Friday, October 24, 2008

Regency Redux

Regency Redux: High Style Interiors: Napoleonic, Classical Moderne, and Hollywood Regency by Emily Edermans is an impressive book. Regency Redux is a lavish volume published by Rizzoli. Pre ordered for months, it finally arrived the other day, and I have been pouring over it.
The text is akin to a dissertation on the subject of an overview of the Regency style formed by the ancient Greeks and Romans, and adopted in 18th, 19th, and 20th century France, England and The United States of America.
The text is chock full of historical facts, but written in a breezy style accessible to Recamier readers. Peppered with Regency era words like ‘the bon ton’ and ‘paste pot decor’ and 'beswagging’, it puts you in the milieu of decorators, upholsterers, drapers, furniture makers, and their clients of the era.
The illustrations and photographs are spectacular.
from Regency Redux
Rex Whistler's design
for The Painted Room at Sir Philip Sassoon's Port Lympne

from Regency Redux

The time line from the ancients to period styles of 1700’s, and up to modern interpretation in 20th century Hollywood to the present day Regency influences, is jaw dropping.
from Regency Redux

We basically owe our present style of decorating to the Regency period of the 1700’s and 1800’s: Free floating furniture placement; furniture that does double duty; sumptuous color; over painting old inexpensive pieces to make them current; decorating with "paste pot" wallpaper and using draperies; hand painted murals; mixing the old with the new - are all things initiated back then, and still very much the way we decorate today.
The term Hollywood Regency has been erroneously applied to anything 21st century. A movie Regency style look really took place from the 1920’s - 1930’s, based on the European tendencies of Moderne and Art Deco, which in turn referenced certain classical forms.
A glamorous Hollywood style evolved and developed from the 1930’s into the 40’s and 50’s, the first design for the people movement. If a home decorator saw it on the movie screen, vendors soon enough sold the look for home use.
An East Coast style referencing Hollywood also took hold in New York, something called Vogue Regency. The interplay of fashion and decor was linked by the original Regency crowd in France and England. Think empire waist dresses, The Empress Josephine...
...and Madam Recamier, whose furniture style is very much in use today.
Fashion and decor is certainly carried forward to the 21st century. The idea of changing your decor to keep as current as this year’s frock is something we've done since the 1930's.
Even The Great Depression in the USA, and The Slump in England couldn't stop us from constantly decorating. I think this is going on right now during the current financial fiasco. We feather our nests the best we can to hunker down and wait it out.
Kelly Wearstler does the forward for the book, and is mentioned as a guiding force to the current revival of modern Regency style. I find the omission of Jonathan Adler odd. Both of them share the same time line, the same look of things, one being East Coast, the other West Coast. Both revived Hollywood Regency and Vogue Regency in a major way.
Perhaps it’s Emily’s nod to the famous cadre of ‘lady decorators’ she documents from Elsie de Wolfe to Miss Wearstler.
The section on the Lady Decorators is absolutely fascinating.
Mrs. Draper, Lady Decorator

Emily describes the lady decorator: “It didn’t require training, just a vague attribute called ‘good taste’. Those who had an ‘eye’...
It kind of sounds like the current cadre of the blog writing blog-orators!
Dorothy Draper was among the most successful. A 1941 profile in Harper's Bazaar, included this observation: “Mrs. Draper calls herself ‘a professional stylist’ or ‘repackager.’ What she means by this is that as a decorator she has a purely merchandising viewpoint, like a packager of perfumes.”
Dorothy Draper interior

The historical documentation in Regency Redux is flawless.
I would have liked to see reference to period American Regency other than Hollywood. Colonial times certainly had its fair share of Regency influence which can be seen in Jackie Kennedy’s White House (the ultimate Lady Decorator!)...
A sitting area in Jackie's bedroom

The Yellow Room - the drapes are so Regency!

"His" Bedroom

"Hers" Bedroom

Another White House Sitting Room

The Green Room - Uber Regency

...and The Governor’s Palace at Williamsburg...
...and Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello.
Homes from that era such as Richard Jenrette’s Edgewater...
Dick Jenrette bought Edgewater from Gore Vidal in the 1970's for $125K. Vidal had purchased it some 30 years before for $35K. Mr. Jenrette was a client of mine, and I spent many lovely hours in this house.
The decorative arts of the period the house was built in, manifested the same fashion in classical Greek and Roman forms that had inspired it. The Duncan Phyfe, Lannuier and other antique furniture that Mr Jenrette acquired to go with the house represents the final flowering of hand-carved furniture in America.



... and Henry DuPont’s Winterthur also share profound Regency touchstones...
...the sweeping graceful stairway at Winterthur and the furniture below are Regency style.

Regency style was surely realized in the form of American Empire furniture and decoration.

