Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Happy New Year

But can one still make resolutions when one is over forty? I live according to twenty-year-old habits. ~Andre Gide

This post is short and sweet due to a rather hectic end of the year, but I just wanted to share with you a few festive products and images for New Year's Eve. I am thrilled to have 19 countries plus viewing my blog, Please continue to stop by, I would love to hear from you. I want to wish everyone a very happy, healthy and peaceful new year!
Dominique




New Years Eve Party Glitz And Glam Hats by Booptey Lu, $25
http://www.etsy.com/



1700s Paris Inspired New Years Eve Printable Cupcake Topper
And Wrapper Set by PaperScissors Cake. $4.99
http://www.etsy.com/



 I made no resolutions for the New Year. The habit of making plans, of criticizing, sanctioning and molding my life, is too much of a daily event for me. ~Anaïs Nin


Crystal champagne glasses festooned with 700 white and pink
diamonds, $400,000. (Yes, you read right!)
  

"Champagne...the wine of kings, the king of wines."
~ Guy du Maupaussant

Vintage lustre champagne glasses, $19
http://www.ebay.com/

"three be the things I shall never attain: envy, content, and sufficient Champagne".
~ Dorothy Parker



http://www.sandlegowine.net/
http://www.laurentiwines.com/

  
Above left: Krug Champagne Clos du Mesnil 1.50L 1998, $2,124.00....a tad above your budget?  Mine too.  Above right: May I suggest this excellent value which was a most welcome guest at my own wedding: Duval Leroy NV Brut Champagne, $28.95

"Too much of anything is bad, but too much Champagne is just right"
~ Mark Twain


New Year's Eve in Paris


"Cheers to a new year and another chance for us to get it right". ~Oprah Winfrey



Times Square on New Year's Eve, 1950's



New Year's Eve ball, Times Square, NYC.



Vintage noisemakers, $19.00
http://www.ebay.com/


Nouvelle année heureuse, mes amours!

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Decorating for Dummies

Make that decorating with dummies. Mannequins and dress forms seem to be quite the design fetish du jour these days as many interior designers seem to be utilizing them more and more in their projects  as unique accents and alternative works of art.  I confess to a personal fascination with them myself as to me, they represent existential manifestations of our alter egos. There something so poetic about the stillness and muteness of these arresting human forms that seem to evoke a profound sense of vulnerability and fragility.  I can easily see why they have historically inspired artists to use them as poetic apparitions in order to relay an allegory of the human condition.




This cluster of vintage of wig heads would look
fabulous as an art display on a console.

 
Originally created for commerce, mannequins and dress forms gradually found an evolution into the art world. They were countlessly used as haunting metaphysical subject matter in many works of fine art and photography notably created during the Dada and surrealist art movements of the mid-20th century.  The most famous artists utilizing the subject of mannequins sometimes disfiguring them in order to relay an allegory of the human condition were Giorgio de Chirico, founder of the metaphysical art movement (pittura metafisica), Max Ernst, Marcel Duchamp along with photographers Clarence John Laughlin and Man Ray, to name just a few.
"The Disquieting Muses"
by Georgio de Chirico
The current trend of using mannequins in interior design tends to elicit more of a light-hearted and humorous response rather than a philosophical or political one as a work of art might do. As the profession of Interior design most assuredly encompasses many aspects of fine art theory and philosophy, it differs in that it is a trade created solely for clients. It is another form of art, but in the end, dictated mostly by practical concerns. Having been originally been manufactured as decorative objects for commercial use, mannequins allow interior designers to insert a bit of whimsy and perhaps even a more quiet human statement into their designs.

http://www.vollfischbacher.ch/




Weathered mannequin
hands.

Dress forms and mannequins add a unique addition to any room, not to mention acting as conversation pieces. Much of the fascination of them lies in the fact that they exist both as utilitarian and sculptural objects. They can be placed in the bedroom, used to drape a beautiful shawl, fill in an unused corner to stand alone or maybe be grouped within a variety of differing sizes and shapes in order to make a unique design and artistic statement.

Elegant apartment in France

Isn't this fascinating that the wicker dress form and iron chair mimic and complement each other at the same time? They have been brought together as an odd couple to create a marriage of lightness and elegance offset by the charming vintage-style shoes.




Angel dress form, $145
http://www.etsy.com/



Mannequin with cone and sphere by Man Ray



Vintage hat mannequin head.



Broken Mannequin, $13.95
http://www.etsy.com/




 Flank these on either side of a modern
white sofa accented with black pillows.
http://www.ebay.com/



Zig-Zag Dress form, $300
http://www.urbanoutfitters.com/



Mannequin hand, $275
http://www.johnrsneddenltd.com/





I found this doll-like bevy of lovely vintage mannequin heads and small mannequin all for sale on Ebay.
   
Robert Doisneau, Paris, 1968

 
Manuel Abravo,
 "Mannequin with a Voice", 1930-35






  



1950's shop display mannequins, $499
http://www.ebay.com/






  "Mano" Roubini rug.
 To the trade.
http://www.roubini.com/



Mannequin cushion, 49 British pounds.
http://www.housetohomeco.uk/









 

James Dean


 








Buster Keaton and twin friend
Mannequin and Sculpture, 1940's.

I love this photo. Possibly shot for a fashion publication, it is an exquisite example of alternative reality.  There is profound poignancy represented in this image as the seemingly perfect fashion mannequin seems to be the one full of human emotion. She looks to be ironically eyeing the fuller figured feminine torso with envy.  It's as if we can read her mind and she is saying: "If only I could be a real woman". 

This art mannequin
belonged to my father.