A PHILOSOPHICAL THEORY OR IDEA OF WHAT IS AESTHETICALLY VALID AT A GIVEN TIME AND PLACE
~ Monday, January 16 ~
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The famed British artist David Hockney started creating art for the IPhone in 2008, and then for the IPad in 2011, using nothing but his fingers and the handy Brushes app. Initially, Hockney only shared his digital drawings with a small circle of friends. He’s now making that circle much larger. Starting in late October Hockney’s digital finger painting went on display at the Foundation Pierre Berge- Yves Saint Laurent in Paris. The exhibition entitled Fleurs Fraiches (Fresh Flowers), runs until January 30, 2011.

The famed British artist David Hockney started creating art for the IPhone in 2008, and then for the IPad in 2011, using nothing but his fingers and the handy Brushes app. Initially, Hockney only shared his digital drawings with a small circle of friends. He’s now making that circle much larger. Starting in late October Hockney’s digital finger painting went on display at the Foundation Pierre Berge- Yves Saint Laurent in Paris. The exhibition entitled Fleurs Fraiches (Fresh Flowers), runs until January 30, 2011.

Tags: Art David Hockney Paris Pierre Berge Yves Saint Laurent IPAD
11 notes
~ Friday, December 30 ~
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Les Smies Davs la Decoration Interieure
Paris 1926
By Renaud L.

Les Smies Davs la Decoration Interieure
Paris 1926
By Renaud L.

Tags: 1920's Home Decor Interior Design Paris Books
14 notes
~ Monday, December 26 ~
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Nancy Cunard

The beautiful heiress to the Cunard shipping fortune Nancy Cunard was a poet, a publisher and a paramour of many writers of the 1920’s to 1930’s. Unhappy with a life of privilege Cunard rebelled early and took up with writers such as Ezra Pound, TS Eliot, Earnest Hemingway and Wydym Lewis. Dazzled and inspired by these men who became lovers, Cunard eventually published her own books of poetry.

It was the black jazz pianist Henry Crowder who changed her life. Their relationship opened her up to the racial injustices blacks were experiencing and she dedicated her life to civil rights. Although it would cost her both her family and her fortune, she edited and published Negro in 1934 with contributors including Zors Neale Hurston, W.E.B Du Bois and Langston Huges.

Tags: 1920's Lit Nancy Cunard Paris Poet Parisian Chic
40 notes
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Fantasy on the Louis Vuitton 1978
Photo by Jacques Henri Lartique

Fantasy on the Louis Vuitton 1978
Photo by Jacques Henri Lartique

Tags: Jacques Henri Lartique Louis Vuitton Luggage Paris Photography Parisian Chic
223 notes
~ Wednesday, November 30 ~
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“Des Colours”
Vogue Paris December 2012 
Kate Moss as David Bowie

“Des Colours”
Vogue Paris December 2012 
Kate Moss as David Bowie

Tags: Vogue Paris Kate Moss David Bowie Des Colours
3 notes
~ Wednesday, October 12 ~
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Laduree which first established a tea room near the Place de la Concorde in 1862, is said to have originated the French macaroon as we know it. (not the little round cakes), but the idea of sandwiching a pair with filling. The New York City shop that opened this summer on the upper east side is a jewel box. It’s done in a pale green with traditional decorative accents, mirrors and dark wood meant to showcase chocolates, table top items and of course, macaroons, all imported from Paris.
(photo Tre for L’esthetique)

Laduree which first established a tea room near the Place de la Concorde in 1862, is said to have originated the French macaroon as we know it. (not the little round cakes), but the idea of sandwiching a pair with filling. The New York City shop that opened this summer on the upper east side is a jewel box. It’s done in a pale green with traditional decorative accents, mirrors and dark wood meant to showcase chocolates, table top items and of course, macaroons, all imported from Paris.

(photo Tre for L’esthetique)

Tags: Laduree Paris New York Pastry Macaroons dessert
6 notes
~ Thursday, August 18 ~
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The Cats Meow

The Cats Meow

Tags: Josephine Baker September 1930 baby leopard Paris animals pets
20 notes
~ Wednesday, May 25 ~
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Jacques Henri Lartique

                                          

                             (above Henri Jacques Lartigue and Richard Avedon) 

    Jacques Lartigue was born in Courbevoie on June 13, 1894. He took his first photographs at six years old. In 1904 he began making photographs and drawings of family games and childhood experiences, also capturing the beginnings of aviation and cars and the smart women of the Bois de Boulogne as well as society and sporting events. An unfailingly curious amateur, he tried out all the available techniques, tirelessly recording the fleeting moments and meticulously arranging his several thousand images in large albums.
                                

                                    

                                  (Avenue Du Bois de Boulogne, Paris 1911)

His acquaintances in the world of the arts included Sacha Guitry and Yvonne Printemps, Kees van Dongen, Pablo Picasso and Jean Cocteau, while his passion for movies saw him work as still photographer with Jacques Feyder, Abel Gance, Robert Bresson, François Truffaut and Federico Fellini.

 

(Renee-Paris to Aix-les Bains 1931)          

Although Lartigue occasionally sold his pictures to the press and exhibited at the Galerie d’Orsay alongside Brassaï, Man Ray and Doisneau, his reputation as a photographer was not truly established until he was 69, with a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the publication of a portfolio in Life. He now added his father’s first name to his own surname, becoming Jacques Henri Lartigue. Worldwide fame came three years later with his first book, The Family Album, followed in 1970, by Diary of a Century, conceived by Richard Avedon. In 1975 he had his first French retrospective at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. For the rest of his life, Lartigue was busy answering commissions from fashion and decoration magazines. He died in Nice on September 12, 1986. 

                                  

(Lartigue’s cousin diving into the pool)                  (Zissou as a Ghost, villa ‘Les)

Tags: Fashion France Jacques Henri Lartique Pablo Picasso Paris Photography Richard Avedon