Sunday, June 23, 2013

Mallorca Finca Remodel

I love pretty much everything about this place and more so because it includes a painting studio. 
This is the home of  Danish fashion designer, Malene Birger.  The article is featured in Est Magazine and the original photos were taken by Gori Salva,  The full story on the home and more photographs can be seen here.
I would only change the painted white wood floors to natural wood finish, if the place were mine.  I'm aware of the trend of white painted floors, but I'm just not a fan of white floors.



 Entering the painting studio
 Yes, I could paint here.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Roman Cobblestones and High Heels

Though there's been talk of paving the streets with asphalt to save ladies wearing high heels, Roman streets have been "paved" with cobblestones for centuries.
The cobblestone is made from black basalt shaped like a wedge and pounded into a sand base.  When work is required below street level, the stones are pulled out and the sand shoveled to clear the way.
The fan-like pattern of stone placement is said to be based on the arm's reach of the workman placing the stones.
Since so many of the streets in Rome are narrow without sidewalks for pedestrian walkways, the pedestrian shares the streets with motor vehicles and must walk on the cobblestone streets---therefore, the concern for safety of high-heel-wearing pedestrians.  Read one story here regarding the asphalt paving plans.




Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Thesis Becomes Reality












Above:  Model of my own design for "Museum for a Private Collection of Twentiety-Century American Art" by Toni J. Youngblood, A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Architecture University of Washington  1990. 
 
Not long after graduating from art school, I worked with the Anderson Collection in Menlo Park and Atherton, California as coordinator.  I worked along side two young (my contemporaries) Stanford University Art History Ph.D. candidates, Neil Benezra (Currently the Directory of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art) and  Peter Boswell (now Sr. Curator, Asst Dir of Programs at the Miami Art Museum).  I went on to earn a Masters degree in Architecture and as my thesis project, I designed a (hypothetical) museum for the Anderson Collection located on a site adjacent to Stanford University.   Flash forward twenty-three years.  The latest development in the life of the Anderson Collection is that the Anderson's have announced the donation of 121 works from their collection to Stanford University.  Stanford University has promised a new building to house the works. The new home for the collection is a 33,000-square-foot building designed by Richard Olcott/Ennead Architects that will be completed in 2014.
Read about the Olcott/Ennead design here.

The following is the first of two recent articles on the topic from the Stanford News Report.

L.A. Cicero Harry W. Anderson, left, Mary Patricia Anderson Pence and Mary Margaret Anderson
Harry W. Anderson, left, Mary Patricia Anderson Pence and Mary Margaret Anderson stand between two paintings, a Franz Kline and a Mark Rothko, which are part of the gift to Stanford.
BY LISA LAPIN

