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Showing posts with label Placewares. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Placewares. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2015

Best of 2014

Once again it’s time to put up that totally arbitrary list!

Best Bow Ties
Dap Kitsch This young fellow makes really handsome and reasonably priced bow ties. Found him at the otherwise uninspired Union Square Christmas market. https://www.etsy.com/shop/dapkitsch



Best Massage
I had a great masseur in SF but he moved locations. So I found this guy who treats massage like a dance. Something to look forward to every month! http://deepesalenmassage.com/

Best Design Book
Leslie Williamson’s “Modern Originals.” http://www.lesliewilliamson.com/modern-originals/



Best Design Workshop
From Leslie’s book. http://www.werkstaette-carlauboeck.at

Best Mysteries set in France (tie)
This year I read four mysteries set in Provence by M.L. Longworth. Even Frank O’Hara’s Lunch Poems make a brief appearance!

Also found a new series by Peter Steiner that predicts all that CIA nastiness!

Best Book of Love Letters
Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy I keep reading everything that comes out by or about them! http://us.macmillan.com/theanimalslovelettersbetweenchristopherisherwoodanddonbachardy/christopherisherwood



Best Garden
Le Jardin Plume It took us a while to find this paradise on the edge of Normandy. Never travel without an atlas. But the detour was worth it all. One of the most beautifully conceived modern gardens we’ve been to. http://lejardinplume.com/



Best Restaurant Outside the US
La Pramil in Paris. Ran into our friends Anne Fougeron and Mark English in Paris and found this gem without a reservation. My starter was white asparagus soup with foie gras ice cream. Last meal before the revolution! http://www.pramil.fr/



Best House Museum
Just before lunch with we visited Le Corbusier’s apartment and studio in Paris with Sofie Nunberg, Anne, and Mark. Only open on Saturdays. Must see! http://www.fondationlecorbusier.fr



Best Thai Restaurant
We ate at a great Thai restaurant called Au Petit Thai. They don't seem to have a website. Here is their info. 10 Rue du Roi de Sicile, 75004 Paris, France +33 1 42 72 75 75

Best Recipe
Rachel Ray’s carrot soup. But put in mild cayenne, not hot cayenne. http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/rachael-ray/curried-carrot-soup-recipe.html

Best Concert
Thanksgiving Concert at St Paul’s Church in London conducted by Andrew Carwood. It featured Paul’s commissioned piece, “Psalm 30” sung beautifully by the Choir of St. Paul’s Cathedral.



Best New Shoes
My Alden slip-ons http://www.aldenshoe.com

Best Spice Shop
We don’t shop that much but we found this local spice shop a few blocks from our house and it’s got me back in the kitchen. A must visit. Oaktown Spice Shop https://squareup.com/market/oaktown-spice-shop

Best Art Exhibit
Ai WeiWei on Alcatraz. And it’s there until April 26, 2015 http://www.for-site.org/project/ai-weiwei-alcatraz/





Best Art Exhibit in NY
There were quite a few. But Robert Gober was the most thought provoking. Not pretty like the Matisse or Cubist knock-outs but a lot of new information to think about.

Robert Gober
Untitled 1992
courtesy www.moma.org

Best Quirky Exhibit
Maynard and Lu Lyndon’s show of baby rattles at their shop, Placewares, in Gualala. http://www.placewares.com/category/gallery/




Best Private Club
OK, let’s be honest we don’t get invited to very many private clubs. But Two Brydges in London is basically a hang-out for folks in the performing arts. Great food, mismatched chairs, and adorable waiters. Thank you Paul Hughes!

Best Swimming Lake within a Short Driving Distance
Emerald Lake above Redwood City. It’s also private, but not fancy. You feel like you drove several hours to hang out in Andirondack chairs and jump off diving boards into cold green water. Perfect on a hot summer day.



Second Best Lake within a Short Driving Distance
Lake Anza in Tilden Park. It’s public and there is a nice sandy beach and a snack bar, but the water is a bit murkier…

We live on Lake Merritt but you can’t swim there.

Favorite Asian/Tribal Rug Store
The Claremont Rug Company has some of the most beautiful rugs in the Bay Area. But if you don’t have a big budget for antique rugs you might check in at Emmet Eiland and some of their new tribal rugs. Good prices, no pressure.



