Monday, May 31, 2010

In the market for art

If I were in the market for artwork right now I'd be purchasing one of these brilliant Jennifer Sanchez pieces. I see it hanging on a big white wall against floors of stained dark timber, white high gloss furnishings, dark wood Bentwood chairs, some quirky colourful room highlights and two tattered old French armchairs with plush lambskin throws :)

Images via Ampersand Design Studio

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Let's Colour Project

Apparently the only known medically proven treatments for anxiety are kava and music - I think we should add colour to that list. It has an amazing ability to transform moods and evoke emotional response right throughout our lives.

Dulux has set out to eradicate the world of gloomy grey spaces with their Let's Colour Project. One by one they aim to tackle grey corners of the world with a colourful facelift using a palette of 120 colours. So far 650 volunteers have joined their plight for world colour domination.

Go Dulux! I'd be happy to pull up my sleeves and get dirty for this cause. Check out this wonderful new video they just launched to spread the world. And their blog has a great range of documentaries capturing their efforts in various parts of the world.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Houseboat fantasy...

Oh yes, I think I could quite happily reside in this houseboat on the Thames. It doesn't even look like a houseboat. I once went on a cruise (not by choice) and have to admit that the best thing about it was that you woke up somewhere new every morning and you didn't have to keep unpacking. Perhaps this gypsy lifestyle ain't so bad.

Images via The Times

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

National Geographic Map Chairs...

My friend Jean is a clever clever person - she made these gorgeous chairs using maps she ripped out of old National Geographic magazines. She has received so many compliments on them that she has decided to see if they have 'legs' (scuse the pun) in the market. These are one hot item waiting to be discovered by a savvy buyer who knows when they're onto a good thing. Give me a buzz if you're interested and I'll hook you up :)

Pantone Hotel Opens in Brussels

Now this is what I'm talking about! Stark white canvas rooms with splashes of colour to suit your mood. You know how fanatical I am about colour - can you imagine a hotel that revolves your whole stay around your emotional colour experience? You can choose your colour scheme on check in to suit your mood at the time. Such a gimmick, I know, but what can I say, I love it! What colour would you choose if you were to check in right this second? Hmmm I think I'd go with Pantone 1215 C 'Cheerful and Warm'. Check out the Pantone Hotel.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Candle Inspiration

When I was a kid I hated getting candles as presents - I got so mad that I would toss them out, I just couldn't understand what was so good about them and thought they were a cop out gift. Now I covet them and think back at all those wasted beautiful candles I could have enjoyed! I think they are even more beautiful when they are burnt down like these Diptyque candles. I also adore the new Jo Malone candles in six shades of Farrow and Ball paint colours.

Images via Jo Malone, Jak & Jil

Colourful Chalkboard Paint

The Society Inc has just announced the launch of coloured chalkboard paint. How much fun would that be! And how handy would it be to have a chalkboard door - you would never forget a thing before walking out of the house.

Images via Inside Out Blog, The Society Inc., Style-Files, Monolo Home

Monday, May 17, 2010

In the dark...

When black works in small intimate bathroom/powder room spaces.

Images via Design*Sponge, Living Etc, Habitually Chic

The lovely Tara Badcock...

You can’t imagine how excited I was when I received an e-mail back from Tara Badcock of Paris+Tasmania. Ever since first coming across her amazing art textiles while assisting stylist Sibella Court, I can’t stop raving about her to anyone and everyone.

I was surprised to hear that Tara is largely self taught in hand embroidery – something she considers to be fortunate as she follows “no set structure about the way I work and devise designs. It is a very intuitive process”.

I want you all to know about her too. So here is the Tara Badcock story in a nutshell followed by a Q&A which Tara kindly agreed to help me with. Enjoy!
Tara trained as a printmaker, printing her stone-printed lithographs onto silks and other fabrics and then stitching these into replicas of 17th, 18th and 19th Century women's dresses.

After completing her Fine Arts Degree with First Class Honours from the University of Tasmania, Tara couldn't afford to set up her own Lithography Printing Studio, and so she worked from home adapting several techniques from her lithographic repertoire in order to continue print-applying imagery onto textiles, which she then started adding to with embroidered details and taught herself general embroidery techniques in order to do this.

It was in Paris where she spent nearly three years living and working where she really found her feet as a textile artist. On her return to Australia she did a small business course to learn how manage the retail world and start to seriously working towards developing a clothing label - her childhood dream….
Who has had the most influence on your career?
I joined a group of professional textile artists who would meet every Tuesday to work and share professional opportunities to further promote textile art together, and we were known as The Embroidery Gang. We are now all spread out all over the planet, and yet the influence this group and our objectives are still a strong part of my professional life and the members of the Gang are all treasured friends.

With this group there was a conscious aim to promote contemporary embroidery and experimentation within the fine art world, as a 'serious concern' and legitimate method of creating artwork. Since this time I have noticed a real surge in textile art practices and a much higher regard and real value for textiles. I really believe that (hand) embroidery, like clothing, is a vehicle for communicating with others- from the most intimate messages to the most grand and worldly concepts, its such a versatile and eloquent medium and this is why I'm still so passionate about embroidery and continue to use it to express myself. So really, my embroidery and I have grown up together and clothing is just another 'canvas' onto which I now apply my imagery and conceptual ideas.

