. . . an eclectic mix of things I find beautiful, inspirational, important or just plain interesting . . .

29 April 2009

on hiatus

I'm out of town for a few days so no blogging for awhile.

28 April 2009

cactus drama




Beautiful photos of cacti taken by my friend Eric in Tucson. He's definitely got a green thumb when it comes to cactus.

24 April 2009

get outta here

When we were recently in Borrego Springs, I saw this advertised but didn't take it very seriously. It seems I should have. I think it might be on my calendar for next year. Read more here.

shopping for the classes or the masses?

I visited the new shopping center, "The Lumberyard" in Malibu yesterday. I had read a few articles about it, not all positive. I came away with a mixed opinion. Although it is nicely designed using reclaimed wood, beautiful plantings and a state-of-the art septic treatment system (because Malibu has no sewer), the store selection left me scratching my head. The highlight was the J Crew store, with it's reasonable prices. 

The lowlight was the James Perse store. The merchandise was almost non-existent and hung too high for customers to reach.

Local residents are fearful that Malibu is turning into another Vail, with no local business serving the community. 

Dick Van Dyke, who lives locally, said it best when he complained of having to drive to Agoura or Calabasas to shop for a screwdriver and underwear.

You decide.

Read more in the LA Times here. Or in the California Apparel News here.

23 April 2009

Photographer . . . . fascinating





Amazing?
left you speechless?
It did to me ..
its the work of Shadi Ghadirian.. a Photographer from Iran..

" I am a woman and I live in Iran. I am a photographer and this is the only thing I know how to do. "
"...every time I think about a new series, in a way it is related to women."
"...It does not make a difference to me what place the Iranian woman has in the world because I am sure no one knows much about it. Perhaps the only mentality of an outsider about the Iranian woman is a black chador, however I try to portray all the aspects of the Iranian woman...."
..." a woman who one can not say to what time she belongs; a photograph from two eras; a woman who is dazed; a woman who is not connected to the objects in her possession. It was very natural that after marriage, vacuum cleaners and pots and pans find their way into my photographs; a woman with a different look, a woman who no matter in what part of the world she is living, still has these kinds of apprehensions. "
"The photographs are not authentic documentations but deal with current social issues. "
Shadi Ghadirian

Santa Fe Art Colony Open Studios

Studio 2A

20th Annual Open Studios - May 2nd & 3rd - Sat & Sun - 12-7pm. For more info click here

AltBuild Expo

6th Annual - Friday & Saturday May 8 & 9, 2009 - 10:00 am - 5:00 pm - free admission
Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. For more info click here.

Shodo Iwagaki exhibition - woodblock prints

05.15.2009 (Fri.) - 06.07.2009 (Sun.) at Tortoise in Venice
Shodo Iwagaki, a Soto-Zen Buddhist monk and an artist living in Japan will be at Tortoise. For this exhibition he will show 11 woodblock prints mounted on vintage indigo fabric in Kakejiku (scroll picture) style.

opening reception : 
Friday 5/15 6pm - 9pm @ tortoise 
*Live painting is scheduled. To read more click here.

22 April 2009

Earth Day :: 39 years in the making

Advocated, promoted, and conceptualized by Senator Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day was becoming a huge grass roots sensation across the US after the Senator’s seven year effort and first meeting with President Kennedy. Less than a year later on April 22, 1970, the first Earth Day was celebrated. Now 39 years later, after internet has become a necessity in our existence and you can google (a new “verb” that we know didn’t exist back in ‘69) to no end about Earth Day, new recycling techniques are part of our daily lives, and now, “green” has actually hit its colloquialism stride, Earth Day is a celebrated and anticipated holiday every year across the nation.

With all the talk of celebrating Earth Day, it can seem a bit daunting about how to “celebrate” or take part in the big day. So here are 5 activities (in no particular order) to feel like you're taking part or at least recognizing what your Earth means to you:

1) If the weather isn’t very inviting for an outdoor activity, take some time (in your loft or own respective abode) and indulge in the BBC series, Planet Earth. David Attenborough offers great British narration, and after just a couple episodes in the eleven episode series, you’ll be rethinking some aspect of waste and pollution you produce in the world. (Hint: Watch it without the lights on, since you’re already using electricity to actually view the series). It took four years to produce and is the most expensive BBC series to date that has ever been made. And if you’re an animal freak, nature geek, or just want to kick it back on Earth Day, then rent or even buy (it’s worth the investment for sure) the DVD set. It won’t disappoint.

2) It’s the quickest thing you can do: Make the No Coal Call. All you need is this number: 202.224.3121. This will get you in contact with your member in Congress and to demand from them a moratorium on coal-fired power plants.

3) Calculate your ecological footprint, and then more importantly, figure out the changes you can make to decrease this number.  Go here to start calculating: Find Out Your Footprint NOW

4) If you’re more into giving away the real “green” then you can find more than plenty charitable causes that will take your green bucks off your hands.  Adopt An AcreRescue the Reef, or apply for a Nature Conservancy Visa credit card so when you make your first purchase, 10 trees will be planted in the Atlantic Forest and an additional tree will be planted each month afterward.

5) Something so small, can be huge in the end. Such as changing out your lightbulbs, switching to totes (there’s still too much plastic being wasted these days), and honestly not turning on your AC as strong or so soon, even if we’re slowly making our way from Spring to Summer. Think ’bout it.