Best Chinese Food
Mission Chinese Clean up a funky Chinese restaurant, turn off the lights, shrink and freshen up the menu, and Bob’s your uncle. http://missionchinesefood.com/

Best Documentary
CitizenFour about, you guessed it, Edward Snowden. https://citizenfourfilm.com/



Best New News Source
What happens when you bring a billionaire together with several very determined journalists? Well, I can only imagine the chaos, but most days you get something very interesting from The Intercept! https://firstlook.org/theintercept/

Best Snow Globe
OK, I am not a big snow globe fan. But our pals Liz Ross and David Westby create something really different. Check them out at: http://coolsnowglobes.com



Best Air BnB in New York
Found this charming apartment in Manhattan. It is four long blocks from the Lexington subway, but the linens are marvelous and so is the morning light. https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/825732?euid=f92852da-0e60-f6e9-c3d2-56f57213deee


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Placewares: A Big Well-Designed Circle

Maynard Hale Lyndon and Lu Wendel Lyndon
Maynard Hale Lyndon and Lu Wendel Lyndon were integral parts of the famous Design Research (D/R) store before they founded their own firm, Placewares. They are part of the history of modern design in the United States. When they moved up to Sea Ranch, retirement wasn’t in the cards, so they set up a small shop and gallery in Gualala, the town immediately north of Sea Ranch. It is very much like an updated but miniature version of Design Research, without all the furniture. It is one of my favorite stores anywhere, and I wanted to know the Lyndons’ story. When you look at Morley Baer’s photographs of MLTW’s early Sea Ranch houses, you see they feature a lot of Marimekko fabrics, one of the mainstays of D/R and now Placewares. It’s a wonderful big circle.

Maynard and Lu thought New Year’s Day would be quiet and a good time for a conversation. But design devotees are a loyal bunch, and customers began calling almost as soon as we sat down. The seasoned shopkeepers slipped in and out of conversation with grace, and it was only later I realized they had sold a fair amount of merchandise during our interview.

Interviewer: How did you get started in design?

Lu Lyndon: When I was out of college, I moved from San Francisco to Cambridge and discovered D/R. And like many people, it’s where I went on Saturday, what I did for recreation. I would just go hang out in the store because it was so beautiful.

Maynard Lyndon: This was the original store in the wood frame house on Brattle Street?

Lu Lyndon: Right. This was in the early 1960s. A year later I moved back to San Francisco and worked as a legal secretary. A woman I worked with said to me one day that her sister was coming to visit. She told me that she worked for Design Research and that she was scouting a location for a store in San Francisco. And I said, “I have to meet your sister.”

The sister didn’t think I was tall enough, blond enough, whatever enough, and sort of said she didn’t think she was interested in my working at D/R. And I said, “Well, I’d be happy to come and help. I know you need hands to set up the store. I’ll do anything you need.” I just wanted to be there. So I helped set up the store. And then I managed to worm myself into working there on Saturdays. I had a fulltime job during the week, and on Saturdays I put on my Marimekko dress and went to work at D/R. Over time I was given a fulltime job and then became the assistant store manager. When the Beverly Hills store lost its manager, I worked there temporarily before being promoted to be part of the buying group in Cambridge—talk about a big circle!

Ben Thompson's D/R store in Cambridge.
Courtesy Chronicle Books

Interviewer: Did you have a design background?

Lu Lyndon: I never really had much design training. I was an English Lit major in college. But my passion is design. And so it’s been a lifelong career and love for me. And I met this guy. That helped.

Interviewer: Did you meet in Cambridge?

Lu Lyndon: No, I actually met Maynard after I was given the position in Cambridge, while I was still in Beverly Hills. The president of D/R at the time said, “You need to find a replacement for yourself and train that person before we can move you, because we can’t let Beverly Hills flounder.” Meanwhile Maynard was interviewing for a position as product development director. D/R was trying to put together a team of three people to develop new products— Ristomatti Ratia, the son of Marimekko’s founder, Armi Ratia; Craig Hodgetts, an architect from Los Angeles; and Maynard.

