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Showing posts with label Fortuny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fortuny. Show all posts

she wore Fortuny

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La robe de Fortuny que portaitce soir~la Albertine me semblait comme l'ombre tentatrice de cette invisible Venise. Elle etait envahie d'ornementation arabe. Marcel Proust, 1923, La Prisonniere



Gloria Vanderbilt and Fortuny, photographed by Richard Avedon for VOGUE 1969. In the article Vanderbilt recalls her first glimpses of the innovative gowns made with a revolutionary patented process by Fortuny :

"I recalled first seeing the gowns at Miss McNeill's Madison Avenue shop before they stopped making them...There was a whole wall of floor to ceiling drawers each filled with different coloured dresses... each its own rainbow  of shades from the deepest to the palest tones, of red, or green, or blue, or violet... It was beautiful...Just absolutely beautiful... And since you never hang them up they just lay there, tenderly tucked away in loose curls and twists like little embryonic fishes."









"Each dress has an exclusivity, a nicety of details that is at the heart of its desirability, and the unique texture of the fabrics gives each one a remarkable simplicity and,at  the same time, an extraordinary luxuriousness." -GV




Vanderbilt wore the jewelry designer- Rita Delisi's artful body ornament creations with her Fortuny gowns. " It was Fortuny's idea that woman is always something more than woman.. a flower... an urn... a statue."- GV  The Delisi pieces seem to enhance that idea.





 of all the outdoor and indoor gowns that Mme. de Guermantes, wore, those which seemed to respond to  a definite intention, to be endowed with a special  significance, were the garments made by Fortuny form old Venetian models. Is it their historical charterer, is it rather the fact that each one of them is unique that gives them so special significance that the pose of the woman who is wearing one while she waits for you to appear or while she talks to you assumes an exceptional importance as though the costume had been the fruit of a long deliberation... Proust





the Louvre's Nefertiti & below  the Charioteer of Delphi- both inspiration for Fortuny.














Lillian Gish-1920 at left , Natasha Rambova,1924, (r)




the incredible TINA CHOW in Fortuny




Lauren Bacall in Fortuny, 1976







Isadora Duncan & her daughter in Delphos gowns,at left,Mme.Conde Nast, 1909, (r)




Natalia Vodianova in her Fortuny gowns




&
Now-
get yours.











FORTUNY PEPLOS GOWN, c. 1920. Pink crinkled silk with attached short sleeve tunic, the bottom curving toward open side seams trimmed in silk cord and joined at intervals with blue Murano glass beads, matching trim on sleeves and tunic bottom, separate pink silk sash with metallic stenciled design. Sash and seam tape stamped "Fortuny Dep". Length 57, sash 2 5/8 x 45. (Silk drawstring frayed) otherwise excellent. $5,000-6,000. (HERE)















TRAINED FORTUNY DELPHOS GOWN with ORIGINAL BOX, c. 1920. Pale orange silk having draw- string neckline, side seams decorated with brown striped yellow beads, stenciled bodice bands (detached), tape label "Fortuny Depose Made in Italy", drum shaped box with Madison Avenue boutique label on lid, Fortuny store label with customer name and address on bottom. Bust 38, front length 55, back length 63. (Small spot on front, draw- string frayed, stitch marks from bands) good. $4,000-5,000.(HERE)




alas, likely it will be this-  THE WORLD OF GLORIA VANDERBILT  by Wendy Goodman.

but it's really quite alright- she has long been seen and admired here. As Town and Country writes-and rightly so-'There will never be another Gloria Vanderbilt.'




a great piece in T&C's November issue is devoted to photographs of Vanderbilt by Richard Avedon-who introduced her to third husband Sidney Lumet. Photographers Horst, Gianni Penati -a favorite GV photo of mine- and Toni Frissell's work are featured as well.

the long overdue book by Goodman provides intimate access to Vanderbilt archives- photographs, portraits, personal collections and her extraordinary homes and Anderson Cooper- Vanderbilt's son, writes the foreword.

get it-
if you can't get your Fortuny.




see my own Fortuny here

images from VOGUE Nov 1969,  FORTUNY, Deschodt and Poli
and Whitaker Auctions

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INrapturous INdecorous Taste


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Lauren Tennenbaum of the riotously creative INDECOROUS TASTE is one amongst many out there in the blogging world, uh well- maybe the world- certainly the world beyond the one she is creating with her painted rooms. Lauren's rooms are Moody (my favourites) ,Romantic, Sparkling. Full of reds, full flourishes-full of Baroque-with her must have touches of funk- the rooms feel well worn but very alive- no dour dust- unless it is pixie dust.

She has fixations- this one.
witness One fetish...
for shoes (are all her own creations)
here
here
here
here
here
I told you-

But Look at this-
This is what intrigues Me, what brings Me to her posts, sends me back to them again -to scrutinize, applaud.


