Archive for the ‘Social’ Category

Visual Relish or Le Porte-Couteau

What if I didn’t hold my silverware – okay, flatware – like a shovel at the ready to plow through a meal toute de suite?

There’s something deeply wrong with the way I carry out my dining aesthetic, I must confess. This grand admission had its unveiling through a gift of small proportions:  Le Porte-Couteau. Courtesy of my darling younger sister who now lives French-side, these knife rests remind me that I have not been savoring the day’s journey with delight.  A meal is a time to slow down, share stories, talk about roads less traveled or overly trafficked.  Elsa Maxwell would have groaned, and I’m sure audibly, at my ostentatious displays of insignificance.

I am now in possession of a loyal set of Basset Hound knife rests that will, I assure you, be used on more than the rare special occasion.  They will be used on the special occasion of the everyday.

Cheers to the art and craft of lively, daily entertaining!

Below is a selection of rests for those that enjoy the simplicity of the minimal to the prismatic light of the maximal (Cristal Baccarat).  Amusez-vous. . .

Knotting in New York

I used to think New York was a place of grand gestures, and that this city would make me better simply by association. All I had to do was walk with purpose through any one of the revolving doors belonging to Sixth Avenue’s looming skyscrapers and. . . poof, I was made.  That was the easy way.

The hard way is walking through a much more humble door, belonging to a small shop where anonymity isn’t allowed (if only because the space is limited), and beseeching one’s help face-to-face is a prerequisite.  I was all knotted up.  This was for real! And so, here is how this afternoon’s reality transpired:

Enter Purl Soho, a yarn yard of outrageously vibrant hues.

Enter Amy, my dream weaver.*

Enter I, knotted up.

Amy and I milled about the yarns, talking the yarn talk.  I got my first pair of chopsticks and fabric.  Yes, that’s what I called them.  I was ready to quit after the exhausting task of getting familiar with yarn, but Amy is a for real knitter and wanted to get on with it.

Over a cup of tepid coffee with extra sugar to get rid of the coffee taste (Amy had for real coffee with extra coffee aroma), she taught me how not to be a knotter, but a true knitter.   With each knit and purl, which I was not supposed to do, I got a bit closer to confidence.  Knots melted from my body and wove themselves through my chopsticks and into my fabric.

It’s too early to tie up all the loose ends of this story.  What I can conclude is that the small gesture of two chopsticks humbly and happily clickity clacking is something I can get used to as I make my way through the streets and avenues of New York.

* Outside of teaching  me how not to be a knit wit, Amy can be found living her own dreams on her blog.

Art Basel Miami Scene

Miami was on fire Thursday with record temps = a visit to the beach

Miami was on fire Thursday with record temps so I made a pit stop shoreside

So happy to be back in the holiday land! While Art Basel still has my head spinning, I wanted to immediately throw some photos your way to help contextualize what the week-long art extravaganza is about.  In addition to Art Basel, we also ventured to Scope and Pulse. In the next post, I’ll share all the artworks I liked and thought you may find interesting too. Finally, when our eyes are exhausted, I will put a few words about what it is like to experience this high-powered, see-and-be-seen fair.

If anything surprises you off the top of your head do share.  Most importantly though, draw your own conclusions before I put mine out there!

If you’re into the gossipy art thing, click  here.

Awaiting my friends, I dove into the ocean solo

Awaiting my friends, I dove into the ocean solo

Storm clouds brewing

Storm clouds brewing

Keeping it real, I crawl under a stack of chairs for shade

Keeping it real, I crawl under a stack of chairs for shade

Palm shadows on Deco

Palm shadows on Deco

Sunset on South Beach

Sunset on South Beach

Haddon Hall Hotel, the ultimate in Euro Essence luxury accomodations.

Haddon Hall Hotel, the ultimate in Euro Essence luxury accomodations.

Night descends; Miami becomes a Deco jewel box

Night descends; Miami becomes a Deco jewel box

Wynwood Walls, outdoor exhibition with stunning murals by lauded street artists

Wynwood Walls, outdoor exhibition with stunning murals by lauded street artists

Shepard Fairey at Wynwood Walls

Shepard Fairey at Wynwood Walls

Captivating formal qualities similar to those found in medieval illuminated manuscripts and Byzantine icons

Captivating formal qualities similar to those found in medieval illuminated manuscripts and Byzantine icons

mondrian mural

Haunting image of solitude. It will engulf you.