Maynard Lyndon: One of us being in Boston, one of us in Los Angeles, and one in Helsinki. That was the plan.

Craig was designing a new building for D/R to be built in Beverly Hills, which never happened.

While D/R was setting up this department, they needed a store manager for Beverly Hills. They said, “You might as well learn the culture of this company directly by managing the Beverly Hills store; when the board gets the funding together, we’ll begin the design department back East.”

Lu Lyndon: So a year later, Maynard came back to Cambridge. But by then things started going really awry with D/R. Once Ben Thompson was out of the picture, there was a succession of different people who were in charge, and the heart and soul went out of the company.

We both left and started our own business, which was a design-build firm. We did graphics. We did space planning for lawyers, for medical people, and for people in their private homes—whatever work we could find. This was 1973—there wasn’t a lot of work.

Maynard Lyndon: Annual reports, a whole series of things. Wielding hammers, paint brushes, Letraset—whatever was needed to get the job done!

Lu Lyndon: We were very poor.

Maynard Lyndon: We called that company Placemakers. We were making places for people.

Lu Lyndon: One of the projects that we had was for a couple who owned the train station building in Concord. There were a number of little stores within the train station, but there was no system for moving people through the building, so we came up with a signage scheme. At one meeting, the owners were all down in the doldrums, and we asked, “What’s wrong?” They said, “Well, our major tenant just stole away in the middle of the night, leaving the main store space empty.”

Maynard and I looked at each other and thought, well, we know a little bit about retail. So we put together a store for them. The arrangement was that they would put up the money, and we would do the store—the concept, the layout, the build-out, the buying, the displays, the necessary backroom systems, hiring and training staff—and we would run it for six months or so and then we would leave. It was called Plum Loco.

Plum Loco store in Concord Train Station designed by
Maynard and Lu Lyndon
Photo by Steve Rosenthal

Maynard Lyndon: After three years there, we said, “We’ve got to do our own store.” We came up with the name Placewares and opened our first store on January 11, 1978. So this January, it is 33 years since we started the original Placewares.

Lu Lyndon: By that point, we had already put together a unique collection of products that we had sourced from all over the world.

Maynard Lyndon: Our tagline for that first store was “a newfangled hardware store.” We got a lot of attention at the time, because our store was the first to focus on storage and organization as a category. From our design/build days, we had learned that most people have plenty of living space; they simply don’t use it very well. What we offered in our stores were products that could help people use their spaces better. Our tag line changed to “specializing in places to put things” and then to “the storage and organization resource.”

Lu Lyndon: We opened our first store in Concord, because we knew the Concord customer from our years at the train station store.

Maynard Lyndon: As we expanded—at one time we had seven stores—we would literally count the number of Volvos in the parking lots.

Lu Lyndon: That was the qualifier. Volvo owners were people who were sensitive to design and function and durability—and had a degree of disposable income.

One of the Lyndons' Placewares stores in the Boston area.

One of the Lyndons' Placewares stores in the Boston area.

One of the Lyndons' Placewares stores in the Boston area.

Interviewer: And the name of your own store was Placewares?

Lu Lyndon: Yes. We coined that name, meaning “wares for your place.” Because we advertised fairly heavily in Boston Magazine, people would come out to Concord. When the 1979 gas shortage happened, customers said, “You know, you have to have a store in town.” We decided that if we opened a store in Boston, we had to go to the premiere shopping area, and that would be Newbury Street. So the second store was on Newbury Street.

Maynard Lyndon: We were there for 26 years.

Interviewer: What did you sell?

Lu Lyndon: The same product mix as the store in Concord—storage and organization.

Interviewer: Tell me about LyndonDesign.

Lu Lyndon: We started LyndonDesign, which is the second part of the name of our store/gallery here in Gualala, in 1983. We were designing product largely in response to our customers’ wishes and requests for things that they couldn’t find to fit their needs.

We didn’t want to be the manufacturer or the marketer or distributor, so we’ve always worked on a royalty arrangement.

But since we’ve moved here, we’ve downplayed product design and are doing the gallery instead. We combined the names when we reopened here—Placewares+LyndonDesign—to enable us to still design some things if someone asks, but we’re not pursuing product or interior design like we used to. In the gallery, we’re developing a coterie of artists who are doing special things in different materials. The whole focus of the gallery has been architecture and landscape.

