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Culture, Features

The Triumph of The Wine Culture

Last Thursday evening, the former French Prime minister and Mayor of Bordeaux Alain Juppé, and former Maitre of the Commanderie de Bordeaux in New York and Managing Director of Epstein…

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May 4, 2015
Art, Art & Design, Art Fairs, Features

Highlights of the 2015 International Show

Serenity, Exuberance, and Toop Fashion at The International Fair: Established in 1989 The International Show is recognised the world over as a premier showcase for exceptional quality works of art from…

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October 26, 2015
Interior Design, Jacques Grange, Lifestyle

A Grange Evening at The Plaza

Jacques Grange Last Friday evening, the French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF) presented acclaimed French interior designer Jacques Grange with the 2014 Trophée des Arts and Internet entrepreneur Fabrice Grinda with…

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December 10, 2014
Art, Art Fairs, Culture

Chic Ideas for Photo Grouping

Like music, photography holds you in the moment. Maybe that’s why I like it so much. That is also why I enjoy my annual visit to Aipad – one of…

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April 13, 2014
Contemporary Art, Editor's Top Picks

Nicolai Frahm: The Super Collector

Takashi Murakami  Kitagawa – Kun Uniquely colored sculpture, oil paint, synthetic resins, fiberglass and stell Background: Richard Prince, Telling It Over. Signed, titled and dated 1989 on the overlap acrylic and…

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December 3, 2012
  • Eve Ruggieri,  Friedman and Vallois,  Interviews,  Rachid Khimoune,  Tribal Art

    Meet Rachid Khimoune

    / Comments Off on Meet Rachid Khimoune
    Rachid Khimoune
     Photo credit High End Weekly™
    Q& A
    with French artist Rachid Khimoune

    HEW: Why Strange Fruit?
    RK: After creating the Mask and Totem series, I felt the need to create a bigger piece. Thus I was inspired by Billie Holiday’s song “Strange Fruit”. This song came to life in 1939 New York City. For me, it is invariably related to this city and the sultry  singer.

    HEW: What fascinates you about African Art? 
    RK: My work is more primitive art than tribal art. The message behind each piece relates to my life. The pieces are more Art Primal. The selection I’ve chosen are all recycled materials – from trees to pieces of metal. It is similar to Marcel Duchamp’s concept when he worked. The style is contemporary, the techniques are exclusively my own.

    HEW: And so the message behind it is?
    RK: Emotion. The reference is about life. The symbolic elements I used are water, energy, humanity.

    Strange Fruit,  iron and bronze, (9 feet), 2012
    Photo credit: Benjamin Didier
    HEW: What’s the best part about living in Paris?
    RK: Whether I’m in Paris, or Beijing, I view myself as an artist of the world. The main idea is to make a continuous connection between my work and the rest of the world. The more people I touch the better. The international language behind what you see is ’emotion’ and the capsule is art.

       
    Rachid Khimoune’s “Gaulois” Totem, 2007, wood, iron and bronze. Right: Grand Masque, 2007,
    mixed media on canvas, H: 85″ x W: 47″
    Photo credit High End Weekly™

    HEW: Conveying emotion through one’s work does make a strong conviction, yes. Your family came to support you at the Friedman & Vallois Gallery in New York during your opening. Tell me, what was the most exciting feeling you shared with your wife, whom I was told is an emblematic figure in the Opera world in France?
    RK: My children and close friends did attend the opening, and it was very important for me to have them with me. My “compagne” for over 20 years now was there as well. Ève produces festivals, and is responsible for launching the career of French soprano, Natalie Dessay here in New York. Ève Ruggiéri stresses emotions with the ears, and I with the eyes. We complete/fulfill each other with both of our own realm of creativity.

