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The stunningly beautiful 'Boulevard Leopold' in Antwerp. Photography; Ben Lambers. |
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Art and Lair Contest
My post on outfitting the artist is one of my favorite everyday outfit combos ever, and so I decided to draw it, cut it, paint it, and post it. I am thinking I would like to do a series of pieces of outfits or favorite things from different areas of the the America, and/or the world. This would be my pick for a "SEATTLE" outfit, but would LOVE to do a "SAVANNAH", "NEW YORK", "CALIFORNIA", PARIS and maybe even JERSEY SHORE! For everyone from bloggers, friends, and art lovers in general, send me images of your favorite grouping for the opportunity to win a FREE, first illustrated, then linocut, then painted with watercolor, piece of art. The groupings can be pieces for the home, pieces of art, clothing, a combo of all, whatever, and I will choose which one I think looks best and announce a winner. All who are interested can send the collection of images (please organize them as I have above, through polyvore, or some other site that is similar) to my e-mail-jament@speakeasy.net (along with your address of where you would like it sent), and the contest will end a month from today. Whoever wins will get a mention ONLY if they give me the ok, otherwise it can be anonymous and I will just post the finished product with no name attached and then send you the piece. This is a FREE piece of art with no weirdness involved (you will not be put on any mass e-mailings, etc..), I just thought it would be fun. Thanks, and I look forward to seeing what you send! :) |
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Contest
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
The Art of the Scarf
Tags:
Roarke Necklaces
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Plants As Art....
This amazing garden wall inside of a home in Paris, France,
was created by the famous botanist Patrick Blanc,
who is the creator of the Vertical Garden.
was created by the famous botanist Patrick Blanc,
who is the creator of the Vertical Garden.
It takes the place of a canvas, or any other art form.
It is enormous, gorgeous, and very,very alive....
It is enormous, gorgeous, and very,very alive....
Via- Yellowtrace
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Patrick Blanc
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Have a Great Weekend!
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Here is some of my work (the Serpent, and the Starburst Pine), hanging in one of the Sundance Film Festival's gathering spots, The Bing Bar. Leah-Ball Steen, from Revival Home and Garden, in Seattle, was kind enough to ask me to be involved in the project, as she was the hired designer...She did a beautiful job... Thanks again, Leah! |
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Sundance Film Festival
Thursday, January 20, 2011
The Friends In My Head...Olympia Le-Tan


and Olympia Le-Tan has represented each genre, by re-creating these
first edition book covers into clutches and totes that are pure genius...
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Here is my other buddy, (in my head), Lou Dillon... Love these totes and banners that Olympia created as well. |

Olympia is one of my favorite artists out there.
Her work is carried at Opening Ceremony in N.Y.C.,
and Collette in Paris...
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Olympia Le Tan
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Monday, January 17, 2011
Coffee Break
Have a cup for me, will ya?
Photos- Unknown (if you know who the photographer is ,please let me know.)
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coffee
Sunday, January 16, 2011
His Last Day In Seattle : Picasso - 1881 - 1973
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One of the biggest events to EVER happen in the Seattle art scene, is the Picasso exhibit that is showing at the Seattle Art Museum, and today, is the last day. It is an amazing collection from the Musee National Picasso, Paris, and is a once in a lifetime chance to see it here in the states. The Seattle Art Museum will be open until midnight tonight, so get there in plenty of time, as lines, I am sure, will be long.. |
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| Acrobats - 1918 |
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| Portrait of Olga in an Armchair, Fall 1918 |
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| Cat Catching a Bird, April 22, 1939 |
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The Seattle Art Museum is excited to present a landmark exhibition of the work of Pablo Picasso (1881–1973), arguably the most radical and influential artist of the 20th century. The exhibition presents iconic works from virtually every phase of Picasso’s legendary career, documenting the full range of his unceasing inventiveness and prodigious creative process. Drawn from the collection of the Musée National Picasso in Paris—the largest and most important repository of the artist’s work in the world—the exhibition features more than 150 extraordinary paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints and photographs. This unprecedented opportunity is possible at this time because the Musée Picasso has recently closed for renovations, allowing a global tour of this full-scale survey to travel for the first and, very likely, the only time. The Musée Picasso’s holdings stand apart from any other collections of Picasso because they represent the artist’s personal collection—works that the highly self-aware artist kept for himself with the intent of shaping his own artistic legacy. Every major period from the artist’s prolific output over eight decades is represented, including the Blue Period La Celestina (1904), Rose Period The Two Brothers (1906), African art–inspired Three Figures Under a Tree (1907), Cubist Man with a Guitar (1911), and the classicizing Two Women Running on the Beach (The Race) (1922), to speak of only the first quarter of his career. Highlights from the period associated with his mistress Marie-Thérèse Walter and his provocative dissolution of the human form include a quintet of Head of a Woman bronzes from 1931 and the portrait Reading from 1932, while another muse, Dora Maar, is represented in many guises, from stately beauty in Portrait of Dora Maar (1937) to emotional wreck in Weeping Woman from the same year. Picasso’s lengthy career spanned both world wars, the Spanish civil war and the Korean War, and each conflict exerted a presence in his work. The impending chaos of World War II, for instance, is reflected in such canvases asMan with a Straw Hat and Ice Cream Cone (1938) and Cat Seizing a Bird (1939), while his consistent challenges to sculptural tradition are traced with such icons as Head of a Bull (1942), The Goat (1950) and the grand figurative groupThe Bathers (1956). Renewed interest in his late period is also amply sated by the exhibition, with numerous paintings from the 1960s and early 1970s, including the sly self-portrait The Matador(1970). This is the first major survey of the long and productive career of Pablo Picasso ever to be seen in the Northwest. –Chiyo Ishikawa, Susan Brotman Deputy Director for Art and Curator of European Painting & Sculpture All images courtesy of The Seattle Art Museum |
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Pablo Picasso
Friday, January 14, 2011
The Art of Fashion : Emilio Pucci
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| This one is my fav...Reminds me of something Anais Nin would wear... |
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| I would give my left eye. Have a great weekend! |
Via- Style.com
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Emilio Pucci
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
The Art of a Stylist
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The photo's above and below, have got to be some of the best groupings of art, that I have ever seen. |


These rooms were styled by the talented, James Leland Day.
Via-here
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james leland day
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Sexy Serpents...
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Gorgeous, sexy and glam...These photographs are perfection... |
Parisian artist Guido Mocafico doesn’t use paint, clay or a chisel to create these brilliant works of natural art. His art form is smooth, silent and scaly-skinned, the living creatures of the serpent world. Earlier this decade, Mocafico began photographing a wide variety of living snakes in a color-neutral environment. The close-quarter confines in these images cause the snakes to wrap and overlap amongst eachother, creating amazing shapes and patterns of bodies and colors. No matter your opinion of our scaly, legless friends, these images are truly breath taking. The colors are so visually arresting in Guido Mocafico’s work, we’ve never seen eye candy quite like this. (The Coolest)
Bottom photo- Elton John's Home
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Guido Mocafico
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Foggy Day
Put this in your Shadow Box
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This is the kind of found object, that makes my eyes widen and my lip curl... Don't you LOVE??? Found here |
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