The gallery wing of Placewares+LyndonDesign in Gualala.

Maynard Lyndon's recent collage constructions on exhibit.

Maynard Lyndon's recent collage constructions.

Interviewer: Which of course is what Sea Ranch is about. Maynard, let’s go back to how you got into the design world. I know about your father’s practice in Los Angeles.

Maynard Lyndon: Yes, Maynard Lyndon, FAIA, was my father (that’s why I use all three names, Maynard Hale Lyndon), and my mother, Jo Hale Lyndon, was a consultant to my father’s architectural practice. She did all the colors for his buildings. She also opened a store in Detroit that she and he designed together, called Contemporary Backgrounds.

My mother had gone to the New York 1938 exposition at MoMA of Alvar Aalto’s work and was so taken with all that collection of things—the glass and the furniture—that she became the second importer and retailer of Aalto pieces in America. In Detroit, my father was doing very modern, award-winning schools.

Contemporary Backgrounds opened in 1940, and it wasn’t so far away from Cranbrook and what was happening there. It was a very exciting time. I don’t remember it personally, but of course I have some photographs. (My brother, Donlyn Lyndon, FAIA, did an exhibit at UC Berkeley and then at UC Santa Barbara about Contemporary Backgrounds.)

Contemporary Backgrounds
Photo by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA

Contemporary Backgrounds
Photo by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA

We still have some original Aalto pieces from that store in our house here. This type of design was engrained in my childhood.

Dad went to an exposition of new housing ideas in the early 1940s in Los Angeles where he saw a house that Richard Neutra designed. It was a 1936 plywood house, two-story, a very early use of plywood, partially demountable. You could take it apart in sections and move it. My father came back to the office in Detroit and called Neutra and introduced himself as an architect. They became friends and collaborated together later. Dad bought that house from the exposition over the phone. Meanwhile, he bought a lot in West Los Angeles outside of Westwood and had the house moved to that site. As a young child, I grew up in this house; it was amazing. We lived in that house until Dad designed his own house out in Malibu in 1949.  You can see Julius Shulman's photos of it in Barbara Lamprecht's book on Neutra.

Malibu House designed by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA, 1949.
Photo by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA

Malibu House designed by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA, 1949.
Photo by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA

Maynard and Donlyn Lyndon, FAIA
at exhibit of Maynard Lyndon, FAIA's work in Los Angeles.
Pictured here is their family home designed by Maynard Lyndon, FAIA from 1949.

I went to architecture school at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, and then to painting school at the Chouinard Art Institute in downtown Los Angeles.

Interviewer: What was your first business?

Maynard Lyndon: A toy store on Wilshire Boulevard in Santa Monica I founded in 1967. I called it Colorform. I designed and built the store, designed the toys, made the toys. I started a little manufacturing company called ColorformLine, making a line of children’s furniture in three garages in Santa Monica.

After two or three years, I was getting a lot of attention in the press, and unbeknownst to me, the president of Creative Playthings, which was in Princeton, appeared on our doorstep. I didn’t know who he was; I didn’t even know Creative Playthings particularly. We walked around the block several times that day, and by the end of that conversation, he said, “We want you to come back East and head our product development for Creative Playthings.”

Creative Playthings had been bought by CBS, the television network. They were buying these little companies thinking that they should branch out. So within very few months, I sold my store to one of my customers and moved to Princeton to head the product development for Creative Playthings, which was an amazing experience.

I had I think 17 designers and engineers under my umbrella and a secretary. This corporate world was very new to me! Eventually, CBS rid themselves of all of these fun little companies. But it launched me into a totally different world of understanding how things are made, how designers work with manufacturers, and how things are distributed.

Interviewer: How old were you?

Maynard Lyndon: I was in my 20s. It was a fantastic situation. Later I returned to California, where I became product development director for Forms+Surfaces, Santa Barbara, an architectural hardware and finishes company.