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  • Cappelini,  Charities,  Christopher Reeves Foundation,  Events,  Knoll,  Life and Style,  Savoir Beds,  Social Unit,  Textiles,  Vyna St Phard

    Dream for the Sky

    / Comments Off on Dream for the Sky
    Peter Wilderotter, and Dorothy Cosonas
    SO LUXE!
    “This project is personal. My 24 year old daughter became paralyzed suddenly from a rare auto immune disease,” says Dorothy Cosonas. “The Reeve Foundation is a place that creates hope — like birds, that hope can rise to the sky.”

    The veteran brand, Knoll Luxe Textile, recently collaborated with Savoir Beds in order to benefit the Christopher Reeve Foundation. My friend C. Jean and I went to the event last week, and we were both impressed with what we saw. The event was spearheaded by Dorothy Cosonas from Luxe Textile; and the bed in question: Dream for the Sky is made of 100% linen with design elements in viscose and an accent of Swarovski crystals – the aesthetics were simply très jolie.


    Savoir Beds is currently offering these custom designed headboards in five of my favorite patterns from Knoll: Arabella, Sandis, Mepal, Gates, and Garden City. 100% of the proceeds from the auction will benefit the Christopher Reeve Foundation, which is dedicated to curing spinal cord injury. Additionally, for one year, a percentage of the proceeds for the sale of the selected Savoir beds that are upholstered with the above-mentioned fabrics from Knoll Luxe, will also go to the Foundation.

    Custom Savoir Bed upholstered with a Knoll Luxe Linen Fabric
    The ‘Dream for the Sky‘ bed is being auctioned by CharityBuzz.com for the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation 100% of the proceeds will go towards the foundation

    Photo credit: Knoll Textiles


    CAPPELLINI

    That same evening, a few blocks down, in the same artsy neighborhood of Soho, the folks at Cappellini were celebrating a project which involved a couple of cool designers from Amsterdam…


    Social-Unit: The plastic bed is made from consumer waste plastic in Amsterdam’s sheltered workshops
     The evening was fueled with some pretty acrobatic entertainment
     The Social-Unit Team and Designers (Far left: Wouter and Corinne – far right)
    Checking out the goods: Left: Yours truly. Right: Christ Jean-Palling

    Photo courtesy Social-Unit
    The Social-Unit is a luxurious residential bed, complete with ample storage, a vanity table, a desk and electrical outlets and lighting. It is specifically crafted to create a cozy ‘sheltered island’ space, in the middle of a large open plan living area. This sustainable bed is from a project that was part of a larger initiative – One Hundred Days – an international art competition launched by Contaminate NYC back in 2011. Contaminate is a social and cultural platform for art immerse experiences and – given its social entrepreneurial roots – decided to challenge artists to produce projects combining art and sustainability issues. Wouter and Corinne’s Social-Unit is the third and final show of the series dedicated to the winners of One Hundred Days. The Social Unit is available at t the Cappellini Showroom in Soho.

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    High End Weekly™
  • Adrienne Moumin,  Art,  Modern Art,  New York

    Not So Black & White

    / 1 Comment
    Fan Of The Hirshhorn (small)

    I’m A Fan

    Adrienne Moumin’s Epic Collages
    New York-based artist Adrienne calls her handmade photo collages “Architextures”. They are fragments of what we see all around us – bigger than life skyscrapers that became synonymous for this city of steel. Her work is a combination of her lifelong involvement with both silver-based photography and collage, as discrete and separate practices. Architextures is also a combination of hand-printed B&W photographs with cut-and assembled handwork.
    While I was at her studio last month, I noticed that at first, her works appeared to be digital montages, but upon closer inspection they revealed a texture and layering inherent in the handmade pieces. While you’re looking at these images on the screen everything appeared 2-D, but seeing them up-close will bring these multiple buildings alive, and your eyes will most likely be drawn to follow their hypnotic forms. As a modernist, I admired her work a great deal. Partly because of their originality, but mostly because Adrienne Moumin is following the path of such contemporary artists like: Dinh Q. Le, Ray K. Metzker, John Stezaker, and Annette Messager.
    Kaleidoscope (Starrett-Lehigh), 37th dia. Hand-cut-and-assembled inkjet print photo collage, 2008
    Snippetree
    Fan Of The Hirshhorn (large)
    Center Curves Squared 2012

