Categories
Art

Affordable art to bring a little sparkle

I like sharing unique affordable art (if everyone had the same Ikea canvases it would be a very sad world) as much as I do supporting fellow bloggers, so I need you to know about Anna White’s new Crystal Love series.

She’s the blogger behind Lona de Anna and the artist behind some great prints you can buy on Etsy.

 

“The inspiration behind my Crystal Love series came from a long time love and fascination with crystals, and not just gemstones. I mean the sparkly glasses that you tend to only bring out on special occasions, or the amazing chandeliers that shimmer like thousands of diamonds,” she says. “To me, there has always been something so fascinating about the internal structure of a crystal that almost has you completely mesmerised by its beauty. And let’s face it, every girl’s heart does a little flip flop over something sparkly!”

Anna’s right in that the crystal trend is still everywhere. “Loads of images I come across through the blogosphere, I often see that someone has styled their dresser or coffee table with a beautiful raw piece of amethyst sitting ever so beautifully on top of a pile of books. Even famous designers such as Kelly Wearstler draw inspiration from crystals. She often places them in her mood trays or incorporates a crystal sculpture into a space she is styling.”

Inspired, she went ahead and captured the beauty of a crystal in art form. “I am unbelievably happy and proud of the series, even more because in my mind I have created something that is unique, beautiful and affordable enough that others can enjoy it.”

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Interiors Addict

Walls tell a story with Spineless Classics

Tell me these aren’t cool! Yes, that poster (above) has the ENTIRE The Great Gatsby book on it! And The Great Gatsby is so hip right now with Leo’s film about to come out. There are more than 50 titles in the Spineless Classics range though, including Price & Prejudice, Alice in Wonderland and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Both a striking black and white art print that would work with any colourscheme and, up close, an entire book which you can actually read (if you had the time to stand in one place for a while!), it’s certainly a novel (pardon the pun) idea! I do love finding unique and affordable art solutions.

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Art

Herman Miller posters inspire art exhibition

I love good chairs, I love posters and I love typography, so I’m pretty excited about this upcoming Melbourne exhibition.

Herman Miller has shaped the world of modern furniture design as we know it. But the company’s influence is not limited to product design and manufacturing – equally acclaimed are the now iconic art and illustration posters which were used to promote Herman Miller’s highly sought-after furniture through much of the last century. The idea of the exhibition Then x Ten is to celebrate the power of the poster and in so doing continue Herman Miller’s distinct association with design history.

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Interiors Addict

Interiors Addict’s big Freedom giveaway!

Doesn’t this winter weather just make you want to stay home all cosy with cashmere throws, gorgeous rugs and moody lighting? Perfect weather for nesting! And thanks to Freedom I have two awesome prizes for your home to give away this week. Yay!

First prize is this amazing giant ikat canvas print which is one of my favourites from their current collection. Not all of us have a spare few grand hanging around to buy art (one day, when I grow up!) but we still want something great on our walls to add interest and colour and make a statement. This one’s BIG and at $599 it’s affordable. But you’d rather have it for free, right?

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Art

Artist Andrew O’Brien on the relationship between art and interiors

Andrew O’Brien left a comfortable corporate career to finally become a full-time artist and to say his brave decision has paid off would be an understatement. You may have admired his work on the cover of the current Real Living magazine or in the background of pictures of the Danish Royal visit to furniture store Corporate Culture late last year.

I spoke to Andrew about the relationship between art and interiors and how to go about choosing artwork, something many struggle with.

Andrew says the relationship between art and interiors is interesting, complex and often trivialised. “Art influences interior design, fundamentally and in wholesale ways. Historically, think of the modernist movement in architecture and furniture which derives its genesis from visual art which was in turn the first to link sociological and philosophical changes from theoreticians like Kant. History is littered with how art has influenced interior design and architecture, but the question is why? Well, on the most basic measure, colour, pattern and subject matter tell us about how we fit into our larger community, they offer the viewer a perpetual cognitive self reference. Art talks to composition, beauty and balance; these are things that drive great design and have always been core to interior design.”

Should you ever choose a painting that matches your room’s colour scheme? “Yes absolutely, often understanding colour is the first step in the language of art. It is the most accessible point of discovery,” says Andrew. “Colour is such an important part of cognitive engagement with the world, it defines emotion and shapes perception. Colour tells us about how to act, how to be and who to be with. It has great powers of influence that by and large we take for granted. After time, most rooms change their colour schemes and decor, but often the paintings remain and process of engagement with the art begins again.”

His commercial background and the snobbery that comes with many art galleries led Andrew to instead partner with high-end furniture store Corporate Culture, where his work is displayed and sold. “It is about pairing great furniture and design with the art. It makes someone’s journey into art easier and without condescension. It also showcases the work beautifully and in a manner unlike any other gallery space.”