And again, I got into another whole layer of things that was a great learning experience. But the owner had never had somebody besides himself doing the design. And finally I just said, “This isn’t going to work. There can’t be two of us.” And I begin looking for something else. I responded to an ad by this company, Design Research, and ended up meeting with then-CEO Peter Sprague.

Interviewer: He had done the takeover?

Maynard Lyndon: Yes, and Phil Doub was then president. I met with them in San Francisco and Los Angeles. And they said, “Well, we’re trying to convince the board to start a product development team of our own.” And that’s when this whole idea started, but they didn’t have the money put together.

It’s odd the way the world happens. And so there I was. Lu trained me at D/R Beverly Hills for about two weeks before D/R moved her back to Cambridge.

Beverly Hills was a totally different world than Princeton or Cambridge. And I had this staff of 15 to 20, all women except the stock boy. I had to learn how to deal with their various quirks, and they had to learn to deal with my quirks. About a year later D/R moved me back to Cambridge, where I managed their flagship store for a while.

Interviewer: How did you get from Placewares in Boston to here?

Maynard Lyndon: Both of us have been coming to Sea Ranch since the 1960s even before we knew each other. In 1997 on a trip to visit my brother Donlyn (the “L” of MLTW), we thought, “Well, just for fun, let’s see if there’s any property available that seems right and that we can afford.” We always wanted to be out here. We found a lot, bought it, and went back to Boston and continued to work. But we began designing our house with Donlyn. He did the siting and shaping of the house and we did the interiors. Matt Sylvia built it; it was the last house he finished. Interestingly—in relation to your big circle notion—Matt used to build Neutra houses in Los Angeles before Sea Ranch invited him to come build up here. He built over 150 homes at Sea Ranch. Our house was finished in 2000, and for four years after that we commuted back and forth to Boston.

Maynard and Lu Lyndon's Sea Ranch house.
Architecture by Donlyn Lyndon, FAIA

Inside the Lyndons' home at Sea Ranch.

Inside the Lyndons' home at Sea Ranch.

The view over the sheep meadow.

By the 26th anniversary of Placewares in 2004, we said, “We’ve done this long enough. It’s time to move on.”

We gathered all our employees together at our Boston headquarters and told them we were closing the stores down and we would help them find other employment. And that’s what we did. Every two weeks, we closed a store and consolidated the merchandise and whatever remaining staff. The last location to close was our first store, in Concord. On the very last day, there were just the two of us, just the way we had started 26 years earlier.

Within months, we were out here at Sea Ranch full time with the idea to continue the design practice, because we still had various royalty arrangements. We thought that would sustain us, but we missed all the contact with people.

And so we began asking ourselves and family and people we were meeting up here, “What does this town need?” People said, “We need a quick photo place. We need a drycleaner. A messenger service.” In Lu’s Mini Cooper, we could have the Mini Messenger Service. Lu thought about a madeleine baking company.

But finally we said, “Why don’t we just do what we know how to do? But let’s change the LyndonDesign part, and let’s do a gallery because there are so many talented artists up here.”

So now we are back doing what we love and talking with people directly. And Lu, you should take over talking about it. You haven’t had a chance to say a word.

Lu Lyndon: I used to tease Maynard when we interviewed prospective new employees. When you do an interview, you’re supposed to let the interviewee do the talking. I used to have to nudge Maynard because he was the one who was doing all the talking, describing Placewares to the interviewee!

Interviewer: So do you feel like this is the essence of what you were about, getting to the pure designs and art, without the huge overhead and delivery and operations and finance?

Lu Lyndon: When we were planning this store, the big question was, what is really needed here? What kinds of things do we know about that would resonate in this community? I first found Sea Ranch in the late 1960s while I was working at D/R—I didn’t know Maynard or Donlyn then. People would come to D/R to furnish their houses up here.

On my first visit I just fell in love with Sea Ranch. And I said to myself, “Someday I’m going to live here.” And luckily for me, someday happened. But the store really is a response to the community. It is a way for us to give something back and to be able to continue our love of sourcing new products and finding interesting, good, well-designed things. And sharing them with our customers.

I have always been very careful that whatever I acquire is well-designed and beautiful and enduring. I have this attitude that that’s the way we need to live. It’s hard to be sour about the world if you’re surrounded by beautiful things—and interesting people! It’s also a very sustainable approach to living. If the things you have are things you love, you’re not throwing them away and replacing them every two years.