    Images courtesy Adrienne Moumin
    All rights reserved

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  • Art Fairs,  Interior Design

    The New PAD

    / Comments Off on The New PAD

    PAD.1

    The Park Avenue Armory reopens its doors to another antique fair this past Thursday, November 8th. The show will end on Monday, November 12th. Salon Art + Design was created by veteran show producer Sanford Smith. It is the first American fair to collaborate with the Syndicat National des Antiquaires, Europe’s most prestigious association of dealers. Most of the dealers were in attendance at the renowned Biennael des Antiquaires in Paris, this past September. Altogether the mix of genres, periods and styles reflected the eclecticism of today’s collector.

    While this show highlighted 20th century and contemporary art and design, historic design were represented by the oldest decorative arts gallery in Paris, an Old Master dealer with multiple European locations, and a selection of dealers in ethnographic and Asian material.

    Salon Art + Design was created by veteran show producer Sanford Smith. It is the first American fair to collaborate with the Syndicat National des Antiquaires, Europe’s most prestigious association of dealers.

    Luba: Shankadi people, D.R. of Congo, 19th Century - wood, Galerie Bernard Dulon
    Luba: Shankadi people, D.R. of Congo, 19th Century – wood, Galerie Bernard Dulon
    The New PAD.3
    Victor Vasarely, Naissance-Pas, 1958, Painting on panel
    Yayoi Kusama "Pollen" chair, circa 1984, Vivian Horan Fine Art
    Yayoi Kusama “Pollen” chair, circa 1984, Vivian Horan Fine Art
    Left: A rare and unique Gaston Suisse, Wooden dark gray and black lacquer furniture (c. 1939) opening with three doors and eggshell on the handles,  Galerie Felix Marcihac
    Left: A rare and unique Gaston Suisse, Wooden dark gray and black lacquer furniture (c. 1939) opening with three doors and eggshell on the handles, Galerie Felix Marcihac
    Two door cabinet of welded aluminum, black enameled steel from Paul Evans, Bernd Goeckler Antiques
    Two door cabinet of welded aluminum, black enameled steel from Paul Evans, Bernd Goeckler Antiques
    A masterful sculpture by Wendell Castle from "A New Environment", Barry Friedman
    A masterful sculpture by Wendell Castle from “A New Environment”, Barry Friedman
    Horror Vacui from Morten Lobner Espersen, Jason Jacques Gallery
    Horror Vacui from Morten Lobner Espersen, Jason Jacques Gallery
    A single Otto Wagner, post chair from Modernity
    A single Otto Wagner, post chair from Modernity

    Collectors in attendance welcomed, once again, the opportunity to pair a Brueghel with a Jean Michel Frank table or a tribal mask with a Le Corbusier painting. The range and caliber of material at the Salon will attract discerning collectors, designers, and art enthusiasts around the world.

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  • Flowers,  Food,  Life and Style,  Preston Bailey,  Table Settings,  Tableware,  The Weekender

