Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Sleek in the City

There was something about the Traina's home that I posted yesterday that reminded me of this New York apartment.  It belongs to eccentric fashionista Daphne Guinness and was designed with Daniel Romualdez who she said got what she wanted right away.  It was featured in the March issue of Archtechtural Digest and is a clear indication of why you should be buying the magazine again.  I love that even though you know a designer helped with the apartment, it still looks personal.  You can tell that she chose all the art because she loved it.

Guinness says that some people get a little turned around in the entry hall of mirrors but it looks chic. Mirrors are especially great at opening up dark spaces in New York apartments. The photograph is by Daido Moriyama.

Sometimes I wished magazines included floorplans so you could see the flow.  I'm not sure where this part of the entry lies but I love the kaleidoscope look of the butterflies in Another Amazing Transcendental Experience by Damien Hirst from 2003.

A close up of Daphne Guinness in front of the Damien Hirst piece.

One wall of the living room is also mirrored. Hanging over it are works by Nobuyoshi Araki, David LaChapelle, and Bert Stern.

Wish we could see more of the library too.  I always love to see what books on are on a person's shelves.

Of course, I love the green Chinoiserie paper covering a screen in one of the bedrooms.

Another bedroom looks like it's mirrored but it's really Mylar wallpaper from Florence Broadhurst. I follow Daphne Guinness on twitter and find her fascinating.  It seems like her New York apartment reflects her interesting personality and her sophistication perfectly.

Photos by Thomas Loof

Monday, March 28, 2011

Chic and Colorful and Art Filled

The calendar says spring but the temperature says winter. Makes me wish I had a conservatory like Alexis and Trevor Traina in San Francisco. Vogue featured the home in the December 2009 issue and just posted some party pics online today.  It was fun to see the dining room set for a chic lunch to celebrate the new Balenciaga exhibit at the de Young Museum and a visit from Hamish Bowles who curated it. 

The Trainas renovated the home and added the conservatory by Amdega. The furniture was designed by Ann Getty who collaborated on the interior design with the couple and interior designer Thomas Britt.

The dining room set for lunch.

I love the pop of pink stemware against all the green in the room.

The chairs were designed by Ann Getty and Andrew Fisher designed the abalone topped tables.  The chandelier was found at Coleen & Company.

The entrance hall is perfect for tricycle riding.  The artwork is Studio Wall Drawing: 13th May 2004 by Keith Tyson.

Another Keith Tyson painting, History Painting (Baden-Baden, 1942) hangs in the entrance gallery.

Thomas Britt thought the red velvet by Sabina Fay Braxton would be the perfect backdrop for Trevor Traina's photography collection.  Queen Elizabeth II, 1999 is by Hiroshi Sugimoto.

Alexis and Trevor Traina with their children in the drawing room.

Thomas Britt also designed the Lucite banister which adds a modern touch to the old house.  Hanging on the stairs is Walking Cake II by Laurie Simmons.  The artist's daughter Lena Dunham wrote, directed and starred in an independent film Tiny Furniture which is also worth checking out.  Hope this colorful home brightened your day!


Photos by Andi Hatch and Francois Halard

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Italian Inspiration

I happened to be shopping at J.Crew over the weekend.  (What else is new right?)  While flipping through the new catalog I came across Part III of their Made in Italy series.  It was especially interesting because it dealt with their trip to Ratti and Canepa mills in Como, Italy and perfect timing since I had just posted about textile designer Sonia Delauney.  There used to be many mills in Italy but much production has moved to China so it's comforting to know that J.Crew is supporting these old Italian mills.  I especially loved their look into the archives at Canepa and the artisans painting the prints at Ratti.  I highly recommend watching the accompanying video.  I'm off to figure out how I can get myself invited on the next trip! Ciao!











Saturday, March 26, 2011

Color Moves: Art and Fashion by Sonia Delauney

It's cold again in New York and what better way to escape the weather than by visiting a museum.  I can't wait to visit the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum for Color Moves: The Art and Fashion of Sonia Delauney which runs through June 5, 2011.  This show epitomizes one of my favorite blog topics which is how art, design and fashion are all related.  Sonia Delauney (1885-1979) worked in Paris and was "known primarily as an abstract painter and colorist" but "applied her talents and theories to all areas of visual expression, including graphics, interiors, theatre and film, fashion and textiles," and even a few cars. She was very well known for her use of color and it seems perfect that this exhibition coincides with a very colorful season for fashion.  And who knows, it may even make you forget that it's freezing outside!  Bon Weekend!
















"He who knows how to appreciate colour relationships, the influence of one colour on another, their contrasts and dissonances, is promised an infinitely diverse imagery." - Sonia Delaunay

Friday, March 25, 2011

Favorite Thing-Marble Kitchen Island

We just came accross this modern kitchen island the other day and we just love it.  It's so versatile. You can use it as an island or a kitchen counter or a dining counter or extra shelving unit.  Plus it goes so well with the new modern, white marble kitchen that is all the rage right now. 






It's priced at $2700 including shipping and you can find it here.