I would say that my artistic peers and supportive artistic family have had the most impressive influence on my career...my friends and family are so supportive and having spent those few years living and making work in France was essential to boosting my self-confidence in my chosen arts field and seeing that although Australia is still sports-obsessed and still has little regard for the arts as a national pastime, this is not the only outlook in the world...France is so steeped in the arts and supports the arts in every aspect, it is so heartening to be in that kind of environment and to be taken seriously and considered professionally as an artist. I now trust my inner artist's voice more than anything else!
Where do you look for inspiration?
Mainly I find inspiration from what I am reading at the time, random objects in my immediate environment as well as what is going on in my immediate environment, Paris and my things from there, friends and family inspire me as do other people's artwork and exhibitions on museums, etc...its really just whatever is around and what triggers a response in my mind, its very unpredictable and always fascinating to see what I find inspiring at any given moment....there are some things which just stay with me and continuously inspire me and they're part of my 'secret garden'...the garden of my mind!
Do you have a hidden talent (apart from your amazing art textiles!)?
I love experimenting with cooking and my Paris friends think I make amazing salads! I also grew up with a passion for mimicry and copying accents and I love learning new languages...and my drawing skills are pretty good, although I don't spend enough time drawing for the sake of drawing alone...which is probably why I've started drawing/stitching freehand on textiles with my Bernina sewing machine!!
What do you collect?
I have a passion for Victorian white ceramic jelly moulds which I'm collecting slowly (they're becoming quite expensive now), as well as antique tea cosies, teapots, teacups and teasets....I guess I generally collect antique kitchenaelia, glass and ceramics, which all inspire my embroidery work. I also have a good collection of antique Victorian clothing which I turn to for inspiration regularly too...Oh and my books! I cannot live without my library of art, textile and other reference books! Whenever I have a stable home I tend to collect plants too...unusual and old-fashioned plants are my favourites!
In whose house would you love to find one of your designs in?
Ooooh....anyone's house really...I don't have any great aspirations to appeal to specific people with my work anymore...I just feel that I need to be happy and love what I make and it will appeal to others and that this is enough. Before I fell pregnant I really wanted my work to find its way into the homes of people like Vivienne Westwood, Germiane Greer, John Galliano, Tilda Swinton, Carolyn Quartermaine, to name a few people I admire....and yet there are so many amazing people out there in the world that I prefer my work to just find its way to them when the time is right...I do love it when friends and family want me to make them things, its always so flattering and a pleasure to make for people I know as well as making for the retail/exhibition world.

What has been your best decision?
To follow my heart and live in Paris (France) for some years....even though I had no money and few friends, it was THE best thing I have ever done in my life...and now I'm going to be a mother for the first time so I'll see what I say after the baby is born!!
If you could travel through time, where would you visit and why?
This question is really hard for me answer because I know I would want to visit thousands of places at various times and be able to revisit them with hundred-year intervals for example...I guess a few easy answers would be Cairo in the 1920's...the age of biplanes and dashing adventurers and Egyptology blossoming, Le Marche des Halles in Paris at the turn of the 20th century because now this very famous, smelly fish market is a boring civic park in the middle of Paris with little hint of what it used to be...alive and raw! I want to go to Morocco NOW...in fact northern Africa and Mauritania are at the top of my wish list of travel destinations- I had a lovely Moroccan boyfriend a few years ago and we had lots of plans to live there and make art together....life is a strange and beautiful journey......
Biggest guilty pleasure?
Buying antique fabrics, buttons, clothes, anything that adds to my collections....I really cannot afford to do it and yet I really cannot stop! I will go without food to have something that is instantly like finding an 'old friend'.....like the time I bought a dark red velvet-upholstered antique armchair for $1000...the memories of hunger and deprivation fade and one is left with a timeless and treasured, functional object...an heirloom!
Tara stocks her wears all throughout Australia and recently her designs have made it into Anthropologie on the US. For a list of stockist please contact Tara or myself. Visit the Paris+Tasmania website or Tara's Flickr page for more information.
Thank you Tara for your wonderful insight and inspiration!
Images via Flickr, Design*Sponge, Grazia Magazine

Currently loving Fornasetti Riflesso wallpaper

I share this love with my good friend Gareth who is on the verge of using this in his new bathroom. We were reminiscing the other day about how we grew up with wallpaper in the bathroom - in my grandmothers house she had a bright green bamboo wallpaper and carpetted floors. I love the idea of these small rooms having all that interest on the walls. The pop of pink against the muted tones in the second picture is fabulous.
Images via Amy Nicholas, Living Etc, and my own collection.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Colourful pics for a grey day

It's one of those dreary days in Sydney where all you feel like doing is curling up in front of a good girly movie on the couch with a hot cup of tea - here are some colourful pics to cheer up this grey day. I styled these shots with my photographer friend Scott featuring the gorgeous resin jewellery by Natalia - Designs By Natalia. You can find her designs at Sydney's Paddington Markets every Saturday.