photography

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I hope you’re enjoying the June issue of Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles, one that we dedicated to exceptional examples of global and modern style. Couple that with all the modern fanfare to be found at Modern Atlanta 2010 earlier in the month, and you can guarantee that modern furnishings and decorative objects have been capturing my attention more than ever. I thought I’d share a few of the cool modern pieces that have come my way. Which are your favorites?


Stone Forest‘s new Siena bathroom collection—available in Atlanta exclusively at PDI Plumbing—includes the fabulously curvy Adagia chaise lounge in Siena silver-grey marble. The literature on this collection suggests keeping it in the bathroom to take your daily rituals to another level, but I think it would be just as amazing in an outdoor setting, perhaps surrounded by overgrown container gardens.


Manutti is a manufacturer of incredibly chic, contemporary outdoor furnishings, available locally in Atlanta through Walters Wicker. Though the company’s appropriately titled “Atlanta” collection is gorgeous in its own right, I also love how elements of the new Zendo modular collection can be configured for the ultimate lounging experience—including a makeshift outdoor bed for lounging all day in the sun.


I’ve been eyeing the Porro Synapse dining table by Jean Marie Massaud, available in Atlanta at the Domus International showroom, for a while. It’s a fantastic combination of sleek steel and an almost organic motif. It would make a great oversize desk, as well! Just think about the possibilities of a desk chair to go with it.


A collaboration between McLaughlin Collection—a maker of fine acrylic furniture—and photographer Richard Bettinger, these new C. Tables have a sleek, versatile shape and inset panels featuring Bettinger’s light photography. They’re available in black and white Lucite and a variety of accompanying images. Bettinger’s “Light Speed” photograph, set on a black table, is pictured above. Available locally at Smith Grubbs & Associates.


Tracy Glover, a Rhode Island-based glass artisan, designs these fantastic mouth-blown glass lamps. She offers an expansive inventory but can also make them custom in any color and a variety of shapes. Lampshade fabric and color—as well as metal hardware and more—are also customizable. These sort of remind me of a less expensive, more contemporary version of the Venetian Murano glass lamps of the mid-century. You can pick up these beauties locally through Cantoni for around $925.


I recently happened upon these stunning Harman/Kardon computer speakers, which look like chunky, sparkling cut crystal. They’re actually made from bulletproof glass, which is a cool enough selling point in itself. For audiophiles, the sound quality is a dream. For design enthusiasts, they’re beyond glamorous—more than you’d ever expect from an everyday electronic. Order a pair of them—with woofer—through the Apple Store or at store.apple.com/us for $1000.

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Bid on the Best

Don’t miss the SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala 2010 at the Atlanta campus this Thursday, April 8. The festivities kick off at 6:30 p.m. with a VIP collector’s preview reception—and an exclusive buy it now option—plus select artist appearances, for $275. The silent auction and cocktail reception follows at 7:30 p.m. Enjoy all the artful fare, conviviality, and the chance to win more than 100 pieces of original, one-of-a-kind SCAD artwork for just $150. Paintings, photography, sculpture and jewelry are up for bids.

Style icon Cornelia Guest has been named honorary chair of this year’s Scholarship Gala. Fashion performances and select garments from SCAD’s C.Z. Guest Costume Collection will be on display, as well.

Reserve your tickets by phone at (404) 253-2728 or by e-mail at rnort@scad.edu.

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Picture 17

A portrait of author, chef and television personality Julia Child taken for our 1998 book

When my cousin Nora Feller and I were writing and shooting the photography for our breast cancer book, Portraits of Hope: Conquering Breast Cancer: 52 Inspirational Stories of Strength, we of course used every contact at our disposal to get to Mrs. Julia Child. We landed a contact at Food & Wine magazine who did the necessaries and we were soon booked to land in Boston. Grabbing an assistant almost on arrival, we made for the Child residence and, once there—despite the slow march into late afternoon—Julia (as we must call her) insisted that she cook for us at once—as we must be “starving from our journey.” As she chopped and whisked she talked candidly about her cancer and her great love for her husband, whose presence could be felt in the homey, traditional home she still presided over. Every room was utterly unpretentious and strewn with family photos, books and the detritus of two long and happy lives. Julia continued to cook away while charming me (alone while cousin Nora set up the photo shoot in the living room) and regaled me with her self-deprecation and down-home wit.

A far cry from her Junior League beginnings, she had amazed herself (and me) with the voyage of her life and the tap, tap of fame that came unexpectedly and without seeking. As she finished preparing my meal she set the dishes upon the table and turned away. But some sixth sense told her not to march off from the kitchen to where the cameraman was waiting. She turned and said, “Marcia, you aren’t eating?” And I replied, “Oh, I am so sorry; I don’t eat eggs. I have about a zillion food aversions.” She turned in mock imperiousness and said, “Marcia, I don’t think anyone has turned down food in my kitchen… I’ll make you bacon.” The eggs slid into the garbage. We laughed as her assistant raced in and said, “They just called from a magazine and need a new head shot,” to which she responded gleefully, “Tell them we have a world-class photographer here and that she will shoot me.” Nora, it seemed, would be getting that payment and it was sorely needed as we had poured much of our own money into the project. With that, Julia turned to go to the living room and winked.

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