Sunday, February 24, 2008

Welcome to the Haute Dollhouse - A homage to Jonathan Adler by Michael Williams

Meeting talented people has been one of the many joys of collecting fashion dolls. Meeting people like Michael Williams is an honour. His talent in creating exquisite dioramas, that not only look realistic, but are bristling with taste and style, is unique. I will present here his amazing diorama inspired by the interior designer Jonathan Adler, letting Michael talk about it in his own words.


Michael: I was never your "normal," or perhaps I should say "ordinary," little boy who liked to play with action figures and toy cars in the sandbox. I got my first Barbie, Sweet 16, when I was 5 years old, and progressed to Malibu Barbie & Ken, Pretty Changes, and Superstar Barbie before selling them all off at a garage sale by the age of 10. As a child, I simply loved the escapist fantasy of these glamorous characters in their Dynasty gowns going on James Bond-like adventures in their bright yellow plastic mobile home, since we couldn't afford the A-frame Dreamhouse, back then. They were an outlet for my imagination, and I got to be the costume & set designer, hair stylist, screen writer and director, all in the confines of my small-town, Midwestern, middle-class, orange shag-rug-carpeted living room.


"BEFORE" living room scene
Superman Ken in LB BOYZ polo shirt with Sleepytime Gal reproduction
Barbie in vintage blue "Belle" dress; vintage sofa set found on eBay
for $15; Gloria table lamps repainted by photographer; picture frames
found at flea market. Thin sheet magnets adhered to back of all items
on wall; diorama magnetic walls by Room With A View; parquet hardwood
floor from Dreamstime.com royalty-free stock photo, printed on 13x19
inch Epson R1800 panoramic photo printer; Barbie and RE-MENT
miniatures abound.


The first time a doll resurfaced in my adult life was right before moving to New York in 1994. I was on a yearlong fellowship studying studio photography in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, when my best friend there gave me a Dutch-talking Barbie, complete with little wooden shoes. He and his boyfriend would often buy cheap play line dolls to repaint and restyle as their favourite silver screen icons, like Joan Crawford or Bettie Davis. And so I had my first introduction to grown men who play with dolls, and not the inflatable kind.

When I returned to the US and moved to New York, I discovered the Barbie on Madison boutique at FAO Schwarz and fell in love with retro reproductions of the very first #1 ponytail Barbie dolls from 1959, and I got a couple as novelties for my bookshelf, because I love vintage 1950's and 60's film and fashions, personified by actresses like Audrey Hepburn and Doris Day. An older friend once recounted nostalgically how he remembers when there was a time that you could HEAR a woman enter a room just by the ruffling sound of her crinoline petticoats. I enjoy escaping back through time to that era, where women wore pearls and little white gloves and both men and women wore hats, and these dolls can personify our idealized vision of that bygone Camelot.


This presentation gets its name from my September 2007 HAUTE DOLL Magazine feature on diorama doll house furnishings, and it serves as a laudatory homage to Bravo TOP DESIGN guru Jonathan Adler (age 41),who first fell in love with ceramics at age 12 in summer camp, but took a brief detour in the movie business before launching his initial line of pottery at Barney's in 1994. The line was an instant success, and in 1998 he opened his first store in Manhattan's SoHo neighbourhood, which has since been followed by several boutiques across the country, as he expanded his line into a glamorous new furniture collection, along with bedding, towels, and pillows (some of which are licensed and carried by Bed, Bath and Beyond and department stores). He even redesigned the Le Parker Meridien Hotel in Palm Springs, now a hot resort vacation destination.

Jonathan Adler catalogue photo

First, I thought I'd start off with the inspiration for my dioramas - from the catalogue of Jonathan Adler.

Jonathan Adler catalogue photo

Many of the pieces in the feature come from either bargain vintage finds on ebay (the centrepiece red corduroy sofa set cost only $15)or IKEA's line of doll house furniture that closely match Adler's lacquer-finished end tables, along with items like the wall screen from Barbie's My Scene and Fashion Fever line, accessorized with many simple and easy handmade projects like the Adler-inspired pillows (printed onto ink-jet friendly fabric), star burst mirrors of painted toothpicks and foam core, a George Nelson clock made of pins and paper, vases and lamps from fluted metal beads that closely resemble the gourd-inspired signature pottery of Adler, and an Adler place mat that doubles as an area rug.

Jonathan Adler catalogue photo

RED, WHITE & BLUE living room

Repainted black IKEA picture frames; all images by French fashion
designer Rene Gruau (he is pictured in small horizontal white photo
frame on shelf); white plastic "lacquer" look nesting side tables and
bookshelf - IKEA doll house furniture; lamps made from metal beads;
authentic Jonathan Adler-designed vases, lampshades, books from
Bozart Kaleidoscope Doll house accessory set; TV, record player -
REMENT; radio vintage Barbie by Mattel; wooden ashtray by Carolyn
Allen; Miss Honey, Silkstone Barbie accessory set.



