Showing posts with label Robert Mapplethorpe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Mapplethorpe. Show all posts

26 July 2018

requiscat in pace


may she begin to rest in peace

I am certain of nothing but the holiness of the Heart's affections and the truth of the Imagination.-John Keats*

Lucy Helmore Birley
(1960-2018)


* a favorite poet of Lucy Birley
photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe of the then Lucy Ferry

The Times here
Hamish Bowles poetic remembrance at Vogue here






12 May 2012

Essentials from my collection, ONE more day

at One Kings Lane 
of special books,

 One of my most favorite books- the essential The Glass of Fashion by Cecil Beaton. There is no other book like it. Looking through the  EYE of Beaton, glimpse the women that made fashion.



  Th' expectation and rose of the fair state,
The glass of fashion and the mould of form,
Th' observ'd of all observers.
SHAKESPEARE


a sneak peak of this special book,







 1st-edition of Le Temps de Cartier by Barracca, Negretti, Nencini.




 Flemish Tapestry by Guy Delmarcel

& below,  Pistils by Robert Mapplethorpe.






Mapplethorpe's sensuous delights in Flowers:


Right now these titles are on My One Kings Lane Tastemaker Tag Sale. 
There's a DAY left, so take a look at


the Practical,


Old Carpenter's level, not to mention-a sculptural addition to your boring bookcases-



or a Pair of Chenets-making an elegant pair of bookends.




or a French Bookcase with two drawers in the Louis XVI style. There are four shelves with carved borders, bow and floral details in silver leaf and gilt. The working cabinet below has wire fronts on each door. Circa 1920.






the CHIC,



a Pair of Fashion illustrations prints. One of  Paquin, the other Worth, c 1937.




& the Game changers in a room.




Vintage Suzani  with a rich claret & embroidered floral motifs in cream. 
To Hang, To Frame or To Drape over a sofa, a bed, or a table-

interior design by John Stefanidis,image from World of Interiors



the home of Carolina Irving,, image from World of Interiors



& a thank you to the wonderful friends that helped me get the word out on their blogs-See what they Loved from the SALE.

Lisa of a A BLOOMSBURY LIFE

Stefan of ARCHITECT DESIGN

Carol of FORM & FUNCTION

Stacey of QUINTESSENCE

Victoria or VICTORIA THORNE



all the pieces featured above are linked within the text to One Kings Lane.



.

31 December 2011

patti smith feeling the rhythm

.

last year-December-
I was finishing up the great book Just Kids, by Patti Smith, recommending it to readers here and as the New Year of 2011 began suggested a series for looking at the gender question here
Later in the year Smith won the National Book Award for Just Kids. Her own power comes from one source-neither masculine nor feminine-this -a key to being a great artist. She mentions Picasso-another great artist that comes and goes here at little augury.


 "One evening I sat Beauty on my knees 
And I found her bitter 
And I reviled her.” RIMBAUD




Patti Smith came to mind on a posting today-December 30th.  Is it the ending of a year? the beginning? or today was it because today is her birthday,
PATTI SMITH
born December 30 1946.





“And again: No more gods! no more gods! Man is King, Man is God! - But the great Faith is Love!” RIMBAUD




Artists from the Patti Smith feeling the rhythm postings in 2011 here ,were all women. Perhaps-because WOMEN are often described as WOMEN PAINTERS, WOMEN WRITERS, WOMEN this that or the other.  My Picks: Tilda Swinton, Nina Simone & Helen Frankenthaler. Your suggestions for 2012?




 “I have stretched ropes from steeple to steeple; garlands from window to window; golden chains from star to star, 
and I dance.”  
RIMBAUD








Again, looking at Robert Mappelthorpe, photographer who has not yet been recognized as the truly extraordinary artist he was. Yes-he is recognized as a great one-he is that too.



 (from Interview here)

We'll see more of these Artists in the new year. Their power remains undiminished.




“He would say, 'How funny it will all seem, all you've gone through, when I'm not here anymore, when you no longer feel my arms around your shoulders, nor my heart beneath you, nor this mouth on your eyes, because I will have to go away someday, far away...' And in that instant I could feel myself with him gone, dizzy with fear, sinking down into the most horrible blackness: into death.” RIMBAUD




all photographs in this post by Robert Mapplethorpe, at little augury here

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30 December 2011

when DOVES cry

.
Little emerald bird
wants to fly away
If I cup my hand
could I make him stay?

Little emerald soul

Little emerald eye
Little emerald soul
Must you say goodbye?

All the things that we pursue

All that we dream
are composed as nature knew
In a feather green

Little emerald bird

As you light afar
It is true I heard
God is where you are

Little emerald soul

Little emerald eye
Little emerald bird
We must say goodbye
Patti Smith


Patti Smith by Robert Mapplethorpe, 1979.



Mapplethorpe self-portrait, 1975.



Linsday Key, photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe, 1985.


Read about the UnHATE DOVE  art installation sponsored by Benetton & given to LIBYA on Christmas Eve this year. Using 15000 empty cartridges, the UnHATE DOVE sculpture is part of the Benetton Group’s UnHATE Foundation program












pictures from VOGUE it here & from the COLORS OF LOVE blog here -with wonderful videos of the Project





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28 September 2011

Lucy Ferry by Robert Mapplethorpe

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I have always loved this photograph of Lucy Ferry by Robert Mapplethorpe. Now there is an upcoming show organized by art dealer Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris with works selected by one of Mapplethorpe's subjects  Sofia Coppola. 



 photographed in 1986



All the references are here. Mapplethorpe's eye for Beauty, his love of celebrity and a nod to past iconic images like Nancy Cunard photographed by Beaton, Man Ray amongst others with her stacks of bracelets embracing her wrists and arms.



