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Search resuls for: "Kurt Soller"


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In Majorca, a One-Room Home With Sheep for Neighbors
  + stars: | 2024-08-22 | by ( Kurt Soller | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
At least, that’s what the designers Tyson Strang and Tatiana Baibabaeva wanted to do when they moved to Sencelles, Majorca, in 2020. The pair, who met in Kyrgyzstan two decades ago, had previously lived for 15 years in New York City, where in 2017 they founded the ceramics line Terra Coll Home. Before turning to pottery, Baibabaeva, 38, had worked in fashion and Strang, 45, had been a teacher; when they relocated to Spain, they fully merged their creative, personal and professional lives, raising two children together, developing a rustic-minded interiors business and even sharing an email address, from which they explain, “For us, ‘rustic design’ means unifying the interior of a space with its landscape by using the raw materials from the surrounding land as the primary construction and design elements.”
Persons: Tyson Strang, Tatiana Baibabaeva, Strang Locations: Sencelles, Majorca, Kyrgyzstan, New York City, Spain
Instead, Etro decided, every room was to be kept in its place, fitting for a country manor in a traditional village that’s been maintained, for now, he says, “mostly in the state that it was.” Given how rich people lived four centuries ago, with distinct spaces for entertaining and relaxing, as well as separate ones where servants could clandestinely move about and manage everything, each floor of the home is its own maze of meandering living rooms, hallways, staircases and antechambers; there are three kitchens — a winter one, a summer one and an outdoor one — several sitting areas, three guest bedrooms, a formal dining room and dedicated wings for the couple and their daughter to watch television and sleep. Only once did the architect with whom Etro worked, a local woman named Lucia Cataldi who “knows the best artisans in the area,” tear down a wall to create better access to the ground-floor winter kitchen but, even then, she had two doors installed that exactly match the house’s many carved wooden ones. They updated the electricity, lighting and plumbing, but most of their work focused on fixing what previous residents had ruined: The best surprise came when they peeled back decades of paint and plaster on the vaulted and coffered ceilings, revealing elaborately decorated borders in lavender, periwinkle and blush pink.
Persons: Etro, , , Lucia Cataldi
A Forest Retreat in ‘Tokyo’s Backyard’
  + stars: | 2024-05-17 | by ( Kurt Soller | Josh Robenstone | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Although the two had regularly worked in the country (their firm is currently renovating Tokyo’s Ritz-Carlton), neither of them ever imagined they’d settle permanently in Japan. Over the course of three years, however, they moved out of their Hong Kong apartment, sold their home in Taipei, Taiwan, and bought the last available piece of land next to their existing Japanese property, just over an acre crowded with cherry, pine and larch trees that flash gold, green or gray depending on the season. The pair had considered other Japanese locales where they could one day retire — snowy Niseko; Hakone, by the sea — yet it was ultimately in Karuizawa, Ng says, that they wanted to prove, after years of championing glamour and shine, that they could make someplace “supertranquil” for themselves.
Persons: Ng Organizations: Ritz, Carlton Locations: Japan, Hong Kong, Taipei, Taiwan, Hakone, Karuizawa
Moya initially planned to find a more permanent home in Paris after his working holiday. Instead, after visiting the 2,475-square-foot apartment, he decided to stay in Florence so he could write in solitude. The astronomer Galileo Galilei stayed here several times in the 17th century, until the family of artistic patrons eventually sold it off. “I like empty spaces and complete austerity because I travel for work. “But here, the question was, ‘How do we respect the woodwork?’”
Persons: Moya, , , Galileo Galilei, I’m, ” Moya Organizations: , Villa, Medicis Locations: Paris, Florence, Italian
For a few hundred years, money poured in from the church, which was eager to expand its influence in the Dodecanese, this group of islands so close to Turkey that on a map it looks like a jeweled choker wrapped around the country’s southwestern coast. Pilgrims seeking either enlightenment or refuge — from the fall of Constantinople, the waning influence of Crete — soon settled this island’s Chora (“town” in Greek) in the shadow of the monastery. Patmos continued to grow into the modern era as a locus of cross-cultural currents and commerce: Prosperity and geography made it ideal for seafaring, as boats brought back wooden furniture from Venice and crafts from Istanbul and Cairo. By the 15th century, both immigrants and rich merchants were building the small churches and blocky mansions that still crowd Chora’s narrow, steep pathways. Although throughout history various interlopers — pirates, Ottoman expansionists and Nazis among them — have claimed this territory as their own, Patmos has belonged to Greece since the late 1940s.
Persons: Crete —, Patmos, Ottoman expansionists, Locations: Turkey, Constantinople, Crete, , Venice, Istanbul, Cairo, Ottoman, Greece
Sacco Chair (1968) by Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini and Franco Teodoro for Zanotta“In the 1960s, people wanted to find new ways of socializing. I still remember sitting on my first beanbag chair and thinking it was a massive leap of imagination coupled with a new material (polystyrene balls), which is always what pushes design forward.”Image Credit... © 2023 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris. Photo: © Christie’s Images Limited 2023Hippopotame II Bar (1978) by François-Xavier Lalanne“Many designers are doing art-furniture today, but the Lalannes were doing it much earlier. It’s playful and Surrealist and yet beautifully crafted — in brass, a metal I’m obsessed with.”Image Credit... Farrar, Straus & Giroux“The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test” (1968) by Tom Wolfe“I took a couple of acid tabs when I was a kid, and it was super mind-expanding. Wolfe’s writing is, too.”
