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Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

May 15, 2013

'The Great Gatsby's' Costume Designs

One of the many reasons I want to see Baz Luhrmann's film 'Great Gatsby' is the dress collection that will appear on the big screen. 
As soon as I heard that the gorgeous dresses in the style of the 20s who will be wearing Carey Mulligan will be designed by Miuccia Prada, I was more impatient than ever to see these dresses in movement.
Meanwhile, we sated our curiosity with pictures of the shootings and with the four sketches that Prada published of the costumes that the tragic Daisy Buchanan will wear.
Prada worked with costume designer (and  Luhrmann's wife) Catherine Martin to create 40 looks, inspired by dresses already appeared on Prada and Miu Miu catwalks.






According to Vogue Prada admits that what intrigued her the most when working on the project was the way in which many of her designs could be so easily translated into Twenties pieces - despite not necessarily being originally created with that era in mind. The dress worn by Mulligan as Buchanan in the big party scenes took its roots from Prada's spring/summer 2010 "chandelier dress".
"That's what interesting. The point of view can transform things so much," she toldWWD. "Yes, probably a few [dresses] had that kind of edge, but almost none were meant to be Twenties when I did them. I was really fascinated by that."


It is not the first time that Prada works with the director Baz Luhrmann. They have previously worked together to creat Leonardo DiCaprio's suit in the 1996 version of Romeo + Juliet.

Luhrmann says in an exclusive article on Stylist (you can find it here) : "Miuccia is a very old friend of mine, and she did the first suits for Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet. What we share with Miuccia is that she takes old classical things, that were once modern but are now seen as clichéd, turns them on their heads and reinvents them in a way that they’re refreshed and renewed."






Martin chose Tiffany & Co. to design the magnificent jewelry for the actors Carey Mulligan, Leonardo Di Caprio and Elizabeth Debicki and collaborated with the brand Brooks Brothers for the menswear costumes worn in the film. 
She was also in charge of creating other 1,700 beautiful vintage designs for the cast.



The 40 costumes designed for the film, showcased in an exhibition celebrating the costume collaboration between Prada and Catherine Martin. (More for the exhibition here)



Is it just me who believe that we are going to see more roaring 20s-style clothes on the catwalks?


Catherine Martin for the collaboration with Miuccia Prada  




Sources : Vogue

May 10, 2013

David Bowie's 'The Next Day' Clip

Despite his 66 years, David Bowie, is still inquiring mind, as his new video managed to provoke reactions and divide opinions.





David Bowie plays a Christ-like figure in his latest music video.
The video also stars Marion Cotillard as a woman with blood spurting from stigma-like wounds and Gary Oldman as a priest condemning Bowie.
Written, conceived by and starring Bowie, the video for 'The Next Day' was directed by the Italian filmmaker Floria Sigismondi.








Apr 13, 2013

☮ Rainbow Gatherings

Rainbow Gatherings in pictures by Benoit Paille

Photograph by Ross McDermott, American Festivals Project

[via] Rainbow Gatherings are temporary intentional communities, typically held in outdoor settings, and espousing and practicing ideals of peacelove, harmonyfreedom and community, as a consciously expressed alternative to mainstream popular cultureconsumerismcapitalism and mass media.
Rainbow Gatherings and the Rainbow Family of Living Light (usually abbreviated to "Rainbow Family") are an expression of a Utopian impulse, combined with bohemianismhipster and hippie culture, with roots clearly traceable to the counterculture of the 1960s. 
The original Rainbow Gathering was in 1972, and has been held annually in the United States from July 1 through 7 every year on National Forest land. Throughout the year, regional and international gatherings are held in the United States and throughout the rest of the world respectively.



Canadian photographer Benoit Paille who was a member of these communities has taken some very artistic pictures which he generosity shares to show the beauty of the nature, the simpleness of living.

The portraits that the talented phorographer had taken are more than stunning, with amazing lights and colors. But any of these portraits will not be posted here as a move of respect for the artist's work. As he mentions at his site for this project: 

 I decided to photograph my family, my brothers and sisters. I have been going to rainbow gatherings for 7 years now, and I have taken pictures of it for the past 3 years. The pictures you see are very precious since photography is not usually allowed during the event, so please be respectful to my brothers and sisters

People are love, 
are magic,
are beauty 
these sister and brother are the people of the future.