HAPPY EARTH DAY!

Do you know what you're going to do for Earth Day?
Visit EartDay.net and find an event near you.
Go see Earth!
Join the Arbor Day Foundation and get 10 free trees.
Plant a baby tree at mybabytree.org
Start a compost bin.
Get a rain barrel. 
Plant a garden.
For more ideas go to JustDoOne
TELL YOUR BOSS YOU FEEL SICK AND GO OUTSIDE AND ENJOY THE WEATHER!
(Hey it's Earth Day - it should be a national holiday anyway!) 

21 April 2009

are these for real?


! ! ! MUJI back online ! ! !


After a long absence from the internet, MUJI is back! As of April 16th, MUJI devotees in the US can shop online (currently, Muji only operates two retail stores in New York). The selection is limited, but we’re hoping the catalog will expand. You can download their catalogs here.

20 April 2009

Architecture in Baja

D’Acosta and Turrent joined a 1940s American mobile home with a Mexican office trailer to make a comfortable, inexpensive dwelling that seems to float on the land. Recycled aluminum doors and windows came from second-hand shops in Ensenada. An open-air aluminum-and-wood pavilion they reclaimed from an old factory is covered with carizzo, a cane grass, taken from their neighbor’s trash. Recycled telephone poles support the structure; recycled beams from an old bridge make up the deck. “All vernacular architecture depends on what you have at hand," D'Acosta says. "We need to train our eyes to convert things near us into usable objects.”

LA Times :: arcticle by Barbara Thornburg with photography by Don Bartletti

Mexican winery

Paralelo winery in Baja's Valle de Guadalupe is architect Alejandro D’Acosta’s latest wine project.

Alejandro D'Acosta and Claudia Turrent have quietly been spreading their brand of sustainable design in northern Baja, Mexico, turning trash into interesting architecture. One of D'Acosta's recent experiments is La Escuelita, a wine school and olive oil factory in the Guadalupe Valley. One building is made of palos — discarded wood boards taken from construction sites, while the new wine tasting center’s walls are composed of wine barrel staves.

A vineyard in the Valle de Guadalupe, Mexico’s premier wine-growing region in Baja, near Ensenada.

D’Acosta stands next to wine barrels and rammed-earth walls imprinted with nopal cactus. “At one point the cactus actually started growing in the walls,” he says.

D’Acosta sits atop a wine barrel in the underground wine cave of his latest winery, Paralelo. The architect imprinted rammed-earth walls with things he found on the property: olive branches, nopal cactus and old tires. “This building is in touch with Pacha Mama — Mother Nature,” D’Acosta says.

To see more wonderful photos by Don Bartletti (coincidentally a former student of my father's) in the LA Times click here & here.

succulents down south



LA Times :: over the weekend was a succulent garden tour of five gardens from Carlsbad to Olivenhain sponsored by the American Assn. of University Women . Unfortunately the LA Times is such a crappy paper it didn't report the tour until Sat. I would have enjoyed going. Maybe next year. See more photos here.

17 April 2009

wrinkles are beautiful

I just had to post this ::

Tokyo (Reuters Life!) - Wear a shower cap over your face. Think about sexy men. And don't stress about those wrinkles.

All are part of Japanse beauty expert Chizu Saeki's "Skincare Revolution", her compilation of sometimes unorthodox facial care that has made her a household name in Japan.

"As you age, it's okay to have wrinkles, it's okay to have age spots, it's okay to sag," the 66-year-old Saeki told Reuters after the publication of "The Japanese Skincare Revolution", her first book to come out in English. "Becoming beautiful isn't cosmetics, it's your way of thinking, your hands," she said.

Gotta love that!

tiny house


I recently purchased Tiny Houses by Mimi Zeiger hoping to get some inspiration for an out-building that we could put up in the future (way out in the future) that would be small enough to NOT require a permit. To my surprise, included was a project I came across several years ago by Stuttgart architects FNP Architekten. 
It is the renovation of a pigsty for a showroom and it's name S(ch)austall depicts the humorous relationship between these two uses: saustall = pigsty; schaustall = showroom.
To deal with the crumbling 18th century structure, the architects created a "house within a house", a wood container that fit within the old stone walls but without touching them.

Links:


hope

"There is Hope Here" by Zach Bulick available at Wall Blank.

16 April 2009

Pritzker Prize Goes to Peter Zumthor




NY Times :: Swiss architect Peter Zumthor is the 2009 recipient of the Pritzker Prize, the highest recognition for architects.

15 April 2009

this should happen more often


I've seen the "Sound of Music" enough to last a lifetime, frankly. But I saw this on You Tube and it just makes me smile . . . frankly.

Sweet, simple pleasures. Good times.

14 April 2009

history of the color wheel

The first color wheel has been attributed to Sir Isaac Newton, who in 1706 arranged red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet into a natural progression on a rotating disk. As the disk spins, the colors blur together so rapidly that the human eye sees white.
From there the organization of color has taken many forms, from tables to charts, to triangles and wheels.
Read more here.

top ethical companies

New York, April 13 (Reuters) - The Ethisphere Institute on Mon named 99 companies it says are the world's most ethical, it's third annual listing designed to encourage ethical practices within the global business community. Included were Honeywell International, Patagonia, Nike, BMW, Johnson Controls Inc, and HSBC Holdings. 35 countries were represented. Read the entire list here.