Lance Armstrong's Benefit

Stages Lance Armstrong's Benefit

Final pic before leaving Lance's benefit

Final pic before leaving Lance's benefit. Hmmm how long have we been up now??

Inside the fete

Inside the fete

On our way in to Basel

On our way in to Basel

Entrance to Art Basel

Entrance to Art Basel

Art Basel, the largest fair, abuzz with sales and art world gossip

Art Basel, the largest fair, abuzz with sales and art world gossip

Free-spirited hat guy flustred the serenity of these gallery owners

Free-spirited hat guy flustered the serenity of these gallery owners

Men's fashion memo for Basel 2009:  Everyone wear gingham.  Never seen so much of it.  These two gallery guys got another trend straight with greeen cords and washed denim over shirts, capped off with a lowbrow orange cravate

Men's fashion memo for Basel 2009: Everyone wear gingham. Never seen so much of it. These two gallery guys got another trend straight with greeen cords and washed denim overshirts, capped off with a lowbrow orange cravate

La Sandwicherie is a famous spot for French Street food on South Beach

La Sandwicherie is a famous spot for French Street food on South Beach

Scope, a much smaller, less-established fair

Scope, a much smaller, less-established fair

Scope's courtyard before a massive front came in dumping inches of water on us and dropping the temp by 30 degrees!

Scope's courtyard before a massive front came in dumping inches of water on us and dropping the temp by 30 degrees!

Entrance to Pulse Fair

Entrance to Pulse Fair

Clueless Goes to Miami

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This turkey is off to baste in the Miami sunshine.  That’s right, ladies and lads, tomorrow I’ll be  up with the roosters and on my way to Art Basel Miami Beach, an international contemporary art fair with more than 250 premier galleries in attendance.

My descent on Miami symbolizes the culmination of my graduate studies, a chance to see the art market in action.  But I come from two camps:  one that views art outside the realm of commerce – the art historian side; the other that knows that art and artists need the market to survive. Before the credit crash, Basel (marketers) and others glorified art as commodity, promoting fairs as playgrounds for the wealthiest – often with precarious egos; some without apprehension of art and its history –  to mental masturbate en masse (“hobnob,” I believe is the appropriate term).  Art, so it seemed, was not the primary reason to be there.  Hmmm.

elle decor miami

art basel cartier

Has economic  hardship changed the face of the art world?  The meaning of art?  Respect, appreciation and knowledge of art and artists?  These are the thoughts that frequently mill through my mind, and will be when I meander through the booths at Miami.

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Now, if you’ll excuse me I have to pack, preen, slap on a fake tan, grow some breasts, and craft a few art-conversation topics to hobnob with those who may be more clueless than I.  Wink and a nod.  Oh yeah.

What say you about art and the market?  Blurt out the first word that comes to mind.

See New York Magazine’s Holiday in the Sun, a good read for the uninitiated.

Zippy, Pithy Elsa Maxwell Quotes for Thanksgiving

Enjoy the abundance of the season with an earful (and if things get messy, an arsenal) of Elsa Maxwell’s musings on the Art of Lively Entertaining.

Wishing you a supreme gustatory gathering!

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Serve the dinner backward, do anything – but for goodness sake, do something weird.

Someone said that life is a party. You join in after it’s started and leave before it’s finished.

Under pressure, people admit to murder, setting fire to the village church or robbing a bank, but never to being bores.

Bores put you in a mental cemetery while you are still walking.

A bore is a vacuum cleaner of society, sucking up everything and giving nothing. Bores are always eager to be seen talking to you.

I make enemies deliberately. They are the sauce piquante to my dish of life.

Giving parties is a trivial avocation, but it pays the dues for my union card in humanity.

Holidays are Coming! Maxwell’s Maxims for Entertaining

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Even if you took Martha Stewart, Julia Child, Two Fat Ladies, Regine, Suzanne Bartsch, Nigella Lawson, Diane Brill, Carmen D’Allessio, Pat Buckley, Amy Sacco, and Phyllis Diller and threw them all into a giant blender, you would still fall short of producing anyone as compelling and scrumptious as the late, uber-hostess Elsa Maxwell.

