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Twisted Toile: Witty Wallpaper & Home Accessories With A Modern Toile.




Wallpaper has made a huge comeback as an interior decorating option in the past 2 years (not to mention wall decals, vinyls and stickers...but that's another article).

In addition to bringing back foil stamped retro-patterned papers, textured seagrass walls, contemporary florals and graphic repeating patterns, several designers have taken a humorous stab at Toile, the classic french wallpaper design. As a result, there's a fabulous collection of tongue in cheek, slightly macabre, satirically suburban and just plain goofy options to choose from.

Jessica Smith, a textile artist and designer in Philadelphia, has taken the Toile de Jouy form and made it modern, witty and political. Her hand-printed toile wallpapers offer lighthearted social commentary.

Specializing in the design of textiles, wallpaper, and china, Jessica Smith uses elements of domestic design to explore contradictions. Although her products seem innocuous enough at first glance, upon further study, they often contain highly ironic commentaries on contemporary life, remixed within well-known historic textile patterns.



Above: French Toile de Jouy in three different color examples.

“Eighteenth-century French toile depicted pastoral scenes with classical ruins, ladies in frilly dresses on swings,” Ms.Smith said. “I wanted to make my own pastoral countryside, and the countryside of American is the suburbs.”


Trash Day, (above), is a homage to the day when suburbanites put the trash on the street for collection. Also available in several color variations.


Spying on China, above, shows and American spy plan over a Chinese landscape, a reference to a collision between such a plane and a Chinese jet in 2001 off the coast of Hainan Island. Also available in several color variations.


Cars Go Beep 1, above, has delicately rendered Hummers on the New Jersey Turnpike. Also available in several color variations.


And Cars Go Beep 2, above, has a double vision version of its predecessor.



And above is Jessica Smith's South Beach Toile. Ms.Smith is just one artist revamping traditional wallpaper design.


Yee-Haw Toile (above) comes in subtle colors or contrasting colors.



What at first glance seems like traditional toile, but upon closer inspection is revealed to be oil wells and bucking broncos, is a fun western twist on the french pattern. Designed by Paul Loebech, this too is printed by Studio Printworks and can be purchased there.

Ms.Smiths & Paul Loebech's wallpapers are available at Studio Printworks, 650 Newark Street, Hoboken, NJ (212) 633 6727 or info@studioprintworks.com.

Another wonderful eerie and perhaps even grotesque take on Toile is by Timorous Beasties.


above: What at first looks like a damask-like toile is revealed to actually be a devil's face up close.



Above is one of my favorite all time wallpapers, Iguana and Insects, looks like formal flourishes until one looks closer (right) and sees birds, insects and iguanas.



Their London Toile looks an awful lot like the traditional Parisian toile until you see that people are being mugged and more.

And while the two below toile patterns from Timorous Beasties below (left; pineapple and right; pheasant) may not have any "twist' on them, they are nice options from traditional toile. And are available in two tone color variations and well as several single colors.



Shop Timorous beasties wallpaper here.


Timorous Beasties Twisted Toiles are also available as lace curtains:


Buy Timorous Beasties Devil and Thistle lace curtains here.


And their fabulous London Toile is also available as bone china here.



Lest you think toile is only suitable for your walls, below are four different twisted toile patterns designed By Groovy Q.



Pattern shown clockwise from upper left: Suburban Sprawl Toile, Girl Power Toile, the Classic Tom of Finland Toile and Vice Toile.

Available in pillowcases (and sheets):


Boxers:


even gift wrap:

Buy Groovy Q toile products here.

Town Toiles makes a line of products that range from aprons and tea towels to wallpaper, fabric and gifts in their own "city" patterns:




Above are just four examples: New York, Charleston, Nantucket and Boston. They also have San Francisco, Tampa, beach and Nautical patterns.

Shop Town Toiles here.

Buy them here.

And lastly, one of my favorite takes on toile is by Historically Innaccurate Decorative Arts where Richard Saja takes classically traditional toile fabric and embroiders such modern day icons as UFOs, bunny eras and Mohawks atop it:



Learn More about Richard Saja's work here, on his blog.


16" x 20", cotton/linen shell, 95/5 feather and down insert.Price: $184.00

Or buy the above Toile & Tats Anarchy Pillow here.


and don't miss Saint Honore's modern toile wall tiles, read about those here!

