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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

CLOUD CITY







These photos were taken on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where Tomás Saraceno's installation Cloud City currently resides, through November 4.  Saraceno creates environments out of scientific forms, breaking boundaries between art, science, and architecture.  This work challenges the way the participant interacts with his or her surroundings, and the roof of the Met is the perfect place to experience the mirrored structure, which allows viewers to ascend closer and closer to clouds themselves.

I'm wearing a Robert Rodriguez blouse, H&M skirt, Neon wedges, and Linda Farrow sunglasses.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

THE JAPANESE BRIDGE


The work below is one of a series of twelve paintings of Claude Monet's footbridge at Giverny, a beloved subject of his work from the year 1899.  

Claude Monet,  Bridge over a Pond of Water Lilies, 1899

The bridge is recreated at the New York Botanical Garden for the exhibition Monet's Garden, on view through October 21.


I'm wearing a Zara dress, Theory shoes, and a Rebecca Minkoff bag.
 Thanks to Chelsea for the photos, @zkinslow for the .gif animation and metmuseum.org for the image.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

RYAN MCGINNESS


Ryan McGinness (b. 1972) and I share more than just an appreciation of bright, contrasting colors and symbols.  


The artist and myself are both originally from Virginia Beach, VA, and now reside in New York, NY.


McGinness's large-scale silk screens (and other works in a multitude of media) combine visual forms and iconography that overlap to produce a web of signs and symbols.  I've always thought of these works as a sort of scavenger hunt of characters and meanings.


He has described the way that the culture of Virginia Beach is an inherent aspect of his work.


"I think my interest in [graphic language] comes from growing up in Virginia Beach, which has a surf and skate culture obsessed with branding and saturated with a cult of cool.  


"At an early age I recognized that the power of a logo...can change the value of an otherwise ordinary object like a surfboard or a t-shirt or a skateboard."


Reminiscent of the juxtaposition of high art and illustration of artists like Andy Warhol, McGinness's work brings together multiple disciplines, including graphic design, fine art, advertising, and signage.


I'm wearing an H&M dress, vintage bangle, and Carlos wedges.



Photos by @kay_elle_pea on the roof of the New Museum.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

CLARENCE COLES PHILLIPS


Last weekend was one of my favorite events of the year: the Jazz Age Lawn Party on Governors Island in NYC.  I wore a modern rendition of what a 1920s lady might wear to a daytime fête, and here is a look at my inspiration.


To get some ideas, I perused 1920s fashion plates, and came across the work of Clarence Coles Phillips (1880-1927).  


Phillips was an American illustrator, well-known for his watercolor images used in popular magazines such as Life and Good Housekeeping throughout the 1910s and early 1920s.


One of the most interesting aspects of his work is how the figure often disappears into the background, as though what she is wearing perfectly matches her surroundings.  


This device was known as the "fadeaway girl" and became a trademark of Phillips' work and also saved on printing costs.


Phillips' images of women served as both snapshots of life and fashion plates, and give a whimsical perspective of the style at the time.


I'm wearing a BCBG jumpsuit, hat from a street vendor, Betsey Johnson shoes, vintage purse and bracelet, and F21 necklace.


[Phillips photos from hemmings.com, oilpaintings-supplier.com, magazineart.org, and polarbearstale.blogspot.com.]

Friday, August 10, 2012

ART TO WEAR: Gerhard Richter



These Nicholas Kirkwood pumps are the unofficial shoe incarnation of Gerhard Richter's Abstraktes Bild 809-3 (1994).  I'd like to wear them with this dress.

Richter image from art observed.com

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

GEORGE BARBIER


The print of this dress from sheinside reminded me of Art Deco fashion illustrations, particularly those by French artist George Barbier.


Barbier (1882-1932) was a member of the Ecole des Beaux Arts, and was well-known during the first half of the 20th century for his fashion illustrations, costumes, and jewelry.


He was the leader of an artistic and stylistic collective called "The Knights of the Bracelet", who championed ostentatious dress.


I'm wearing a dress courtesy of sheinside.com and Carlos wedges.

[Photos by me; Barbier images from artophile.com.]

Thursday, July 19, 2012

YAYOI KUSAMA



With the opening of her retrospective at the Whitney Museum and the launch of her collaboration with Louis Vuitton, Yayoi Kusama's unconventional career has been widely discussed and re-interpreted.


What I've always admired about Kusama's work is that there is literally no distinction between her work and her life--it is one and the same.


This article provides an abbreviated overview of Kusama's life and career, describing her rise to NYC art world stardom in the Sixties, return to Japan as a "national disgrace" and institutionalization in the Seventies, and finally, her rediscovery in recent years.



When Kusama (b. 1929) arrived in New York from Japan in the 1960s at the recommendation of Georgia O'Keeffe, she discovered an audience for her art of "self-obliteration" that was unlike anything she experienced in Japan.


Kusama created drawings, paintings, sculptures, installations, happenings, and films, describing her work as "art medicine", and simultaneously blurring the boundaries between art and life.


Throughout the following decade, her popularity rose and fell, leading her to eventually return to Japan and voluntarily enter a mental institution, which she still frequents.


"I fight pain, anxiety, and fear every day, and the only method I have found that relieves my illness is to keep creating art."  --Yayoi Kusama



Kusama fell off of the art world radar for some time, until she was "rediscovered" in the 1990s.  She continues to live her art on a daily basis, and is an inspiration for those who wish to give voice to the way they see the world.


Kusama's retrospective is on view at the Whitney Museum through September 30, and her Louis Vuitton collection is now available.


I'm wearing a vintage dress from Beacon's Closet, H&M necklace, and Salvatore Ferragamo sandals.


Photos by @kay_elle_pea at Pier 45, Hudson River Park, NYC, the future site of the Whitney Museum, and current site of Kusama's installation Guidepost to the New Space, 2004.



[Kusama images from designboom.com, phaidon.com, blog@artfinder.com, trendland.com, bullettmedia.com, blogs.artinfo.com, and pasunautre.com, respectively.]