Friday, February 23, 2018

...doing it up in grand style!

As always on Enchanted Revelries, these 
images can be 'clicked' to see a larger file image which
allows you to examine details more closely!
 Margravial Opera House, Bayreuth, Germny, 2008
David Leventi photographs the interiors of world famous opera houses, capturing the ornate design of the architecture found inside. Leventi captures each opera house from the vantage of an operatic singer, photographing the space from the very center of the stage.
 Romanian Athenaeum, Bucharest, Romani, 2007
Leventi is not just aesthetically inspired by the opera houses he photographs, but also holds a familial connection to their structures. He is the son of two architects, and the project was started in remembrance of his grandfather Anton Gutman, a cantor trained after World War II by a famous Danish operatic tenor. Gutman performed for prisoners and officers while interned at a prisoner-of-war camp in the Soviet Union, and Leventi’s photographs are a gesture that aims to examine the spaces he was never able to perform.

 La Fenice Venice, Italy, 2008
Leventi’s photographic process imitates with light what a performer would do with his or her voice, light waves bouncing off of each architectural element and bringing the vast space back to the detailed image. Each photograph captures a view impossible to the naked eye, combing both line-of-sight and periphery imagery to produce images that wrap the viewer in the experience of each world famous theatre. Leventi is not just capturing the depth of the space, but also the extensive history lived within each performance hall.
Palais Garnier, Paris, France, 2009



Grand Drape, Palais Garnier, Paris, France, 2009
Leventi received his BFA in Photography from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri and is represented by galleries internationally. Leventi’s exhibition “David Leventi: Opera” will open May 7 at Rick Wester Fine Art in New York City, and his first monograph by the same name (published by Damiani) will be released this spring. (via Arch Atlas)
The Metropolitan Opera, New York City, United States, 2008
Teatro di Villa Aldrovandi Mazzacorati, Bologna, Italy, 2014
Mariinsky Theater St. Petersburg, Russia, 2009
 Teatro di San Carlo Naples, Italy, 2009

Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía Valencia, Spain, 2014
Amargosa Opera House, Death Valley Junction, California, United States, 2009
Curtain, Royal Swedish Opera, Stockholm, Sweden, 2008

 Be sure to see all the other participants' posts this week in

Now, go make something beautiful!
¸.•´
¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)(¸.•´
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥  
 
Stunning intimate gothic theatre in Paris, France.
We were in this theatre and I can't remember the name,
although I do remember the incredibly uncomfortable seating!
(Not photograpahed, obviously, by David Leventi!)








































Friday, February 16, 2018

... the World's Most Valuable Dollhouse

A couple years ago, upon discovery of the amazing Colleen Moore faery tale castle dollhouse in Chicago, I did a lengthy post about it. When built in the 1930's it cost 1/2 million dollars - now worth over 4 million dollars.
I have just discovered the Astolat Dollhouse (also known as Astolat Castle or Dollhouse Castle). Now, of course, these dollhouses are world famous for people in-the-know and traveling in doll and dollhouse circles. Having little interest in dollhouses, I'm not one of those. So, when I run across one of these astounding art pieces, I am flabbergasted and have to share with you - even though you may already be well aware of them! Astolat Dollhouse, a museum quality dollhouse is officially the most valuable dollhouse in the world, appraised for $8.5million. No - that's not a typo.
Built by the artist Elaine Diehl around 1980 and decorated with 10,000 items, the castle combines incredible craftsmanship with the finest materials.

Its great value is attributable to its hand-made intricate 800 pound, 9 foot tall, 29 room structure, as well as its extensive collection of the finest miniatures in the world including extravagant furnishings, with working fireplaces, stained glass panels, and 10,000 handcrafted miniature pieces that include original works of art, gold chandeliers, and the smallest antique Bible in the world.
 The Astolat Dollhouse Castle was once on display at the Tee Ridder division of the Nassau County Museum of Art (New York City. "The Castle is worth so much because of the structure itself," said Paula Gilhooley, the Museum's curator. Furthermore, "Astolat is one of the finest miniature structures in the world exhibiting a rare combination of sculpture, art, engineering and detail that sets it apart from anything in existence to date."
 Astolat "is a massive feat of construction and when you see it, it will leave you absolutely speechless"

The value also derives from its collections of high quality miniatures, including some made of gold, sterling silver, and many are antique and one of a kind.
 amazingly life-like miniature food served on sterling platters
the collection includes dozens of minature original oil paintings - some which 
were created with brushes of one or two hairs
real crystals line this desk, and in the back is a miniature frame
 with a hand made collection of miniature rare coins
Few other museum quality dollhouses meet such criteria.