    Drama At The Table

    / 1 Comment
    Photo credit Chronicle/Eric Luse

    How To Decorate Your Tables – Beautifully
    My gift to you today is a series of dramatic table settings that I’ve collected from the Internet over the years. No doubt you appreciate the pleasure and the importance of preparing a meal, and setting an elegant table as you get together with your friends and families. So today, as you welcome them in your homes and ultimately your tables, why not do so with a bit of flair, and a lot of drama?
    Simple and personal touches at the table equal lasting memories
    Photo via Brunch at SAKS
    Centerpieces are key to any table settings. It’s important for the eye to wonder and fantasy, especially when the conversation around the table gets a bit dull 
    Black and white is the new black. Seeing these bold stripes at an outdoor table setting is “a good thing”. It makes a lasting impression, even if the flowers were absent from the table
    Bountiful: Preston Bailey’s over the top, yet elegant table setting
    Breaking bread: The folks at Le Pain Quotidien always manage to create a dramatic table, even with they bare-polished furniture
    Elegant: Greek keys, monograms and zig zags… Who could ask for anything more?
    Photo via Reasons to Breathe
    Lost in the woods: This setting is by far one of the most interesting ones. It provides a means to escape, and be wrapped up – In The Moment
    Photo credit Chronicle/Eric Luse
    I would of liked to see a bit more color here, especially since all the flowers are white. However, the peacock provides plenty of that – even though it is neutral
    Monique Lhuilier’s Table Setting
    Shine on: Nothing says drama, and romance than candlesticks
    Okay, we get it! Audrey equals drama!
    Photo credit Timothy Kilk, via Elle Decor
    Outdoor festivities are always a great ideas. Even in the winter
    All other images via Pinterest


    NOTE: Please notify us directly, if you believe that certain images on this post are alleged to infringe upon the copyrights of others, according to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Thank you.

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    The Wondrous World of Parisian Florist Olivier Giugni

    April 7, 2011
  • Culture

    New York via Italy

    / Comments Off on New York via Italy

    Fendi.1Fendi Casa made a stunning ultra-chic showhouse (the first of its kind) at NYC’s ubber cool Setai Hotel. The world-famous iconic Italian designer unveiled a contemporary home collection in the posh quarters of the private residences at 400 Fifth Avenue. I was quite impressed with their Italian fashion and accessories brand, which were sleek, modern and advanced.

    For this highly anticipated project, FENDI CASA has transformed the expansive three-bedroom, 3.5-bathroom penthouse 2N into a vision of contemporary elegance.

    With a clear focus on rich materials and clean lines, the 3,292-square-foot residence features their own leather sofas and chairs, lacquer furniture, signature rugs and chandeliers in tones of champagne, ivory, black and chocolate, meticulously paired with the property’s lush hardwood and stone finishes.

    As a final touch, modern art from the renowned Hirschl & Adler Galleries were on loan to create a stunning, visually compelling image only rivaled by the breathtaking, floor-to-ceiling views enjoyed from every room.

    Frendi.2

    Fendi.3

     

    In choosing 400 Fifth Avenue as the locale for its first New York City show home, FENDI has selected a building acclaimed for its inspired, contemporary design and exclusive amenities and services. Opened in 2010, the 60-story building encompasses a collection of 169 upper-floor private condominium residences, along with the award-winning hotel Setai Fifth Avenue, named the 2012 Best Hotel in New York City by U.S. News & World Report Travel. “It was extremely important for us to partner with a building that evokes a similar design sensibility,” said Raffaella Vignatelli, President of Luxury Living – FENDI CASA.

    “With the exceptional penthouse at 400 Fifth Avenue, we have found an ideal environment to showcase FENDI’s trademark style.”

    Designed by Gwathmey Siegel & Associates and expertly appointed by interior design firm DAS Concepts, 400 Fifth Avenue boasts imported Italian cabinetry, hand-laid black-oak flooring, stone countertops, the latest appliances and panoramic, floor-to-ceiling views. Among its many exceptional offerings, the building houses Ai Fiori, the three-star Italian restaurant from celebrated chef Michael White, along with Bar on Fifth, Auriga Spa and Julien Farel Salon. Residents also have access to premier hotel services, including in-home catering, valet parking, linen and turn down service, and housekeeping, as well as unique on-call services such as pharmacist, physician, dentist, airport transportation and childcare.

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  • Celebrities,  Daniel Day-Lewis,  Life and Style,  Lincoln,  Movies,  Steven Spielberg,  The Weekender,  Time Magazine

    Is Daniel Day-Lewis The World’s Greatest Actor?