 

When the Crown Prince and Princess of Denmark visited Corporate Culture to present managing director Richard Munao with an export award in Melbourne in November, Andrew’s work ended up being the backdrop for the official photos. “It was a great honour,” he says. “I had completed another work for the same shot, however it was rejected and this work was completed in some haste. Princess Mary was in a white suit, and the painting was still wet. At times she was a little too close to the painting!”

The big question: how to choose art? Simply go for what you like, what you think is “in” or something by the artist du jour? None of the above. “Art should be chosen physically and in context to the work. You should attempt to spend some quiet time with the piece and see how your senses engage with it.”

Andrew, who is inspired by the expressionist movement of the mid 20th century, advises against asking anyone else’s opinion. “It generally takes the decision away from the interaction of the art to the relationship dynamic between the person and opinion provider. Find the truth of the work for you. Does it make you happy, joyous? Does it calm you? Is the picture in harmony and well balanced? Does the work provoke you?”

 

Although he doesn’t regret his decision, Andrew says being an artist is challenging. “Self interested businesspeople, collectors and curators highly commodify artists with a proprietary hold on their ability to reach people interested in enjoying art. Been intimidated walking into a private gallery? Wondered why public institutions are so freely criticised by contemporary artists? Then you may get a sense of how the art world is a closed shop, usurped by those that benefit often at the expense of the artist,” he says. “It is this environment thats makes it so very hard for artists to make the move full time. I had to think differently about how I marketed my art. Once I had an idea that I could do something differently I think I was able to make the leap of faith with greater confidence.”

He says his work is about exploring the nature of the human condition and he is interested in works that activate primitive emotions. “I paint many highly repetitious layers and forms in a very deliberate and formalist manner. Over time these layers are painted out and the subsequent layers become much more subconscious and often gestural. To me, the painting’s completion is about seeking the pleasure in the painting without the formalist battle of dealing with objects and colour in space. I want my works to reward over time, with a power for the viewer to connect emotionally.”

 

Find out more about Andrew at his website.

Categories
Art Designers

Shaynna Blaze sells her art online

So not only is she a talented interior designer and television presenter, it turns out Shaynna Blaze from Selling Houses Australia and The Block, is also an artist in her spare time! She’s just opened her online shop where, among other things, she’s selling some of her work. And it’s really good. OK Shaynna, enough! You can stop showing off now…

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Art

Stylish affordable canvas art from Urban Road

The challenge of finding affordable, stylish artwork is a big one. Trying to find it online sounds like a terrible idea. But Suzie Atkin is making it happen with her growing business Urban Road.

Suzie always loved art while she was growing up. “My parents were crafters and my brother, two sisters and I were their production line,” she jokes. “In Year 12 I decided I wanted to be an art teacher, but was encouraged to do business by my well-intentioned father. So, I ended up in IT and I was lucky enough to get a job with a design software company. When I discovered their software I fell in love with its possibilities.”

She spent a lot of her spare time tinkering with graphics online but continued down the corporate career path. After she had her first child she started doing illustrations for people, mainly portraits.

“I am pretty fickle when it comes to decorating my house and I like to change colours and styles every now and then, but finding something I really liked that was affordable and would cover large expanses of wall space was difficult, so I decided to create it myself.” In 2010, Urban Road was born, with a view to creating fabulous artwork at super affordable prices.

So how does she decide on the designs? “Oh that’s easy, I do what I love. When I get an idea I become an obsessed mad woman and have to design it as quickly as possible. They don’t all make the cut mind you.”

Suzie thinks her art’s for anyone who loves to design, renovate or redesign their home, who wants to look like they spent a fortune on artwork without actually spending a fortune.

Key to Urban Road’s success has been the online gallery which shows the art in situ and gives people inspiration for how they could hang the canvases in their homes. There’s also the option to create things in your own custom colours. Pretty damn cool if you ask me. Suzie supplies a lot of interior designers and started selling through retail outlets last year.

“I don’t want to jinx myself but business going great… really great! I have to pinch myself sometimes because I can’t believe I actually did it.”

Canvases start from $49 (retail) and you can apply for a trade account. Oh, and did I mention free shipping Australia wide? My personal favourite designs are Dreamy Wilderness and Ava Pink. The Ava series can be mirrored in a pair for a striking effect which could cover some serious wall space! Lightweight enough for renters to hang with 3M hooks too…

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Interiors Addict

I’m so over Keep Calm and Carry On

This weekend I listed my pink Keep Calm and Carry On print on eBay. A sad day. When I bought it four years ago from Keep Calm Gallery (who incidentally have some AMAZING stuff) in the UK, (because they weren’t selling them here in Australia then) nobody else had one. And then when everyone else started to cotton on, at least mine was different because it was pink. But now the design has been so done I just can’t have it in my home anymore. I’m sick of seeing it!

