Showing posts with label 20th Century Art and Design Show and Sale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 20th Century Art and Design Show and Sale. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Cool Stuff: SF20

I played hookie from my deadlines today and sneaked over to Fort Mason for the opening of SF20, the San Francisco 20th Century Art and Design Show & Sale. (Bonus quasi-celebrity sighting: designer Windsor Smith.)

Some of the standout booths there:

The most unique exhibitor was relatively new Los Angeles retailer Voila!, which repurposes military salvage and vintage airplane parts into breathtaking furnishings and home accents.

The lights above, for instance, are from a naval vessel, while the lighted wall sculptures are actually parts of the fuselage from an aircraft.

I didn't even bother to note prices, but suffice it to say that many pieces cost more than some hardworking people earn in a year. (OK, fine -- the Tommi Parzinger sideboard above, from L.A.'s sublime Downtown, will set you back $36,000. And the beautiful George Nakashima lounge chairs below, from a San Francisco store that does not wish to be named, are $24,000.)

Given a few hours, I could find a lot of this stuff on eBay for a tenth the price. Vintage Bitossi horse lamps like the one above, for instance, pop up there from time to time. But there's nothing quite like seeing items like these in person and getting the chance to admire pieces in such absolutely pristine condition.

Plus, I love making mental notes about how the spaces are put together and learning tricks that I can experiment with at home, substituting my thrift-store and eBay booty for the museum-worthy pieces that will most likely never be in my price range.

I also enjoy seeing high-end dealers get creative with inexpensive materials in their exhibit cubicles. San Francisco's Ed Hardy, for instance, staple-gunned plastic highway mesh to the partition walls to mimic the look of bold, colorful wallpaper. And several other exhibitors put down what looked like simple pieces of 4-by-8 plywood painted glossy white to approximate epoxied floors.

I may not be able to afford their wares, but I can definitely steal a clever idea or two and file it away for future use.

This space, which I dubbed "the Liza room" (duh!) and which was as much an art installation as a showcase for designer Ken Fulk, was my absolute favorite of the entire show.

Yes, that is indeed a discarded black bra on the floor. There was also an ashtray overflowing with lipstick-stained cigarette butts and random bits of disco-era bling flung about. Really, there should've a been a razor blade and a white-powder-dusted mirror on the coffee table to complete the vignette.

One word: Genius. (Hey -- I told you I was partial to over-the-top Seventies design.)

SF20 runs through Sunday, September 14 at Fort Mason's Herbst Pavilion. Read more about it here.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Mark Your Calendar: 20th Century Art and Design Show

From Thursday, September 11, through Sunday, September 14, the San Francisco 20th Century Art and Design Show & Sale will be taking place at Fort Mason Center's Herbst Pavilion.

The event features "50 premier national and international exhibitors presenting decorative and fine arts from all design movements of the 20th century."

In other words, it's the good stuff -- and at nosebleed prices. I seriously doubt there will be any bargains, but it still sounds like a fun way to ooh and aah over absolutely beautiful pieces and to educate yourself about 20th century modern design.

The event's keynote speaker is 1stdibs founder and president Michael Bruno, who will kick off the exhibition's first day with a Thursday morning lecture on buying vintage.

Show hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $20, and lectures are $10. Click here for more info.


P.S. Show pics and impressions here.

 

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