La Fiorentina

Vogue.com posted a few photos this week of Elizabeth Taylor at La Fiorentina in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat France taken in 1967 by Henry Clarke.  They reminded me that I had a folder full of photos of La Fiorentina that I had never posted.  The Palladian style villa also has a very interesting design history.

According to Alexandra Lloyd Properties, La Fiorentina was "built in 1917 by the Countess Therese de Beauchamp on a vast piece of land which occupies the extreme end of the Saint Hospice point of the Saint Jean Cap Ferrat peninsula."  Architects Aaron and Gaston Messiah designed the villa in conjunction with Harold Peto who designed the grounds including the large staircase leading down to the water.  She later replaced the men with Ferdinand Bac who completed the work before it was sold to Sir Edmund Davis and then later to Lady Kenmare in 1939.

It was Lady Kenmare's son, Roderick "Rory" Cameron who turned La Fiorentina into something special.  He worked with architect Henri Delmotte who had previously worked for Somerset Maugham at Villa Mauresque. He was also an avid gardener who shaped the landscape until the gardens were finally redesigned by Russell Page.

The villa was redesigned many times until it was said to resemble the Rotunda de Vinence Villa in Italy.

La Fiorentina around the late 1940's. During the war, the villa was occupied by the Nazis who left it in ruins before Lady Kenmare and Rory Cameron restored it.

There is a great story about Rory Cameron in Fabulous Dead People online at The New York Times.

An old photo of the gardens.

Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton at La Fiorentina in 1967 photographed by Henry Clarke. Rory Cameron and his mother received many movie stars and well known people to the villa for glamorous parties.

A vintage photo of the gardens date unknown.

Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor playing gin outside at La Fiorentina in 1967 by Henry Clarke.

The outdoor furniture looks similar to pieces that were installed by interior designer Billy Baldwin who decorated La Fiorentina for his clients advertising executive Mary Wells Lawrence and her husband Harding Lawrence, president of Braniff International Airlines.  They purchased the villa from Lady Kenmare in 1969.

In Billy Baldwin Decorates, La Fiorentina is described as "a villa for active Americans."

The Lawrences told Billy Baldwin before the redecoration, "Let's have lots of linen and cottons, big puffy sofas and chairs, and good lights to read by.  But let us remember that we bought the house because of what it is.  Let's not revolutionize it."

When Rory Cameron and his mother lived at Villa Fiorentina, it was very neutral and without color like a black and white photograph.  Billy Baldwin said "We have simply reshot it in color."

A view of the living room decorated by Rory Cameron.

"Patterns in small doses, calmer than in an allover smash, creates a living room with a sense of serenity, yet is just plentiful enough to give the room life." - Billy Baldwin

Another view of the living room decorated by Rory Cameron.


"Clear, fresh blue covers the upholstered sofas and chairs, a deeper blue checkerboards with white on the French woven rugs, and every blue imaginable mingles in the Indian hankerchief pillows. All over the room are masses of blue and white Chinese porcelains.  The big lacquered coffee table was designed, as was much of the furniture spotted here and there, by Charles Sevigny." - Billy Baldwin

One end of the living room with the entrance hall decorated with trompe l'oeil Greek vignettes is visible beyond.

"The library was used during the chilly as a sitting room and during the summer as a kind of retreat from a houseful of guests."

A view of the library as decorated by Rory Cameron.

Mr. Lawrence's study was very masculine and decorated with Persian paintings.

"A beautiful fresco, eighteenth-century Italian trompe l'oeil transferred to canvas - like a verdure tapestry in wonderful soft beiges and greens - covers the walls of the dining room, a charming, almost square room with tranquil view of the sea." Billy Baldwin

A old view of the dining room year unknown.


A view of the dining room decorated by Rory Cameron.



Elizabeth Taylor and her five year old daughter Maria at La Fiorentina in 1967 photographed by Henry Clarke. This is the only photo of a bedroom that I could find anywhere.

In the second floor alcove hangs a painting by Cleve Gray and drawings by Jack Youngerman. 

Elizabeth Taylor wearing her diamonds by the pool at La Fiorentina.

An old view of the infinity pool that was added to the property by Rory Cameron.

A shot of the pool from Billy Baldwin Decorates which states that "lunch is sometimes served in the little apricot and white pavilion."

"There's a deep respect for good design whether it be of man or nature, old or new, indigenous or imported.  It's all a part of the young vibrant American lifestyle the Lawrences have brought to La Fiorentina.  And La Fiorentina, with reason, is absolutely delighted." - Billy Baldwin

The Lawrences enjoyed La Fiorentina for more than 30 years before selling the villa furnished in 1999.  The new owners promptly turned around and sold everything at Sotheby's and gutted the interiors. Mary Wells Lawrence wrote a fabulous book about her advertising career A Big Life that also includes her memories of La Fiorentina and Billy Baldwin. ''Billy taught me everything about houses, and I trusted him completely,'' she said. ''He liked working for us because we gave him total control. I liked working with Billy, because it provided such a learning curve.''  I love that we're still learning from Billy Baldwin today. 
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