"Look for comfort now, within these walls
For all these different days yeah, these autumn ways 
Will slowly disappear. Will slowly fall apart,
Drifting slowly, drifting clear" - Neil Halstead


(all photos by David John)


Kinfolk Magazine hosted a dinner party in Los Angeles this weekend to celebrate autumn's arrival in the Arts District in downtown at the Apolis Common Gallery.   Danielle, of Paper Palate created a mouth-watering, multi-course meal for us all, while a local beer brewer, the Handsome Coffee Crew, and a local ice cream maker on a bike kept us mildly intoxicated and on a steady sugar-caffeine high. Bundled herbs were tied to the painted white beams of the spare warehouse, casting shadows as the night crept in, and everyone cozied up to the dinner table.  New folks interested in conversation and delicious crafted food (pumpkin tacos, slow cooked pork, and heirloom tarts).  Thank you to Nathan and Julie from Kinfolk for the invitation, and for Raan & Shea Parton at Apolis for having us for the evening. - David

no it's all broke down, eyes out on the road but no one comes along."

















go to Kinfolk Magazine here...

"Kinfolk is a growing community of artists with a shared interest in small gatherings. We recognize that there is something about a table shared by friends, not just a wedding or once-a-year holiday extravaganza, that anchors our relationships and energizes us. We have come together to create Kinfolk as our collaborative way of advocating the natural approach to entertaining that we love."
You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/look-for-comfort-now-within-these-walls.html. Thanks!
"Hedge Gallery is pleased to present the American debut of Sam Orlando Miller with a solo exhibition of new works in glass and silver. 
                     
“What preoccupies me the most with my work is the constant shifting between the imagined world and the real one,” says Miller, “making this series of sculptures is an attempt to reconcile these seemingly incompatible worlds. Cutting out pieces of sky to hang on the wall, I thought, how could I do that?”  Born in London in 1966 Miller grew up in the family silver trade.

Surrounded by English craftsmen he learned not only how to work with precious materials, but a skillful approach to making beautiful objects. In 1987 he graduated with a degree in fine art. He ran a successful London design business creating objects and interiors. In 2002, compelled by a desire to spend time in a rural landscape, he set up a studio in a remote part of Italy where he makes his work alone."




read a (non)conversation with 
Sam Orlando Miller on YHBHS here.


"But the main thing in my mind really was to create something the opposite of the drawing, the reverse, that did not absorb light and that gave energy and balance to the room. I wasn’t for a moment thinking about making something you could look at yourself in. "

- Sam Orlando Miller
You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/hedge-gallery-is-pleased-to-present.html. Thanks!
You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post.html. Thanks!
LAMA Preview
Auction : Oct  7



Los Angeles Modern Auctions is previewing the lots for their upcoming auction on October 7th.  Yesterday afternoon, Peter Loughrey, founder of LAMA, gave me a tour of some highlights, including a Keith Haring decorated gas tank, and a Harrison McIntosh Scottish Rite Temple Jar from the early 60's. One of the highlights for me was seeing 2 large scale works by Sheila Hicks, (photographed above in the background and below) circa 1970 and 1975.  It's seems bizarre that her market has not gained strength in the U.S., especially at a time when Kusama's prices have skyrocketed and taken center stage in the art world.  In 2011, The Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) presented Sheila Hicks: 50 Years, the first major retrospective of Sheila Hicks work, though this show never made it to the West Coast.

"In Tahoe Wall (c. 1970), Hicks illustrates her ability to transform a surface into a vibrant tapestry, teeming with warmth and fluidity. Her scrupulous attention to the properties of the materials has resulted in a seamless transition of colorful silk interrupted by smooth tufts of natural linen. Critic Mildred Constantine and fabric designer Jack Lenor Larsen describe this piece as “replete with the rhythmic cadence of music.” (text taken from here)











"The 20th Anniversary Auction features over 500 lots of rare and important fine art and design, including a work on paper by Sam Francis, a selection of works by Richard Pettibone, Blue Surround from 1982 by Richard Diebenkorn, nine works by Andy Warhol, a hand-decorated motorcycle gas tank by Keith Haring, a collage by Yayoi Kusama, a painting by Roland Peterson, and a drawing by David Hockney.    