It is Lauren's ability to take her decorative painting and then design a moody room that- for instance this tapestry (painted) is perfect.
This You may wonder, well So?
Well, So-It is unusual.
What designers today do you know that are painting the walls for the rooms they are designing? There are those in past that have done so- the most famous I think must be the incomparable RENZO MONGIARDINO.
It is a truth: Those that decorate- design do not, or should I say- can not paint. Yes, there will be Painters out for Me- but Decorative Painters do not decorate-can not decorate.
It does not follow-
Do not try to convince me otherwise!
No.
but- well, there is Lauren Tennenbaum.


I couldn't wait to ask Lauren some questions. Her own blog has such a lot of information about her & her work.

But what really makes her Louboutins skip a beat on the cobbles?

LA: Who or what period are you most inspired by?

LAUREN: I'm inspired by characters with individual styles and distinct personalities: Isabella Blow, Denning and Fourcade, Marcel Duchamp, Tony Duquette, Florine Stettheimer. Oh, and really exceptional window dressers and fashion stylists: Gene Moore, Edward Enninful, Linda Fargo. Essentially, people who create fantasies. And especially those who possess the ability to take something unexpected (even ugly) and turn it into something absolutely desirable and wondrous.





Always put "something mad on top of something very good, 
or something very good on top of something mad." 
- Geoffrey Bennison
(this quote found on the Indecorous Taste site)





The periods I gravitate toward change.  A love for Gothic churches and their objects (reliquaries, texts, etc.) is a constant.  The Byzantine Empire. Also, imperialist Russian decorative arts. And a sort of Baroque spirit underlies everything, but the more I can be inspired by, the merrier!




Gothic Quatrefoil Wall








Imperial Malachite





LA: When did you start painting? Were you a childhood talent?

LAUREN: I don't think I was particularly talented as a child— at least not in painting. My mom enrolled me in many, many art classes when I was young; I never liked painting. (Should I be admitting this?!)  She paints, and my grandfather did so in Europe, professionally.



up close-Lauren's


















We've done lots of decorative work together, and I think that's where I've picked up most of my painting skills.  It's when I realized that there were certain rooms and styles that I LOVED that my painting skills blossomed.  They grew from necessity.  I get captivated by a fantasy or idea, and then, I'll do whatever it takes to get there: painting, sewing, hammering, plastering, gluing, soldering... sometimes it works, other times it results in a giant mess.  Painting is just one of the mediums I employ to get there.  My mom and I influence each other in that way.  She loves painting for painting's sake, I love style and fantasy— the ways in which it can be used.




Lauren's own LX IV here
personally, I have past the point of them- but this would be just the sort of thing I would buy to look.

LA: What led you to enter the Architectural Design competition recently?

LAUREN: It was a pretty last minute decision. I ran across it by chance and entered because I thought this room fit the theme of the competition, which was "interesting use of fabrics."





Lauren's Bloomsbury meets Beaton Bedroom 









(more views of the room)


LA: What would your personal fantasy room look like?

LAUREN: I'd need five houses full of rooms— I have too many personal fantasy rooms! My bedroom as it stands right now is one of them— light aqua bluish green Fortuny style walls, lots of delicate apricots and golds, painted inlaid wood floors, TONS of mirror, glass and crystal, an antique Cuban feather mahogany bed, crisp white linens, plenty of damask and layered patterns.  It's all very light and very reflective.










Often, though, I fantasize about darker, dustier, more cavernously cozy spaces. But lately, I've been fantasizing about the bedroom Denning and Fourcade designed for Oscar de la Renta's Paris apartment, in the 80s-see Lauren's fantasy here. It's covered floor to ceiling in the most gorgeous chintz, with layer upon layer of pattern and luxurious fabric, paintings, furnishings...  It's a jewel box: very small, very extravagant, but it's also very cozy.




 the de la Renta room





 a last look at Lauren's own Summer Palace
looking very much Onegin &Tatyana






read more about Madamoiselle here 
Maison Archinard here
INDECOROUS TASTE here





 all photographs are Lauren's -please inquire with her for use.
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Sophie's Choice

Some dogs choose their own masters. Masters choose their dogs.With Sophie- there could be no other master. I like to say the dogs that are rescued have been temporarily misplaced- as owner of Moses, there will be other dogs-but never again Moses. The same can be said of Sophie.

Sophie is her dog- my dearest of friends, Now that Sophie has found her- her world seems complete.

This is Sophie's choice.

Sophie and her master at home
(photograph by Missy McLamb)



Sophie and Shades of Gray


from Sophie's point of view


black patent slip cover on bench, YSL style


the master's mix


view of Sophie's pad


Kuba(cloth), Fortuny(curtains), Aesthetic(movement)
(click Kuba(cloth) above to read more)



the master carried her grandmother's Fortuny curtains along



Sophie's Bone Collection


looking through to the office


Office Mix
French(settee), Urban Electric( shagreen lamp), MOP(table)


Music Room
Elliott Puckette composition


Mother of Pearl and Kuba Cloth


Dining Room


Choice of China


small japanned buffet (by Sanford Peele), smocked curtains


Sophie's Den


Tablescape Mastery



Sophie on standby( waiting in far right corner)



... and waiting.