The same happened to me with tram scroll art. I was an early adopter of that too. Now every second home has one (vintage, screen print or wall decal). Sigh. I still love it though and black and white things are slow to date so it’s staying! For now.

How about you? What trend, which you loved when you first saw it, have you now got sick of seeing? Chevron? Blackboard paint? Cowhide rugs?*

*Disclaimer: I love all those things.

Categories
Art

Win an original artwork by Julie Paterson

You all loved the pictures of Julie Paterson’s latest collection for Designer Rugs in her Blue Mountains cottage earlier this week. Now she’s giving you the chance to win a little bit of the design process in the form of an original painting for your own home. 

Julie has taken four of her best rug designs and overlaid them with four of her key fabric designs, playing about with composition and colour to create Remixed, a new collection of eight rugs that respectfully riffs on the popular cloth originals.

To illustrate this process, the artist and textile designer has created an edition of screen prints inspired by the rugs, reflecting the next stage in the back and forth of her process. She’s showing them at Global Gallery in Paddington but you can win one of the pieces of art that didn’t make the final cut.

To be in with a chance of winning simply pop over to cloth fabric’s Facebook page, tell her Interiors Addict sent you and why you’d love one of her pieces in your home. A winner will be chosen on Wednesday.

“The artwork is one of the pieces that didn’t make the final hang for the show,” says Julie. “These pieces form part of the process and I want to increase awareness of the process where so much more work gets created than ever gets to see the light of day. This work in its own right has merit.”

She’ll eventually be selling some of the other pieces that didn’t make the exhibition in her Surry Hills shop for up to $500 each.

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Interiors Addict

Cloth’s Julie Paterson creates third collection for Designer Rugs

Good design improves with time and attention, which is how Julie Paterson of cloth fabric created her new collection with Designer Rugs.

“It’s not always about what is new, the question is what can we re-imagine from what we’ve already created?”

Julie has taken four of her best rug designs and overlaid them with four of her key fabric designs, playing about with composition and colour to create Remixed, a new collection of eight rugs that respectfully riffs on the popular cloth originals.

To illustrate this process, the artist and textile designer extraordinaire has created an edition of screen prints inspired by the rugs, reflecting the next stage in the back and forth of her process.

Check out some photos of the rugs in Julie’s gorgeous Blue Mountains fibro cottage below.

You can view the paintings alongside the new rugs at Global Gallery in Sydney’s Paddington, where the Remixed collection is being launched this month. Find out more at the cloth Facebook page.

Her third collection with Designer Rugs talks about how design can mature with time. “That design can take on a journey of refinement. By redefining placement, composition and process we can start to develop an idea of the contemporary classic that looks at longevity rather than being obsessed with the next new thing,” says Julie.

“It’s about slow design really. Remixed is a show that encapsulates this, highlighting how my art practise influences my design process and on again to my art.”

And perhaps, in today’s need-it-now society, it’s something we could all learn from?

“Design influences art influences design,” says Julie. “Returning and reconsidering the familiar can turn a well designed piece into a modern classic.”

They’re all great but personally, I think ‘Wattle Shadow’ (immediately below and shown outside Julie’s studio) is quite stunning and bang on this year’s orange trend.

And here’s a sneak peek of some of the artwork in progress. Look out for a special Interiors Addict giveaway this weekend where you can win a piece of Julie’s art that didn’t make it into the final exhibition! 

In the meantime, check out the cloth Facebook page for all the latest.

Categories
Art

Blacklist couple’s love of love makes great art

Jaynie and Nathan Johnson are husband and wife and co-creators of Blacklist Studio Prints. Regular readers of this blog will know I’m just a little bit obsessed with typography and nearly everything on my walls contains words in one way or another. So it’s quite clear I’m a big fan of their work, not only because it’s very heavily typographical but because I’m also a big softie at heart and just doing this interview made me feel all romantic…

“We have pretty simple philosophy,” says Jaynie. “We love love.”

She continues: “We just love being dreamers and doers. We love that the mediums in which we work are so tangible, that they are able to manifest from concept to creation quite easily. We love words, we love typography, we love design, and we love music, so we put all of our favorite things into one (or twenty-something) prints.”

This is the ‘About’ page from their website:

Jaynie started out as a primary school teacher, and also worked as a stylist, but was too “gypsy-hearted” for regular hours. “I love children but am way too disorganised to be a teacher. I transitioned into magazines after a couple of years’ teaching. I got an amazing opportunity to intern as a market editor and loved it. A friend worked on the title I joined, and then I ended up full-time there until I had Willow. We accidentally started the prints side of Blacklist and I have done that ever since.”