Silkstone Fashion Designer Barbie (with gelled-back bangs) does
Gloria Vanderbilt in reproduction Commuter Set jacket with vintage
crest and "Open Road" vintage Barbie pants; pillows based on Jonathan
Adler designs, created in Photoshop and printed on 8.5x11 inch ink jet
printer fabric.


Vintage Allan head on VOLKS articulated body wearng vintage "Victory
Dance" Ken fashion, area rug - Jonathan Adler placemat from Bed, Bath
& Beyond.


IKEA dollhouse nesting tables, lamp of metal beads, Integrity Toys
Monsieur Z Fly Girl stainless steel cocktail shaker set and tray,
custom-painted vintage Barbie phone, Fashion Fever Barbie wall
screen, custom painted Gloria ice bucket as planter with fake fauna.



LIGHT BLUE CIRCLES living room

Blue circular wallpaper based on Jonathan Adler design; George Nelson-
style wall clock made of metal ring, foam core circle, push pins and
paper cut-out hands; Barbie My Scene coffee table, cordless phone and
customized floor lamp, Hobby Lobby photo frame chair, RE-MENT
teacups, bead lamp; area rug is Jonathan Adler place mat from Bed Bath
& Beyond.




Hobby Lobby photo frame chair (about $10, purchased on-line from
another board member, since there is no store in New York City I can
get to); Barbie My Scene table and customized lamp (I combined two
lamps to get this stand-alone upright); Barbie phone, RE-MENT tea
set; George Nelson clock made from foam core, pins and beads.


VITRA miniature white Panton chair (similar to the new Dynamite Girls
chairs, which are a better bargain, as VITRA can be quite expensive),
Barbie lamp and Fashion Fever screen, Bratz side table, IKEA
doll house chest of drawers, white enamelled and silver beads and wall
ornaments.



IKEA doll house chest of drawers, white enamelled and silver beads and
wall ornaments, Barbie lamp, star burst wall mirrors made of foam core
circles with metal rings, Mylar reflective adhesive paper, and
metallic spray-painted toothpicks.



Black & White Living Room (below from left) My Scene Barbie china cabinet with RE-MENT china set (top shelf), beads (middle) and custom painted Barbie My Scene stereo and lamp; cruelty-free (and pet-friendly!) zebra "skin" rug from ink jet printed fabric glued on black felt base, vintage Allan head on VOLKS articulated body in vintage houndstooth sport coat and fashion, repainted black flea market picture frames with added magnetic backing, custom ink jet printed pillows based on Jonathan Adler designs, Barbie My Scene repainted coffee table and RE-MENT tea set, vintage Barbie Go-Togethers end table with custom printed tabletop liner, white enamelled metal dollhouse birdcage (severed from original attached table bottom, lined with felt), Hobby Lobby photo frame chair, Silkstone Lingerie #3 Barbie doll in I Love Lucy Barbie fashion, Haute Traveler Susie doll in handmade reproduction Francie Japanese exclusive fashion by Joan Hudson; black and white wallpaper scanned in from fabric and printed on my Epson panoramic photo printer (about 3 pieces of 13x19 inch paper fitted together for each room width).

And some detail photos below:


China cabinet detail - looks so realistic!

The birdcage is one of the amazing details put by Michael into this exquisite diorama.

Even seasoned decorators have a lot to learn from Michael.

All photos are by Michael Williams: check him out at: MAWPhoto and also at his Flickr album.

RESOURCE LIST:

Room With A View magnetic diorama from Cleabella

Carolyn Allen
Mod-O-Rama Fashion Doll Furniture
cda311@myway.com

Matt Trujillo
Custom OOAK reflocked Ken dolls
rubbermatt2000@yahoo.com

Joan Hudson
Reproduction Francie fashion
jhudson1101@hotmail.com

B&J Fabric (for black and white pattern on wallpaper)
525 Seventh Avenue, 2nd fl at 38th St
New York, NY
(212) 354-8150

TOHO Shoji Bead Store
990 Avenue Of The Americas/36-37th St
New York, NY
(212) 967-2088


Thursday, February 14, 2008

The Dollhouse: an interview about this blog

It has been quite a while since I have properly posted in this blog, I promise it will soon change. Meanwhile, I got interviewed in a Greek magazine, SOUL, about my blog, by my friend Indiktos. Below are the scans of the two page spread I got in the magazine, with photos of my dolls (most of them published in this very blog), a portrait of mine with one of my dolls (Tonner's Ghost of Christmas Future). After the scans, you can find the whole interview translated in English. I hope you like it.