Even New Orleans has it’s fair share of Napoleonic Regency inspired interiors and architecture.
The Pontalba buildings in New Orleans, the vision of The Baroness Pontalba, are designed based upon the Palais Royal and the Place des Vosges of Paris. Begun in the spring of 1849, they were finished in the winter of 1851. The Baroness had hired and fired the finest architects of the community, used their plans, then altered the product to her liking. The result was an amalgam of Creole, Parisian, and Greek Revival tastes and uses.

The Soniat House hotel (above and below) in New Orleans was created over twenty years ago by combining three historic Creole town-houses. Two of the houses were built in 1830 by Joseph Soniat, a plantation owner who needed a house in New Orleans when visiting with his large family. Just four years later his oldest son built an even larger house. The three have become one. Many of the rooms have Regency style decor.
The sweeping staircase in The Soniat House has a Regency style. Many houses in the French Quarter have these staircases.

This is The Pitot House in New Orleans (below).
Located on historic Bayou St. John, the Pitot House is the only Creole colonial style house museum in New Orleans. It tells the story of life along Bayou St. John since the earliest days of settlement. The Pitot House has had a variety of owners from prominent lawyers to austere nuns. One of the most prominent was James Pitot, the first American mayor of New Orleans who lived here from 1810-1819. The scale of the house, and the delicate furnishings of the era are very Regency.

Settee in the Pitot House
...and of course The Napoleon House. Few places capture the essence of New Orleans like the Napoleon House: Nearly a 300 year old landmark that is as unique as its French Quarter surroundings. The building's first occupant, Nicholas Girod, was mayor of New Orleans from 1812 to 1815. He offered his residence to Napoleon in 1821 as a refuge during his exile. Napoleon never made it, but the name remains. The Napoleon House has become one of the most famous bars in America, a haunt for artists and writers throughout most of the 20th century. Owned and operated by the Impastato family since 1914, it's a place that suspends you in time, where you can hear Beethoven's Eroiqua, which he composed for Napoleon.
Napoleon House

While the French and English certainly “invented” the Regency vernacular, on this side of the pond, early 18th century Americans brought it with them, and ultimately made it their own in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.

The Hollywood era is beautifully explained and illustrated, and the photos obtained from the Mandelbaum collection are rare enough to really be appreciated gathered in one volume.
from Regency Redux

As I look around my own living room, I realize how much Regency style I have intuitively acquired in the form of furniture that is portable and light in the form of settees, chairs, and little tables.
I even have a paste pot detail in the form of a mural with a reference to ancient times!
Look around your own home, no matter what style you have adopted, and I’m sure you will see the effects of Regency on your lifestyle too.
I think anyone who loves decor and interior design, who loves the movies, who loves the history of decorating, whether it be for a movie fantasy, a middle class home, or a grand house of the wealthy, will certainly want to add the masterful Regency Redux to their collection.
Jennifer Dwyer from The Peak Of Chic is acknowledged and thanked, and if you go to her blog, you will find many fine postings on Regency Redux.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

James Noel Smith

I recently did a posting about Domino The Book Of Decorating HERE
I used the charming drawings from the chapter openers by James Noel Smith.
Fascinated, I found my way to his web site where there was nary a word about a book that seemed so important to all of us. There were many beautiful drawings, but nothing about James when you clicked on "About Me" - no bios or credits, but thankfully there was contact information.
So I shot off an e-mail and asked him if he was indeed the artist.

He answered me:

JAMES: Well, I DID do a Domino decorating book recently but I don't know what they decided to call it...Yes, indeed, I am the guilty party that produced those illustrations...If you've perused my web site, you probably realized that the Domino stuff isn't really typical of my style or what I normally do, but I like the challenge of something different.


VV: How did you get to do the Domino book?

JAMES: I just checked out your blog, and it is Tres Kool. Do you by any chance know Joanna Goddard, who also does a really neat blog called A CUP OF JO? VV: I know her blog, and she's fabulous!

JAMES: She used to be editor at a wonderful (unfortunately now defunct) magazine called BENE, about all things Italian. I loved working for that magazine--the subjects were always fun and they really let me have a lot of freedom and use my sense of humor. That's how I met Stella Bugbee, who used to be art director there and who then went to DOMINO, and it was she who recommended me to do the book. She's a terrific art director and great to work with. Doing the book was intense because because it was a huge amount of work in a short period of time but a good experience because the DOMINO folks are so appreciative and pleasant.

VV: Isn't it amazing how generous people are, how connections are made. I find the blog girls (and guys) so supportive. Do you have a blog?

