Showing posts with label architectural digest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label architectural digest. Show all posts

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Italian Style!


We are thrilled to featured in the July issue of Italian Architectural Digest!
Here's Ron and me gracing the pages of the magazine. I am wearing a one of a kind dress design by Valerj Probega. How appropriate since she is a fierce Italian fashion designer.

This issue features a wonderful pictorial of one our favorite projects,
Christina Aguilera's Home!

Her music studio. "The Red Lip" Room. With D*Face artwork and vintage brass tables.
Gorgeous Christina in the game room.
Pink felt pool table. Notice how we put the billiard green on the walls. Star rug by Paul Smith. This project had such a surreal edge to it. Absolutely divine to create.
Custom artwork, Grammy(s), dramatic theater shown below.
Beautiful manzanita sculptures by Krislyn.
D*Face Marilyn on David Hicks inspired wallpaper suspended above a David LaChapelle book on a William Switzer console.
Kitchen is a fanciful feast of color, fun and family.
Bedroom designed with Hollywood opulence in mind, inspired by the glamorous film sets saluting the likes of Mary Pickford & Marlene Dietrich, yet fit for a modern day queen.
Lovely Christina.
The master bath, & her office.

A round velvet bed is such a wonderful focal point to this room. Layers of beautiful elements such as the Circa wallpaper with roses, bespoke striped fabric and Christina's signature red. Classic! = A fabulous project.
Thank you Architectural Digest!

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Where it all began

To us, old Hollywood living has such a signature look and feel. While visiting the prop house of historic Warner Bros. studios in Burbank the other day, Ron and I reminisced about the incredible and inspirational lifestyles this town has been built on.
Audrey Hepburn with husband actor and director Mel Ferrer at their home on Kimridge Road in Beverly Hills, 1956.In 1964 actress Sophia Loren posed for photographer Alfred Eisenstaed in the villa outside Rome she shared with her husband, producer Carlo Ponti. “I remember our dwelling with great fondness,” recalls her son Carlo Ponti, Jr., today the music director and conductor of Southern California’s San Bernardino Symphony Orchestra. “I think it was—and still is—the most beautiful house I have ever seen."
Marlene Dietrich's Beverly Hills residence in the mid-1930s reflected her preference for high-contrast black-and-white furniture in a home that featured a tuxedo sofa, a mural of a leopard and a zebra, a zebra-print throw, 19th-century Chinese wallcoverings and an ankle-deep carpet of fur. “I would like to have lived in Hollywood at another time,” Dietrich once remarked.

Ava Gardener
“Legend has it that Julia Jean Turner was discovered at Schwab’s Drugstore,” remarks Cheryl Crane, daughter of actress Lana Turner. “But, in truth, Billy Wilkerson, a talent scout, spotted her at the Top Hat Café, a soda fountain across from Hollywood High School. He took her to Warner Bros., where she was renamed Lana, cast in several movies and dubbed the Sweater Girl.” As such, Lana Turner became one of the most durable pinups of her generation. “That image clung to me for the rest of my career,” Turner observed in her autobiography. “I was the sexual promise, the object of desire. And as I matured, my façade did too, to an image of coolness and glamour—the movie star in diamonds, swathed in white mink.” She was in her early twenties when she purchased a modest cottage in a lush, quiet neighborhood north of Sunset Boulevard. For the interiors, Turner created a cocoon of frills and flounces and surrounded herself with china figurines, ruffled lampshades and an enormous teddy bear.Doris Day
“There’s always been just one way—what’s right for me,” said the indomitable Mae West. Like many performers, West was a mixture of show-off and recluse, a personality at once calculatingly public and insistently private. These two facets of the actress’s nature were reflected in her home and the life she led there—not in any balanced way but, like nesting boxes, one hidden within the other. Outside was the Mae West persona, sex-obsessed and self-loving, for which she found a domestic equivalent in the apartment she moved into in 1932, when she first arrived in Los Angeles, and where, in what may well be a record for residential longevity in Hollywood, she remained for the next 48 years. Located on the sixth floor of the Ravenswood, an Art Déco building on Rossmore Avenue whose other tenants included Ava Gardner, Hedda Hopper and Judy Garland, West’s apartment was modest in size. It had just two bedrooms, a tiny kitchen, and common rooms that were by no means grand, but the decoration aspired to grandeur, and beyond. “Quality, quality—that’s all I heard [from my mother],” West told Life magazine in 1969. “Everything has proportion, nothing is jarring. Everything is symphony.”
In 1946 Gene Kelly and his first wife, Betsy Blair, bought a modest home at 725 North Rodeo Drive that everyone in their circle would regard as one of the most vibrant social hubs. “A gang of us used to meet on weekends, most of them members of ‘The MGM Family,’” wrote actor Hume Cronyn in his 1991 memoir A Terrible Liar. “These gatherings would shift from house to house, but those I remember best were at the house of Gene and Betsy Kelly.” Famous for his athletic ability and rather notorious competitiveness, Kelly would invite his friends to play touch football and volley ball, providing generous spreads of food and drink, and enjoying sing-alongs at the piano with the likes of Judy Garland and Hoagy Carmichael. Most memorable for his guests, however, was the elaborate and complicated version of charades that Kelly invented, known simply as The Game. “The trick was to pick a series of phrases or quotations so outrageous that they would defy the abilities of the most accomplished pantomimist,” writes Cronyn. It was nearly impossible to beat the Kellys, he says, who shared a “radar-like communication.” “He was a very bright man, in addition to being a talented man,” author and Hollywood historian Rudy Behlmer remarks with admiration. “He was very articulate and his recall was not faulty.” By all accounts, Kelly was exceedingly happy in the North Rodeo Drive residence. There he would live until a tragic Christmas fire in 1983 destroyed it and everything in it, including unique works of art, collected papers, and Kelly’s honorary Oscar for his brilliance and versatility as an actor, director, singer, dancer, and, especially, a choreographer. But so fond was Kelly of the house and its location that when it burned to the ground, he had a new house built in its place on the same property and lived there with his third wife until he died in 1996.
Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, circa 1940.
Few celebrities exemplified the movie community’s shift to simpler lifestyles better than Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, who moved to a 20-acre ranch in the sparsely settled San Fernando Valley town of Encino several months after their marriage in 1939.
Which brings us back to today. Burbank still has that ranch style essence of decades ago. The ghosts of the past still, are such an inspiration and the essence lives on. It is a wonderful thing, nostalgia and to be right in the middle of it is priceless.
(All photos and quotes from Architectural Digest.)


