Sunday, October 19, 2008

The Selby (dedicated to Els and Tottie)

Another of one of my findings :-)
The site of photographer Todd Selby, a person with an eye for wonderfull things.




I think this doesn't need a lot of explanation, just enjoy the pictures and do visit the website. You will be looking there around for a good moment.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Sandra Nunnerley


Sandra gazes out her living room window.
I know this name will not ring a bell to some people, but I found that she a goddess in interior design. “I have a lot of god's and goddesses ;-)” The list is as long as twice around the globe. But I will share this with you every time I can.

Sandra’s desk and a chieftain chair from Ethiopia. The hall installation “Brancusi’s Dealer” is by artist Richard Pettibone.

Some fact's here.
She grew up in New Zealand and studied architecture in Australia, but established herself here in the 1980s. She's an architect and also an interiordesigner. For more technical info you can visit her website.
http://www.nunnerley.com/index1.html


“Bad day for Meth Lab #3 and #4” by Kelly McLane dominates the wall of Sandra’s cozy study. The custom sofa doubles as a guest bed when needed.
And like I am very fond of nice pictures I will share with you the pic's of her new New York appartment.
A 1987 Richard Serra painting “My Curves Are Not Mad”, makes a bold statement in the living room.
A view into the foyer. The low curved side table from the 1970s is made out of eggshell and lacquer. “Crying” and “Licking Lips” by photographer Morton Bartlett, hang above a Louis XIVth style table in the entrance foyer.
A close up of the beechwood base of the Louis XIV-style foyer table.
A 1920s Senufo guardian bird figure from the Ivory Coast keeps watch over Sandra’s home. In the background, a print by Italian artist Alberto Magnelli.
A handsome Maison Jansen 1940s black lacquer and steel dining table stands in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows in the living room.
A crystal ball sits atop a 19th century gilt bronze stand in the entry foyer.
Sheepskin scatter rugs soften the lines in the bedroom. To bring light into the room, Sandra opened up a solid back wall with a set of French doors.
A beveled-glass 1950s “Sunburst” mirror by Tommy Parzinger hangs above a Biedermeier chest in the bedroom.
A charming gilt mirror sits atop a marble top Guerdon table in the master bedroom.

Sandra’s walk-in closet.
If this isn't a wonderfull place to stay, you just would want to work from home if you had this :-)
interview to read on http://www.newyorksocialdiary.com

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Hotel Verhaegen

Hôtel Verhaegen offers the most charming and elegant way to stay in the Belgium city of Ghent (Gent in Dutch). It is a luxury “bed-and-breakfast”. The French word “hôtel particulier” refers to a house of standing and character, a private mansion, normally for a single family and with more than one floor.Hôtel Verhaegen is a listed 18th century building. Therefore, the owners, Marc Vergauwe and Jan Rosseel were not free in their interior design. Since the private mansion or hôtel particulier had been handed over several generations, they felt that they had no right to change it fundamentally. They feel more like keepers of an architectural treasure. No doors were moved, the spaces were respected.For the four guestrooms on the first floor, they decided to create a new architecture within the existing one in order to avoid changes that could not be undone later. They made no effort to be trendy. Instead, they were inspired by the building, but without creating a period atmosphere with museum-like rooms. One room was decorated reminiscent of the 1940s Art Deco style, when the first clean style had become softer and more decorative.Marc Vergauwe and Jan Rosseel first saw the Hotel Verhaegen in March 2004 and fell in love with it. In December 2004, they finally bought it from the family Verhaegen and started to restore the house. It took them three months just to put in the new electricity and water supply. At the end of June 2005 they moved furniture from their previous home to Hotel Verhaegen and, by June 2005, they opened their first guestroom.