The business has grown very organically. “We believe in creating for the sake of creating, not for the sake of money, or cool. We want our prints to make people feel loved.”

Their latest collection, To The Sea (which includes wall hangings and cushions as well), is no different. It’s about “falling in love, following love and most importantly: staying in love.”

The pirate vibe comes from an illustration Nathan drew for Jaynie when he proposed titled Love Pirate. “I look at that piece often and I’m a tad obsessed with old sea merchants,” says Jaynie. “When we speak of love, it’s not just romantic love, but a lot of our prints are inspired by our friendships, our paternal love for our daughter and of course, each other.”

(Are you feeling the love yet?)

“Every day I get to work, rest and play with my dearest of dears. It doesn’t get better. I feel very spoilt. We’ve always had a great creative connection and Nathan hates paperwork and accounts so I say he’s the beauty and I’m the brains! We both love what we do, so it works well for us.”

Jaynie sometimes also works as a stylist (although, ever modest, she’s reluctant to call herself one). “We currently work on creating advertising campaigns for different clients so I style and produce those, which is fun. We are also planning on starting up Blacklist Interiors some time in the future. We are insanely passionate about creating amazing commercial interiors, so are working on collaborating with some architect and builder friends to create some amazing retail and cafe spaces.”

Their own Sydney home is small and by the sea. “We definitely bought for the location and are making it our own as the months tick by. It is very open, great for entertaining friends. I think my favorite things about our home are the natural light and the location. My favorite things in it are the artworks, books, my family, and our new cubby-house. I love a good project.”

Who does she admire? “Mr Jason Grant for his bold, bright, sunny, personal approach to styling and Sarah Ellison (her editorial features always spark new ideas and reveal the latest and greatest). Akin, they constantly amaze me. To say I’m obsessed would be a huge understatement.”

Now to really get a feel for Blacklist Studio Prints, watch the video they made for To the Sea.

Categories
Art

Win 1 of 6 art prints from Pea Press!

If you love a bit of colour on your walls and you don’t take life too seriously, Pea Press is the place to go for affordable Aussie art. I say Aussie, but artist Vicky Axford is actually a fellow Brit who made Melbourne home. There’s a funny story there actually; Vicky was in the year above me at high school in England but when I first came across Pea Press online I had no idea she was behind it! It was a happy coincidence!

Pea Press are giving SIX readers the chance to win a large print of their choice from the entire range on Etsy. All you have to do is comment below telling me which one you want and why. Too easy! You must be in Australia and entries close at midnight on Friday.

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Interiors Addict

My favourite Keep Calm Gallery have done it again with their latest prints. You all know how I love

My favourite Keep Calm Gallery have done it again with their latest prints. You all know how I love a bit of type-inspired artwork! These latest designs are by newlywed Keep Calm owners Lucas and Hayley, who also sell many other artists’ work on their site. The eye chart prints are fun and and the Life is Absurd print is inspired by an Albert Camus quote. Might be just the yellow print I need for my new study. Yes, they’re UK-based, but take it from me, they ship to Australia!

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Interiors Addict

A Type of Show at kind of gallery Yesterday I was lucky enough to stumble across this typography exh

A Type of Show at kind of gallery Yesterday I was lucky enough to stumble across this typography exh
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Interiors Addict

FOR THE LOVE OF TYPE Oh, how I love typography! I suppose it’s because I’m a wordsmith (

FOR THE LOVE OF TYPE

Oh, how I love typography! I suppose it’s because I’m a wordsmith (Okay, journalist) that I love the look of words, fonts and typography and why I already have such a big collection of type-based prints from Keep Calm Gallery in the UK.

But this week, thanks to Louise over at Table Tonic, I stumbled upon New Zealand’s g&m design and promptly fell in love! What I like most about their work is that it’s all inked and printed by hand (using a collection of antique letterpress printer’s blocks originally destined for a coffee table) and every piece is personal.

g&m (otherwise known as Gretchen and Melissa) design and create hand-printed personalised typographic artworks on Italian paper or canvas. Gretchen says: “You come up with your 20 words and choose your colours and we will turn it into a piece of art. Words may be around a theme, or simply an eclectic collection of significant words, places and dates in someone’s life.” The perfect gift for for weddings, anniversaries, birthdays, graduations or farewells or just a great treat to commission for your own wall at home.

Gretchen Fraser and Melissa Laterveer started their business after being inspired by a magazine feature on typography. They made some prints with Gretchen’s collection of printers’ blocks and the popularity of their designs with friends led them to establish g&m design in 2007. They now create hand-printed personalised typographic artworks for customers around the world.