Lifestyle

Lifestyle

Seeing Things: Paolo Soleri

Architect Paolo Soleri, described by The New York Times as “the architect of counterculture,” passed away yesterday at age 93. An apprentice of Frank Lloyd Wright, Soleri is known best for Arcosanti, an experimental eco-minded settlement in Arizona that is still funded by the sale of Soleri’s signature windbells, which are popular souvenirs and home accents across Arizona. Soleri created the huge Bronze Verde Bell that hangs in the atrium of Neiman Marcus Scottsdale for the store’s opening in 1991. And like almost every work in the NM art collection, it reflects the store’s commitment to its regional culture.

Photos by Katherine Thornhill.

Categories: Lifestyle » Art | Tagged

Lifestyle // Women's

We Have a Winner-Pinner in The Art of Fashion!

Pinterest
Pinterest

Screenshots don’t begin to do it justice, but we at NMdaily were absolutely enthralled by Mimi Tanaka’s Pinterest board. It incorporates two of our favorite things at NM — butterflies and breathtaking black-and-white fashion photography. So Mimi has won our Pinterest contest, The Art of Fashion! Please enjoy Mimi’s board here:

http://pinterest.com/mimitanaka/the-art-of-fashion/

We want to thank everyone who took the time and care to craft beautiful boards interpreting The Art of Fashion. We hope you’ll keep on pinning with us.

Congrats, Mimi Tanaka!

And a few honorable mentions:

http://pinterest.com/deborahbiggs/my-neiman-marcus-art-of-fashion-board/

http://pinterest.com/juliaguila2013/the-art-of-fashion/

http://pinterest.com/audragm/the-art-of-fashion/

http://pinterest.com/headenistic/art-of-fashion/

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Women's » Designer | Tagged ,

Lifestyle // Women's

Stylish Space: Lela Rose at Home in Tribeca

Lela Rose

"I'm never one to say no to color." - Lela Rose

Designer Lela Rose’s signature whimsy and elegance is expressed beautifully throughout the interior of her Tribeca home (an old commercial fabric warehouse) which she and her husband converted and built into a residence.  After converting the space into 3 livable floors Rose began making it a home for her family.  “I like to use fabric from past collections for re-upholstery projects here and there, like the fabric I used on my sofa cushion,” says Rose.

Lela Rose

The living room in designer Lela Rose's Tribeca home.

The Texas native acknowledges that living in New York City is “of course very different” than growing up in Dallas. “Living on the ground floor, as opposed to an apartment, gives a semblance of living in a home—with lots of street theater.” Rose adores the liveliness and fun she and her family have in this house. “There is always something going on, from people dropping in for dinner to just hanging on the stoop, watching NYC as it goes by.”  The rawness of the exterior mixed with the nostalgia of the interior expresses Rose’s elegant outlook on life.

Lela Rose

Designer Lela Rose cooking dinner in her kitchen.

“I started collecting photographs in high school and have added to my collection over the years.” Most are black-and-white photographs (William Wegman, Ruth Orkin, Robert Doisneau, and more) there are some beautiful drawings as well (Russell Crotty, Vija Celmins.) The chairs in the front room are hand-me-downs from Rose’s mother.  “When my mother owned them, they were covered in just the original padding and she had asked an artist to do drawings on them based on “The Little Prince.”  It wasn’t until Rose was planning the home that she thought of the chairs.  “I thought they would be perfect for that space as they didn’t necessarily match the rest of the décor, and I long had wanted to bead and embroider some chairs. I designed an embroidery based on one I had used in a past collection,” says Rose.

As Rose continues to evolve her collection and her home, one thing remains true – her vision and passion to stay true to who she is.

Lela Rose

Rose's collection of black-and-white photographs mixed with beautiful drawings.

Lela Rose

Chairs handed down to Rose from her mother.

All photos by Lexie Moreland.