Herman Miller launches new "Be Collection"



Herman Miller has launched a new collection of products designed for your comfort, your organization and your working lifestyle. Called the "Be Collection", they teamed up with some of their favorite designers (Yves Behar, Bill Stumpft and Jeff Sokalski to name a few) to create products in three categories; comfort, connectivity and organization.

Products range from the frequently blogged about Leaf lamp to a cool little personal climate control unit called the C2.


Above left: the personal Leaf Light in red. Right, The C2, a personal climate control device



In addition, the Be Collection from Herman Miller employs Herman Miller's Design for the Environment protocol (DfE) for material selection and product design.

See the entire collection of products here.

OCMA gives birth to COOL: An exhibit about 50s and 60s California art, design and culture


Birth of the Cool: California Art, Design, and Culture at Midcentury
October 7, 2007–January 6, 2008, Newport Beach

Birth of the Cool examines the broad cultural zeitgeist of “cool” that influenced the visual arts, graphic and decorative arts, architecture, music, and film produced in California in the 1950s and early 1960s. The widespread influences of such midcentury architects and designers as Harry Bertoia, Charles and Ray Eames, John Lautner, and Richard Neutra, have been well-documented.


Above: Karl Benjamin, Black Pillars, 1957, oil on canvas, 48 x 24 in. (121.9 x 61 cm), private collection. © Karl Benjamin, courtesy of Louis Stern Fine Art, West Hollywood

Less well-known, however, are the innovations of a group of Hard-Edge painters working during this period including Karl Benjamin, Lorser Feitelson, Fredrick Hammersley, Helen Lundberg and John McLaughlin, whose work retains a freshness and relevance today. Birth of the Cool revisits this scene, providing a visual and cultural context for West Coast geometric abstract painting within the other dynamic art forms of this time.

Birth of the Cool is organized by the Orange County Museum of Art and curated by Elizabeth Armstrong, deputy director for programs and chief curator at OCMA.


above image:
Lorser Feitelson, Dichotomic Organization, 1959, oil on canvas, 60 x 60 in. (152.4 x 152.4 cm), Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, Marie Eccles Caine Foundation Gift. © Feitelson Arts Foundation

The exhibition is accompanied by a 300-page publication (see the end of this post).
Major support for Birth of the Cool is provided by Brent R. Harris, The Segerstrom Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Significant support is provided by Bente and Gerald Buck, Twyla and Chuck Martin, Jayne and Mark Murrel, Pam and Jim Muzzy, Barbara and Victor Klein, and Victoria and Gilbert E. LeVasseur Jr..



Above: Julius Shulman, photograph of Case Study House #22 (Pierre Koenig, architect, Los Angeles, 1959–60), 1960. © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute

Additional support is provided by Toni and Steven Berlinger and Patricia and Max Ellis. Corporate sponsorship is provided by Gucci and Design Within Reach. The official media sponsor of OCMA is The Orange County Register. Additional media sponsorship is provided by KCRW and KKJZ. Image credit: Karl Benjamin, Black Pillars, 1957, oil on canvas, private collection. © Karl Benjamin, courtesy of Louis Stern Fine Arts, West Hollywood.

If you can't make the exhibit, buy the book.

Birth of the Cool Catalogue

Hardcover; 304 pages
$65 (member price: $58.50)

EDITED BY ELIZABETH ARMSTRONG

1950s West Coast style exuded “cool”: from the smooth, hypnotic strains of a Miles Davis riff through Richard Neutra’s elegant modernist residences to the hard-edged paintings of Helen Lundeberg and Karl Benjamin. This richly illustrated volume casts a fresh eye on Fifties West Coast style with illuminating commentary from a variety of perspectives. Designed to echo the period it celebrates, this catalog explores modernist innovations in art, architecture, design, film and music. Prominent cultural critics write on an array of topics: Thomas Hine about the culture of cool; Elizabeth Smith on domestic aspects of the period’s architecture; Frances Colpitt on hard-edged abstract painting; Dave Hickey on jazz; Michael Boyd on modernist design in Southern California; Lorraine Wild on graphic design and advertising; and Bruce Jenkins on the crossover between animation and experimental film. The result is a multi-faceted exploration of the 1950s West Coast zeitgeist in all its color, creativity, and cool

Elizabeth Armstrong is Deputy Director for Programs and Chief Curator of the Orange County Museum of Art.

Available as of October 7th, 2007
pre-order the book here

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