The façade of Hotel Verhaegen from 1828 by night. Photos © Jan Rosseel / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.
Details make the difference.
I remember an excellent Santos high-speed orange juice, a selection of Mariage-Frères teas, Floris amenities in the bathroom, Roberts design radios and sharp flat TVs in all guestrooms. All rooms have their original 18th century fireplaces. My bedroom in the Paola Room gas has a red bed à la polonaise, decorative boxes, a Buddha statue and many more decorative and design objects. The interior decorators Marc Vergauwe and Jan Rosseel have created an eclectic, but tasteful mix, making you feel at home. Old and new harmoniously coexist. The house may be from the 18th century, but you can enjoy a high-speed internet connection in your room.

View of the sitting area with the “Pasta” poster by the French artist Razzia in the Paola Room. The room I stayed in is named in honor of the present day Queen of Belgium who, as a young Italian princess, slept here when visiting the Baroness Verhaegen, herself by birth a Swedish princess who lived in the Hôtel Verhaegen until 2004. Photos © Sarah van Hove / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.
The breakfast salon. I remember an excellent Santos high-speed orange juice. Photos © Sarah van Hove / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.
The bedroom in the Italian Room. Photo © Sarah van Hove / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.
The history and art of Hotel Verhaegen.
The main activity of Marc Vergauwe and Jan Rosseel is their interior design studio Neoo selon Neo, created in 1990. They work on new buildings and help with renovations and redecorations worldwide. Marc's working room on the ground floor dates back to the 1770s, with a mix of late Louis XVI baroque and Empire classicism style decoration, with white plaster and gold, as well as ornamental leaves with a Classicist Greek touch. The Chinese wallpapers (chinoiserie) known from old photographs were destroyed probably in the early 20th century. They depicted the daily life of the Chinese. On top of the plasterwork above the chimney one can admire a dog representing truthfulness and a lion representing courage, both standing aside a puto representing wealth and opulence. The candelabras above the chimney with motifs copied from Pompeii are a sign of the classicist influence.In the working room of Jan you can admire a chinoiserie from the 18th century pasted onto a linen frame. They are painted with insects, cranes, partridges, peacocks, pheasants, flowers and trees. In the 18th century you had to pay your goods from Asia in advance and take the risk that the ship controlled by the Ostend Company, which controlled the Flemish trade in luxury goods from 1723 onwards, could sink on its sailing trip from China to Europe.These two salons de passage are complemented by two bigger salons, which face the present day French-style interior garden with symmetric parterres of box hedges, which was only created in the early 20th century by the Verhaegen family, is now already a listed monument itself. All four salons are still equipped with the original chimneys.

The living room salon with an Yves Klein sculpture on the table. Photo © Jan Rosseel / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.
The grand salon on the very right of the entrance is decorated with three smaller supraportas canvases depicting the four seasons, the four elements and the four hours of the day. The commission by Antoine-Bernard Triest was painted in the style of François Boucher (1703-1770), inspired by engravings of Jacob de Wit (1698-1754) and executed by the painter from Ghent Pieter Norbert van Reijsschoot (1738-1795). A few years later, Antoine-Bernard Triest commissioned the same artist to create five impressive canvases for the adjacent dining room. They portray fishermen, peasants and shepherds in idyllic genre scenes, inspired by paintings of David Teniers the Younger (1610-1690) and other Flemish painters. According to Marc, remarkable and unusual for the time are the high skies painted by Pieter van Reijsschoot, filling two-thirds of the canvases with clouds. In this salon, Marc Vergauwe and Jan Rosseel made sure that the wall and wooden doors were restored in the original blue tone of the 18th century.

Detail of the bathroom in the Chambre des amoureux with a 19th century Afghan camel hair coat placed above the bathtub. My favorite object in this “room for lovers” is the 1993 iron sculpture representing an elk by Henri Terres, placed on the mantlepiece in the bedroom. The calm Paola Room is situated on the first floor, facing the dépendance building and offering a partial view of the interior garden. Photo © Sarah van Hove / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.

