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September 29, 2006

Aranzi Aronza - Total Japanese Cuteness

By Holly Becker, decor8Ah, Aranzi Aronza. Step into the world of Japanese products - only in English! Their website is easy to read, amazingly easy to navigate (and packed with total cuteness), and you can shop them online! I love their dishware and these cutie stacking mug cups, don't you?

Aranzi Aronza carries lots of homewares, as well as accessories, letter sets, rubber stamps, and t-shirts, too. Have fun, spend some money, knock yourself out with cuteness galore.

Psst: Don't miss their new enameled canisters!
(images from aranzi aronza)

September 28, 2006

Dwell Homes

I did a couple of recent posties on manufactured homes. I have already given credit to Tree Hugger and their fabulous lengthy posts on manufactured modern housing.

But I just can't help myself. I am in love with some of these eco-friendly, well designed and very affordable metro-dwellings that you pre-order and they plop it anywhere you like.

I did a little post on Metroshed and Marmol Radziner. Today I wanted to showoff Dwell Homes.

Is everything from Dwell cool? I think so!

Check out these tasty selections:

Empryean Empyrean

Lazor_office Lazor Office

Resolution_4_architecture Resolution 4

Check out the various floor plans and options you can choose from. Even office buildings!

I am so impressed by what can happen today with environmentally friendly design that looks cool! Housing contractors are in trouble if this catches on!

September 27, 2006

Modern Santa Fe

2Modern Design Talk is going to take you on a little tour across the United States, looking for the best in modern lifestyle resources by major metropolitan city. We are starting with Seattle and zig-zagging our way to New York. If you have any suggestions for our directory, which we will be constantly improving and adding, please let us know by providing comments to the posts.

Modern Santa Fe

A city of culture with with an up and coming modern lifestyle still inspired by an authentic adobe flavor.

Santa_fe_3

Modern Furniture Stores:

Jezebel Studio and Gallery

La Puerta Originals

Zen Stone Lighting

Galisteo Home Furnishings

Pandora's

Dining_1

Modern Art & Museums:

Joyce Robins Gallery

Karan Ruhlen Gallery

Museum of Fine Art

Peyton Wright

Nussbaumer Fine Art Gallery

Burnside_residence_nm_01_2_1

Modern Architecture:

First National Bank

La Fonda Hotel

Palace of Governors

Santa Fe Art Institute

Santa_fe_art_institute

Modern Architects & Designers:

Dennis Holloway

Michael Henry

Brukoff Design

Douglas Newby

Abq_loreexter1


Modern Etc:

Santa Fe Design Week Oct 22-29, 2006

New Mexico Culture

September 26, 2006

Jackson Pollock revisited

I recently posted about an exhibit for Jackson Pollock at the Guggenheim museum.

I thought it would be appropriate to provide some more images of his work and some more about one of the best artists in the past 50 years.

Jackson_pollock_2_1 Jackson Pollock in his studio. 1950. Courtesy Hans Namuth Studio 

Paul Jackson Pollock was born January 28, 1912, in Cody, Wyoming. He grew up in Arizona and California and in 1928 began to study painting at the Manual Arts High School, Los Angeles. In the fall of 1930, Pollock moved to New York and studied under Thomas Hart Benton at the Art Students League. Benton encouraged him throughout the succeeding decade. By the early 1930s, Pollock knew and admired the murals of José Clemente Orozco and Diego Rivera. Although he traveled widely throughout the United States during the 1930s, much of Pollock’s time was spent in New York, where he settled permanently in 1934 and worked on the WPA Federal Art Project from 1935 to 1942. In 1936, he worked in David Alfaro Siqueiros’s experimental workshop in New York.

Pollock’s first solo show was held at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art of This Century gallery, New York, in 1943. Guggenheim gave him a contract that lasted through 1947, permitting him to devote all his time to painting. Prior to 1947, Pollock’s work reflected the influence of Pablo Picasso and Surrealism [more]. During the early 1940s, he contributed paintings to several exhibitions of Surrealist and abstract art, including Natural, Insane, Surrealist Art at Art of This Century in 1943, and Abstract and Surrealist Art in America, organized by Sidney Janis at the Mortimer Brandt Gallery, New York, in 1944.

