Showing posts with label Greta Garbo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greta Garbo. Show all posts

19 October 2015

a Visit with Cecil...





Reddish House with its "lilac-coloured facade," with Cecil Beaton languishing by the door. This photo was just this size in the story, and reproducing it was- without great success-however I have tinted it to indicate a lilac brick. Still in all the brick is more-well- brick-coloured with a smidgen of that favourite-colour lilac, as seen in this photograph of Hamish Bowles at Reddish House paying homage to Beaton-Bowles is certainly a Beaton throw-back.


(Via Hamish's Instagam)




As I've been scouring old magazines and periodicals doing research for my book, I've been amazed at what I still haven't seen... If you follow instagram, pinterest, etc. etc. you know what I'm talking about. The wealth of photographs, new and old, and information (does anyone read anymore?) I do hope so. 

A VOGUE issue, circa 1949, some years after World War II, with rationing in Britain waning- bon vivant Cecil Beaton showed off his country house near Salisbury. Reddish House, according to Vogue's writer (not credited), CB himself ?-was one of Britain's most important 17th century small houses. Andre Kertesz was responsible for the photographs, and I must say nothing is amiss in the facade of Reddish House. It appears infinitely pleasing to my eye, and would be a perfect house to build today. Interesting to are the "colourless" photographs. Adjusting one's eye to a lack of colour details become more vivid. Later, and numerous photographs were taken of Reddish House in colour. They are out there. 

Note too, all Beaton's little extras, flowers in abundance, little chairs, stools, books in all his rooms. I wonder what his rooms were scented with? A Rose potpourri? I think so.


"a vest-pocket edition of a three volume novel"


Beaton's Drawing Room


"...with blackberry-coloured walls and banana-yellow curtains appliqued in red, its fine Aubusson rug, and Louis XV chairs," and a striped velvet sofa. Beaton famously photographed his favourite glamourous recluse, Greta Garbo sitting on this sofa-alone.

Look at Garbo's long hands... Beaton had added the pug, the fringe on the sofa, and gone chintz on the curtains.



In the drawing room, the 18th century deed to Reddish House is draped across a Louis XVI chair.




The Library

The Library was papered in sage green and gold accented by claret-coloured curtains. Noted in the story, Beaton papered the halls and bedrooms with period reproduction wallpapers in a white-with-black or brown design. Interesting.


"like a Balzac setting"







Beaton's Reddish House 30 years LATER with few changes in the Library. 
That- I Love-complete integrity in design.



Beaton's photographs of the library from Architectural Digest Celebrity Homes-1977




The Hall
Beaton used it for dining when entertaining a crowd- often no doubt.

..."coolly gray with marble columns, marble plaques, marble-topped William and Mary table, 18th century sculpture, and a screen made from a collection of 18th century equestrian prints. The curtains were "raspberry" velvet.





In the Master Bedroom a sepia and white print on the walls, bed hangings and lampshade.

This paper is the same as the library paper but in a different colour-way.





CB's Dressing Room

... drenched in a deep green wallpaper, the arrangement-pictures, paintings, and furniture- gave the room a touch of Victorian frivolity.




The Flower Room

Still-Life with Calla Lilies, Skull, and Gardening Gloves 
-and right out of a Tim Walker photo shoot.




 on the grounds- "with a manor-garden which includes a nut-walk, thatched roofed cottages and impeccable box topiary."



Idyllic, Reddish House is still the epitome of all that is good.

The article is littered with (-) hyphenated-words, and I have kept to that writing style in my text. Quotations indicate direct quotes from the article.







04 September 2013

Gibbons' Repose

..

A visionary-Cedric Gibbons found the perfect place to kick back and relax.



Noted for his art direction and production design at MGM, Cedric designed the Academy's Oscar-and went on to win 11 of the gold statues himself. His work influenced the interiors of  theaters and houses- and the style he practiced in- Art Deco-was his personal choice too. He and his glamorous movie star wife- Delores del Rio created what might be the epitome of the style with an accent on Hollywood style during the 1930's.


I think Gibbons designed the perfect sofa-and I can't imagine why there isn't more Gibbons Glamor in rooms today-more depth, more style. The Gibbons sofa-something akin to a daybed perhaps- has the proportions of a twin mattress-and gets covered in some sumptuous fabric (suede maybe) with loads of pillows piled up for repose.



SET STYLE


Garbo perfect -and the perfect sofa.

Cedric Gibbons design for the apartment of John Gilbert in "A WOMAN OF AFFAIRS"




On the set of "Men Must Fight" Gibbon's sofa goes deep with a high back and tufting by the inch.





AT HOME-IN REPOSE


Cedric Gibbons & Dolores del Rio in their Santa Monica Art Deco house, that Gibbons and architect Douglas Honnold designed.



Today the house is pristinely preserved with Gibbon's oh so smart built in sofas.










INSPIRED


No doubt taking off on Gibbons, designer Anthony Cochran goes deep with his own corner built in.









go to see more of the 1930 Gibbons-del Rio House here
photographs of the house by Val Riolo and Jeff Elson





03 October 2010

Scrapping with Cecil

.

eagerly awaiting, the ultimate SCRAPbook.

from Assouline  with a delayed release date of November - It may be THE ultimate holiday  gift for purveyors of STYLE.

compiled by James Danziger of Danziger Projects in New York & former Director of Photography at the London Sunday Times Magazine, features editor of Vanity Fair, and director of Magnum New York.






ASSOLINE says:
As one of the 20th century’s most important photographers, Cecil Beaton helped invent the cult of the celebrity image while pushing the boundaries of his art form with innovative techniques and staging. In the course of his decades-long career as a photographer for Vogue and Vanity Fair, as well as a British war correspondent, Cecil Beaton documented lives both famous and quotidian in dozens of scrapbooks now held by Sotheby’s London.










I can just see Cecil & Garbo "scrapping" in Beaton's living room at the Plaza Hotel, c.1964.



photograph by Dmitri Kessel, from LIFE


Garbo.
Cecil snaps a photo.


image from here




in the meanwhile read LOVING GARBO by Hugo Vickers-a- can't put it down read.
or any of the Cecil Beaton diaries from Knopf.

.

22 January 2010

DEVASTATING BEAUTY : the CUT

10



 "Beauty can be isolating."
Richard Avedon




GRETA GARBO "Anyone who has a continuous smile on his face conceals a toughness that is almost frightening."



  
GRACE KELLY "Other women looked on me as a rival. And it pained me a great deal."





MERLE OBERON  "Without security it is difficult for a woman to look or feel beautiful."



of MARELLA AGNELLI Capote said "If they were both in Tiffany's window, Marella would be more expensive."(the other 'they' being Babe Paley.)



Pauline de Rothschild "Elegance. The most fleeting, intractable of qualities. It can be increased, but rarely bought outright."





 James Lees-Milne said of DIANA MITFORD her beauty was "the closest to Botticelli's Venus that I have ever seen."





PAUL NEWMAN "You can't be as old as I am without waking up with a surprised look on your face every morning: 'Holy Christ, whaddya know - I'm still around!' It's absolutely amazing that I survived all the booze and smoking and the cars and the career."





GARY COOPER “The general consensus seems to be that I don't act at all”







Giorgi Armani said of TINA CHOW " Tina had an innate elegance and never needed any designer to do anything for her. Rather she did a lot for us."




DONYALE LUNA "Back in Detroit I wasn't considered beautiful or anything but here I'm different"



 in NO particular order-

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