Showing posts with label Mariano Fortuny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mariano Fortuny. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Gorgeous Fortuny

Last week at the Legends of La Cienega 2012: Windows to the World in L.A., there was a rare exhibition of 25 rare dresses and velvet cloaks by Mariano Fortuny
What a collection! 


The dresses were presented by Keith H. McCoy & Associates in their showroom, where the dresses hung in front of some of Fortuny's new Colourismo Collection 2012. Mr. McCoy began collecting them in 1993, intending an offer to be submitted by a friend for three pieces. His friend later informed him that six dresses instead had been purchased for him, spending twice the budget allotted. Little did he know then that he would accumulate such an important collection.



 For your eye candy fix for the day, pop over to the Fortuny blog and admire!


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Photos by Andreas B Branch

Saturday, April 14, 2012

From the Artisan's Hand: Fortuny

Mention the word Fortuny and it brings to mind a man with a great gift. I have written about Mariano Fortuny before, here and here, on the subject of his paintings. It's so nice to see the Fortuny company carrying on the tradition and presenting beautiful fabrics.

Some of my favorites include:

  Sevigne

 Carnavalet

Fortuny's powder pigments, used for his fabrics, much like the new collection below

  Colourismo collection 2012


La Sainte Chapelle church in Paris was the inspiration for the Sainte Chapelle fabric below. See the squiggle line area between the arch and the column?

Sainte Chapelle
 
Melagrana

Ashanti is a fabric named for the Ashanti tribe of Ghana, known for their weaving

Girandole is an original Fortuny pattern recovered from Mariano Fortuny’s archives in Venice.

Are you a Fortuny fan?
If so, stay tuned for THE new book on Fortuny, Fortuny Interiors, to be released in August, 2012.

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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Pulp Fashions: San Francisco and Venice

Yesterday I visited Karin's lovely blog, La Pouyette, where I first encountered the intriguing work of Belgian Isabelle de Borchgrave. (Where have I been?) She introduced us to the book, Paper Illusions, which offers Barbara and Rene Stoultie's stunning photos of Isabelle's art. Look closely.



What you see is paper- in beautiful colors, with amazing details. 


 Isabelle de Borchgrave, first and foremost, is a painter. She loved it growing up and has always had her hands busy in some form of painting or another. Isabelle began her own studio, Creations Isabelle de Borchgrave, in 1983. Over the years, she has painted commissioned murals in fine hotels and homes throughout Europe, worked with fashion designers to provide them with painted fabrics, and developed lines of fabrics and textiles for the home. 


Exquisite!

In 1994, inspired by a visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, she began recreating her paper costumes sculptures. Based on paintings and the high fashion dress of the period, Isabelle has gifted the world with four different collections: 300 years of fashions, from Elizabeth I to Coco Chanel, with "Papiers a la Mode", the Fortuny collection with 19th century fashions of Venice, the "I Medici" collection with the ceremonial dress of famous figures in Renaissance Florence, and the costumes for the 20th century ballet companies of the world.  

Here is a peak into her to-die-for studio:






How I would love to be working right with them!




Isabelle starts with sheets of rag paper that measure 1 meter by 1.5 meters and applies her magic with her colors, brushes, gilding and trompe l'oeil techniques. 




Just look at the incredible definition of each painted object! Just the "fabric" background alone reads pure silk to me.




In 2008, Isabelle exhibited her creations in the Fortuny Palazzo in Venice. She described herself as "Fortuny's spiritual daughter", inspired by his devotion to reinterpretations of ancient textiles.




Fortuny's art of plisse (pleating) is meticulously captured by Isabelle...




The "fabrics" are so colorful and realistic.






What a setting!







For those of you lucky enough to live close by, be sure not to miss the new exhibition, "Pulp Fashion: The Art of Isabelle de Borchgrave", at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. It runs from February 5 to June 5, 2011 and features 60 costumes and works from the collections of Isabelle de Borchgrave.  

[Photos courtesy of Isabelle de Borchgrave and the Facebook page of Isabelle de Borchgrave]


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