Design offerings include a rare Jean Prouvé table from 1954 that was commissioned for a hotel in Cameroon, an impressive selection of Greta Grossman designs, and a strong grouping of Serge Mouille lighting. Sixteen designs by Nakashima will go up on the auction block, including one of his masterpieces, a monumental coffee table from 1969.

Ceramics include a large-scale Harrison McIntosh vessel, as well as other ceramics by Peter Voulkos, Pablo Picasso, Beatrice Wood, and Stan Bitters..."











"The psychology of a collector."
Do you collect anything yourself?   


Peter: I often answer this question by explaining I collect items that haven’t sold yet. BUT, I do have a nice collection (pieces not for sale) of Gio Ponti furniture and objects such as glass by Venini and enamels by Paolo di Poli.   There must be a collector’s gene that can be isolated. Perhaps it will eventually be possible to develop a pill, like a statin, that will not cure the collector, but it would allow them to keep their condition manageable.

(read entire interview with Peter Loughrey, of LAMA here) 



View the entire catalog here..



You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/lama-preview-auction-oct-7-los-angeles.html. Thanks!
this is a new chapter.
is this chapter new?
a new chapter is the?
the new chapter is a...
 

"Trying to find, find the right time"


Above, a book on a glass coffee table, revealing the layers of our conversation that afternoon.
Duncan Nicholson
showed me this book  the day I arrived at his studio, at the end of our conversation, almost like an afer-thought, or a new beginning of sorts, (I'm not quite sure it matters if you talk about the beginning or the end. )   A bank designed by Louis Sullivan, if I recall correctly, in the Midwest, in early 1900's.



"To study Frank interiors published between 1928 and 1941—when the forty-six-year-old designer jumped from a Manhattan building, a refugee desolated by the Nazi occupation of France and a love affair gone awry—is to be amazed by his confectionary palette and catholic furnishings. “White was his favorite color,” says the designer’s niece, Alice, who recalls her uncle’s apartment at 7 rue de Verneuil as a suave composition of travertine, sanded oak, vellum and blanched leather. But the rooms of his clients embraced the glitter of Boulle as well as the glamour of the silver screen."
(text from AD here)


The Spring afternoon in Mexico City, we walked past a line of books. 
A diagonal line. It left a memory with us. The street felt brisk with business.
I snapped a photo, only to stare at it with a melody behind it, now back in Los Angeles.






Walking alone I'm in the red lines 
Trying to find, find the right time 
Walking alone I'm on the wrong side 
Try'na find, find the right times
You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/this-is-new-chapter.html. Thanks!
robert lewis studio

" robert lewis studio is a design workshop in los angeles creating custom fabricated light fixtures for residential and commercial use. working one on one with the client, designers, and fabricators, each project is site specific. "

photo taken at lawson fenning, silver lake
You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/robert-lewis-studio-robert-lewis-studio.html. Thanks!
You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post_20.html. Thanks!

A conversation with Christopher Boots

" I would have been an arborist, stuntman or Shiatsu practitioner
had I not taken the designer path.
In fact I'll probably do all of these one day, once I make the time."