View from the bedroom towards the living room in the suite. Photos © Sarah van Hove / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.
The French-style garden - created in the first half of the 20th century - with the dépendance in the background. Photo © Jan Rosseel / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.The kitchen was in the side-building in order to avoid the destruction of the entire hôtel in case of a fire. The dépendance opposite the present day garden also served once as the glassworks atelier of Arthur Verhaegen (1847-1917), who lived and worked here all year long. The newer part of the building on the right was once a chapel. The owner Antoine-Bernard Triest bought the existing house in 1766 and started to remodel it in 1768 in the latest fashion of the day to create the mansion as we know it today. It served as the winter residence of the family.In 1768, Antoine-Bernard Triest, descendant of the well-known bishop, redesigned the elevations and commissioned the Rococo architect David 't Kindt (1699-1770) to modify the front and the back of the hôtel. In 1828, his widow, Eleanore Philippe de Cronbrugghe opted for a front façade in the Palladian style, known as Empire in Belgium.

The French-style garden - created in the first half of the 20th century - with the dépendance in the background. Photo © Jan Rosseel / Hotel Verhaegen, Ghent.


Among the later otable owners of the hôtel particulier was the mayor of Ghent, Minne-Barth. After a series of successions, the house was bought by Jules Clément Lammens in 1882. By a wedding, it passed to the Verhaegen family.In 1872, the engineer, architect, designer, writer and politician Baron Arthur Verhaegen married one of the two daughters of Jules Lammers; the other daughter became a nun. He was a grandson of Pierre-Théodore Verhaegen (1796-1862), a lawyer, liberal politician, free and founder of the Université Libre de Bruxelles.As an architect, the pious Arthur Verhaegen worked in the Belgian Gothic Revival style. He built schools and public housing for the poor. Among his works are the brick buildings near Hotel Verhaegen, e.g. St. Lucas, the present day artistic middle and high school.
Arthur Verhaegen religious glassworks (vitraux) were made in workshops in Bethune. In the atelier in the garden building at Hotel Verhaegen, he had his design atelier. According to Marc Vergauwe, Arthur Verhaegen made the vitraux for the Cathedral of Antwerp, Chloister Poortakere near Hotel Verhaegen, at present itself a modest hotel as well as many other places including the cities of Paris and Rome. Arthur Verhaegen stopped producing glass when his leading employee established his own atelier.As a Catholic-Conservative politician, Baron Arthur Verhaegen was one of the founders of the Belgian Christian Democratic movement. He created the Christian Labour Movement in Flanders (Association Ouvrière Anti-Socialiste), the Ligue Démocratique Belge and the Catholic daily Het Volk. In ancient times, what later became Hotel Verhaegen stood just outside the city walls. Therefore, wood for the construction in the city was stored here. The Wellinck Strad (Citadel Street), one of the three streets surrounding Hotel Verhaegen, has some Medieval houses of former craftsmen.In short, instead of a dead museum, Hotel Verhaegen is a showroom inhabited by the owners as well as a handful of privileged guests, who sometimes become clients of the designers.
Literature and sources for this article

Fredericq-Lilar, Marie: Gent in de 18de EEUW. De schilders van Reijsschoot. 1992, 271 p. Maeyer, Jan De: Arthur Verhaegen 1847-1917. De rode baron. KADOC-Studies 18, Leuven, 1994, 696 p.Swimberghe, Piet and Jan Verlinde: Flanders: The Art of Living, 1994, 231 p.Verhaegen, Arthur: Verdediging van het paternalisme, 1871.Verhaegen, Arthur: Vingt-cinq années d'action sociale. Préface d'Albert de Mun, Bruxelles, Albert Dewit, “Bibliothèque de la revue sociale catholique”, ca. 1911, 369 p.

First article

My first article, I hope there will be many others and that i make some people happy.

David,

Thursday, September 11, 2008

First day of the rest of my blog life.

Will start soon doing things here :-)

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails