Vogue Living: Houses, Gardens, People

Hardcover
from $0.00

Author: Hamish Bowles

ISBN-10: 0307266222

ISBN-13: 9780307266224

Category: General & Miscellaneous Architecture

This unique book of thirty-six spectacular houses and gardens—whose owners come from the worlds of fashion, music, art, and society—draws not only on stories that have appeared in the pages of Vogue and Vogue Living over the past two decades but also on images that have never before been published. Vogue Living: Houses, Gardens, People takes you to these style-makers’ private realms around the world, captured by such celebrated photographers as Miles Aldridge, Cecil Beaton, Jonathan Becker,...

Search in google:

This unique book of thirty-six spectacular houses and gardens—whose owners come from the worlds of fashion, music, art, and society—draws not only on stories that have appeared in the pages of Vogue and Vogue Living over the past two decades but also on images that have never before been published. Vogue Living: Houses, Gardens, People takes you to these style-makers’ private realms around the world, captured by such celebrated photographers as Miles Aldridge, Cecil Beaton, Jonathan Becker, Eric Boman, Oberto Gili, François Halard, Horst P. Horst, Annie Leibovitz, Sheila Metzner, Mario Testino, Tim Walker, and Bruce Weber, among many others. Their dazzling photographs bring to life interiors and exteriors, modern and classical, that are both inspiring and transporting. Writers like Hamish Bowles, Joan Juliet Buck, Dodie Kazanjian, Eve MacSweeney, Julia Reed, Marina Rust, and Vicki Woods take us behind the scenes to give us an intimate view of the owners and how they live.Here are Madonna’s romantic rural retreat in the depths of the English countryside and the Oscar de la Renta’s coral-stone Palladian mansion on the coast of the Dominican Republic; Michael and Eva Chow’s epic Los Angeles manse and shoe maestro Christian Louboutin’s magical houseboat on the Nile; Donna Karan’s Zenlike Manhattan aerie and legendary tastemaker Marella Agnelli’s enchanted villa and gardens in the Palmeraie of Marrakesh; Julian and Olatz Schnabel’s operatic downtown loft and childrenswear designer Rachel Riley’s miniature château on the Loire; celebrated landscape gardener Fernando Caruncho’s innovative Spanish gardens and Houghton, David Cholmondeley’s magnificent English stately home; Janet de Botton’s idyllic Provençal estate; and four decades of Karl Lagerfeld’s endlessly surprising houses, both innovative and palatial.Lavishly illustrated in full color, Vogue Living: Houses, Gardens, People is an irresistible voyage through some of the world’s most beautiful and private gardens and interiors.Library JournalBusiness success brings privilege. Celebrity, which can feed business success, brings privilege. Large inheritance brings privilege. Entry to the privileged class can also be inherited. This hefty volume is a robust tribute in scrapbook form to the homes, rooms, gardens, lawns, clothes, fabrics, colors, art, and so on of privileged people. The images celebrate grandeur where more had better be more to prove the point. These are fine photographs of luxury-beautiful lifestyles in beautiful wrappers. But quality photography is hardly the point here. This is a peepshow exposing stone, mahogany, rugs from heaven, art from the gods, and the highest level of our species calling this rarified world home and lolling around inside it in front of a camera lens. But instead of recommending this book, this reviewer suggests subscribing to Vogue magazine instead, because it's at least good for the economy.-David Bryant, New Canaan Lib., CT Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

\ Library JournalBusiness success brings privilege. Celebrity, which can feed business success, brings privilege. Large inheritance brings privilege. Entry to the privileged class can also be inherited. This hefty volume is a robust tribute in scrapbook form to the homes, rooms, gardens, lawns, clothes, fabrics, colors, art, and so on of privileged people. The images celebrate grandeur where more had better be more to prove the point. These are fine photographs of luxury-beautiful lifestyles in beautiful wrappers. But quality photography is hardly the point here. This is a peepshow exposing stone, mahogany, rugs from heaven, art from the gods, and the highest level of our species calling this rarified world home and lolling around inside it in front of a camera lens. But instead of recommending this book, this reviewer suggests subscribing to Vogue magazine instead, because it's at least good for the economy.-David Bryant, New Canaan Lib., CT\ Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.\ \