Would you like to see this page in English? Click here.


または
1-Clickで注文する場合は、サインインをしてください。
または
Amazonプライム会員に適用。注文手続きの際にお申し込みください。詳細はこちら
こちらからも買えますよ
この商品をお持ちですか? マーケットプレイスに出品する
The World of Madeleine Castaing
 
イメージを拡大
 
Kindle化リクエスト
このタイトルのKindle化をご希望の場合、こちらをクリックしてください。

Kindle をお持ちでない場合、こちらから購入いただけます。 Kindle 無料アプリのダウンロードはこちら

The World of Madeleine Castaing [ハードカバー]

Jacques Grange , Emily Evans Eerdmans , Frederic Castaing

参考価格: ¥ 6,300
価格: ¥ 6,244 通常配送無料 詳細
OFF: ¥ 56 (1%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
1点在庫あり。(入荷予定あり) 在庫状況について
この商品は、Amazon.co.jp が販売、発送します。 ギフトラッピングを利用できます。
多読の一助に
英語学習にぴったり、10万冊以上の中から自分のレベルに合った洋書が探せる「英語 難易度別リーディングガイド」 がオープン!

会員なら、この商品は10%Amazonポイント還元 (ポイントが表示されている場合は、表示ポイント+10%還元)。

キャンペーンおよび追加情報


商品の説明

内容説明

The inimitable style of renowned French interior designer Madeleine Castaing, chronicled in-depth for the first time. While many were drumming to the beat of modernism in the early- and mid-twentieth century, French antiquaire and decorator Madeleine Castaing created her own look that was a unique blend of neoclassicism, Proustian romanticism, and pure wit. Her distinctive aesthetic vision has inspired tastemakers on both sides of the Atlantic, and her devoteesboth then and noware legion. Ocelot carpeting, opaline blue, "coolie" lampshades, and an eclectic mix of neoclassical furnishings ranging from English Regency to Napoleon III all formed part of the vocabulary of "le style Castaing." This lavishly illustrated volumethe first on her workexplores in-depth the elements of her style, and examines how she crafted interiors so emotive that visitors felt that they had stepped into a Balzac novel or a Proustian recollection. Her entire life and career are chronicled, from her early years in Montparnasse, the epicenter of artistic activity in Paris, to her incomparable country house Lves and her legendary shop on rue Jacob in Paris.

著者について

Emily Evans Eerdmans received her master’s degree in fine and decorative arts from Sotheby’s Institute of Art in London, and has pursued her passion for antique furniture while working for Partridge Fine Arts, Devenish, and Hyde Park Antiques in New York. She has written articles for the Furniture History Journal and Connoisseur’s Quarterly. Her previous books include Classic English Design and Antiques and Regency Redux.

Jacques Grange
is a world-famous interior decorator who worked with Madeleine Castaing in his early career.

Frdric Castaing
is Madeleine's grandson and is an historical autographs dealer in Paris.

登録情報


カスタマーレビュー

Amazon.co.jp にはまだカスタマーレビューはありません
星5つ
星4つ
星3つ
星2つ
星1つ
Amazon.com で最も参考になったカスタマーレビュー (beta)
Amazon.com: 5つ星のうち 4.7  9件のカスタマーレビュー
84 人中、83人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 5.0 The most beautiful -- and inspiring -- book about decor I've seen in years 2010/10/26
By Jesse Kornbluth - (Amazon.com)
形式:ハードカバー
What a beautiful book.

No. That's too little praise. What a work of art. What an inspiration.

Look at the American decorating books of the last decade, and what you mostly see is how important it was for the clients --- and their compliant decorators --- to spend tons of money. And they didn't spend it just on the walls and rugs and art and furniture. They went right on to the little things, the chotchkes. Every possible surface has stuff on it; these rooms are busy. Your eye darts around, looking for an idea that centers the space, but there is none. Indeed, none was intended --- the overarching concept here was, apparently, to overwhelm the visitor.

Now let us open "The World of Madeleine Castaing" and consider any of the 275 color and black-and-white illustrations. They're not all the work of Madame Castaing, but the rooms designed by others have her sensibility: simplicity, boldness, originality. The color combinations are like nothing you've ever seen. Often the rooms are almost empty. Instead of a framed painting, you might find that Jean Cocteau has drawn on a wall.

Why isn't Madeleine Castaing a household name?

Because she's impossible to describe in a sound bite.

She was French --- born near Chartres in 1894, dead at age 98 in 1992 --- but you can't really say she was a French decorator. "I can take inspiration from a scene in Chekhov as from a dress by Goya," she said, and she wasn't kidding. In one of her rooms, you could be in Russia, in another room London. Most of the time, the mood she created was timeless, poetic, a fantasy. As she said, "There is always beauty in mystery."

She was, as you might guess, quite a character. Daughter of the engineer who built the Chartres railway station, she was 15 when she saw the 36-year-old man she wanted to marry. She walked right up to him and, in record time, sealed the deal.

In Paris, the Castaings knew everyone, did everything. Most importantly, they started collecting. And not from the approved list. One day they saw students throwing rocks at a gallery window. They moved closer; in the window was a Modigliani nude. They stared for an hour --- and then went in and bought it.

Her husband was tall, handsome and aristocratic. To make sure he didn't stray, she bought a house in Lèves, a lovely village a few miles from Chartres, and set about personalizing it.

World War II took the Castaings by surprise. "We were living in our own world --- we wouldn't even open the letters we got in the mail," she recalled. "All of a sudden soldiers in blue-green got through to the garden and wrecked the bed. My poetic universe had suddenly collapsed."