Persons: Sacco, Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini, Franco Teodoro, Zanotta “, Xavier Lalanne “, . Farrar, Straus, Giroux, Tom Wolfe “, Organizations: Rights Society, François Locations: New York, ADAGP, Paris
“We like emptiness, so there isn’t a lot of decoration,” Sauzay says. (This, after all, was where the first electric streetlights were installed.) There are also no carpets in the apartment, the better to reveal shadows drifting across the bare floors. “I don’t love rugs,” de Tonnac says. “Let’s just say I prefer the wood.”Photo assistant: Camille Padilla
Persons: , ” Sauzay, Auguste Perret, Sauzay, Paolo Buffa, Jules, “ It’s, , de Tonnac, “ Let’s, Camille Padilla Locations: France
Before that, Koizumi, 35, studied sculpture, painting and drawing at Chiba University, in the suburb where he grew up, hoping to become a children’s art teacher. Last summer, the gallerist Yukiko Mizutani heard him talk about his background on television and sought out the designer, one of fashion’s rising talents, to tell him that he should try being a visual artist himself. “And oil paint stinks.”) He’s spent six months creating 30 or so pieces; his first solo show will be held there this December. Most are constructed using leftover fabric, which he sews into small or wall-filling rectangles, then smears with layer upon layer of oil and acrylic paint, which collects like alien goo within the folds of the ruffles. The artist initially used brushes, but it took too long — the crenulated surfaces are a few inches deep — so now, like Jackson Pollock, he uses his hands.
Persons: Tomo Koizumi, Lady Gaga, Sam Smith —, Koizumi, Mizutani, He’s, Jackson Pollock Organizations: Chiba University Locations: Shinagawa, Shinjuku
Pop, like all genres of creative expression, is more commercialized than ever. Rihanna, who hasn’t released an album since 2016, has her multibillion-dollar Fenty Beauty line; Ariana Grande will soon star as Glinda in Universal’s “Wicked” juggernaut. Service95 represents who Lipa is “behind closed doors,” she says, a space where discussions around trans liberation are as common as those about jewelry and yoga. “My intention is never to be political … but there’s a political bent to my existence,” Lipa says. “I’ve found being in the media this way very encouraging.”
Persons: Britney Spears, Whitney Houston, Amy Winehouse, , Lipa, don’t, Rihanna, hasn’t, Ariana Grande, , , Sinéad Burke —, she’s, ” Lipa, Tavi Gevinson, , Drew Barrymore, Kelly Clarkson, Gwyneth Paltrow, Lipa won’t, Oprah, Reese Witherspoon, Tracy Flick, “ I’ve Organizations: , Locations: Lipa, London, ” Lipa, Tokyo, Lipa’s,
Card 2 of 12Pink Floyd, ‘The Wizard of Oz’ and MeThe inside story of a Times reporter’s strange role in a foundational moment in early internet culture: “The Dark Side of the Rainbow.”Background Image: A video montage showing scenes from “The Wizard of Oz” with Pink Floyd song lyrics superimposed.
Persons: Pink Floyd, , Oz ’, Oz
What do you think queer literature specifically has to say with its hybrid forms? Gay: I don’t think you can overlook nonfiction in talking about queer literature. Queer and trans people have, amazingly, taken that demand and subverted it, and that’s why those kinds of stories are so important. Also, Roxane, the point you were making about how some of the greatest truths of queer culture and activism have been done in nonfiction … Oddly enough, queer fiction writers have long hidden behind persona and character to write about queer culture and about themselves. I remember interviewing Galgut once and saying, “Your character Damon” — and he stopped me and said, “No, that’s not a character, that’s me.” I thought to myself, “I’m trying to protect you here,” which is a very quaint protectiveness on my part.
Persons: , Adrienne Rich, , ” Lorde, Lorde, ” — Tomi Obaro Soller, Roxane, I’m, we’d, Edmund White, Marcel, Proust, André Gide, Ernest, Hemingway’s, Hemingway, Ed, Gide — White, Willa Cather, Mukherjee, Damon Galgut, Damon, Galgut, Damon ” —, , “ I’m
Imagine a place for making things: a simple room, with little but the tools you need and the ideal never-too-bright light. They also wanted somewhere to park their car, a nearly 18-foot-long 1966 Chevy Impala Super Sport convertible. Researching bespoke garages online, the couple discovered the work of another couple, Max Worrell and Jejon Yeung, two architects in their 40s who, after meeting in their Yale graduate program, co-founded the firm Worrell Yeung in 2015. Several years ago in upstate New York, they had built a Japanese-and-Scandinavian-influenced minimalist annex with space for their clients to relax — and to store their vintage Ford Bronco. It was exactly what Burst, 62, and McDonough, 67, pictured for themselves.
There is perhaps no Zoom meeting less satisfying than one scheduled on a cold weekday morning to talk about food — specifically, the food that one ought to eat in Paris. And so was the Paris culinary scene, driven by that thrilling hunt for places both new and old, French and not, an obsession among natives and tourists alike. As with a similar list we made for New York — and as part of our ongoing T 25 series, which has surfaced significant and memorable travel destinations, buildings, interiors, art, fashion and books — we wanted to name the essential Parisian dishes to eat right now. The final list, which appears in unranked alphabetical order below and covers most arrondissements, isn’t what we expected, nor is it like the myriad Parisian food rankings we’ve all encountered before. Above all, it speaks to the fact that great food — particularly in Paris, particularly right now — looks forward and backward at once: That’s what makes eating there (and debating where to eat there) so deliciously freewheeling.
Persons: I’d, Dominique Ansel, Dorie Greenspan, Moko Hirayama, Omar Koreitem, Aude, Mercerie, Daniel Rose, Jessica Yang, Pierre Hermé, chou, — Kurt Soller Organizations: New York Locations: Paris, New, 11th, Marie, America, France, Italy, Africa, Asia, Philippines
Total: 13