Pollock Blue (Moby Dick) 1943

From the fall of 1945, when artist Lee Krasner and Pollock were married, they lived in the Springs, East Hampton, New York. In 1952, Pollock’s first solo show in Paris opened at the Studio Paul Facchetti and his first retrospective was organized by Clement Greenberg at Bennington College, Bennington, Vermont. He was included in many group exhibitions, including the Annuals at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, from 1946 and the Venice Biennale in 1950. Although his work was widely known and exhibited internationally, the artist never traveled outside the United States. He was killed in an automobile accident on August 11, 1956, in the Springs.

Jackson_pollock_1Lavender Mist: Number 1, 1950

Pollock was the first ``all-over'' painter, pouring paint rather than using brushes and a palette, and abandoning all conventions of a central motif. He danced in semi-ecstasy over canvases spread across the floor, lost in his patterning, dripping and dribbling with total control. He said: ``The painting has a life of its own. I try to let it come through.'' He painted no image, just ``action'', though ``action painting'' seems an inadequate term for the finished result of his creative process. Lavender Mist is 3 m long (nearly 10 ft), a vast expanse on a heroic scale. It is alive with colored scribble, spattered lines moving this way and that, now thickening, now trailing off to a slender skein. The eye is kept continually eager, not allowed to rest on any particular area. Pollock has put his hands into paint and placed them at the top right-- an instinctive gesture eerily reminiscent of cave painters who did the same. The overall tone is a pale lavender, maide airy and active. At the time Pollock was heiled as the greatest American painter, but there are already those who feel his work is not holding up in every respect.

Jackson_pollock_3 Jackson Pollock.
Foto by: Wilfred Zuobaum. Courtesy Jackson Pollock Papers

Lee Krasner (1908-84), who married Pollock in 1944, was not celebrated at all during his lifetime (cut short in 1956 by a fatal car crash), but it was actually she who first started covering the canvas with a passionate flurry of marks. The originality of her vision, its stiff integrity and its great sense of internal cohesion, is now beginning to be recognized. Cobalt Night (1962; 237 x 401 cm (7 ft 9 1/3 x 13 ft 2 in)) at 4 m (over 13 ft) is even larger than Lavender Mist and has the same kind of heroic ambition.

September 25, 2006

Make Earth First With Arbor Sports

Splash_06a_1
I have to admit, when I heard that Salt Lake City had received some snow this past week, I got that tickle feeling in the pit of my stomach. You know that feeling when you know that snow season is almost upon us and you begin to dream in white? Summer has barely passed and I am already onto the next season much like a toddler tosses an empty bottle. As my excitement builds I yearn for my first pass at fresh snow.

What better time than now to start planning those trips and dreaming of your new board for the winter season? For those of you ECO conscious people who are in need of a new board and have delayed this purchase because you don't want to contribute to the mass of unnecessarily discarded snow gear, I have found a guilt-free snowboard line just for you.

Now celebrating 10 years in the skate and snow business, Arbor Sports has been recognized as one of the innovators in manufacturing ECO friendly snow gear using products that are sustainable and environmentally friendly. Arbor has recently introduced a line of boards made from our favorite renewable resource, Bamboo. Using Bamboo top-sheets, Arbor snowboards are hardcore strong but extremely light,(good for the ladies), and well worth the investment into your wallet and our world.
Bamboo seems to be popping up everywhere. From the obvious flooring solutions to the trendy clothing and upholstery textiles.
Arbor also recently introduced a line of clothing made from Bamboo. These limited edition T-shirts are being sold exclusively at Fred Segal in Los Angeles. The graphics are fresh and the garments are so super-soft that your friends will not be able to keep their hands off. Maybe not such a bad thing, you decide.
I always like to see ECO-trends make such a huge impact in the consumer market. This is one bandwagon I would like to see other major labels in the skate and snow industries jump on. I can't think of a better way to glide down the mountain than surrounded by natures sights and sounds including my new eco-friendly Arbor board carving it's way down a perfectly groomed mountain on an early season day.

