Lost- “unable to find one's way; not knowing one's whereabouts.” The inspiration for this piece interprets a persons simplicity in the way they feel about themselves. Though you may feel like you will never know who you truly are; the painting is encapsulating that the process of transforming has its own beauty. Tourist-“a person who is travelling or visiting a place for pleasure.” Finding yourself is a similar concept of tourism you will go to certain places and like or dislike them, this is entirely up to you. This piece is my personal journey I hope you can learn to see the beauty of transformation as I did. Furnished with vernix.
An homage to the great houses of Sussex
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Living furniture.
HOW TO MAKE A GRAND HOUSE FEEL LIKE AN INVITING HOME I adore the openness and room to move that large houses provide, but they do present a unique set of challenges when styling the space. I like to decorate grand homes with the goal of making them feel warm…
This latest work by artist Ted Lott titled Sit/Stay explores the prospect of sculptural house framing. A frequent theme in the artist’s works, house framing, needs extensive craft practice and good creativity. This particular work has an antique chair, meticulously framed by miniature 2×4’s. According to the artist, a lot of craft practices are characterized […]
Love reading and have always dreamt of having your own home library!? Check out these 10 amazing home libraries... for the perfect inspiration!
Façades and frontages to dream of, or take some inspiration from.
In a former monastery on a hilltop in southern Tuscany, the residence and studio of British sculptor Emily Young is the ideal setting for her stone carved heads and figures.
I'm like an old lady, and like fantasizing about living like a king in a big home. Castletown House was built in 1722 - 1729 for William Conolly, Speaker of the Irish Parliament, and one of the wealthiest Anglo-Irish protestant aristocrats in Ireland at the time. xxxxx Protestant Ascendancy, roughly between the 1650s and the 1910s, refers to the political, economic, and social domination of Ireland by a minority of great Protestant landowners. Back in 1652, Oliver Cromwell passed the Act of Settlement, seizing a vast majority of arable land in Ireland from the Catholics and distributing it to Protestant soldiers and noblemen. From that point on until the 1880s, the Catholics were to become poor tenant farmers under the control of their aristocratic Protestant landlords. The Protestant Ascendancy was a period of great prosperity for landed gentry, and they built magnificent country houses around Ireland. The Georgian and Palladian stately homes in Ireland are amongst the finest in all of the British Isles. Meanwhile, the Catholics were not even allowed to buy land and were the poorest people in Europe at the time. I've heard a saying that even these days, few Irish Catholics have much interest in visiting these homes, even though they are now mostly under the care of the Irish government.
Home, Art and Interiors- Just stuff I like. - What a fabulous dining room. I adore the eclectic mix of artwork on the wall- the industrial lighting.. studded french seating-- it all comes together in
Thirty years on from a life-changing meeting with the man who was to become her husband, the Scottish-born Amelie, Duchesse de Magenta, remains at the helm of the Château de Sully in Burgundy
Ceramics, Nature and Art
Tom Dixon has been hard at work on a new furniture and lighting collection that could best be described as sculptural, monolithic house jewelry.
ART NOUVEAU Art Nouveau (French pronunciation: [aʁ nuvo], Anglicised to /ˈɑrt nuːˈvoʊ/) is an international philosophy[2] and style of art, architecture and applied art—especially the decorative ar…