This is an image from the work of Cai Guo-Qiane, another Prospect 1 artist. he conveniently works with fireworks and today is the last post of 2008. I know its been a rough one but there has been some wonderful things that have happened. So lets breath deeply and be thankful for the good and learn from the not so good.
Happy New Year to ALL! Annie
We got a very nice shout out from Costas Voyazis, the editor of Yatzer. He picked a Little Building Cafe post one of his favorite posts from 2008! I have really enjoyed being part of Costas Blog community this year. He has a very strong vision of the design world....and so optimistic!
I am going to look for this book while in NYC. Isabelle de Borchgrave work looks very intriguing, part artist part masterful business person.....Quite an inspiration.
This is more work done by Neta Amir. I am very jealous that she had this idea first. I can just image a whole generation of people sewing there own apartment rather than buying small picture frames to make yourself happy????
For the next week I am going to gather up all then examples I can find of work than is being done under the "Soft Architecture" genre. People who are working with textiles and fabric at an epic to furniture scale. The first to really open up this method of working is the wonderful Petra Blaisse. Founder of the studio Inside/Outside her work is balanced between the giant drapery work that she is known for and garden design. Her book has been on my bedside table for two years now and I look to her as to how an alternative practice can be developed.
This wacky Christmas tree at the Colton School venue in New Orleans was wonderful. Lots of wire and water bottles spray painted gold made for a very GREEN tree. We are off to NYC on Thursday and I will schedule posts for the week...I have an agenda! I want to wish everyone a very merry and real Holiday.
This Beatriz Milhazes installation was delightful. Cribbed from a dance set that she designed in 2004. A small square room full of glitter, feathers and pink targets is what everyone needs right now.
Shawne Major's knock out tapesteries are a high point at Prospect 1. The Opelousas, Louisiana native makes huge pieces that are highly considered Five and Dime explosions.... They are big abstract expressions from far away and close up you recognize that gum ball machine pistol you had when you were small. Real focus, real passion.
We just got back from a weekend in new Orleans to see the Prospect 1 Bienniel. I really enjoyed it and will be posting my favorites for the week. The work that stuck with me for the drive up was Anne Deleporte. We only got to see one piece by her (there are two) but the process is well- haunting. She wallpapers a space with newpapers and magazines and then paints out everything but small iconic figures or images that just seem to hang in space. These are not great images but visiting her site www.annedeleporte.com will give you an idea of the process, there also seems to be a book which I will be on the look out for.
Speaking of Brooklyn, we got a very nice shout out from The Brownstoner about the 272 21st Street project. The building is rocking along, we get to go see it next week!
There is something very calming and peaceful about this Rachel Whiteread daybed. Whiteread is the first British woman to win the Turner Prize and is most famous for her piece "Ghost" which was a large plaster cast of a Victorian house. I really love her big idea, quiet work approach.
I have posted this bench before but as I was cleaning my desk and this photo that Rinne Allen did was next to a piece of paper where I had copied down this quote.
I have three chairs in my house, one for solitude,two for friendship, three for society. Henry David Thoreau
I have been on the look out for sustainable tree. I have contacted near by tree farms, gone to the nursery for a magnolia, and no luck. Caleb designed this tree in L.A. years ago and I wish we had it now (looks less serious in color). Guess I am off to the Kroger.....
I spotted these textile tea cups on at cribcandy. The author Neta Amir has a strange and wonderful site called Doll Stories. Normally I can't handle crocheted animals and dolls but her work well is just weird enough. And I am jealous that she had the where- with- all to sew a arm chair made of bed sheets.....
I got to hand it to those Bludot guys. This is pure invention. The fact that maybe the laser cut extrusions might yield a structural role in the bench is wonderful. Its a very pure structural diagram. This piece does not show up on the Bludot web site but does on the Future Perfect site. So cool
I am reading Interior Design history texts this weekend to prepare for next term. In the depths of understanding Empire furniture, I found this image of a early proposal, 1758, for a gateway at the site of Paris' Arc de Triomphe by Charles Ribart. Now would Paris be so chic if???? Well it never got built-let's leave it at that.
Yatzer had nice discussion about comtemporary large scale Quee
n Anne chairs....I was reading yesterday about French 1950's avant guard and I found this very similar Jean Royere chair from 1956. See Jaime Hayon site for more glam...
The holidays are coming and I have the "I wants" for a Charles and Ray Eames molded plywood elephant. It was designed in 1954 and never produced until the Eames foundation did this edition last year. I do not need this but its lovely. I like to buy all Eames work from the Eames Gallery on line-it all supports the maintainence of the Eames house in Malibu.
"Amateurs borrow and professional steal....." A great someone once said. Well, I did not borrow, well I did from the Shakers not from these guys.. But this is a very nice resolve in a cafe that has all Thonet chairs...hum-needs more color. The space was designed by Architects Kahle, Oiza Arauza in Pamplona, Spain.
I have been prepping lectures for next term and getting to re-read a lot about the great modernists painters. Along time ago a came across pictures of Josef and Anni Albers home while he was at Yale. This is the perfect composition for Albers' work. An all white house awaiting his paintings, perfect.
This week I will be on a hunt for designers who are practicing a design entreprenerialship. I came across the work of Charlotte Sken -Catling via a post on remodelista about a residential project. On her web site she shows this project Eco-lab in which she was the director and visionary behind the project. It seems to be a health and wellness emporium along with a cafe. I know why I came to design project for myself in their entirety but why do others? Its an interesting point in time for designers with the economy and does that mean we may be our only client?
These benches by Eindhoven graduate Sylvia siu fung Lai are a great example of the specificity of measure in design. All of the benches are the same form yet the use is from the dimension of the height of the bench. Also interesting is her contention that the form is derived from her memories of a traditional Chinese childhood. The narrative and measure.....
One of the joys of being a designer for aloong time is that your friends and peers are now VERY talented and VERY accomplished. Some more of our dear friends are Laura Briggs and Jonathan Knowles. And when I think of beautiful staircases I think of this project in Harlem. See more work on their web site www.briggsknowles.com.
It is cold wet and rainy here in East Mississippi today. But surprisingly next year's gardens seem to be on everyone's mind. We have two gardens to work on now, one at LBC and one here on Greensboro. When I think of gardens I always take a look at our dear friends at Plant in Toronto. Makers of many gardens for a decade now they are very skilled at making wonderful places.
This an image from the photo shoot that Rinne Allen did for Little Building this month. It really says it all.