September 22, 2006

Marimekko New Line Autumn/Winter -'06/'07

By Holly Becker, decor8

Marimekko Saaa-woon! Browse some new beauties from your Finnish friends, with four color themes in their Autumn collection that reflect the diversity of nature, created by talented young designers Erja Hirvi, Maija Louekari and Teresa Moorhouse, Maija Isola, Fujiwo Ishimoto and Marjaana Virta. Isn't the Kassiopeia fabric amazing? Not to mention (okay I'll mention!) their fashion, handbags and accessories for Autumn, totally hot hot hot! Umbrellas, coin purses, handbags, and a must-have b/w striped shirt with  Marimekko across the chest in red. I have to find out who carries that shirt online, does anyone know?
What are your favorites for the season? [UPDATE: FYI: I found a source for Marimekko fashion, called Kiitos in New York.)
(images from marimekko)

September 21, 2006

PS1 Partay

I read a recent post regarding FIRST FRIDAY parties at the MCA in Chicago

It looked like fun...but entirely civilized.

Let's move on over to New York and take a look at some of the Partays happening at PS1. I have been there a few times this summer, when I have been in town and it has been nice and nutty, New York style.

Ps1_new_york

There were plenty of beers, dancing (the dancefloor was PACKED) and, uhm...oh yeah!...art.

The art, sculptures and photography all had a pleasant theme the last time I was there...human waste...if you will. Every medium possible, covering every raunchy topic possible. Some of it was very good and many of it was very bad. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder I guess.

It is an exhibit that is there till the 26th of September. "Into Me/Out of Me"

Robert_gober Robert Gober "Untitled"

If you want to go, put your ear to the ground and find out what Saturdays they are having their impromptu events. I found out from a friend. Tickets were at the door.

My highlight: A friend of mine and I had a frisbee. We decided to start tossing it back and forth in one of the rooms that had one large TV screen with a beach scene looping on a video. People started to think we were part of the exhibit and were ducking under the frisbee throws. We kept stone-cold expressions on our faces. A crowd gathered. Good times.

September 19, 2006

First Fridays at MCA

The Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago is hosting FIRST FRIDAYS (the first Friday of every month).

Museum_of_contemporary_art

Happy hour takes on a new meaning with First Fridays at the MCA. Relax after a long workweek with a cash bar featuring ABSOLUT Vodka specialty drinks and free Wolfgang Puck appetizers. Enjoy live music from local DJs, the world’s only iMac G5 digital dating bar, and creation stations right within our open galleries. Each month features an up-and-coming Chicago artist in a preview of the latest 12 x 12: New Artists/New Work exhibition.

First_fridays

First Fridays tickets, which include museum admission, live entertainment, and complimentary Wolfgang Puck hors d’oeuvres, are $15 ($7 for MCA members). Advance tickets are available for $10 ($7 MCA members). Please call the MCA box office at 312.397.4010 or visit ticketweb.com. Doors are open from 6 to 10 pm with a cash bar until 9:30 pm. Guests must be 21 or older to enter.

September 18, 2006

The Writing Is On The Wall

Wonderfulgraffiti_1
Ever had something to say and wanted to go so far as put your words to your walls? There is a company on the web that can help you do just that. www.wonderfulgraffiti.com
I found this online company as I was researching a way to begin an art project for my foyer. I am always coming across fantastic phrases and thoughts that I want to remember and would like to share with others.

During a recent trip to a local coffee shop, I noticed what looked like standard stencils covering the walls with a quotation from an unknown author.
While the words struck me as interesting and worth remembering, it was the application to the painted wall, the font and the color of the text that caught my attention.

