SCAD Atlanta

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Of all the exquisite pageantries to behold at last Thursday’s SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala and Art Auction, one of the most shining displays was that of the fashions of C.Z. Guest, a 20th century socialite famed as much for her philanthropy as her acquaintances with such luminaries as Truman Capote, Ernest Hemingway and, through her marriage to polo champion Windsor Guest, his cousin Winston Churchill. Notably, she was also a friend of top designers, and over the years she amassed a collection of garments and accessories as extensive as it was inspired. 

Cornelia Guest, 2010 SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala Honorary Chair

C.Z.’s daughter Cornelia—dubbed the “Debutante of the Decade” by friend Andy Warhol in 1982—has retained her place in the limelight as an accomplished actress, decorated equestrian, philanthropist and entrepreneur boasting a new line of eco-friendly products. Five years after C.Z.’s passing in 2003, Guest donated more than 400 fashion objects, including gowns, coats, shoes, bags, sweaters, scarves and more to the permanent collection at the Savannah College of Art & Design in her honor.

Guest’s decision to choose SCAD was not taken lightly. She already admired the university’s equestrian program and had donated horses to it, so when it came time to find a final resting place for many of her mother’s finest clothes, she didn’t want them hanging in a closet or collecting dust in just any museum.

A silk brocade evening dress by Mainbocher (1890-1976), part of the C.Z. Guest Costume Collection at SCAD, on display at the SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala April 8, 2010. SCAD Photo/John McKinnon

A gold/silver tinsel lame and silk chiffon evening ensemble by Mainbocher (1890-1976) part of the C.Z. Guest Costume Collection at SCAD, on display at the SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala April 8, 2010. SCAD Photo/John McKinnon

The framboise evening coat by Mainbocher (1890-1976) part of the C.Z. Guest Costume Collection at SCAD, on display at the SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala April 8, 2010. SCAD Photo/John McKinnon

“I really wanted [the students] to learn because I think that the art of fashion is slowly leaving us… I wanted people to see how these clothes are so beautifully done and for [the students] to look at them and be inspired… because Mainbocher, Paco Rabanne, Adolfo—they were all couturiers and they really knew how to sew.”

Other design houses represented in the collection include Oscar de la Renta, Chanel, Lagerfeld, Balmain, Valentino, Yves Saint Laurent, Bill Blass and Givenchy, as well as two silk Delphos-style gowns designed by Mario Fortuny, which are still considered some of the rarest and most sought after in fashion because of the intricate pleating process Fortuny patented, but that has been lost through the decades. “You always wrap them; never hang them,” Guest notes. “These were wrapped in boxes of my mother’s and I’ll never forget the day I pulled out a box thinking ‘I wonder what’s in here,’ and it was Fortuny! Some really wonderful surprises came with going through these clothes.” 

A silk chiffon evening dress by Paco Rabanne (born 1934 in Spain) worn by Cornelia Guest, part of the C.Z. Guest Costume Collection at SCAD, on display at the SCAD Atlanta Scholarship Gala April 8, 2010. SCAD Photo/John McKinnon


Guest credits the quality of SCAD’s curation, along with the fact that university gives her free rein to copy the garments—or even whisk one away to wear for a special occasion—for her unwavering confidence in selecting the school for their safekeeping. 

“Tonight when I walked into the gala, and as I was talking to the students upstairs earlier and seeing the clothes on display this afternoon, and meeting Summer, who cares for them, I knew that I had made the right decision,” Guest explains. “President [Paula] Wallace is amazing. Everyone at SCAD is amazing. I’m so happy to be a part of it.”

C.Z. Guest’s fashions can be viewed in the Mélange d’Art Sélect exhibition at the SCAD Museum of Art at the Savannah College of Art and Design, Kiah Hall, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Savannah, Georgia. (912) 525-7191; scad.edu/museum

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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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Though it’s already well known for top-quality, eco-friendly furnishings, home accents, unique rugs and even interior design services, Verde Home on Atlanta’s Westside is embarking on yet another venture that will set it apart from the competition. In fact, it’s the store’s new design competition, precisely, that’s got insiders across town buzzing.


For the first-annual Verde Home Tibetan Rug Design Competition, SCAD students are asked to design original rugs much like the authentic woven Tibetan rugs that are found in Verde Home's in-store collection.

As Verde Home moves forward with its soon-to-debut line of proprietary handwoven Tibetan rugs dubbed “Verde Sole,” it’s also welcoming contributions by a talented group of design students from SCAD Atlanta. Aiming to bring the ancient art of rug weaving and the modern art of graphic design together, the inaugural Verde Home Tibetan Rug Design Competition will invite a class of approximately 15 design students to create original 24″ x 32″ carpet renderings that can be successfully translated into hand-woven rugs. The team at Verde Home, along with three to four judges hand-picked from the design community, will then evaluate the designs based on modernity, salability and the potential to execute the rug in 100 knots or fewer.