 

 

 

 

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Women's » Designer, Lifestyle » Home Design, Women's | Tagged , , ,

Lifestyle // Women's

Seeing Things: Magazine Café

For all the talk about the death of print, some of the world’s most imaginative imagery can be found in the pages of magazines. For proof, look no further than Magazine Café, a midtown Manhattan destination (and, lucky us, an equally comprehensive website magazinecafestore.com) where the visually obsessed can spend hours poring over some 10,000 domestic and international titles—more than 400 in the women’s fashion category alone. Love, i-D, and Carine Roitfeld’s CR Fashion Book are all here, of course, as is every edition of Elle, Vogue, Marie Claire, Glamour, and Harper’s Bazaar, plus a slew of esoteric finds, from German streetwear mag High Snobiety to Egg, which celebrates the blonde-wigged teens of Japan’s gyaru style tribe. Back issues are a specialty. Bonus: Magazine Café also offers subscriptions.

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Lifestyle » Books & Media, Lifestyle, Women's | Tagged

Lifestyle // Women's

Seeing Things: Gucci Museo

Galleries devoted to "Flora World." Gucci Museum, Florence, Italy.

Galleries devoted to "Flora World." Gucci Museum, Florence, Italy.

Milan may be Italy’s fashion capital. But Florence, arguably the country’s top cultural destination, is the place to soak up the history of style. Ferragamo has long operated a museum devoted to its inspired shoe designs here. Now another hometown house expands the field with Gucci Museo (guccimuseo.com).

Gucci Museo.

Gucci Museo.

Overlooking the landmark Piazza della Signoria in a 14th-century palazzo, the 18,460-square-foot showcase begins with a look at the original 1920s luggage designs produced by Guccio Gucci (after serving as a bellman at London’s Savoy Hotel) and continues with vitrines devoted to early classic floral collections and bamboo-handled bags. From horse tack to a 1979 Cadillac—even a neon orange surfboard— the collection ventures as far and wide as the imaginations of the house’s designers. Formal showstoppers, including a 2011 ostrich feather gown worn at the Oscars by Hilary Swank, boast their own dramatically lit gallery.

Vintage Luggage at Florence's Gucci Museo.

Vintage luggage at Florence's Gucci Museo.

Fashion isn’t the only draw. On the second of the museum’s three levels, a contemporary art gallery rotates pieces from the Francois Pinault Collection and screens experimental video art. The museum is also a destination for pasta nibblers and espresso sippers thanks to its ground-floor cafe with a library-like communal table strewn with Rizzoli art books, also on sale in the in-house bookshop. An adjoining space lures shoppers with the Icon Collection, dealing period Gucci designs ranging from the “Flora” scarf to the “New Jackie” handbag. Nice touch: Half of the 6-euro admission benefits the preservation and restoration of Florence’s art treasures. —Elaine Glusac

 

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Lifestyle, Women's | Tagged ,

Lifestyle // Women's

The Art of Pinning

Art of Fashion, Spring 2013. Photographed by Walter Chin.

The Art of Fashion, Spring 2013. Photographed by Walter Chin.

Every March and September Neiman Marcus showcases the season’s most cutting-edge fashion with equally provocative photography, known as The Art of Fashion. In honor of this season’s campaign shot by Walter Chin, we have revived past AOF campaigns (Richard Avedon, Helmut Newton, Annie Leibovitz…) to display them on a social media platform where beautiful imagery thrives — Pinterest.

Art of Fashion, Spring 1997. Shot by Paolo Roversi.

Art of Fashion, Spring 1997. Shot by Paolo Roversi.

Through March 27, show your eye for the aesthetically pleasing by repinning The Art of Fashion’s most captivating moments captured by photography’s greats onto your very own AOF board. Curate a Pinterest board that artfully interprets the essence of The Art of Fashion with AOF images and supporting inspirational pins, and you could win $1,000 NM gift card.

Art of Fashion, Fall 2007. Photographed by Tom Munro.

The Art of Fashion, Fall 2007. Photographed by Tom Munro.

1. Get started on NeimanMarcus.com/PinterestAOF

2. Create a Art of Fashion board and pin the AOF board cover.

3. Pin any 6 looks from The Art of Fashion board

4. Complete the collection with some creative pinning.

AOF board on Pinterest.com/NeimanMarcus

AOF board on Pinterest.com/NeimanMarcus

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Lifestyle » Books & Media, Women's » Designer, Women's | Tagged , ,

Lifestyle // Women's

Seeing Things: Punk at The Met

A punk-influenced Chanel look shot by David Sims for March 2011 Vogue, part of the Met's upcoming "PUNK: Chaos to Couture."

A punk-influenced Chanel look shot by David Sims for March 2011 Vogue, part of the Met's upcoming "PUNK: Chaos to Couture."