As I mentioned, I have been collecting random thoughts from both famous and not so famous people for years and up until recently, I have had no particular use for these words other than a messy pile of sticky notes and chicken scratch.
This coffee shop art was exactly the outlet I was looking for and so began my search.
www.wonderfulgraffiti.com is a user friendly site dedicated to creative thinkers. This site was created by a woman who was faced with the same challenge that I was currently facing, "how do I put all of these quotes and phrases on my wall?".
With endless fonts, colors and suggestions the owner and creative director, Mary McPhail, has made it very simple to achieve my desired effect. Wonderful Graffiti is very thin pieces of vinyl which stick to clean walls with a simple application.
The letters won't fade, crack or peel and there is no damage to your walls should you choose to remove them.

I started by requesting samples of 3 graffiti colors to test the waters. The samples were shipped out promptly and it was easy to see that the quality and ease of use was a perfect application for my artistic endeavor.
I chose bronze and love the color against my carmel colored wall.
It was fun to play with the font colors and sizes and after hours of experimentation, I decided that my project would involve multiple fonts with varying sizes. Each time someone comes into my home and expresses an interest in my ongoing "Graffiti project", they are
encouraged to add to the "wall of fame" with their own or borrowed quotation.
Wonderful Graffiti has made it easy for me to quickly access my account and order my next quote. In addition, the customer service department has been very helpful with font sizing when I get in a bind.

I love this site and run the risk of over doing it in my home. Less is more but I can't help but feeling like I want more graffiti on my walls.
I have decided that my current graffiti project is cool enough to creep onto a few more walls in the house, but sooner,rather than later, I should stick to just sharing the gift of Wonderful Graffiti with others.

September 15, 2006

Design Blogging From The Land Down Under

By: Holly Becker, decor8 Face it. You're eternally cursed. Thanks to your insatible desire to learn about the latest, you'll forever walk into stores immediately able to recognize the Adlers from the Adams. Blogs and magazines have transformed you into a new kind of shopper. An educated one.

Think back a few years. Chances are, you're not the same person that you were before design blogs hit the web. You not only know product lines (both popular and indie), but you anticipate the release of new collections, know the bio's of designers, materials used, prices, and when browsing a major department store, you can quickly point out, "They sooo knocked-off Karim Rashid with that". You're such a snob. :)

Now that we've established that we're all a bunch of design obsessed geeks, care to expand your horizons outside of your local hood and travel to the land of Oz to mingle with like-minded geeks?

Meet Modamuse, an Aussie blog that showcases talented independent modern Australian and New Zealand designers and artisans. The founders, two sisters and designers Nancy and Jessica Lim (they are also decor8 readers and co-own Wild Garden), noticed that their isn't much online coverage of designers in thier corner of the globe so they decided on August 8, 2006 to change all of that with Modamuse. This is a site I'll bookmark because it has a definate focus - What's hot in Australia and New Zealand. This is uncharted territory by most design bloggers, we simply can't cover it like a native. The blog is clean and uncomplicated, simple and beautiful, and most of all it contains uber fabulous finds. They even featured a few of my aussie faves, Hammer and Daisy and Zaishu.

I'm so pleased to welcome Nancy and Jessica to the world of design blogging - and I hope all of you will check out their site and visit their often to expand your horizons and locate fresh exciting finds! Bookmark el pronto!
(images from modomuse)

September 14, 2006

Jackson Pollock LAST CALL

There has been a wonderful exhibit at the Guggenheim this summer and all things must come to an end. This is your last chance to take a look at the Jackson Pollock Exhibit: Paintings on Paper. It ends September 26th.

Jackson_pollock Untitled (Green Silver), ca. 1949

The Guggenheim Museum has long been associated with the work of Jackson Pollock. In 1943, Peggy Guggenheim offered the relatively unknown artist his first solo exhibition at her influential museum/gallery Art of This Century. For the next five years Guggenheim subsidized Pollock with a monthly stipend, which in turn allowed her to amass significant holdings of the artist’s work. After Art of This Century closed in 1948, Guggenheim’s patronage continued. In 1950 she organized his first European solo show at Venice’s Museo Correr, and then began to disseminate his work through gifts to museums from Omaha, Nebraska, to Amsterdam. Her support throughout his brief yet brilliant career was unwavering, and she fondly called Pollock her greatest discovery.