~Simon Doonan

My father is a dying breed, the last of the old time socialites.  He can turn a dull event into a jovial affair through sharp wit and an inventive guest list. You will never find a more eclectic social roster than the ones he dreams up.  At dad’s dinner parties, never am I surprised to find myself seated with the unknown locksmith to the left, and yes, on the same occasion, the city’s mayor to the right.  Invariably, by the end of the night, all barriers will be down and new friends made.

Dad insists that he learned how to socialize from his mother, a grande dame of D.C. society in the years leading up to and after WWII.  He often recounts fond memories of grandma doing her early morning “marketing” (which in her day consisted of telling the cook and the driver what she needed) before that evening’s soiree.

On a visit home to Gloucester, MA last March dad bestowed a copy of Elsa Maxwell’s (1883-1963) book How to Do It or the Lively Art of Entertaining. Maxwell and my father have a lot in common: both love a good laugh, spirited conversation, and wearing men’s trousers.  The actual Ms. Maxwell, it seems, was nothing like the eminent society hostess I envisioned.  She was quite a bit piggish, enjoyed costuming up as great historical male figures, and lacked the pedigree of many refined socialites.  She was a self-made woman, hailing from none other than Keokuk, Iowa.

A renewed interest in Ms. Maxwell’s particular brand of entertainment will do culture a favor.  As a newly married woman socializing in various contexts from Chelsea art galleries to Lower East Side scenester bars, I find that we have grown socially lazy.  The “lively art of entertaining” in 2009 is, I must say, rather boring.

In the chapter “The Perfect Guest – and Others,” Maxwell expressed the issue:

Stock in trade of the agreeable personality – that is, the good guest – is his ability as a conversationalist, an art that is, I fear, slated for oblivion in this country unless something is done to revive in us the habit of original thinking, a taste for the cultivation of fresh ideas, as opposed to our current mania for blank-eyed hearing and viewing and the cultivation in consequence of no taste whatever.  Radios and television screens that are never dark are making us mentally crusty.

Thank heavens she didn’t live to see the Crackberry. . .

It’s time to practice conversing, to craft meaningful moments that cultivate the integrity of our individual selves and enrich our culture.

So, put on a party infusing Maxwell’s Maxims into the mix!

Maxwell’s Big Six Alluring Personalities

  • Beauty
  • Glamour
  • Intelligence
  • Charm
  • Wit
  • Gaiety

Have you tried this formula for entertaining?  Mixed up the guest list and were surprised by the results?

Love, Loss and What You wore?

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I’ve been meaning to read the book Love, Loss and What I Wore by Ilene Beckerman,  but am happy to know it’s now been made into a Broadway play by Nora and Delia Ephron.

This morning, the Ephrons are visiting the Martha Stewart Show, reminiscing with great nostalgia about what they wore to their first proms and to their brownie meetings.  The domestic doyenne doesn’t hesitate to share a story about how she hid a bra from her mother (who was apparently in denial about Martha’s burgeoning womanhood) in the back of her closet until her displeased mother discovered it.

We all have memories of what we wore when a significant event happened in our lives.  The Aussie actor Simon Baker remembers handmade swim trunks, my mother remembers the-in-her-words jazzy raincoat and hat she made during her college days.  I remember a friend’s black poodle skirt that I’d beg to wear any chance I got.  I felt transported to the 1950s, a period that I had assumed was America’s utopia.

What were you wearing?

Sew Not Happening

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Let’s get back to what I don’t know.  It is true, in addition to celebrating linens and place settings (ah, and a marriage milestone, of course), I have been feverishly chipping away at my craft inhibitions.  It seems I can choose a stunning tablecloth, but can I make one?

Um, no.  Not yet at least.  But I sure as hell can destroy quality fabric and choke up a Signer (or Janome) sewing machine in a flash.

Etsy Labs once again hosted Craft Night at its new post in DUMBO, Brooklyn.  The topic:  handmade drawstring bags, an eco-friendly alternative to the plastic bag epidemic.  I’m a firm believer that plastic bags are the devil, so I was pleased to plop my butt in front of a sewing machine to double-handedly save our plasticizing planet.

Turns out that the sewing machine is the devil encased in an angelic white shell, hungry and seething for overzealous do-gooders that look a lot like me. Press that pedal and have a go at taming the chomping acceleration Bummm, bumm, bum, BUM! of the beast yourself.  As for me, fewer than 10 seconds against the Janome and my gingham was mulched and wedged in its fangs.  Then it went to sleep OR, gulp, I broke it!  Here’s the tale of my little tragedy.

