorable phrases: Always put “something mad on top of something very good, or something very good on top of something mad.” On Geoffrey Bennison’s death, as all dealers perhaps ultimately wish, his things—the very good and the very mad—were dispersed in a great sale


Stephen Calloway
Geoffrey Bennison: Extravagant Patterns and Remarkable Objects Define Exotic English Rooms
Architectural Digest, January 2000



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Now playing: Paolo Nutini - New Shoes
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Thursday, 20 August 2009

Speaking of Richardson


Richardson's library.




John Richardson interviewed in his New York loft by Charlie Rose.


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Now playing: The Kinks - Art Lover (remix)
via FoxyTunes

Wednesday, 19 August 2009

The happy few






The late Bill Blass's New York dining room.



The late great Geoffrey Bennison once remarked to the art historian John Richardson regarding Bill Blass, Bill’s one of my favourite clients...no cobwebs on his cheque book.



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Now playing: Carly Simon - Legend in Your Own Time
via FoxyTunes

Languid

Tuesday, 18 August 2009

Iris doesn't live here anymore


The main gate of La Foce.



The gardens were done by Cecil Pinsent (1884 - 1963), the Edwardian garden designer who also created the gardens at Bernard Berenson's villa I Tatti.




La Foce: A Garden and Landscape in Tuscany by Benedetta Origo


La Foce, once the Tuscan estate of the elegant and intelligent Anglo-American writer Iris Origo (1902 - 1988) , Marchesa of Val d'Orcia.

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Now playing: Antony and the Johnsons - Knockin' On Heaven's Door
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