The Germans occupied the house. The Castaings and their two children moved back to Paris. And as the war ended, Madame Castaing opened her first boutique.

Never had there been a shop like this. For one thing, it did not look like a store --- it was a series of rooms that looked as if someone lived in them. And no two rooms were alike. Indeed, no single room had an identifying theme or style. English Regency tables, Swedish chairs, a Russian couch --- her rooms didn't make statements, they told stories.

The most amusing story about her shop was that Madame Castaing had only modest interest in commerce. As Emily Evans Eerdmans notes, "She opened a shop not because she wanted to sell, but because she liked to buy and make poetic settings out of her acquisitions." So her prices were stratospheric --- she took the real value of her wares and just added a few zeroes. And if she didn't like you, she wouldn't sell to you at any price. On the other hand, a child who told her that a piece was beautiful could have it for almost nothing.

By the 1950s, Madame Castaing was the most admired decorator in Paris. (The gorgeous wallpaper she designed --- there are four dazzling pages of those papers in the book --- is still available, and still looking fresh.) Here too she was a one-off; she gave her clients the rooms she thought they needed, not necessarily the rooms they asked for. By the evidence of this book, there were no complaints.

Until her death, I never made a trip to Paris without visiting 30 rue Jacob, her final location. Her shop was on the first floor; from the street, it looked like an apartment with picture windows. Madame was often on the scene. She was as idiosyncratic as her antiques --- her lips were flaming red, her eyelashes were pasted on, and she wore a wig that announced itself as a fake because she kept it on with a black elastic chin strap. And as she had for decades, she would dress to match her upholstery.

Her family kept the shop going for a decade after her death, and then, in 2004, the contents of her residences and store were auctioned. Life moves on; now there's a branch of Ladurée dispensing pastries at 30 rue Jacob.

You can look at Madeleine Castaing simply as a decorator, and, if you're interested in lovely rooms, you can learn quite a lot from her. Or you can leave the narrowness of occupational identity behind and consider her as an artist and a teacher. What did she have to teach? In essence, this: "Don't be intimidated by audacity. Be audacious --- but with taste... Don't get taken in by fashion. A secret: love your house; love makes miracles."

That's not decorating talk. It's something else. As is this book.
27 人中、27人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 4.0 It's about time 2010/11/8
By jeff spain - (Amazon.com)
形式:ハードカバー|Amazon.co.jpで購入済み
It's about time someone published a book in English about the incomparable Madeleine Castaing. I remember reading years ago about an eccentric French decorator who was in her 90s and presided over her Paris shop wearing full makeup and a wig with a flesh-colored chin strap. Going on this information alone, before I had ever laid eyes on any of her rooms, I adored her. Later on, of course, I learned the originality that had first endeared her to me was realized fully in the decoration of the rooms at Maison de Leves and her other residences. The book, while informative and certainly a worthy addition to any collection of interior design volumes, is not particularly well-designed. The script font used to highlight certain passages is dated, large and distracting. Some of the photos are grainy and soft, particularly irksome since I have seen many of these same images reproduced clearly and in sharp focus in other publications ("Paris Interiors" for example). I suppose this is permissible, given Madame Castaing's penchant for displaying her interiors through a gauzy haze of filtered light and dust, but the contrast between the soft- and sharp-focus images is a bit jarring. Still, if you love the lady, you must have the book.

Addition on 1/31/11: I would like to add that, several months after the release of this book and after several readings, I find it to be one of the most fascinating books on interior design that I have ever read. The author's insight and knowledge of Madame Castaing is total and profound. The book has literally opened my eyes and changed my focus on the interior design of my home; once a strict devotee of Art Nouveau, I am now seeking out examples of English Regency and Napoleon III. I happily canceled the scheduled painting of my flat and now make sure all the Coolie lampshades are prominently askew before turning off the lights each evening.
25 人中、23人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 4.0 Beautiful Photographs, Hideous Prose 2010/11/5
By Roger L. Walker - (Amazon.com)
形式:ハードカバー
The photographs are stunning, and I can understand why so many of the rooms are by people who either bought things from the boutique or listened to advice from Madame Castaing. Interior design in our century is transitory by its very nature. Fine designers rarely leave their own rooms alone, much less those of their clients. Honestly, I am not surprised at the paucity of interiors actually by Madeleine Castaing.

I did read the book in one evening, and I wondered if its editor actually read it herself. To say that the text is fulsome and overly familiar is a vast understatement. It reminds me of the society columns in Southern newspapers of my youth. It's as if the writer and the person she refers to as "Madeleine" and the empress she knows as "Josephine" are all very best friends. It's one gush after another. Many of the sentences have a subject, an unnessary adverb, the verb itself, followed by a lengthy ramble. However, I actually would buy it for the illustrations alone. Because I am an embittered old man, I know I will enjoy reading the text again, next time with a red pencil or three.
これらのレビューは参考になりましたか?   ご意見はクチコミでお聞かせください。

クチコミ

クチコミは、商品やカテゴリー、トピックについて他のお客様と語り合う場です。お買いものに役立つ情報交換ができます。
この商品のクチコミ一覧
内容・タイトル 返答 最新の投稿
まだクチコミはありません

複数のお客様との意見交換を通じて、お買い物にお役立てください。
新しいクチコミを作成する
タイトル:
最初の投稿:
サインインが必要です
 

クチコミを検索
すべてのクチコミを検索
   


リストマニア

リストを作成

関連商品を探す


フィードバック


Amazon.co.jpのプライバシー ステートメント Amazon.co.jpの発送情報 Amazon.co.jpでの返品と交換