After an initial meeting at Verde Home on April 2, the students will return with their ideas one week later to procure design guidance and select colors, then submit their final renderings one week thereafter. The renderings and woven samples of the designs by the grand prize winner and five runners up will be presented at the MA10 Design Is Human & Modern Atlanta Home Tour Launch Night on June 1, and the top design will be implemented into a stunning 6′ x 9′ rug to be included as part of Verde Home’s in-store Tibetan rug collection.

AH&L blog readers can get involved, too! Visit the Verde Home booth at the Modern Atlanta Home Show to vote on the five runners up and determine the “Best in Show.” That student’s design will be woven into a 4′ x 6′ rug and also included in the store’s Tibetan rug gallery—yet another great reason to visit both this Westside home décor hotspot and one of the most highly anticipated design events of 2010.

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carpet-detail-1

Gallery Hops at SCAD Atlanta are free and open to the public, allowing you to view many of SCAD’s groundbreaking exhibits at no cost–even a free shuttle to the galleries and parking services are available at the SCAD Atlanta campus. Fortunately, one of these seasonal events lined up for this evening—with refreshments served at select galleries. Details below:
The ACA Gallery of SCAD Atlanta welcomes the work of Cao Fei (a Chinese artist currently shortlisted for the Guggenheim Foundation’s Hugo Boss Prise) presents “NO LAB on Tour” in partnership with Map Office, a Hong Kong-based husband-and-wife duo, who show dynamic and politically charged films and line drawings depicting a Katrina-battered New Orleans. Joining the exhibit is a carnival cart with computers linked to another of this artist’s projects, Second Life. Viewers can use the software to create their own avatar and navigate the virtual world created by this digital architect. The exhibits continue through February 7 but are on view for free tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. Woodruff Arts Center, 1280 Peachtree St.
Swing by Trois Gallery for Erick Swenson’s moving “Caught Captive” exhibition of naturalistic cast resin sculptures depicting allegorical, hybrid creatures frozen in dramatic moments of tension. His Whitney Museum-exhibited “Carpet Piece”—an intricatedly painted fiberglass sculpture desined to look like a woven carpet–is also on view. This exhibit continues through January 24 but is on view for free tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. SCAD Atlanta, 1600 Peachtree St.
Head to Gallery See at 3:30 p.m. for a gallery talk by the creators of “Horsepower”—a two-person painting exhibition by SCAD Savannah professor Gregory Eltringham and SCAD’s 2009 Visiting Artist Matt Blackwell. From cruiser cars to equine imagery, the works play off the double meaning of the title word and pay homage to a nostalgic American past. This exhibit continues through February 26 but is on view for free tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. Visit at 3:30 p.m. for the artists’ talk. SCAD Atlanta, 1600 Peachtree St.


Gallery Hops at SCAD Atlanta are free and open to the public, allowing you to view many of SCAD’s groundbreaking exhibits at no cost—even a free shuttle to the galleries and parking services are available at the SCAD Atlanta campus. Fortunately, one of these seasonal events is lined up for this evening—with refreshments served at select galleries. Details below:

The ACA Gallery of SCAD Atlanta welcomes the work of Cao Fei (a Chinese artist currently shortlisted for the Guggenheim Foundation’s Hugo Boss Prize), who presents “NO LAB on Tour”—a range of dynamic and politically charged films and line drawings depicting a Katrina-battered New Orleans. Joining the exhibit is a carnival cart with computers linked to another of this artist’s projects, Second Life. Viewers can use the software to create their own avatar and navigate the virtual world created by this digital architect. The exhibits continue through February 7 but are on view for free tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. Woodruff Arts Center, 1280 Peachtree St.

Swing by Trois Gallery for Erick Swenson’s moving “Caught Captive” exhibition (shown above) of naturalistic cast resin sculptures depicting allegorical, hybrid creatures frozen in dramatic moments of tension. His Whitney Museum-exhibited “Carpet Piece”—an intricatedly painted fiberglass sculpture designed to look like a woven carpet—is also on view. This exhibit continues through January 24 but is on view for free tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. SCAD Atlanta, 1600 Peachtree St.

Head to Gallery See at 3:30 p.m. for a gallery talk by the creators of “Horsepower”—a two-person painting exhibition by SCAD Savannah professor Gregory Eltringham and SCAD’s 2009 Visiting Artist, Matt Blackwell. From cruiser cars to equine imagery, the works play off the double meaning of the title word and pay homage to a nostalgic American past. This exhibit continues through February 26 but is on view for free tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. Visit at 3:30 p.m. for the artists’ talk. SCAD Atlanta, 1600 Peachtree St.

Visit SCAD Atlanta’s Events calendar for more info.

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