Remind you of the first time you put your hand to something unfamiliar?

A Sewing Sojourn – Minute by Minute Account

5:10 PM

Shortly after arriving at Etsy Labs, I successfully suffocate one sewing machine.

5:11 PM

Turn attention to learning handout on how-tos of sewing a bag.  Realize diagrams are a tad boring.  Where’s the color?!  I need some real visuals. Ehhhhhhh!

5:15 PM

Measure fabric with nearby ruler to pass time and to appear officially craft smart.

5:18 PM

Redirect energy to resuscitating lifeless machine.  Gulp in deep breaths of courage and calm, not allowing embarrassment or fear to trip up confidence.

5:25 PM

getting_help

Photo from Etsy’s Flickr page. Not surprising to see that in many of the pictures, you can find me in the background (limey cardigan, short brown hair) receiving friendly tutorials by fellow crafters.

Issue still at hand: There’s this errant brown thread attached to a spool on top of machine.  I know it needs to go through eye of needle, but where it goes from beginning to end is a complete mystery. Julie!!!!!  (Julie, an Etsy employee and craft queen,  seems to wear many hats.  I’ve had several run ins with her at craft events around New York.  She responds to the multitude of emails I send to Etsy as well.  Wouldn’t be surprised if the emails are mind numbing, especially the latest edition on whether Etsy has felting needles available.)

Julie can’t help.  She’s running Etsy’s Virtual Labs for the at-home crafters.  Consult the manual?  We all know how well I do with instructions.

5:40 PM

There are so many places the little thread could go.  Another deep breath leads to rational thinking.  If I built this machine, how would I put it together?A simple question, yet it lifted the shroud of frustration and doubt looming overhead.  I was free to let my mind play without restriction or self judgment.  The puzzle pieces started to come together, the thread began to slowly wind its way across, down, up, and down again.  Finally.

6:10 PM

I hold in my hand a flimsy, crooked-stitched brown gingham sac that, although defective, I exhibit with pride.  Handmade with my own brand of persistence, I believe my creation is ready to sell on Etsy.  Ok, that was before I took a second look.

Any tips on how you crafted your way through a difficult, uncomfortable situation?

HouseCraft in America’s North Country

One Woman’s Enlightened Vision of Homecrafting

Yes, to my surprise, housecraft is a word.

How many of us think that house keeping is drudgery, that in pursuit of perfection we’ve subscribed to a lifelong task of Swiffering, vacuuming, dusting, and dish washing?  Keeping house, I learned on recent vacation to Tapawingo, New York’s storied Adirondack getaway, is a lot different than keeping home.

50s_appliance

Keeping House is the acceptance of culturally codified rules, beliefs and myths that for generations have informed the domestic ideal.  Followers of “keeping house” pray to the Windex Wizard and pay deference to the Clorox King and his lady the Queen of Clean.  They see self reflection in the image of a spotless stove and believe that material goods will bestow years of prosperity and happiness.

Keeping Home is the throwing away of this false religion.  It’s the empowering notion that the home is something that each of us creates as a reflection of individual desires and needs.  Home is not a commodity.

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Tapawingo’s open air kitchen, all designed and crafted by her and her late husband

Tapawingo is a place of lore so seemingly untrue that you may not believe it exists.  It is a family home that from the 1940s on gradually pieced into a compound, hand built by Margo Fish (at right) and her late husband Howard. Howard proposed to 15-year-old Margo on Tapawingo’s porch;  A half century later, he unexpectedly passed while on a walk in the woods near their cherished place.  Margo, full of life, zest, sadness, love and memories carries Tapawingo’s torch into the future.

Margo also carries all sorts of things to fashion Tapawingo into the famed magical cabin-manor it has become.  During the 4-day stay, Margo managed the affairs of her home with vigor, yet effortless mastery.  At any moment, I would catch her with broom in hand, brushing away the leaves that fell from nature’s trees; plucking a fern on a whim for replanting; carrying petrified birch to line Tapawingo’s winding paths; and, straining a boiling pot of baby red potatoes for that evening’s impromptu dinner party of 20.

