March 18, 2018

"She’ll describe a mint green as 'a color that makes me thirsty,' or perceive 'crushed raspberry' where others might see fuchsia."

"'I like to mix and let them insult each other, have an argument,' she has said, of colors, as though they were guests at a dinner party... 'The color of my childhood was strawberry milkshake,' Mahdavi said recently. She was born in 1962, in Tehran, to an Iranian father and an Egyptian mother.... Iran is one of the wellsprings of Mahdavi’s style. 'I love the contrast between the brutality of the city and the softness of this,' she said one day, showing me a photograph she had taken of a bourgeois living room, its coffee table laden with textiles, pattern upon pattern, and bowls of fruit. Iran, to her, is mirror-work, marquetry, turquoise, faded glory. The country also has the advantage of being comparatively lightly touristed, giving her access to a creative person’s most valuable resource: things that not everyone else has seen. 'Iran is inspirational, because the taste is a bit funny,' she told me. 'They’re very free with their associations, and can often go down the wrong route, like kitsch, but that’s where you have the best associations.' [Her client Adel] Abdessemed described Mahdavi’s style as 'a cross between the chromatism of the films of Almodóvar and a form of childlike and joyous orientalism inspired by Iran.' He said, 'She creates a fantastical version of the East that doesn’t exist in the East, a sort of dreamed image.'"

From "India Mahdavi, Virtuoso of Color/The interior designer’s polychromatic dreamlands."

15 comments:

traditionalguy said...

Wow! Andy Warhol with Persian Rugs.

David said...

These are great designs. I like the hotel in France best.

Friendo said...

Hideous

mockturtle said...

I liked The tearoom at Ladurée, in Geneva, Switzerland.

JackWayne said...

So, am I supposed to be impressed by a person who emigrated from a Muslim theocracy to Paris and enjoys her freedom? Or think that because she is who she is that her art is exceptional? I’m neither. More Ho Hum than Wow!

Ralph L said...

One or two colors and too much white.
Not my definition of polychrome.

Leslie Graves said...

I am ultra-frustrated that the pink ladyfinger chairs show up in so many of the photos because they made me want to see more examples of her work.

Anonymous said...

'Iran is inspirational, because the taste is a bit funny,' she told me. 'They’re very free with their associations, and can often go down the wrong route, like kitsch, but that’s where you have the best associations..'

Yeh, sure 'inspirational' Iran. Does interior design but keeps a bag on her head when she's
exterior she's visiting home.

Henry said...

There is something particularly appalling about the pretenses of fashion. The February 18, 2018 New York Times Style Magazine / Women's Fashion features Judy Chicago on its cover. "The oracle of feminist art -- and the culture that finally caught up to her."

I haven't found that article because it is buried in the fashion-ad litter of nearly-nude-female-fashion-models made up and photographed to look undead: "If you want to fuck a corpse ... buy this purse."

There are few things I hate, but I hate this.

Henry said...

Here it is. The self-congratulatory death-cult has embraced Judy Chicago.

Henry said...

For decades, the feminist artist was pushed to the sidelines. Relevant once again, she can no longer be ignored.

The people who write this tripe pretend that they are beyond context.

But this is the context:

"On the cover: Dilone wears Miu Miu shorts, $895 [urls redacted]... Jenny Shimizu wears Valentino pants, $1,050 [phone number redacted]... Judy Chicago wears her own clothing.

Quick, fashion, find another artist to compromise irrevocably.

William said...

I like the Style issue of The New Yorker. I can just read the cartoons and be done with it.......I did read the article on Reddit. Apparently the combined weight of the news media and entertainment industry in America were unable to swing the election to Hillary. It was done by a few hundred Russian trolls who placed strategic posts on Reddit and Facebook. Those Russians are so much smarter than us. We should all be afraid.

Henry said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Henry said...

He said, 'She creates a fantastical version of the East that doesn’t exist in the East, a sort of dreamed image.'"

Orientalism never dies. It just gets new wallpaper.

* * *

The country also has the advantage of being comparatively lightly touristed...

I get it. It's the new Cuba.

Mr. Groovington said...

Right on topic. A 30 second video here from a week or so ago.

https://mylucinda.com/2018/03/08/on-the-beach-2/