Placewares+LyndonDesign in Gualala.

Placewares+LyndonDesign in Gualala.

Placewares+LyndonDesign in Gualala.

The Finnish designer Kaj Franck designed a line of dishes for Iittala in 1952. They are the dishes I bought from D/R for my first apartment; we still use them today at home, and we sell them in our store. His whole attitude was to keep things simple. Buy things that you love and use them every day. Don’t put them in a cupboard for special occasions. They’re part of your life. I feel very fortunate to have known both Armi Ratia, who founded Marimekko, and Ben Thompson, who was D/R. And to be able to continue what they began, in some small way in this little outpost in Gualala….

Maynard and Lu Lyndon
at their first Placewares store in January 1978.

All photos courtesy Maynard Hale Lyndon and Lu Wendel Lyndon except as noted.

Further information:

Placewares+LyndonDesign
http://www.placewares.com/

Design Research Book
http://www.chroniclebooks.com/index/main,book-info/store,books/products_id,8937/
http://www.archpaper.com/e-board_rev.asp?News_ID=4886&PagePosition=4

The Sea Ranch
http://www.papress.com/html/book.details.page.tpl?isbn=9781568983868

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

My Favorite… End of the Year Blog


I have a few secret things that I love. Everybody has them. I love water parks. Related to that, I love boogie boarding. I love hot fudge sundaes. I love Mercedes Benz automobiles from the mid-late 1960s. And I love family Christmas letters. When I was a kid, they were often mimeographed. They came with their own scent. Distant yet intimate. A staple of the American middle-class holiday season. Now only my friend David Kerr and my Aunt Roberta still send them, and I look forward to hearing the news, even if I already know most of the information.

Favorite car (MB 280 SE)

As some of you know, I post a monthly photo diary on Facebook. This will serve to remind me what I did as my memory grows dimmer. It also takes care of the basic information that a holiday letter would contain. So I decided that instead of writing a letter, I would list favorites from this year and see where that leads.

Joe Brainard: I Remember

The idea of starting a list of favorites was inspired by the late artist Joe Brainard and his book I Remember. Through repetition, he creates one of the most intimate yet accessible poems I’ve ever read. I am also rereading the great catalog that curator Constance Lewallen prepared for the Brainard retrospective that was at the Berkeley Art Museum in 2001. Brainard brought me around to representational painting. I was reminded of Joe because he was mentioned in the biography of painter Fairfield Porter that I recently finished. Porter has got me looking carefully at contemporary representational painting and exploring the connections between those painters and poets like James Schuyler, John Ashbery, and Ron Padgett. I got to the Porter biography because of its author, Justin Spring. Before this year, I had never read anything by Spring, but his book on the writer Samuel Steward is incredible. Before the Steward book, Spring wrote mostly art history and criticism. So let’s begin there.

Secret Historian: The Life and Times of Samuel Steward,
Professor, Tattoo Artist, and Sexual Renegade

Favorite Biography
Secret Historian: The Life and Times of Samuel Steward, Professor, Tattoo Artist, and Sexual Renegade
Although he lived and worked near where I grew up, I never knew about Steward until his letters with Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas were published in the late 1970s. But he was much more than a friend of the literati. He was also a tattoo artist, pornographer, professor, and associate of Alfred Kinsey. Spring threads together a life that might otherwise seem fragmented. (My interview with him is posted on my other blog.)
www.queersage.blogspot.com

My second favorite biography is Raymond Carver: A Writer’s Life, by Carol Sklenicka. It’s well worth reading even if you are not a big Carver fan.

Raymond Carver: A Writer’s Life

Favorite Joint Art Biography
My favorite solo art biography was the one on Porter. But since I am making the rules, I am going to add a category called “Favorite Joint Art Biography.” I am not yet finished reading Art and Activism: Projects of John and Dominique de Menil, but I am going to include it anyway. This couple spent much of their adult life trying to link contemporary art and spiritual inquiry. This project interests me as much as any other.

