Textiles

This category contains 80 posts
Chinoiserie – Pavilions, Porcelains and Passionate Pursuits

Chinoiserie – Pavilions, Porcelains and Passionate Pursuits

By the eighteenth century in Europe and England all things Chinese had assumed incredible proportions as fashionable society sought to transmit their ideas about the magical land of Cathay through a multiplicity of imagery.

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Men in Vogue – Downton Abbey to Draper & Clooney to Caffrey

Men in Vogue – Downton Abbey to Draper & Clooney to Caffrey

Men of style who are in Vogue have always looked ‘sharp’ and sensational. As my daughter in law would say, wow, they are sure eye candy on a massive scale.

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Peabody Essex Museum at Salem – Opening Windows on the World

Peabody Essex Museum at Salem – Opening Windows on the World

A connoisseur, scholar and devout Buddhist, within the forbidden city Chinese Emperor Qianlong created a luxurious garden compound to serve throughout his retirement as a secluded place of contemplation, repose and entertainment. When the city was shut down following the Chinese revolution of 1911 – 1912 many of its treasures gathered dust for a century. Now, through a great deal of international cooperation and negotiation they have been conserved and sent on tour.

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The Culture Concept Circle – You Tube Channel

The Culture Concept Circle – You Tube Channel

On our You Tube Channel you will find our mini-documentaries, which provide an insight into the evolution of art, design, music, fashion and style.

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The Bed – Sleeping Stylishly in the Chamber of Love

The Bed – Sleeping Stylishly in the Chamber of Love

We spend at least one third of our lives in bed. Every culture is steeped in customs superstitions and folklore surrounding this unique piece of furniture. But what about the bedroom? When did the bed gain a room of its own? How was it decorated? Where can we begin to relate its story?

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Notebooks by Betty Churcher – My Favourite Book 2011

Notebooks by Betty Churcher – My Favourite Book 2011

Having been an avid, voracious reader of all types of texts since I was a very small child today, in reality, it takes a lot to get me excited about a book. I have read many of the classics, lots of classic novels, masses of thriller fiction works and non-fiction works, including autobiographies, biographies, books [...]

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French Country Style – Provence tres chic ‘indiennes’

French Country Style – Provence tres chic ‘indiennes’

Among the cargoes brought into the port of Marseilles in Provence during the mid seventeenth century by the Compagnie des Indes Orientales were desirable cotton prints from India. They consisted of dazzling patterns and striking colours, which captured the imagination.

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Raphael –  Weaving Tapestry Magic for the Sistine Chapel

Raphael – Weaving Tapestry Magic for the Sistine Chapel

The Raphael Cartoons were made up of a mosaic of hundreds of sheets of paper glued together and then fixed to the wall. Raphael and his assistants would have painted them before they were transported to Brussels to Pietr Van Aelst’s studio, where they would have been cut up into strips for use by the tapestry weavers.

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Trio of Boutique Style Museums – At Sydney, Paris and London

Trio of Boutique Style Museums – At Sydney, Paris and London

My favourite trio of boutique style small museums offer a unique experience to the visitor. All are in amazing locations with collections that cover epochs of history from antiquity to the nineteenth century in Europe. The advantage of this type of Museum is you can get up close and personal with very classy collections. And, the bonus is they all offer a special view and perspective on, and of the art and history of man.

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The Rococo Style – Sophisticated and Yet Enchantingly Pretty

The Rococo Style – Sophisticated and Yet Enchantingly Pretty

The Rococo style was delicately elegant with a distinct preference for asymmetry. It was presided over by France’s King Louis XV’s mistress, Madame du Pompadour, a sophisticated lady of impeccable style.

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The Lady and the Unicorn and ‘Millefleurs’ Style Tapestries

The Lady and the Unicorn and ‘Millefleurs’ Style Tapestries

In the late medieval period of the fifteenth century the now famous millefleurs tapestries first appear characterized by their backgrounds made of hundreds of tiny flowers. The most well known in this style are known as La Dame á la Licorne, or the Lady & the Unicorn. A group of six tapestries they are woven from a combination of woolen, silk and gold thread and have exercised an almost universal fascination on all those who have encountered them for hundreds of years.

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Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Harmony of Courtly Love

Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Harmony of Courtly Love

From the 11th to the 13th century in England and Europe expressing personal feelings in relation to the beauty and bountiful joys of women became the province of troubadours, who were both composers and performers of lyrical poetry set to romantic music. They roved about the countryside visiting castles and their communities to deliver the latest ditties going about in song. The themes they favoured the most were those of chivalry and courtly love.

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Macaroni’s, Incroyables and Dandies, at the essence of cool

Macaroni’s, Incroyables and Dandies, at the essence of cool

In the 1770’s young fashionable young blades in London were called Macaroni. Their antithesis was a dandy who was at the very essence of contemporary cool.

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Nijinsky to Nureyev – The Ballet Russes Enduring Legacy

Nijinsky to Nureyev – The Ballet Russes Enduring Legacy

From choreography to creativity the Ballet Russes imagined the future of dance. The company under the brilliant direction of their guru, Sergei Diaghlev, turned it into a rock star activity within a framework of early twentieth century design and culture. The National Gallery of Australia bought its treasure trove of garments at auction. And once again, Russian romance was transported to Australian shores.

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Arts & Crafts Movement – William Morris the Art that is Life

Arts & Crafts Movement – William Morris the Art that is Life

In England, during the second half of the nineteenth century, painter, writer, textile designer and social activist William Morris (1834-1896) became the spiritual leader of a revival in arts and crafts that encompassed all the visual arts, including architecture and interiors.

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Fashion, is it more than a Frock?

Fashion, is it more than a Frock?

From skinny self sacrificing super models to those demanding the use of ‘real people’, costume accommodates a desire to be noticed. It is the look at me, look at me syndrome, which has been in play for thousands of years. Today it collectively reflects a western society in which privacy has been stripped completely bare. But is fashion about more than a frock?

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Shanghai Scenes

Shanghai Scenes

Explore the delights of the burgeoning Shanghai arts scene, including the visual arts music, dance and literature.

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