Stanford University will become home to the core of the Anderson Collection, one of the most outstanding private collections of 20th-century American art in the world, which is being donated to the university by Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson, and Mary Patricia Anderson Pence, the Bay Area family who built the collection over nearly 50 years.
The Anderson Collection at Stanford will contain 121 works by 86 artists, including some of the foremost examples of post-World War II American art in public and private hands. The collection is anchored in the work of the New York School and key modern and contemporary artists collected in depth, across media. Major movements represented include Abstract Expressionism, Color Field Painting, Post-Minimalism, California Funk Art, Bay Area Figurative Art, Light and Space and contemporary painting and sculpture.
The collection is one of the most valuable and significant to be donated to any university. Represented artists include Helen Frankenthaler, Franz Kline, Morris Louis, Agnes Martin, Robert Motherwell, Nathan Oliveira, David Park, Mark Rothko, David Smith, Frank Stella and Wayne Thiebaud. Key individual works include Jackson Pollock's Lucifer, Willem de Kooning's Woman Standing – Pink, Richard Diebenkorn's Ocean Park #60, Sam Francis' Red in Red, Philip Guston's The Coat II, Ellsworth Kelly's Black Ripe and Clyfford Still's 1957-J No. 1.
"The Andersons' contribution is historic and their desire to share this remarkable collection with the world reflects their philosophy that art can inspire all of us," said Stanford President John Hennessy. "It will be an honor to own this beloved collection at Stanford University and curate these works in perpetuity for the benefit of future generations of students, art scholars and the public. We intend to continue the Andersons' tradition of making great art accessible by highlighting the collection as a key element in our broad arts initiative at Stanford."
Stanford plans to construct a permanent building dedicated exclusively for the Anderson Collection within its arts district, adjacent to the Cantor Arts Center, near the Bing Concert Hall now under construction and the planned McMurtry Building for Art and Art History. The Anderson Gallery is anticipated to open in late 2014.
"Throughout our adult lives, we have always been closely associated with colleges and universities, and in making this gift to Stanford we anticipate the students, the public and the entire art community will have the opportunity to fully engage the collection," said Harry "Hunk" and Mary Margaret "Moo" Anderson. "Hopefully, this gift makes a great university greater, and the world a grain of salt better."
The gift of the collection marks a major milestone in the Stanford arts initiative, a university-wide effort to increase support for the arts and creativity, including significant investments in new arts facilities, faculty positions and graduate fellowships, as well as new arts programs designed to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration and engagement with the arts throughout campus.
The ties between Stanford University and the Andersons have spanned many decades and have included professors Lorenz Eitner, Al Elsen, Nathan Oliveira, Wanda Corn and John Merryman, to name just a few. More than 30 doctoral candidates in art history at Stanford have interned at the Anderson Collection, engaging in intensive study and curating collection exhibitions.
"The collection will be of tremendous academic value and we anticipate that the Anderson Collection at Stanford will quickly become a significant research destination for arts scholars from throughout the world," said Nancy J. Troy, chair of the Department of Art and Art History and the Victoria and Roger Sant Professor in Art. "The opportunity for sustained and intensive examination of these important works will enhance Stanford's already strong reputation as a preeminent location for the study of the arts. The Anderson Collection will catalyze curators, faculty and students to collaborate in the creation of exhibitions and publications that can have a transformative impact on the ways in which the arts are experienced at Stanford –and beyond."
The Andersons began collecting art in the mid-1960s after a trip to Europe, where they admired works of the French Impressionists. They initially collected work by Early Modernists, such as Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse; the German Expressionists, such as Emile Nolde; and the Early American Modernists, such as Georgia O'Keeffe, Marsden Hartley and Arthur Dove. By 1969, however, the Andersons had made the bold decision to concentrate exclusively on post-World War II American art.
The Andersons have always used as a criteria for collecting, "Have we seen it before, and could we have thought of it?" placing special emphasis on the head and the hands of the artist.
The Andersons have always considered themselves "custodians" of their collection, which they have shared widely through loans to museums and special exhibitions. Especially noteworthy were Celebrating Modern Art at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and An American Focus at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. This gift further supports the Andersons' philosophy of collection-sharing and follows prior gifts of significant portions of their collection to other arts organizations, namely 650 graphic works to the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Pop Art collection to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
In addition to the permanent collection to be housed at Stanford, it is anticipated that other portions of the greater Anderson Collection will be available for loan exhibitions on the campus.
"This arrangement with Stanford is a momentous occasion for the Andersons," said Jason Linetzky, manager of the Anderson Collection. "It offers the family their first true opportunity to maintain the integrity of the core collection in perpetuity, to launch an active and lasting legacy, and to engage the broadest possible audience – all, long-held goals."
Some of the Anderson Collection works being donated to Stanford include:
Willem de Kooning: Woman Standing – Pink (1954-55) and Untitled (1986)
Richard Diebenkorn: Ocean Park #60 (1973) 
Sam Francis: Red in Red (1955) 
Philip Guston: The Coat II (1977) and The Tale (1961)
Ellsworth Kelly: Black Ripe (1955) 
Franz Kline: Figure 8 (1952)
Morris Louis: #64 (1958)
John McLaughlin: #13 (1962)
Joan Mitchell: "Before, Again IV (1985)
David Park: Four Women (1959)
Jackson Pollock: Lucifer (1947) 
Ad Reinhardt: Abstract Painting (1966)
Mark Rothko: Untitled - Black on Gray (1969) and Pink and White over Red (1957)
David Smith: Timeless Clock (1957)
Frank Stella: Zeltweg (1981)
Clyfford Still: 1957-J No. 1 (1947)
Wayne Thiebaud: Candy Counter (1962)

Media Contact
Lisa Lapin, University Communications, (650) 725-8396, lapin@stanford.edu

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Comfort and low impact by simplicity of design and materials

All photos by Marion Brenner
Home in Stinson Beach, California...
The original home was built in 1968, and started out as a modest, L-shaped bungalow. During a recent renovation, SF-based architect Peter Pfau added 540 square feet of living space and collaborated with Marin-based Blasen Landscape Architecture to create a family retreat that welcomes the sea without capitulating to its harsh demands. "You have salt air and extreme winds," says Eric Blasen, landscape architect. "Trying to fit into the landscape was the goal, and it was a challenge." Here's how the garden rises to the occasion and utilizes drought tolerant plantings.  An original story appeared in Remodelista.





LIKE

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...