The diamond ring (materials: quartz crystal, neodymium rare, earth magnets, iron, carbon), where did the idea come from?
What is your attraction to crystals? I have always loved crystals since I was a kid. I found my first one on a beach when I was 8 years old. I've still got a little guide book on rocks and minerals that sparked my imagination about Geology. I was all about rocks as I grew up and was certainly alone in my own world. I always wanted to create an object that would have the power and awesomeness that I imagined always existed in that dream space land I daydreamed about. I guess the current work is the culmination of my life thus far. Geeky kid into rocks + design experience and training = diamond ring:) People occasionally ask about the energetic properties of crystals, magnets and light being all placed together and powered up. I guess that the result speaks for itself- a glowing manifestation of the unique crystalline structures of earth's minerals. Quartz crystals have been used for eons in many cultures for reasons that they are as unique as the people that use them. Essentially, they retain any information that is programmed into them energetically. The intention the studio has when using quartz crystal in lighting is to facilitate the expansion of consciousness in these times, we are now at the end of one calendar and moving into a new paradigm. Changing the world one interior at a time ;) What are rare earth magnets? Rare earth magnets are classified as rare since they use minerals such as neodymium that keep their magnetism permanently. They are adhered to the crystals, and thus magnetized to the frames made from steel (iron+carbon) very strongly, allowing them to be re-arranged and removed for cleaning (perhaps cleansing out in the full moon as required if that's your thing) and aesthetic purposes. This kind of interaction engages and personalizes the product experience. How do you design? Daydream often. Sometimes the best work I sketch while waiting in a plane during taxi. Love that time as there's no digital distractions. Seriously the best time ever- you're in-between spaces and can go anywhere. I reflect on what I've seen and where I'm going. Think, lots. first. The brain will always be superior to any computer- gospel from my grandma! Sketch very rough concepts. Run straight with making by hand at full size with the actual materials. This gets expensive but it's worth every cent. Full size model making is good also but the materiality is second to none, to feel the material and know it, to guide it and work with it- to understand the full capabilities of the materials you work with is critical to be able to make them perform to the best capacity that they can. How long have you been out on your own as a lighting designer? What were you doing before working on your own? After high school I did a B.A. in Linguistics and Cinema, thinking I could change the world through the means of media. However theory became extremely tiresome and I pined for being practical. I studied Industrial Design at Swinburne National School of Design from 2000-2004. I'd always been making chairs, tables, lights and sculptures as I was growing up so industrial design was a natural extension of those explorations into built form. I was very close to transferring into Architecture but decided to complete studies and save another few institutional years. I graduated in 2005 and pretty much worked with a lighting designer, Geoffrey Mance, straight away the first day I was in his studio. I worked there for two years, and for the last six months until his untimely passing away from cancer in early 2007, I was managing the studio. He asked myself and a colleague if we wanted to carry on the business and we said yes. Little did I know how much work was ahead for the next few years. We built up the studio from 3 to 12 people, but were still running with old designs. I pretty much had enough of that studio by 2010 and sold out my share by 2011, and spent the year chilling out, doing yoga, drinking tea, traveling and designing a new collection that you see today. I never looked back. If anyone can take a year off from work, do it every few years, I highly recommend a sabbatical every now and again!





What makes a light interesting?
Thats a good question! And very open to interpretation. Personally, it needs to speak to me in a language that is not cut and paste, that has an effect that is gentle to the eye (think ambiance and the effect on the face and perception of the space) and allows one to ponder how it all came together, without being too busy or fussy. And it has to be easy to clean and maintain. Longevity is critical in a product, it must look as good or better in 10 or 20 years time as it does today. Materials you are interested in working with, or are currently working with? Bronze- love it- amazing textures can be created by hand in the wax molds, beautiful colors, warmth and timeless classicism. Quartz- forever amazing, a manifestation of pure earth energy, clear as ice and each and every one has its own character and individuality, just like people all the same yet different. Gold - never tarnishes, always keeps its sheen, is antimicrobial (crazy huh!) and in small quantities is never ostentatious. I like to use it in interior surfaces where only a glimpse may be had- so as to create a surprise. What is the design culture like in Victoria? Pretty strong. Melbourne is the cultural hub of Australia. There's a plurality of designers and architects who view design as a process and spend time overseas in places like Berlin and New York for many years to stretch their wings before coming home, if at all. It's still a small town to me even though the population is about 4 million. Lots of tea towels and cupcakes with birds on them too.. There's activity on many levels from small boutique lane and carpark design markets to a healthy home building and renovation boom (which we are the tail end of now after a decade) which still presents many opportunites for product and service offerings for the a&d community. Architects, writers, or designers of the present or past that resonate with you? I'd have to say that Frank Lloyd Wright, Zaha Hadid, James Turrell, Olafur Eliasson, Stanley Kubrick, Alexander Mcqueen and Tom Ford are among those in my library of awesome people whose body of work I respect and admire greatly. 3 things you can tell me that i would never think to ask? I would have been an arborist, stuntman or Shiatsu practitioner had I not taken the designer path. In fact I'll probably do all of these one day, once I make the time.





