Monday, November 10, 2014

On to Holiday House NYC


Greetings Everyone!

It's Monday November 10th, the first day of installation at Holiday House NYC. I'm thrilled to be participating in this year's event. We've had 3 weeks to put our rooms together, gather items form vendors, in my case have everything custom made including some fabric and now we have this week to install. It's always a surprise when rooms are put together, it's like cooking, things come together like magic, but behind it all is a lot of care and hard work. Here's a sneak peek of a few items.




About the room:


Mischievous Night

The room is designed as a sitting room for daydreaming or plain reflection and relaxation. The mythical client is a Boho chic, lightly goth artsy type. We weren’t after a dark room for Hallowe’en as every night is mischief night if you’re so inclined, but more of a theatrical interpretation for an artistic spirit. After all November is the start of the Holiday Season, the first frost and winter fun.



Sketch for the room





Napoleon 3 chaise




Lining for the daybed canopy



Bronze legs on my daybed




This is the sketch for room's layout. I'm old fashioned and like to actually draw everything out on paper.

Stop by if you can, below is the link.

That's all I have today...off to work!







http://www.holidayhousenyc.com/contact/

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Good Old NEW 834

Greetings All,

So what has kept me away from blogging the last few months? Finishing up a project out in the country, a new OTT job on Park Ave, an addition to a client's house and last but not least, we finally bought a small apartment on Riverside Drive which needed a lot of work and of course a trip to Europe that had been planned last January when we didn't know any of this would be happening.




 The apartment is in a prewar building and had had no work done on it for over 30 years. It was in fact used as storage.






The front hall




This was the original living room with french doors
you can see the door and wall on the left which was added at some point






Sort of odd pass thru made the apartment feel dingy and poky




We started by removing all of the trim and wallboard and then went about restoring the floors



Removed the partition that had been put up to make an extra bed room, not original to the apartment



Widened all of the openings and raised them almost to the ceiling which  created a sense of space


The opening before we opened it up



Bathroom is now clad in floor to ceiling marble tile with small marble tiles on the floor





Our color palette






We carved out a nice hall by modifying a deep closet and moving the door to our bed room. All of the original doors from 1910 were stripped 



Looking from the bathroom to the hall and beyond




Created a new smaller entrance hall that opens directly into the living room










New kitchen painted F&B Clucnh



The new space furnished. We added built ins and cleaned up all the surfaces



One of our side tables



Looking into the Living room. Bookcase before it was filled up






A corner of the living room






The small bed room with a large picture on steel by Ric Best

It's been a long summer, but we're finally in the new space and it's just about perfect for us. We're very grateful

and that's all I have for today



Friday, October 31, 2014

Hispanic Society of America at Audibon Terrace

Greetings,

It's been a long while since I've posted anything, been working hard and traveling a little but now that the dust has settled I thought it was time to sit and write a few thoughts on a place two blocks from where we live that I had never visited. Audibon Terrace is a rather imposing complex on Broadway and 156th Street. The two Beaux Arts buildings with a brick terrace and fountains is rather disconnected from the street. The iron gates don't seem to help, unlike the Columbia Campus there's not a welcome in kind of vibe, so I always walked right past it. Today I decided to walk in and I'm glad I did.


Looking across the terrace at Boriqua College


The lovely fountain parterre is currently under restoration




The main room is a lovely atrium dressed in Moravian tiles. It's a beautiful grand space on the ground floor with a balcony that currently houses the painting collection. That's one of the problems with the museum. The paintings are hung too high and sadly one cannot truly appreciate them. Add to that the lighting, which is rather harsh. I believe that originally there were vitrines, now moved to two other rooms under the paintings. I think it would have been better to place the paintings in those rooms and to have kept the pottery where it was, or better yet, there are empty vitrines under the arches, move the pottery there.  It's a really great collection, but sadly it suffers from placement.


There are two of these rooms with vitrines. I can easily imagine them lined with paintings, at eye level. So much better than covering those glorious arches in the main hall. Plus, do you really want everyone to see your biggest hits all at once? So much better to have a procession, the Spanish know all about those, we were just in Toledo this summer and experienced a 5 hour affair.....and the balcony, which could still house a few vitrines could be used for temporary exhibits, one of the missing elements to keeping this place truly alive.








The most effective room holds  a series of 15thc carvings




There are several first rate altars and carvings tucked away under the balcony or covering arches.



A huge room on the ground floor holds Joaquin Sorolla's  "Views of Spain". Not quite a panorama, I'd call it more of a series of impressions and it seriously conveys the feel of the country.




The second floor landing. There are some lovely tiles and Roman mosaics
I love the terra-cotta color on the walls and the railings are lovely





One of several gorgeous altarpieces 




A 1600's pottery vessel on an ornate stand. How about putting this on a refectory table in the middle of your atrium? 

The most famous painting is by Goya of the Condesa de Alba. Sadly she was on loan, but again she lives right across from the entrance...first painting you'd see... she belongs at the end of a long room that you need to work your way to. 


They really need to think about placement but it's a first rate collection that should be seen and it's proof that quality is much better than quantity.