East 66th Street
2015 Kips Bay Boys and Girls Club Decorator Show House
Photograph from Curbed NY. com
I really should have trusted my instincts, mean as they were, and bought 40 Years of Fabulous at Amazon so that I might return it. At first glance the book appears to be what I'd hoped it to be: an historical and photographical record of forty years of show house rooms, but there came a moment, sneaking as it were, when it seemed to me as if this book had been a last-minute attempt to get something – anything – ready for this year's show house. If that was the criterion, this book is a success, and given the lack of discernment in interior design about graphic design, the cheerful book jacket (design by Bialystock and Bloom, perhaps?) together with the
Pavlov's Retreat
Criticizing rooms in a show house is an undemanding if not dying sport, and rightly so you may think. To critique online is to be taken to be criticizing which is not quite the same thing; the difference, it seems to me, has come down, in like manner, to that between "use" and "utilize." In the case of "use" and "utilize" to the ill-educated mind, one sounds more important and better yet, has more syllables!" Critique"sounds Frenchified – thus automatically suspect – and utterly non-egalitarian.
Pavlov's Retreat
This was the first room I went into and it remained for me one of the best
Pavlov's Retreat
Alan Tanksley
View from desk towards murals
Pavlov's Retreat
Alan Tanksley
View from desk towards murals
Living Room
Bedroom
Bedroom
David Phoenix
The Celt reflecting
Bedroom
David Phoenix
Details
Bedroom
David Phoenix
Wall covering and gimp
David Phoenix
Wall covering and gimp
Bedroom
David Phoenix
Carpet, as if hand-knitted by giant sailors
David Phoenix
Carpet, as if hand-knitted by giant sailors
The spaces in show houses that get the least coverage are the ones that are the most difficult to deal with and which test a beginning decorator's mettle. In a traditional townhouse, what does a decorator do with all the little nooks, the passages, vestibules, hallways, that Beaux Arts architects dealt with so cleverly? In the case of the Arthur Sachs house, I seem to remember bar after bar – and why not? A bar being the perfect place for a beginning designer to show finish, sparkle and glamour without breaking the bank.
I wish I knew by whom
A staircase, not the easiest space to decorate – especially when the walls curve and picture frames, generally speaking, do not. I must admit, I found Philip Mitchell's staircase quite beautiful with its toile paper more a texture than the soppy dominance toile can be, and the most understanding background to a delightfully eclectic accumulation of pictures that went from lower floor to attic. I loved every panting step of the way – especially the grace note of a tulip vase from a potter whose business card I've since mislaid.
Staircase
Landing/Lounge Area
Tilton Fenwick's lounge area bodes well for their future but the decision to befringe the dado rail was a touch too much for me. I understand the space is one of contrasts: the roughish wood cabinet front encased in smooth lacquer; the Renaissance Revival chair upholstered in a smooth weave suggesting almost that the more fitting fabric, an ikat, had refused to be used and had laid sulkily on the floor; the traditional Indian scene, a modern photograph in a simple white frame, hanging on Indian-derived paper; even a plastic orchid pot seemed to fit in an oddly sophisticated way.
Anteroon
In the lobby, as we were leaving, I remarked I had not seen Jamie Drake's room to which there came a number of practically audible eye-rolls. "You're in it!" said the Celt. Indeed we were, and very lovely it was, though all too easily overlooked amidst the hustle of ticket buying and catalog grabbing.
I found your take on Kips the most honest out there on social media! Speaking of iphones and photos - are you on instagram?
ReplyDeleteCoulda shoulda woulda, thank you. I try to be honest but not negative which is why I kept my mouth shut about the much-lauded red dining room. I am on Instagram and when I learn how to put the widget on my blog I might take up bourbon again to celebrate. In the meantime, look for bluerhills.
DeletePlease call me Naomi or csw, I can't be bothered to type my blog name myself!
DeleteI could not agree with you more about the book. It is a HUGE disappointment. Could you even find the captions? And once you found them, don't dare try to read them. I am glad you appreciated and liked Alan's room. If you don't know Alan Tanksley, he is a lovely person and a friend and very talented. He doesn't get the coverage he deserves because he is a humble and not show-boaty kind of guy.
ReplyDeleteJeffery McCullough, thank you. The book is a huge disappointment and my situation I feel is a classic case of "buyer beware." Still, I have it and will probably never open it again.
DeleteAlan Tanksley's room is good and I hope many of the budding decorators viewing it are able to take note of actually how good it is.
Frankly, the images I saw (plastered EVERYWHERE) weren't inspiring enough for me to make the trip to NYC. however 2 of the rooms you feature here I had not seen elsewhere. Wish I had seen those! Would love to hear what you thought of the much lauded dining room.
ReplyDeleteArchitectDesign, thank you. We were in New York because the Celt's company won an award (the first from Atlanta) and there was an awards ceremony so the show house was an add-on. I'm glad I did it, though. I'll write to you under separate cover about the red dining room.
DeleteDear jesus' little sunbeam,
ReplyDeleteI think the only thing that would have been better was to have your blog on "audio tape." Love to hear you say the delightfully cranky (oxymoron?) observations of a world gone woo-woo. I'm getting my first iphone this fall. I've always said that at almost 66 I'm closer to Gutenberg than Steve Jobs. And, no, marriage is not for sissies. I think you and the Celt would make a fabulosity of a sit com!
Dear young lady, thank you. Having reached the age, I'm frequently told, where inner and outer voices have merged I feel there's nothing else to do but say what I think – damned if you and damned if you don't, as it were. Audio tape, hey? You have to imagine a conversation between two people one with a northern English regional accent as in "Tha's reight, lass," (mine) and the other with the mellifluence of the upper class private schools (the Celt's). Quite Lady Chatterly and the Gamekeeper, really.
DeleteExcellent post, as always, dear Blue. But your reply to Home has eclipsed everything else. Lady Chatterly and the Gamekeeper? It made my day.
DeleteArrgh, me lovey, thankee!
DeleteAnd not Forster's "Maurice," one noticed.
DeleteJohnny Sunbeam, tear my heart out. I fear you've launched a sobriquet to float this page another dozen years.
ReplyDeleteLaurent, Let's hope I float another dozen years though that is a fearsome thought. Thank you.
DeleteHope is a snap where there is such vigor.
DeleteAwesome work.Just wanted to drop a comment and say I am new to your blog and really like what I am reading.Thanks for the share
ReplyDelete