Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Jonathan Adler and Simon Doonan Colour Their World!

Happy hipsters Jonathan Adler and Simon Doonan know how to play table tennis and live the colourful life!

 Their sunny Park Avenue apartment sparkles and pops with colour, and each day they like to come home from the office, Simon Doonan's being Barneys NYC and Jonathan's being Jonathan Adler Pottery, Home and Decorating, and get down and dirty with a game of table tennis on the coolest table tennis table in the known universe. 

 Yes it has Saarinen bases and red and black paisley fabric covering!


Please enjoy the following images via Architectural Digest Espana

Simon Doonan relaxing tabletop!




Jonathan Adler:  The man who coined the phrase "See YOU Later Decorator!"



Love the flitch coffee table!



Now that's a decorated bathroom!  Love the 'Hermes' orange and the monogrammed bathmat!



The wonderful bedside Owl is from Jonathan Adler



Just adore the banana sculpture! "Sit on it and twist!!!!"
Naughty!!


Tangerine Parsons table, fab atomic light and Phillippe Starck Gnomes! 



Fantastic area rug! Pottery by Adler!

Friday, February 25, 2011

Wearstler Brand is Ready to Wear in NYC!

It had to happen. The Kelly Wearstler brand has expanded into ready to wear.
 Ms Wearslter showed her collection this week in New York City
 to a group of selected fashion editors and buyers.


We can only hope it makes its way to the Australian shores, or online store here we come!


Here she is with all the goodies in tow!






Love the floor, love the wall, love the colour palette,
 love the skirt, love the shirt, love the boots, love the pants, love it all!
Can I somehow wear that floor?





Lovely swatches!





Thursday, February 24, 2011

MUSEUM OF OLD AND NEW ART - An Idiosyncratic Boys Own Adventure

The recently opened MONA sits on the River Derwent in the exotic end of the earth location of Tasmania.
Bunker down at MONA

The curved mirrored entry greets the visitor, who may have arrived by boat, and then the museum descends underground like a bunker.

MONA is the brainchild of gambling guru David Walsh, who is definitely not interested in playing it safe. He has amassed an eclectic, challenging, and sometimes confronting collection which ranges from Egyptian and Roman antiquities, Modernist Australian art, all the way up to contemporary works from all over the world. 
 The visitor will find no explanatory plaques, and the collection is in no specific order.  Walsh wants the viewer to just experience the work at first sight with no preconceived notions or influence.

One of the more controversial works, "The Holy Virgin Mary" by Chris Ofili, which features a collage of pornographic images and cow dung, has it's very own interesting history which includes being part of the iconic contemporary British show of 1997, Sensation, and later in 1999 being part of the scandal which included former New York City Mayor Guiliani suing the The Brooklyn Museum of Art for showing the work.
On this basis, the show was consequently cancelled from being shown at the 
National Gallery of Australia, and how appropriate it is that Walsh was
 finally successful in acquiring it!


'The HolyVirgin Mary' by Chris Ofili

Then there is the specially commissioned work by Wim Delvoye, which reproduces in "smell-o-vision" the human digestive system, sure to be a 'crowd pleaser'!

The German art star Anselm Kiefer can also be seen. The Kiefer Pavilion which houses his
 'Falling Stars/The breaking of the Vessels', is a sculptural work combining lead, glass and iron. 
The quote on the MONA web site, (I am not sure if it is from Kiefer himself or Walsh), best sums it up!

"We kind of like the idea that you have to come to the end of the earth, and then a museum on an island off the end of the earth, and then a pavilion at the far side of the museum on the island off the end of the earth, to see this German neo-expressionist masterpiece!"


ANSELM KIEFER sculpture "Falling Stars/The Breaking of the Vessels"



I think MONA without a doubt is destined to be an important contribution to the international art world.  I like that it's creator David Walsh has tried to push the boundaries in Australian terms, and not follow a 'cookie-cutter' approach to his collection and Museum.  I think the location is exotic and there is something so mysterious about Tasmania, in the world context, which I think would perfectly compliment the collection. 
 While you can see the usual suspects of Australian art history, Whitely, Nolan, Blackman et al, I am pleased and looking forward to being moved and confronted, after all, isn't that what art is about?

 I also look forward to staying in one of the luxurious Mona Pavilions which honour our Australian icons of art and architecture.  Art and a glass of wine from Walsh's Moorilla Estate, sound good to me!


The Robin Boyd Pavilion



The Walter Pavilion



the Roy Pavilion featuring the Wunderkammer cabinet of curiosities



Car Crash sculpture by Roman Signe



Grounds Pavilion




MONA Photo by Sean Fennessy via INDESIGNLIVE


All images via MONA & The Weekend Australian Magazine "Temple Of David" by Matthew Denham

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