Today, Pollock’s iconic, large-scale canvases are recognized by museumgoers the world over. Yet his smaller, intimately scaled works on paper often come as a revelation to even the most seasoned art audiences. No Limits, Just Edges: Jackson Pollock Paintings on Paper—the first retrospective devoted exclusively to Pollock’s works on paper in 25 years and organized on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of his death—specifically considers Pollock’s draftsmanship as an essential component in his transformation of the traditional figurative line into nonfigurative allover abstraction.

Pollock’s defining innovation has been characterized as the transition from  “drawing into painting.” Though apt, this phrase implies that the mechanics of drawing occurred first and moved in a linear progression toward painting, when in fact in Pollock’s work distinctions between the two mediums are quite elusive. Throughout the approximately seven hundred works on paper that Pollock produced, line would remain the governing principle, regardless of whether he applied pencil or paint to paper.

Jackson_pollock_2 No. 18

September 11, 2006

Metroshed

Okay...I know. I said I wouldn't post more about Modern Pre-fab housing. Tree Hugger has already covered this...blah-blah-blah. But this is so NEW and EXCITING to me! My friend gave me a big list of these other pre-fab peeps, so I though I might as well list a few of my favorites.

Here is a company that doesn't make houses, but more little modern modules for the extracurriculars.

Modern shacks if you will, for things like pool houses, garden/tool sheds, pets, music, art, etc. Order them online and they get delivered to your house. They are eco-friendly and look really good for the price.

Metroshed

Metroshed Pool House :)

Metro_studio Metro Art Studio

Metrokennel Metro Dog Kennel!

September 08, 2006

Confessions of a Flickr Addict

By:  Holly Becker , decor8 for 2Modern

My name is Holly Becker and I'm a flick-a-holic. Seriously, I'm a flickr addict - it's my favorite site right now and I can't get enough of the "add to faves" feature there because I love bookmarking all the photos that I love this way (see example above).  To view my faves, click here.

As a writer and interior design consultant, you can imagine how nosy I am, so flickr gives me a chance to snoop to my hearts content. You should seriously get your snoop on and start surfing through flickr yourself. It's loaded with amazing photos, from design finds to great spaces, and even groups for people that are into the same things (mundane photography, photos of people licking things, travel destinations, self portraits, dogs, you name it).

Do you have a flickr favorites view to share? Any flickr groups or people that you really love, that you'd like to share ?  If so, don't be shy - post your suggestions in the comments space below.

Here are a few flickr friends of mine that I'd like to share with you. You'll be hooked - promise!

Mav - Port to Port
M Patrizio and all of her cuteness
Jonathan - Happy Mundane (tour his home here)
Little Birds - She has a blog, too!
Heather Bailey - Also maintains a charming blog.
10 Cent Designer in Canada (tour her home here)
Simply Photo
Michelle Caplan - LA based artist
Ana Ventura in Portugal
Rustic Relics - This girl loves taking photos of herself - and they are so captivating, you'll be hooked.
...and of course, decor8 is on flickr, too. Loads of interior eye candy here.

If viewing photos isn't enough, and you're looking for groups to join, try We *Heart* Stationery, Art In Your Home, and Fresh New Spaces. These are three groups that I administer (along with Becky and Michelle). Art In Your Home (created by Michelle) and Fresh New Spaces (created by Becky) are especially fun for those of us who love to peek in on real homes - lots of  members who love to show off their space can be found here. Some additional inspirational groups:

Mundane Details
Mid Century Modern
Self Portrait Experience
London Alt
Square Format
TheMOMAProject NYC
Domino Magazine (a group created by a Domino editor)
Interior Design
Alternate Hannover (these kids can take photos like nobody's business)

Get involved!
(photo from sfgirlbybay - this is her sitting area overlooking lovely San Francisco. She's a member of the Fresh New Spaces group.)