Dig out those Dr. Martens, and start practicing your snarl. PUNK: Chaos to Couture takes over the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute May 9 through August 11. Acknowledging what curator Andrew Bolton calls punk’s “incendiary influence on fashion,” the multimedia exhibition will focus on how designers appropriated and adapted the visual symbols of punk’s anarchic DIY aesthetic. Will Anna Wintour pogo at the Gala Benefit? We doubt it. But just look at all the punk references on the Fall 2013 runways. It won’t be hard for attendees to get on theme.

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Women's » Contemporary Fashion, Lifestyle » Culture, Leisure & Travel, Women's » Designer, Lifestyle | Tagged , ,

Lifestyle // Women's

How It’s Made: Mary Katrantzou

Mary Katrantzou

Printing money is exactly what London-based designer Mary Katrantzou was banking on for her Spring 2013 Collection. Specifically, foreign currency notes and postage stamps. The Athens-born Central Saint Martins grad has become known for her trompe l’oeil designs realized as intricately detailed digital prints. In her 2008 graduating collection, Katrantzou used imagery of oversize jewelry on jersey-bonded dresses. Since then, perfume bottles, paintings of 18th-century society, interiors, and fields of luridly vivid flowers have all come to life as part of her computer-meets-textile art. Katrantzou expresses her latest motifs—squared-off, graphic postal imprints paired with more curvaceous money markings—in straightforward digital prints applied to bold architectural shapes. She chose the theme for its symbolism—as a form of exchange, symbol of wealth, and passport to exotic cultures. Here, the backstory on one of our favorite Katrantzou looks for spring.

Mary Katrantzou

The Fabric 

Katrantzou selected each color of the individual yarns used in the exclusive jacquard. The cloth was designed by her in-house print and textile teams, then woven in southwest France. The jacquard fabric is full-bodied and substantial, which makes it ideal for strong, clean silhouettes such as the “Desco Dino” top.

Mary Katrantzou

The Artwork

The artwork’s fine repetitive detailing is based on guilloche, a complex, intricate engraving technique.

Mary Katrantzou

The Details 

Katrantzou and her team developed their own technique to render the Swarovski crystal meshjacquard combination of the “Lella” skirt—the first time this method has ever been used on fabric. It takes more than an hour to weave a single meter of the jacquard, and because of the unusual nature of the material, it requires expert skill and accuracy to piece together by hand.

Stacy Girard

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Lifestyle // Women's

On Set: The Art of Fashion Featuring Walter Chin

The always-anticipated annual Art of Fashion campaign is back for its 19th season. For Spring 2013 Neiman Marcus’ creative team tapped fashion photographer Walter Chin to synthesize the season’s most exquisite high fashion with the art form of photography. The twenty-two image campaign will appear in March magazines and in its entirety in the March edition of The Book.

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Lifestyle // Women's

Seeing Things: Hervé Van Der Straeten’s STRUCTURE/S at Ralph Pucci Gallery

Seeing Things: Herve Van Der Straeten STRUCTURE/S

Miroir Lollypop, Hervé Van der Straeten, 2012 Plexiglas, gilt and black patinated bronze frame, curved mirror Limited edition of 60

French designer Hervé Van Der Straeten debuts his new exhibition STRUCTURE/S in New York, at the Ralph Pucci Gallery, from January 31 to May 15. It will be a unique occasion to discover Hervé Van Der Straeten’s latest designs as well as iconic pieces, including his famous curved mirrors and newest consoles. Centered on a collection of furniture, lighting and objects, the exhibition examines Hervé Van Der Straten’s work, bringing to the forefront the precision of the designer’s constantly renewed exploration of volumes, contrasting materials and combining textures.

Seeing Things: Herve Van Der Straeten STRUCTURE/S

Console Partition, Hervé Van der Straeten, 2012 Plexiglas, red edges Limited edition of 60

Seeing Things: Herve Van Der Straeten STRUCTURE/S

Bout de canapé Inclination, Hervé Van der Straeten, 2012 Faded burnt orange lacquered wood top and bronze

Categories: Lifestyle » Art, Lifestyle » Culture, Leisure & Travel, Lifestyle » Home Design, Women's » Jewelry, Lifestyle, Women's | Tagged , , , ,