Showing posts with label metropolitan museum of art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metropolitan museum of art. Show all posts

Friday, December 14, 2012

Thomas Crown Christmas List



Thomas Crown stole what he desired from museums but you can have a piece of a museum as well by simply stopping by the museum gift shop either in person or online. My favorite museum gift shop is at the Morgan Library & Museum because I always find something unexpected when I am browsing whether its a fun children's book for my nieces, a thoughtful card for a  friend or a beautiful coffee table book to give as a gift. Although online inventories are slightly more limited than the actual brick and mortar stores, the websites of these museums offer countless unique items that are perfect holiday gifts for a friend who seemingly has everything.


The Morgan Library & Museum








MOMA


Metropolitan Museum of Art





Victoria & Albert Museum




British Museum
(I know this inclusion means 2 backgammon sets, one week but I love the game and this one is so beauitiful!)

Guggenheim
Whitney

Rijksmuseum
Smithsonian






Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Punk: Chaos to Couture

The official member announcement for Punk:Chaos to Couture, the new exhibit at the Costume Institute in 2013 was sent out today. The exhibit will open on May 9, 2013 and will remain open through August 11, 2013 (with member previews on May 7th and 8th).



The official description of the exhibit is as follows:


"Since its origins, punk has had an incendiary influence on fashion,

says Andrew Bolton, Curator of The Costume Institute. Featuring more than one hundred designs for men and women, the exhibition will include original punk garments from the mid-1970s juxtaposed with recent, directional fashion to illustrate how haute couture and ready-to-wear have borrowed punk's visual symbols. Presented as an immersive multimedia, multisensory experience, the clothes will be animated with period music videos and soundscaping audio techniques.

Cannot wait for the Costume Institute's next installment!


Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Brooke Astor Speaking


Brooke Astor was one of New York's elite and one of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's most generous patrons. She was married to Vincent Astor (among others), eldest son of John Jacob Astor IV who died when the Titanic sank on its maiden voyage. After Vincent Astor's death she ran his Astor Foundation (until 1997 when it was liquidated) and served on the board of the Met, planning and paying for the Astor Court that is part of the Metropolitan Museum today. She also worked with the New York Public library extensively as well as The Animal Medical Center and expressed her philanthropic philosophy rather eloquently when she stated:  

Money is like manure; it's not worth a thing unless it's spread around. 

The end of her life was marred by the elder abuse scandal that arose when it was revealed her son, Anthony Marshall, had been stealing her assets and leaving her in squalor inside her Park Avenue apartment. Her legacy as a woman of style, impeccable manners and a lasting philanthropic legacy will no doubt supersede the darkness & betrayal of her final years. At Sothebys on September 24th and 25th, you can purchase a piece of that legacy through a series of auctions. On sale are portraits of her beloved dogs, jewelry, paintings, jewelry cases, coffee table books and luggage. The items are currently on display at Sothebys Auction House in Manhattan. The proceeds of the auction (estimated to be more than $9 million) will go towards some of Brooke Astor's charities including the Met Museum.

Below are some highlights of the auction's exhibit courtesy of Katie Armour, Editor in Chief of Matchbook Magazine:




Monday, July 2, 2012

Schiaparelli & Prada: Impossible Conversations

I have been intending to see the latest Costume Institute exhibit at the Met since its opening in early spring but I did not make the trek uptown until this past Sunday. The featured designers of the exhibition are Schiaparelli & Prada. The inspiration for the event was a series of articles from one of my favorite publications: Vanity Fair. The "Impossible Conversations" series first appeared in Vanity Fair in the 1930s and featured imagined and mostly fictional conversations between two famous individuals, many who seemed to have little to no connection to one another. An example of such a conversation was one between Stalin & Schiaparelli, the text of which appeared in the foreground of a picture of a cartoonish Stalin & Schiaparelli floating through the clouds:



    • Stalin: (in response to Schiaparelli's threat to dress Russian women like the other women of the world) Perhaps I better cut your parachute down.
    • Schiaparelli: A hundred other couturiers would replace me.
The exhibit itself features the Impossible Conversation between Mme. Schiaparelli & Ms. Prada in various forms. The first form is in a film, directed by Baz Luhrmann (Romeo + Juliet, Moulin Rouge!, The Great Gatsby), in which Miuccia Prada plays herself & the Australian actress Judy Davis plays Elsa Schiaparelli. The second form is through placing actual pieces designed by the women side by side in order to emphasize the similarities & differences in their approach to design. Both women ran (run, in the case of Prada), Italian fashion houses and both have very specific views of fashion & women. Like all people, they agree on some facets of fashion and life and disagree on others. Some of their disagreements are based on the different time periods in which they practiced their craft and others are simple philosophical disconnects. Most of Schiaparelli's side of the conversation is drawn from quotes from her autobiography, Shocking Life


Above: the real Schiaparelli & Prada

Below: Judy Davis as Schiaparelli & Prada as Prada



Similarities:
  • Both Italian
  • Both were discouraged from entering the industry
  • Both have collections based on nature
  • Both have collections based on military & masculine inspiration
  • Both have collections that are child-like (Schiaparelli's butterflies & circus; Prada's monkey & fruit collection & general whimsy)
  • Both like deconstructed beauty
  • Both had surrealist elements (*one intended, one unintended)

Military Inspiration

Prada Banana Print: 
to Prada's surprise, this collection was one of the most commercially successful


Schiaparelli Butterfly Dress



Differences:
  • Schiaparelli saw fashion as art. 
  • Prada says fashion is not art: art is art & fashion is fashion (and, in Prada's opinion, far more commercial than art).

  • Schiaparelli was inspired by surrealism & worked extensively with Salvador Dali & Jean Cocteau in designing certain collections. 
  • Prada seems to have surrealist elements in many of her clothes (lipstick tubes, mirrors, etc.) but claims these alleged surrealist elements are coincidental, not intentional.

  • Schiaparelli designed for a cafe society so she focused on the waist up in design. The result: her elaborate embroidered jackets & cheeky hats. 
  • Prada focused on the waist down because she designed for the active contemporary woman. Prada also feels that the lower half of the body is where life is: the lower half is how we walk, make love, give birth. The result: flirty skirts with lots of character and movement and heels that are works of art in and of themselves. 
Prada Shoes & Schiaparelli Hats

Prada Lipstick Skirt



Two Designers: Both with Surrealist lips on their designs


THE RESULT: 
Not as breathtaking as last year's McQueen exhibit but a fascinating comparison & contrast nonetheless.

As always, I leave you with one final image:


Elsa Schiaparelli & Salvador Dali