Take a small taste of the Benoit Paille's Rainbow Gatherings below.
These pictures are more like paintings. Looking at them your mind would be cleared and  your heart calmed down. Respect the force of nature and then you could feel the lightness of your being.

Rainbow Gathering, Grand Canary Island, Spain, 2011
Rainbow Gathering, Grand Canary Island, Spain, 2011
Rainbow Gathering Québec,Canada 2010
Rainbow Gathering Québec,Canada 2010
Rainbow Gathering Québec,Canada 2010
Rainbow Gathering Québec 2012

Rainbow Gathering Québec 2012

Rainbow Gathering Québec 2012




























Visit his 
flickr to see the whole project.
Or his
Behance profile (Rainbow Gathering 2011-2012 and Rainbow Gathering 2010-2011)








Feb 17, 2013

1950's Kitchens

The Post War America was ready for change and the 1950's were about change. It was a new era in decorating. New color schemes, new materials and gadgets were all incorporated into the design world of the 50's. 

This is a collection featuring kitchens from the '50s.
What I like most of the kitchens from that era is the pastel colors, the round shaped objects and the printed windows curtains. Almost all women were stay-at-home mothers or homemakers, so they proclaimed the kitchen as their domain and it showed in the decor of the times. 
Let's take a look...




[via] "Everything in the kitchen was in a convenient and organized location. There was even a washer and dryer in most kitchens because at the time, there was the assumption that a mother would need to do laundry while she was cooking or cleaning. There was also usually an eat-in bar area or small kitchen table in most kitchens so that women could easily feed their families without having to move out of the kitchen."




"Although only 4% of the population had them by the end of the 1950s, dishwashers were developed so that women could spend less time washing dishes, and more time with family. The dishwashers were not normally placed on the floor either, like they are today. Most dishwashers were installed high enough off the floor so that one would not have to bend down far to take dishes in and out of it. “Roto-tray automatic” dishwashers were also created for cleaner and more convenient washing."
via
via

"Television sets also became more popular in kitchens as the percentage of Americans with televisions rose from 20% in 1950 to 88% in 1960. Refrigerators changed in the 1950s as well. Although some families stuck with the smaller refrigerators, advertisements for larger refrigerators like the foodarama became more prevalent. Another appliance that improved was the range. Electric ranges developed into gas ranges for faster cooking."




"Another interesting feature of the 1950s kitchen was its overall look and appeal. In the beginning of the 1950s, kitchens were brightly colored. Some were green and yellow, some blue and green, and some were even pink! Not only were the walls or cabinets, and sometimes the floors brightly painted, some of the kitchen appliances also varied in colors. Even the 1950s dining chairs were splashed with color. The chairs tended to be tulip chairs, although some people had booths at their dining tables. Lots of cabinet space was another feature in the 1950s kitchen. Some families began to add drawers into their cabinets to add more space. Colorful single-basin sinks were a popular item in the 1950s kitchen, as well. Not until the late ‘50s did kitchens begin to have double-basin sinks. "




If you want to re-design your kitchen and add the retro feel, pick a pastel color (such as pink, yellow, blue, turquoise) and add retro style housewares and countertop accessories. 
To get inspired here are some 50's style kitchens.


Rachel Ray’s TV show kitchen
Big Chill's Kitchen 
via

via


I love checkerboard floors!



Check also :
Fun, Retro Ideas for a 50s Style Kitchen
Amazon : Retro Appliances 
and Jesie Steele - Bring Happy Home to find a super cute apron set!



Source : HouseBeautiful
SportSuburban flickr

Jan 21, 2013

Marlon Brando - Unpublished Portraits, 1952

"By 1952, Marlon Brando was well on his way in Hollywood, with three incredible roles under his belt: his big-screen debut as a paraplegic war vet in The Men; a searing on-screen reprisal of his Broadway turn as the iconic brute Stanley Kowalski in director Elia Kazan’s A Streetcar Named Desire; and the title role in the biopic, Viva Zapata!, about the Mexican revolutionary hero."


"Here, meet the young Brando at his most charismatic and mysterious, seen through the lens of one of LIFE’s greatest photographers, Margaret Bourke-White."
Read more: http://life.time.com/culture/marlon-brando-portraits1952/#ixzz2IbW4mUUr











Source : LIFE.com







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