    / Comments Off on Is Daniel Day-Lewis The World’s Greatest Actor?
    Academy award actor, Daniel Day-Lewis
    There’s been more than 15K books written about Abraham Lincoln. Yet to the general public, Lincoln remains an enigma, the man himself dubbed his persona as “strange”. I wouldn’t pretend to be an expert on Lincoln, but I will say that I know a lot about Daniel Day-Lewis (over the years, I’ve accumulated countless of scrap books about the actor’s personal life, and career). Daniel has been an inspiration, and I’ve admired his acting skills since I was 18 years old. Although I do not have a razor sharp memory of each and every single moments of his earlier films, I found his performances in My Left Foot, The Last of The Mohicans, There Will Be Blood – unforgettable. Even his less known films left a tremendous impact on my view of him. When I look back at his one-liner, tornado force introduction in Gandhi, I knew even then that he was destined for greatness.
    And so decades, Daniel Day-Lewis has been called to the world’s stage to show, once again, his immense power as this generation greatest actor (I’m all in agreement with Time Magazine). It makes sense that he went out of his way to pursue the lead role in a film that delves into the portrayal of a president that was revered, and will so far be remembered as the greatest president of all time.
       
    Left: The official movie poster of Lincoln. Right: DDL on the cover of Time Magazine
    A Room with A View (Daniel Day-Lewis shaking hands with Helena Bonham Carter)
    Daniel Day-Lewis
    The Age of Innocence: Michelle Pfeiffer, and Daniel Day-Lewis


    Daniel Day-Lewis as Daniel Plainview in There Will Be Blood
    Daniel Day-Lewis as Abraham Lincoln

    NOTE: Please notify us directly, if you believe that certain images on this post are alleged to infringe upon the copyrights of others, according to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Thank you.

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    Jeff Koons Plate Launch and Signing at Bernardaud

    December 12, 2011
  • Abstract Expressionist,  Art,  Auction Houses,  Contemporary Art,  Mark Rothko,  Sotheby's

    A Very Good Year

    / 1 Comment

    Mark Rothko’s No.1
    Image courtesy Sotheby’s

    ROYAL RED & BLUE

    Sotheby’s achieved their highest Contemporary Art Evening Sale by tallying $375,149,000 the best auction result in any category in the Company’s history. Mark Rothko’s No. 1: the majestic canvas lead the way with a final bid of $75 Million. Royal Red and Blue was one of eight works hand-selected by Rothko for his landmark solo show of the same year at the Art Institute of Chicago. Measuring 1133⁄4 x 671⁄2 in (288.9 x 171.5 cm), No.1 (Royal Red and Blue) has remained in the same collection for 30 years.

    Mark Rothko’s Blue and Gray, via The New York Observer
    Mark Rothko’s No. 61 (Rust and Blue)
    Source: Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
    Overall, this was the highest auction total in Sotheby’s history. New artist records for: Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Hans Hofmann, Arshile Gorky, Robert Motherwell, Wade Guyton, as well as for a work-on-paper by Andy Warhol and a painting by Takashi Murakami. Note: The previous record for a Sotheby’s auction was the May 2008 Contemporary Art Evening Sale which totaled $362,037,000.

    Mark Rothko

    NOTE: Please notify us directly, if you believe that certain images on this post are alleged to infringe upon the copyrights of others, according to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Thank you.

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  • Art Exhibition,  Events,  Fine Arts,  Friedman and Vallois,  Life and Style,  Rachid Khimoune,  The Weekender,  Tribal Art

    Let’s Meet at Vallois!

    / Comments Off on Let’s Meet at Vallois!