September 06, 2006

Inhabit Living Design Contest

Inhabit Living is having a design contest!

Inhabit_living

Go to www.inhabitliving.com to enter. It is open to everyone. You can win $1000, some cool pillows and a nice little resume piece. GO FOR IT!

It is $25 to enter and you get a t-shirt for just submitting some designs. Looks like fun!

Inhabit_tshirt

September 04, 2006

Modern Prefab House

Labor Day weekend in New Hampshire...well, it isn't quite the HampTONS, but nevertheless a fun journey into a new area.

I am prone to getting stuck into routines. Same restaurants, same vacations spots, same blogs :)

My therapist advised me to try new things. New routes to work, new coffee drinks, new people...etc. So far it has garnered mixed results. There are a few things that I was very pleasantly surprised by and others I asked myself "Why did I do that?!? I could've stuck with my usual 'X' and been happy...that is why I get it every morning!".

Anyway. Back to the positive.

New Hampshire is very green. Lush. Old. Several towns have fascinating history. It's fun to be in a place that is 3oo+ years old, especially in the United States.

The cool thing, is that my friend (Roger), has a large piece of land outside one of these little towns and has done something very interesting: He has constructed a very modern, affordable and green house that looks AMAZING.

I haven't ever stayed in a modern pre-fab house. His house came pre-ordered, with architectural plans, appliances, flooring, solor panels, everything. It looked great...especially for a 2nd home in the mountains.

Prefab_modern_house (not the actual house)

There are several manufacturers. The one he used is Marmol Radziner.

Modern_prefab_house Poolhouse for the house above. How cool!!!

I was going to do a bunch of posts on Modern Prefab Houses, but after taking a look around, I noticed that Tree Hugger has done that already. Take a look: http://www.treehugger.com/files/prefab/

September 02, 2006

MDF Saves Trees

In today's world, trees are utilized at an amazing rate.  Thankfully, they are renewable and can grow back with some careful harvesting and replanting practices.  Mills cut the various size trees into boards so that they can be shipped and easily used to make various wood products.  The mills use as much of the tree as possible, but there always is some leftover wood that doesn't fit the designated size criteria.  This "leftover" wood comes in many forms, such as undersized trees, branches, wood chips, and sawdust.

One efficient use of this excess wood is Medium Density Fibreboard, or MDF.  Since 100% of the leftover wood can be used in making MDF, it is a very efficient use of our precious tree resources.  Once the wood is broken down into wood fibres, it is combined with a resin and wax with high temperatures and pressure to create a strong, versatile fibreboard.  The mechanical and physical characteristics of MDF make it an ideal substitute for solid wood, so it is a great way to create wood products without cutting any excess trees. Some MDF's resin contains formaldehyde which, during processing, needs proper ventilation, but there is now formaldehyde-free MDF that is available for the eco-conscious puritans.

Furniture made with recycled MDF does not require extra tree removal in the furniture's production process, which makes the consumer feel good about purchasing MDF products and helps relieve the pressure on our world's forests.  Check out the formaldehyde-free MDF products from Datumzero.  Their unique, stylish products will make you realize that decorating your pad with the environment in mind can be innovative and fresh.

Verylongbench

September 01, 2006

DIY - Modern Mobile Idea

By: Holly Becker, decor8 I know these Jonathan Adler holiday ornaments are for, well, the holidays, but I was thinking that since they are only around 3" high, it would be really fun to use the white animals and create a modern mobile using ribbons in bright hues. I'm not talking about a nursery mobile either; I would like to see this in my apartment, I think it would be playful but also unique, and given that I love Adler's animals, the perfect way for me to bring them into my space in an unexpected way.

What do you think? Have you ever created a mobile for your space using ornaments, photos, or anything else that inspires you?

(images from jonathan adler)