When Astolat was first installed, the museum's curator stated "each room is decorated with furniture, tables, chairs, artwork and lighting made by artisans from around the world, and the materials are unique and expensive."  
 It weighs approximately 800 pounds. The interior consists of 29 rooms and adjacent areas that contain approximately 10,000 separate interior pieces. The Astolat Dollhouse Castle was acquired by collector L. Freeman in 1996 and moved it to the Nassau County Museum of Art.  Freeman is an avid collector of dollhouses and since her acquisition of the Astolat Dollhouse Castle she has continually upgraded its interiors with additional one-of-a-kind antique miniatures, tiny antique furniture, and paintings in addition to those that already existed within the structure. There are reportedly now about 30,000 miniatures pieces in the Astolat Dollhouse Castle collection, but only about 10,000 are displayed at any one time. The inventory is rotated.
 the room with the display of the world's smallest antique Bible
 a child's bedroom with a 24k gold bedside chair holding a 
highly detailed 3/4" porcelain faery doll with 24k gold wand. 
The embroidered door panels required 
miniature needles to be produced to create them.

Inspired by Alfred Tennyson's poetry about the Lady of Astolat, Astolat Dollhouse Castle was created between 1974 and 1987 primarily by master miniaturist Elaine Diehl with support and assistance from artisans throughout the world. In addition to its 9-foot height, it has 29 rooms, hallways, corridors, sitting areas, and windows. The Colleen Moore fairy Castle Dollhouse and the Astolat Dollhouse Castle were designed with fixed contiguous exterior walls to create a three-dimensional viewing effect.
 

 Astolat was built over a thirteen-year period. The exterior took a year to sculpt to the final finish. 

The interiors and adjoining areas were each constructed to the highest standards of that time. Astolat Dollhouse Castle was initially displayed in Diehl's museum shop in Sedona, Arizona until her retirement in 1996. It was a popular tourist attraction which drew people from around the world.

 Unique parquet floors, framed mirrors, tapestries, gold chandeliers, oil paintings, and fireplaces lead up to the top floor housing the "wizard’s tower" outfitted with telescopes and zodiacal signs. The furnishings include seven periods and styles, including Spanish, Oriental, Tudor, 18th-century English, and Victorian.

 The Dollhouse Castle's namesake was inspired by the fantasy castle "Astolat" in Alfred Tennyson’s poem Lady of Shalott.  Astolat Castle has a copper roof and structural wood walls that are finished on the exterior with papier-mâché and then sculpted to a rough faux stone finish. Some of these exterior wall panels are fixed to create a 3-dimensional effect when viewer's peer into the Castle. 
Other walls can be opened or removed for group viewing.  
The structure was built to 1:12 (one inch to one foot) scale.
 Consisting of seven levels, stairways, and hallways, Astolat Dollhouse Castle was created for 360 degree viewing. As with the Colleen Moore dollhouse, certain exterior walls are fixed to create a 3-D viewing experience. The basement level consists of the Knights Of Columbus room, wine cellar, kitchens, and the armory. The main floor contains the entrance foyer, main stairway, and butler's closet. Next level up contains the formal living room, dining room, and music room and its audience balcony. The fourth level contains the private library containing dueling pistols, a library of minature books, fireplace, miniature daguerrotypes, and the oil painting display area. Fifth level contains the sleeping quarters. Sixth floor contains the grand ballroom, musician's alcove, bar area and sitting rooms. Wizards's tower is on the top level and contains hand painted zodiac signs, telescope, observatory and astronomical depictions.

The interior spaces include miniature fittings and furniture most of which are antique, hand-crafted, and one-of-akind. Some are even artifacts from Pompeii. Other furnishings, and ancillary art includes sculptures, original oil paintings, portrait miniatures, hand sewn tapestries, carved wood moldings, chandeliers, sconces, framed mirrors, and accessories. These include miniature inlaid marble bathrooms, parquet floors, gold chandeliers, hand etched wood panels, and pieces made of gold.
 the gold framed portrait was painted with a one-hair brush
 and is valued at $8,000 - 
chairs around the table are each 18k gold leafed
Most of the interior furnishings and artwork are original and were purchased at auctions from private collectors, or commissioned from known miniaturists and artisans. Such artists include Eric Pearson, George Becker, Warren Dick, Laurel Coulon, Mary McGrath, among others.  The lighting features fully illuminate all areas of Astolat and separate day and night-time lighting systems automatically adjust based on the time of day.
master bedroom with handpainted murals and mouth-blown glass chairs.
the harp will play music
It may seem mercenary of me to keep mentioning the value of items, when it's really the incredible skill and talent it took to put together such a beautiful and awesome creation. But, well, I just can't get over the remarkable sums of money spent to play dollhouse! It floors me! I mean, if you spend $8.5million on your dollhouse, where do you LIVE?! 

Be sure to see all the other blogs participating in Beverly's Pink Saturday Blog Hop today!

NOW, you go make something beautiful!
¸.•´¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)(¸.•´
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥ 
 

Friday, February 9, 2018

Have a Heart ...


Now go make something beautiful!
´¨)
¸.•´¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)
(¸.•´ (¸.•´? Tristan