Designs by Hubert Le Gall for the Fabergé exhibition at le Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal. A subtle progression from Tzarist mysticism to mortality as traced in the work of Carl Fabergé. |
The installation for the Fabergé is the work of French designer and sculptor Hubert Le Gall. His design is a subtle progression from liturgical mystery to rooms reflecting the glint of Imperial jewels to an unsettling sense of the coming fall of the Romanov dynasty. It's a brilliant piece of work by a master artist.
Le Gall is known for his decor for a series of high profile exhibitions and for his unusual furniture designs. And it seems only fitting that the Museum Shop include a few of his inspired - and dare I say marevelously lunatic - pieces amongst the fake Fabergé eggs that will be adorning the homes of many a Montreal matron in the coming months.
I'd be delighted to have these two rather antic rabbits pulled out of a hat at my dinner table. |
And I'd be tempted to play Jonah to this whale of a chair. |
With a knick-knack, paddy whack, Give a dog a bone; |
Or in Le Gall's case a bass lamp? |
And finally a little quiz.
Would anyone like to guess what this is? Yes I knew it's a doggie butt but I mean what useful purpose would it serve in your home decor!
August 11 - 1942: Actress Hedy Lamarr and composer George Antheil receive a patent for a Frequency-hopping spread spectrum communication system that later became the basis for modern technologies in wireless telephones and Wi-Fi.
2 comments:
The backside of a dog.
In a dog eat dog world this is a reminder to the type A folks:
"Don't let them hand your ass back to you on a platter".
Post a Comment