A Reflection on the Meaning of Home

On the last evening while I sat looking into the mirror that is Lake Placid on another of Margo’s hand creations, a rough-hewn twig and wood porch chair (she taught herself how to make all the furniture at Tapawingo), my thoughts turned to my own home.  Since our wedding a year ago, I have been grappling with the concept of housecraft and whether I could find empowerment and self expression in this venue. Do you ask the same?

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Margo’s handcrafted furniture, deck railings overlooking Lake Placid (above) and twig hutch for silver and glass

After Margo’s Tapawingo, it became crystal clear:  we don’t find ourselves in a home, we are the home.  It’s subtle, I know.  By shaping, molding, and working raw materials into beautiful, utilitarian structures and furnishings like Margo, we debunk the myth that the home is something we are powerless to create.  By not buying into commodity culture or praying to false domestic gods, Margo evolves home craft into a transcendent, self-empowering, spiritual practice.

Home is the extension of the self, carrying with it history, integrity, morals, values, and dreams. I feel less afraid of my home and more at peace with the potential of crafting my own version. Unfortunately, I’m just afraid I won’t be able to craft one with as much grace and sprezzatura as Margo.

What do you think?  Are their differences between house and home?  Is the practice of homecrafting empowering or destructive to women?  If you know of any woman or man who has a unique take on housecraft, share here.

Getting into the Fold: Refashioning T-shirts with Megan Nicolay

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Thursday evenings from 6-8 pm throughout the month of August the Museum of Art and Design (MAD) and Etsy host DIY evenings.  This week’s group crafting session was led by the bubbly, uber-resourceful Megan Nicolay, author of Generation-T: Beyond Fashion:  120 New Ways to Transform a T-shirt.  A virgin to group crafting — the last time I crafted in a group was during youth summer camp when I botched a lanyard keychain — I had only an inkling of what to expect. Would I be welcomed into the fold?

Assess the Scenario

It turns out that it was not so easy to assimilate.  When I arrived the 6th floor MAD studio was stuffed to the gills with serious crafters in the heat of creative output. With not a chair to be had, I stood at the doorway praying that someone would leave and allow me the dignity to blend into the crafting mass. Instead, I watched in stupefaction as one woman’s hands mutated into a loom, magically repurposing a tired t-shirt into a textile materpiece!  Umm, does converting a crewneck into a v-neck qualify as imaginative refashioning?  Apparently not.  True, I may have had the misfortune of scoring a seat next to a person who was unpleasant in all contexts, but when she heard me muse out loud about my crafting strategy she told me I really “should have a plan.” Insert eyball roll.

Lesson:  When not welcomed into the fold, create your own.

Address the Scenario

My platform, the method I would use to relate to my peers, clearly was not one based upon expertise.  I would get nowhere by pretending.  What I could do, and what I feel comfortable doing, is playing the part of the joker.  I’d just go ahead and exemplify my innate non-crafting skills by freely sharing them with those who cared to listen.  Through a series of proclamations and status announcements, I gathered a couple of crafters willing to share tips and their society with me.  Slowly, I was creating my own fold, one harmnious with the situation yet unique to me.

The coup just may have been the attention of our leader, Megan Nicolay.  When she caught sight of the t-shirt I was reinventing into an absurd rendition of a halter top, she shared a story with the group that brought us all together.  My tee was a giveaway from the Martha Stewart Show, which appropriately had on the backside precise instructions on how to fold a t-shirt.  Megan, remembering her visit to the TV show a few seasons ago, also received this exact shirt along with a one-on-one lesson on how to fold.  From the pictures, you can see that several of us were enamored with the technique, sharing a good laugh and several demonstrations with each other on how “properly” we were Martha folding.  Miraculously, I was now in good company!

When you find yourself on the outs, what do you do to get in?

IMG_0805 (Above) Megan instructing us on the acceptable folding technique.

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(Above) Using Megan’s book, I opted for the summer halter style.  Sensing a twinge of irony, I salvaged the “How to fold a T-shirt” from the backside and pinned it to the front.  It adds that je ne sais quoi to the overall design.

(Below) Modeling the halter with Megan.  The “biblace” or bib-necklace was my pass at fusing form with function.  Who doesn’t need a napkin handy when dining out?  What woman does want to add that pop to her style with the ease of a ready-to-wear necklace t-shirt?  This design does it all.

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