Art

Bunny Chic

This Sunday is Easter, when our thoughts turn to spring flowers, luscious colors like violet, peony, daffodil and grass, and, of course, the Easter Bunny.

On Madison is celebrating the Easter Bunny with a collage of our own favorite “Bunnys”. Designer Bunny Williams has delivered timeless style with her own twist for decades. Celebrated artist Hunt Slonem has elevated the bunny to haute couture for the home with his collection for Lee Jofa. And, of course, no Easter would be complete without an Easter basket filled with beautiful confections that any Easter Bunny would be proud to deliver, specifically treats from Laduree.

May the Easter Bunny bring you a basketful of style. Happy Easter!

Easter Bunny ChicBunny wallpaper by Hunt Slonem for Lee Jofa / Bunny Williams Brushstroke Lamp / Bunny Williams Turquoise Nailhead MirrorLadurée Easter Treats / Hunt Slonem for Lee Jofa Hutch Pink Bunny wallpaper

 

Dispatches from Paris

Paris lives and breathes art.  Everywhere you turn, there is art in some form or the other.  Whether it is artfully arranged macarons, window displays elevated to the level of installation art, or actual sculpture and canvases, one doesn’t have to look far to find inspiration.

I stumbled across two galleries showing the works of artists whose work got my attention.

EWA BATHELIER

Ewa Bathelier Ewa BathelierImages Courtesy of Espace St. Germain, Paris

An empty tutu painted on a huge canvas immediately conjures a feeling of whimsy mixed with a touch of the melancholy.  Bathelier’s enormous paintings feature these lovely but lonely images of tutus in stark contrasts of black and white, or vivid shades of colors like red and orange.  Their haunting but haute appeal is evident in a piece of hers which hangs in a Georgio Armani installation in New York.

Giorgio Armani

MARCO DEL RE

Marco Del Re

Marco Del ReImages Courtesy of Galerie Maeght, Paris

Although Marco Del Re paints in a variety of styles, it is his powerful and graphic images that grabbed my eyes.  Obviously inspired by the style cut images by Matisse, Del Re gives us not only something exciting to look at, but something to think about as well.

 

Helena Rubenstein: Beauty is Power

Helena RubensteinOn Madison is constantly inspired by the stories of those iconic individuals that seem to possess an inner compass that constantly points them in the direction that is true to their passions (see Diana Vreeland blogpost and that of Tony Duquette).

Helena RubensteinHelena Rubenstein is the subject of a new exhibit, “Beauty is Power”, at the Jewish Museum in New York, which brings together art and objects from Rubenstein’s vast collection.   The title of the exhibition derives from Rubenstein’s determination to transform herself by force of will into a paragon of good taste and high style, all the while building a worldwide cosmetics brand and empire which afforded her to collect that which she loved.

Helena RubensteinFor the design of her stores, Rubenstein turned to the some of the 20th Century’s most legendary designers.  Louis Sue designed her Paris apartment.  Emilio Terry designed her store in the Faubourg Saint-Honore.  Donald Deskey and later David Hicks all collaborated on Rubenstein projects.

Helena RubensteinAs a collector, Rubenstein ventured far afield, often recognizing objects decades before others would appreciate their merits.  Her New York bedroom was furnished with a lucite sleigh bed illuminated with concealed fluorescent tubes.   “I like my own taste, good or bad,” she would say.  She bought what she liked, without benefit of consultation, and learned as she went along.

Helena RubensteinMarie Laurencin, Portrait of Helena Rubinstein, 1934.

Decades before post modernism would emerge, Rubenstein would pair art and objects from disparate periods, with nothing to unify them except her razor sharp eye.

Helena RubensteinPablo Picasso, Portrait of Helena Rubinstein XIX 27-11-1955, 1955.

Ahead of her time, Rubenstein was not only the first “self-made woman magnate of modern times,” but understood the power of what is now commonly referred to as “building a brand.”  Her wardrobe, her homes, her collections became advertisements and sent a message to all women that you could invent yourself and be anything you wanted to be.

Helena RubensteinHers is a message to everyone, women especially, that self-confidence is the ultimate power trip.

 

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