Mapplethorpe with his Lucy Ferry 




Cunard in contemplation, with bracelets.

ROPAC here

the Mapplethorpe foundation here
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17 July 2011

Language, feeling the rhythm: Patti Smith

.


Wild leaves are falling
Falling to the ground
Every leaf a moment
A light upon the crown
That we'll all be wearing
In a time unbound
And wild leaves are falling
Falling to the ground

Every word that's spoken

Every word decreed
Every spell that's broken
Every golden deed
All the parts we're playing
Binding as the reed
And wild leaves are falling
Wild wild leaves

As the campfire's burning

As the fire ignites
All the moments turning
In the stormy bright
Well enough the churning
When enough believe
The coming and the going
Wild wild leaves
Wild wild leaves
Wild wild leaves









photograph of Patti Smith by Robert Mapplethorpe, Wild Leaves written and sung by Patti Smith and dedicated to friend Robert Mapplethorpe






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17 December 2010

just kids

.
a book for giving,
giving to anyone you love. 
family or the found kind.
beautifully written & beautifully lived.
Just Kids.

& photographs from Mapplethorpe's Pistils.
























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09 August 2009

...down the Beaton path - Beverley Nichols & Cecil Beaton





photograph of Cecil Beaton's great friend and artist Rex Whistler
by Cecil Beaton

(read more about Rex Whistler here)



BEATON v. NICHOLS

...continuing FLEUR COWLES FLOWER GAME with detours along the way



Robert Mapplethorpe (here)




Gwili Andre by Cecil Beaton
from Chris Beetles (here)


I can not imagine the sparks that flew when the young aesthete Cecil Beaton met the older aesthete Beverley Nichols. It seems Nichols was trying to coax the 24 year old innocent into an affair. Nichols boasted of bedding a number of famous fellows, dropping Names in hopes of impressing Beaton. In the biography- Beverley Nichols A Life by Bryan Connon, Nichols recalls Beaton as being "startled".
( I bet.)




Artists Gilbert and George

by Cecil Beaton

Cecil Beaton photographs from CHRIS BEETLES (here)



By 1928, Nichols was a best selling author and had audaciously written an autobiography Twenty-Five, he boasted one should have accomplished enough to write such a book at the age of 25. Cecil Beaton was well on his way to his own fame- and ultimately one could say-'outfamed' Nichols.



Nichols by Beaton






In 1929, Nichols wrote Beaton that he must go to New York to be a big success and promised him a commission of 10 photographs for the American Sketch- a new publication where Nichols was to be editor. Nichols had been set up in New York with the job and brought "little pieces of England" to the city- ultimately selling his French furniture in exchange for sturdy "English" Victorian mahogany. Nichols' sophisticated manservant Gaskin was imported as well to oversee it all.



BN

photograph courtesy of Timber Press





CB
by CB


from Chris Beetles (here)



Beaton did take on the city, but the commission BN promised never came through. I can't help but wonder- was it the Sketch publishers who vetoed the Beaton commission or was it Beverley's own snub? Perhaps- a would be lover scorned- at what might have been Beaton's demure to Nichols overtures. I'll never know- neither to my knowledge recorded the reasons. Beaton was in New York and of course angry about the whole thing.

A Happy Ending though: It turns out Beaton didn't need Beverley's help and ultimately landed in what was to be- his own- always -sweet pot of jam.






I can't leave these two erudite aesthetes without knowing they patched things up and fortunately the truth of the tale is that they did. They exchanged genuinely affectionate letters as they got older, admiring each others work and lamenting the onset of old age.


Beverley

The photograph of Beverley done much in the style of Beaton and likely is one of his portraits- no doubt there was a bit of provocative chatter at the sitting.




Beaton, Gladys Cooper, Nichols




Excerpts from the FLOWER GAME




Beaton's Japanese Paper Blossoms




Nichols- not known for brevity exclaimed:

"What a lovely idea!... With the exception of the bougainvillaea, it is firmly British. The only thing that may make it unusual is that I do NOT put roses first. I think that the average garden is greatly 'over rosed'. The whole Idea, of course, is only a dream because one couldn't grow snowdrops and bougainvillaea together. Or Perhaps YOU could!




Nichols with his garden Lilies





... In order of priority is as follows:
Lilium regale, bougainvillea (common magenta variety); Double purple Lilac (Souvenir de Louis Spaeth); Camellia (Donation); Rose (Fragrant Cloud); Snowdrops in clumps (Galanthus ebrosessii); Agapanthus; English Primroses in clumps; and English Blue Bells, philadelphus ( Belle Etoile).




Beaton's scattered Roses fabric creation








Beaton- in less flowery language said:

" Any large white Orchid of any variety, so long as it is white. (I have grown some and they are a great delight!) ; white Paeony, dark red Roses, white Rose, Pink Rose, lily- of- the Valley; auratum Lily; white Marguerites, white Geraniums, Clematis.


Mapplethorpe's Orchid





Rose by Robert Mapplethorpe



Sir Cecil Beaton died in 1980.
Beverley Nichols outlived him by three years.



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