    Rachid Khimoune next to his Strange Fruit Installation 

    Out & About

    Friedman & Vallois hosted a successful art opening this past Thursday evening at their posh gallery location on East 64th Street. For the very first time in New York, an exclusive showing of French artist Rachid Khimoune‘s avant garde pieces were on display. The exhibition opened on November 8th and will run until December 21. Look for my brief interview with the artist tomorrow morning. And for additional images of the party, visit our Facebook page.

    Rachid Khimoune, Robert Vallois
    Margaret Le Coze (Le Bernadin) Rachid Khimoune, Eve Ruggieri
    Barry Friedman, Patricia Pastor
    Eve Ruggieri

    Eve Ruggieri (center) and her friends
    Thanhyen Nguyen
    Patrick de Bourgues, Rachid Khimoune, Alexandra de Grece, Nicolas Mirayantz
    Laurence Fayard
    Alex Barlow, Karim Khimoune
    Elodie Giancristoforo
    Kahina Khimoune and friend
    Photo credit Benjamin Didier

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  • Antique Fairs,  Armory,  Art Deco,  Bernard Dulon,  Decorative Arts,  Design,  Fine Arts,  Jason Jacques,  Le Corbusier,  Modern Art,  Modernism,  PAD,  Park Avenue,  Tribal Art

    The New PAD

    / Comments Off on The New PAD
    Pictured: A stunning wing chair designed by Frits Henningsen, Denmark, circa 1940s, Modernity
    The Park Avenue Armory reopens its doors to another antique fair this past Thursday, November 8th. The show will end on Monday, November 12th. Salon Art + Design was created by veteran show producer Sanford Smith. It is the first American fair to collaborate with the Syndicat National des Antiquaires, Europe’s most prestigious association of dealers. Most of the dealers were in attendance at the renowned Biennael des Antiquaires in Paris, this past September. Altogether the mix of genres, periods and styles reflected the eclecticism of today’s collector.

    While this show highlighted 20th century and contemporary art and design, historic design were represented by the oldest decorative arts gallery in Paris, an Old Master dealer with multiple European locations, and a selection of dealers in ethnographic and Asian material. Collectors in attendance welcomed, once again, the opportunity to pair a Brueghel with a Jean Michel Frank table or a tribal mask with a Le Corbusier painting. The range and caliber of material at the Salon will attract discerning collectors, designers, and art enthusiasts  around the world.
    The venerable Tribal art dealer from Paris, Bernard Dulon
    Top left: A Teke People Mask, congo, before 1920
    Luba: Shankadi people, D.R. of Congo, 19th Century – wood, Galerie Bernard Dulon

    Clean lines, overwhelming elegance: Top left – a Jean-Michel Frank’s wooden X lamp covered with tobacco-colored leather, L’arc en Seine 
    Galerie Valois
    Victor Vasarely, Naissance-Pas, 1958, Painting on panel
    Yayoi Kusama “Pollen” chair, circa 1984, Vivian Horan Fine Art
    Left: A rare and unique Gaston Suisse, Wooden dark gray and black lacquer furniture (c. 1939) opening with three doors and eggshell on the handles,  Galerie Felix Marcihac
    Carpenters Workshop Gallery
    An extremely rare large drawing of Le Corbusier
    Galerie Downtown
    Two door cabinet of welded aluminum, black enameled steel from Paul Evans, Bernd Goeckler Antiques
    Wendell Castle
    A masterful sculpture by Wendell Castle from “A New Environment”, Barry Friedman
    The insightful and playful art dealer Jason Jacques
    Horror Vacui from Morten Lobner Espersen, Jason Jacques Gallery
    A very whimsical Jean-Marie Fiori bull-dog, lacquered bronze, and signed from Galerie Pierre Dumonteil
    A series of stained pine Zig Zag chairs from Gerrit Rietveld, circa 1950s – early 1960s


    A single Otto Wagner, post chair from Modernity
    A favorite pair of Andre Sormay armchairs, circa 1925, Galerie Alain Marcepoil
    Images courtesy High End Weekly™
    All rights reserved

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