Art and Activism: Projects of John and Dominique de Menil

Favorite Memoir
Just Kids
Patti Smith’s memoir of her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe reminds us that the fleeting moments are history.

Just Kids by Patti Smith

Favorite Art Town Book
Chinati: The Vision of Donald Judd
How many artists decide that a town is the right scale for an artwork? This gorgeous volume brings back the memories of a trip Paul and I took there in 2009.

Walking to the Artillery Shed at Chinati.

Favorite Design Book
Handcrafted Modern: At Home with Mid-century Designers
I have already written a review and posted an interview about Leslie Williamson’s beautiful new book. You can’t fix the world, but you can record a moment of beauty. Leslie tells stories of place with her photographs and her writing. She reminds me that there is no sin in beautifully designed clutter.

Courtesy of Handcrafted Modern: At Home with Mid-century Designers

Favorite Design Blog
Every morning Remodelista posts a carefully curated selection of environments and objects that are now part of my morning ritual.
www.remodelista.com

Favorite Movie
I didn’t go to the cinema in 2010. But I am looking forward to renting Martin Scorsese’s documentary Public Speaking, a conversation with Fran Lebowitz. If I had seen that film, it would have been my favorite.

Public Speaking, a conversation with Fran Lebowitz

Favorite New Shoes
I bought these Clarks. I remember them from high school when we called them inside-out shoes because of the funny seam that runs up the middle. They didn’t have them in black then.

Favorite new shoes (Clark's)

Favorite Friends’ New House
That would be have to be David and Jay’s crisp modern rectangle in the Berkeley hills by Clarence Tantau. Rarely does somebody buy a house that I could move right into.

David and Jay's house

Favorite New Hotel
I mean new to us. The Middleton Inn outside Charleston, designed by Clark and Menefee, profoundly moved both Paul and me. Inspired by historic architecture and Louis Kahn, the architects created something boldly original and subtle.
www.middletoninn.com

Middleton Inn

Favorite Old Hotel
We only got to visit the Arizona Inn once this year. Although small things change all the time, nothing really changes. Which is just the way we like it.
www.arizonainn.com

Arizona Inn

Favorite New Northern Place
Vermont is the cleanest state we’ve ever been to. Hardly any litter or fast food joints. It’s affordable, friendly, but not sweet. Great swimming holes. We went to see our friends Liz Ross and David Westby, and Paul was ready to move there. Their beautiful home could almost convert me to a traditional house. We now know the charms of a cool basement in an East Coast summer.
www.liz-ross.com
www.davidwestby.com

Vermont

Favorite New Southern City
Who could resist Charleston’s charms? It’s about space, light, and proximity to the water. The cemeteries capture the essence of the place.

Charleston cemetery

Favorite New Restaurant for Design
That would have to be Lincoln in Lincoln Center. Diller Scofidio + Renfro designed the place. The carpet was travertine-patterned, and Barbara Walters was a few tables away. How swank is that?

Lincoln Restaurant

Favorite Big Party
Definitely Rob and Jeff’s big queer wedding in Washington DC. There are some advantages to being slightly controlling. You get a good event. There were great testimonials and raucous dancing.

Rob and Jeff's wedding


The second favorite big party was also in Washington. It also involved Rob and Jeff, although you can’t see them. Here is a video clip from the Miss Adams Morgan Pageant.


Favorite New Art Museum
Hands down, it’s the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tucson. Anne-Marie Russell has created a great center for art in the desert. And now it’s in a former Brutalist fire station.

Favorite new art museum (MOCA Tucson)

Favorite Protest
When Prop 8 was overturned, we marched!


Favorite Source for Bow Ties
Seigo via Jill Pilaroscia!


Favorite Tour
The Concrete Tour of Cambridge, Massachusetts by yours truly in celebration of Paul’s mid-century mark.  We found Jay's old apartment in Luis Sert land!

Concrete tour

Favorite Bus Tour
The magic bus ride that Al and I took!

Al Baum on the favorite bus tour

Favorite Gardens
Our all-time favorite garden is Uncle Graham’s in Walton in the Midlands because Graham created it. But like all art, it is never done. We saw it at the beginning of the year in winter. Amazing light.