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Yves Saint Laurent ~ with appreciation

Paris’ Sale of the Century
Inside the Christie’s Auction of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé’s Collection, with Exclusive Photos from the Architectural Digest Archives
Text by Mark Ginsburg Published July 2009
1. Italian (18) $1,238,849
2. Attributed to Maison Bagues $128,139
3. Gobelins $712,886
At the presale exhibition, held over the course of three days at the Grand Palais, more than 30,000 people visited the treasure trove of paintings, sculpture and furnishings that Saint Laurent and Bergé had amassed.
1 to 3. Italian $109,576
4. James Ensor $6,436,600

GRAND SALON, 1976

Architectural Digest shot the couple’s apartment in 1976.

1. Italian $109,576
2. Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann $202,393
3. Jean Dunand $418,966
4. Armand Albert Rateau $1,455,422
5. French (pair) $125,045
6. Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann $94,106
7. Jules Leleu $44,604
8. After Giambologna and Pietro Tacca (pair) $388,027
9. Pierre Legrain $589,130
10. Armand Albert Rateau $388,027
11. French $148,249

12. Eileen Gray $28,238,277

GRAND SALON, 1976

Architectural Digest shot the couple’s apartment in 1976.

1. Jean Dunand $81,731
2. Attributed to Pierre Reymond $137,421
3. Jean Dunand $125,045
4. Jean Dunand $66,261
5. Albert Cheuret $403,496
6. Sir Edward Burne-Jones $774,764
7. Alfred Porteneuve (pair) $155,984
8. French (four) $132,780
9. Ernest Boiceau $774,76


GRAND SALON, 2008

When Christie’s photographed the apartment in the fall of 2008, the grand salon remained mostly unchanged, although the walls were now lined with paintings.

1. Giorgio de Chirico $14,233,226
2. Augsburg $233,332
3. Fernand Léger $7,158,509
4. Fernand Léger $4,559,634
5. Augsburg $233,332
6. Nuremberg $148,249
7. 19th century $140,515
8. Fernand Léger $4,848,398
9. Thomas Gainsborough $2,827,050
10. Henri Matisse $10,623,677
11. Juan Gris $1,383,231
12. Probably Italian $47,698

SALON DE MUSIQUE

Hall of Mirrors

Saint Laurent and Bergé were patrons of art and design as well as collectors. In 1974 the couple commissioned a pair of mirrors from Claude Lalanne for the music room of their rue de Babylone apartment. Ultimately, 15 bronze mirrors with foliate motifs by Lalanne covered the walls. Visible through the space is a Roman torso in the entrance hall.

1. Claude Lalanne $94,106
2. Roman $1,671,995
3. Claude Lalanne (15) $2,393,905
4. Jean Dunand (pair) $808,660


BIBLIOTHÈQUE

Light and Bright

“There is a theme and a continuity to my collections. Of course, there are always fantasies, but it is the base that counts,” Saint Laurent told Architectural Digest in 1976. During AD’s visit, a Joseph Csaky bas-relief was on the fireplace.

1. Joseph Csaky $186,923
2. French $32,228
3. Vilmos Zsolnay $44,604
What a legacy! A shining example of good taste and well spent investments towards a wonderful living environment. YSL understood the value of investing into one's lifestyle. Well done! It is paying back ten fold.

Monday, January 19, 2009

White House Interiors


In honor of the Presidential Inauguration, we thought we would link to the article and photos from "Architectural Digest" March 2008 on the newly redecorated White House.

Check it out:

http://www.architecturaldigest.com/homes/homes/2008/03/white_house_article

"It is the most famous building in the world. People who have never heard of 10 Downing Street or the Élysée Palace know exactly what the White House is and even what it looks like. It is more than four walls and a roof. It is a symbol. Every day, in dozens of languages, television commentators report “the White House said today”—as if the building had a life and personality all its own. And in fact it does. For more than 200 years the White House has been a living home to American presidents and their families. Everyone who walks its halls is conscious of all those—Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Delano Roosevelt—who have gone there before. “There’s a great reminder of history when you live here,” says Laura Bush, the wife of the current and 43rd president." "READ MORE . . .