Dolls in the first page are (from top, left to right): with me is Tonner's Ghost of Christmas Future, Franklin Mint's Vivien Leigh in Gone With The Wind, Fashion Roylaty's Vanessa Perrin, Fashion Royalty's Agnes Von Weiss, Tonner's Mameha from Memoirs Of A Geisha


Dolls pictures in the second page (from top left to right): Franklin Mint's Princess Diana, Franklin Mint's Elizabeth Taylor, Fashion Royalty's Vanessa Perrin.


BLOG & ROLL by Kostas Koutsaris, Photography: Natasha Masadi, Stratos Bacalis

The dollhouse
fashiondollchronicles.blogspot.com

25.000 Greek blogs need luck or hours of surfing to go through and discover addresses that hide something more than views or confessions. The Fashion Doll Chronicles: this is the English language blog of Stratos Bacalis', a collective explosion that will send you directly to the valley of the dolls.


What are fashion dolls? I do not have or, better say.... had any idea:

Fashion dolls are dolls of limited edition, dressed in very good quality or, rarely, porcelain.

DAE's Monty

To tell you the truth, I only know about Barbies. (laughter)

I only knew Barbies too, but not the collectibles, the ones that are sold everywhere. In 2000 I discovered, through an advertisement in a foreign magazine, that the Franklin Mint company was selling a 16 inch doll lookalike of Olivia Newton-John στο Grease. As a big fan, I had to have her. Then I found out there were more…

Franklin Mint's Olivia Newton-John as Sandy in Grease

What dolls are you collecting?

Quite a variety. I started out with movie stars: Olivia, Liz Taylor, Marilyn Monroe, Rita Hayworth, Greta Garbo, Vivien Leigh, Marlene Dietrich, Lucille Ball, Audrey Hepburn. I also like dolls from a particular period (especially 18ος -19ος αιώνας), as well as the Gene Marshall series which are mainly in the 40-50ς. From the smaller dolls, only the Fashion Royalty series by designer Jason Wu and certain Barbies, like the Versace one. I have a fondness for Asian ladies, they...fascinate me.

Fashion Royalty's In Bloom Vanessa Perrin

And your favourite?

Ah, there are so many… From 16 inch ones, I guess Olivia and my Geishas (from the Memoirs Of A Geisha film). From 12 inch dolls any incarnation of Kyori Sato from the Fashion Royalty line.

Franklin Mint's Clark Gable as Rhett Butler in Gone With The Wind

How did you start the blog about your collection?

This particular hobby, apart from being relatively expensive, has a certain difficulty: if you live far from shops selling these dolls (which is anywhere apart from certain American cities) you depend on the Internet to get anything you want. So you do not get to see what you buy first-hand. So I though how much I'd like someone to describe to me how the doll that I want to buy is, as well as show me real and not re-touched photographs of it. I realised I could do it as well as a recording of my collection. That is how I started out, having already had some experience from my other blog about design.

Integrity and Mel Odom's Gene Marshall

Are there lots of people dealing with this particular hobby?

Mainly in the USA and Japan. The access to shops is easier there, you do not have to pay exorbitant postal costs, etc. Fewer in Europe, but more passionate and usually with better aesthetics and taste. In Greece I know there is a lady in Athens that also collects similar dolls; I do not know of another person, maybe there is one. I have not met anyone yet in the relative Internet forums.

Integrity and Mel Odom's Madra Lord

Do you have feedback from collectors?

Yes, and not only them! Otherwise maybe I would not keep on doing it. They leave comments or e-mail me, thanking me because they got to better see a particular doll. Others tell me that I made them buy a certain doll after seeing it in my blog. The weird thing is that this blog has usually more traffic than my original design one.

Tonner's Sydney Chase

I know you got an award for this blog.

A web-magazine, Runway Doll, especially for doll collectors, made an homage to my blog in its first issue.

Was that your best moment?

It felt great, although I think my best moment was when I interviewed a Thai painter and clothes maker for dolls. The response from him and my readers was touching and I really enjoyed it.

And the worst?

When you preview the new doll lines from manufacturers, you want to get ten dolls and you can afford only one (laughter)!

Are you planning to get more active in this particular field?

Yes it is in my future plans. I have already talked about a fashion collection based on my designs, in a very limited edition. Also there is the idea of making an exhibition with my collection. All is a matter of time, right timing and organization



*Stratos Bacalis works as a designer at Tetragon but also as a freelancer, and you can find him at http://sandman-chronicles.blogspot.com/

The doll photos posted within the translation are from those that did not get published, all taken by me.