Favorite garden

Not far from Graham, we toured the garden of his friend John Oakland, Long Close Garden, near Woodhouse Eaves. A life’s work really. Although it was winter, there was still a great deal of life.

Graham's friend's garden

The Middleton Inn (see above), which is next door to one of the country’s grandest gardens, the Middleton Plantation. We woke early to avoid the humidity, and it was one of those rare moments where you were alone and walking, as if in a dream. As if an entire estate was yours for an hour or two.

Middleton Plantation

Not far from us in El Cerrito, I stumbled on Harlan Hand’s famous garden at a Sunday open house.

Harland Hand garden

Favorite Garden Without Plants
My young friend Lissa took me to Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens. Reminded me of Simon Rodia, but the garden version. Here is a brief video. You must check it out if you are ever in Philly.
www.phillymagicgardens.org


Favorite New Print
Chris Brown’s Trackside found its way to the living room wall.
www.paulsonbottpress.com

Favorite new print (Chris Brown)

Favorite Fashion Designer
I don’t know very many fashion designers, but I love what our friend Martha McQuade does. She had a show in March at the Rare Device store in San Francisco. And her website is exquisite.
www.uniformnatural.com
www.raredevice.net

Rare Device (where our favorite designer exhibited her wares)

Favorite Factory (and Ceramic Bowls)
Truth is, I don’t visit many factories in any given year. But this one should be on everybody’s list. Heath Tile are still making it like they used to, but at the same time introducing new designs. They are not cheap, but you have them forever (if you are careful!).
www.heathceramics.com

Heath Ceramics

Favorite Porcelain Artist
Paul went to high school in the Midlands with Joanna Howells. We saw her briefly at the holidays a year ago, and the house she shares with her partner Tony is a perfect cozy Welsh cottage. For Christmas, Pauly got a new piece! Also, you can read an interview with her on my blog at
www.designfaith.blogspot.com
www.joannahowells.co.uk

Pauly's new gift from Joanna Howells

Favorite New Car
Zipcar! I no longer own a car. I miss my car, but I am saving money. I should say instead of giving money to the insurance company and the repair shop, I am giving it to the IRS. Now, my favorite Zipcar from this year was a Mini Cooper. Tempting…
www.zipcar.com

Favorite Massage
Esalen, of course. All my worries went away while the Big Sur waves crashed outside. Cherie’s perfect birthday gift!
www.esalen.org

Esalen

Favorite Art Farm
One of the highlights of April was the visit to the Oliver Ranch in Sonoma County, where Steve Oliver led a tour and shared his thoughts about collecting experiences. Although he must give this tour several times a year, it felt fresh. Find a tour to join.
www.oliverranchfoundation.org

Martin Puryear at the favorite art farm

Favorite Shop
I don’t shop much any more. My all time favorite shop was Design Research. Jane Thompson and Alexandra Lange wrote a wonderful history of the store, which I blogged about and reviewed for The Architect’s Newspaper. Some of my happiest moments this year were looking at that book. Although Design Research no longer exists you can find some of the spirit of the store in a little shop in Gualala, California (just north of Sea Ranch) owned by two D/R alums, Maynard and Lu Lyndon. They don’t have room for all the great furniture but there are lots of Marimekko clothes, bags, and linens. The Lyndons are not stuck in the past but have updated the vision with contemporary crafts and an art gallery. Not only is everything beautiful they are great shopkeepers. Look for a blog entry about them in the near future! We got to visit with them on New Years Day while visiting our favorite place to ring in New Years.
www.placewares.com

Placewares

Favorite Place to Ring in New Years
It’s Sea Ranch, where architects planned a utopian eco-friendly place and got a semirural suburbia by the ocean. But we still like the bluff walks, good architecture, and old friends.

Sea Ranch

And my favorite place to spend Christmas (besides anywhere with Paul's Aunt Jenny and Uncle Graham and their kids) is Carmel with Cherie and David and their family.  Also one of my favorite non-boogie boarding beaches.  History, white sand, and a Frank Lloyd house at one end. What's not to love?

Favorite regular beach (Carmel)

Favorite Composer
A good place to close is my favorite composer.  And best buddy and partner, Paul Crabtree.

Pauly with stars in his eyes