JAMES: Actually, I am going to start a blog...well, I guess you could call it a blog. It will be called PAINT THE DAY and will feature oil paintings of whatever I happen to be interested in at the moment. I'll do the paintings in series, and when one is over, I'll start another. The paintings will of course be for sale...reasonably priced for the average art lover, and small enough to fit on my scanner. My son has designed a very cool-looking masthead for me and it will have its own 'store'...Anyway, with two kids in college right now, the emphasis is on making lots of money, so I can't really get much into 'painting the day' until next year, after kid #1 graduates and gets a job, my house will also be paid for by then, so the pressure will be off and I can start doing what I want to do & less of what other people want me to do. What a concept!
JAMES: On a side note, I'm reading A WHOLE NEW MIND by Daniel Pink, a fascinating book that theorizes that the future of work belongs to creative, empathetic right-brained people--industrial design and nursing are very high on the list...yessss!

VV: Are you working on any projects?

JAMES: I am really into landscaping and creating outdoor living spaces...this winter I hope to create a patio, etc. for my wife Michele's studio which will be like a little corner of Provence and Tuscany. Let's say it's right on the border between the two...if you take out a large chunk of northwest Italy and the Alps. I'm also beginning to mess about with creating a Japanese garden in an isolated part of the yard with it's own tinkling little stream and koi pool. With 10 acres to play with, one can procrastinate forever before remodeling parts of the INSIDE of the house. Winter is mild here, so that's my fave time for doing this stuff...too hot and humid to do anything but mow grass in the summer. I just bought a new camera, so my thought is that I will document all this and who knows...maybe it will turn into a book or something.

VV: You said your were making a patio for your wife's studio. Can you tell me more about her?

JAMES: My wife has 4 chihuahuas and 3 cats in her studio. Oh, and 3 horses in the barn. Some day she will be one of those cases you read about in the oddball news...'elderly woman found in filthy house with mountains of newspapers and 835 starving cats and dogs'...her website is www.michelewarner.com ...she does lots of portraits of animals and people and their pets, etc....She's a pretty wonderful painter. And good lookin' too!
VV: By the looks of the drawing Gabrielle did of you for your web site, you're kind of cute yourself, and of course you're a pretty wonderful painter too! Any upcoming painting projects?
JAMES: Right now I'm working on some illustrations about Hungarian wine for CONDE NAST TRAVELER, an executive portrait of a dead guy, and an architectural rendering of, believe it or not, a 'green' National Guard armory. Grass on the roof, solar panels, the whole deal. Who knew. OH, and I'm writing a hillbilly detective novel, set in the fall of 1960, during the month of the Kennedy-Nixon debates. It involves UFOs, drug smuggling, the CIA, the civil rights struggle, and a small town sheriff..the character is based largely on my dad, who was a military cop.
VV: Since I have a decor blog, may I ask you what your house is like?

JAMES: Hmmm...my house....it's really a construction zone right now, so not really too picturesque. It's a big plain-looking brick rancher, a realchallenge to make look interesting, but it's on 10 acres in next to the National Forest and surrounded by the spectacular mountain scenery of northeast Tennessee. We're getting ready to enter "Phase Two" after raising two kids (who are away at college) in our now empty nest. My wife works downstairs & I work upstairs. She really has the decorating knack and has collected a lot of nice antiques and art over the years. We're planning to remodel the kitchen, re-do all the hardwood floors and a lot of other projects. Hopefully, we will have enough energy to tackle it all.
VV: It sounds lovely!

JAMES: If you want to see what it looks like here, check out a zombie movie my son Daniel (who is a 2nd year industrial design major at SCAD) did with his film major friend, Trevor Wild. It's called 8 DAYS LATER...you can see it on the Vimeo website (www.vimeo.com)..do a search for Trevor Wild and you'll find it. They wrote, shot and edited it over a weekend on Christmas break last year...That's my house (including the sink full of dirty dishes) in part 4, where it's snowing. About 10,000 people have watched it on Vimeo so far. While you're at it, look at Daniel's site called MEEDEOR (www.meedeor.com) which is sort of a Facebook / Myspace on steroids. I'd better not leave my daughter out--she's in her final cycle of nursing school, doing her med surg and clinicals. At least one member of the family is sure to have a steady job!

VV: You are so interesting! I love all the stuff you are working on, and your entire family is wildly creative. I'd love to hang out with you guys! Is there anything else you'd like to say?

JAMES: This is probably way more than you care to know, but let me know if there's anything else you need. I have tons of jpgs of drawings and paintings too.
VV: James you are incredibly generous to share your work and tell me all about yourself!
You know I love your work, and especially the watercolor of the dress shop that you sent. It looks like a walk in closet and dressing room any girl would love to have!
Did you see the wonderful one that Patricia Van Esshe, of PVE Designs did for me?
I hope you feel you've made a geeky blog friend, and that we stay in touch! Thank you so much for your time!

JAMES: Luego!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Wednesday Is Tango Night

LePhare
523 Gravier Street - New Orleans
Tango Class 7 - 9PM
Tango Dancing & Cocktails 9 PM - Midnight