What is your attraction to copper?
Copper is a beautiful, warm and ductile material. I find that it has an archetypal quality to its warmth and ambience. It ages gracefully and patinates well over time. In the studio environment we can make the copper take color from a warm chocolate to a dark bronze through to a soft green, it has so many lives that it can become. and can be polished up to a high sheen again. it's so versatile and for me, classic. I have 24 hours in Victoria, where are you taking me? Depends what you're into.. My kind of journey would include breakfast in a laneway like Degraves St, followed by an architecture tour of fine examples of historical and recent architecture located in the cbd (rmit, exhibition buildings in carlton, manchester united building, federation square, melbourne recital centre, acca to name a few) and surrounding suburbs, followed by a quick trip down the coast to the great ocean road for spectacular ocean scenery, and back in again for drinks and dinner in fitzroy or collingwood.






Christopher Boots is driven by a love of nature and light, expressed through designing and creating beautiful, unique lighting. Trained in Industrial Design, Christopher Boots has a background in product design engineering. Boots began his own Architectural Lighting Design practice in early 2011 after half a decade at the stewardship of Mance Design. Moving upwards with a completely new and unparalleled lighting collection has driven Boots to seek a commitment to nothing short of excellence. All products are hand made in Melbourne, Australia using a broad variety of techniques from a team of artisans, such as glass-blowers, coppersmiths, ceramicists, sculptors, and bronze casters, ensuring a commitment to quality. The studio carefully composes these artisans as an orchestra for perfect harmony.


You have read this article christopher boots / lighting designers with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/a-conversation-with-christopher-boots.html. Thanks!

We
used
to be
closer
than
this



Separate or combine
I ask you one last time
Did I hold you too tight?
Did I not let enough light in?

"Light reflects from your shadow
It is more than I thought could exist
You move through the room
Like breathing was easy
If someone believed me"
You have read this article Mexico City / the xx with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post_17.html. Thanks!



AFTER curated by Kelly Behun and Alex P. White
R 20th Century Gallery | 82 Franklin Street | New York NY 10013


You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/after-curated-by-kelly-behun-and-alex-p.html. Thanks!



mexico city
, 2:45 a.m.
a strange bar, in the basement


You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/mexico-city-245-a.html. Thanks!

So I'm back, to the velvet underground
Back to the floor, that I love,
big changes, it's too late. (no big deal)


"I know it’s not very original, but I’m convinced that places have souls. The house materializes the link between the characters and, in a way, what gets lost among them is this link. Generation after generation, something has been left in this house, layer by layer, stratus by stratus. When it’s gone, everything that united the characters comes undone, disappears, becomes a void. The house is at the heart of the film, as a material place and one invested in the flux of identity. "

(text from here)

mexico city, 3:43 p.m city centre
(photo)

You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/so-im-back-to-velvet-underground-back.html. Thanks!
mezcal afternoon 3:44 p.m.






mezcal afternoon at romita comedor.
textures, colors, textiles of modern mexico city

You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/mezcal-afternoon-344-p.html. Thanks!

our afternoon lunch in
Colonia Roma
, Mexico City
2:57 p.m.



You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/our-afternoon-lunch-in-colonia-roma.html. Thanks!

mexico city,
5:43 a.m.


You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/mexico-city-543-a.html. Thanks!

You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post_6.html. Thanks!



All my silence and my strained respect
Missed chances and the same regrets
Kiss the thief and you save the rest
All my insights from retrospect

But Bonny's not coming home

mexico city 2:45 pm. (headphones and the fountain)



You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/all-my-silence-and-my-strained-respect.html. Thanks!

mexico city, 2012 2 p.m.

You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/mexico-city-2012-2-p.html. Thanks!
Floating in and out of time,
In and out of space.
No one can touch us,
We're in a different place.





work, live, and, sleep,
in collapsing space.


You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/floating-in-and-out-of-time-in-and-out.html. Thanks!


I never knew what I want(ed),
I let my body talk

I was in a deep sleep(t)
niki and the dove


You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post_1.html. Thanks!


You have read this article with the title September 2012. You can bookmark this page URL http://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post_1805.html. Thanks!
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...