Saturday, March 12, 2011

Jean-Michel Frank












Jean-Michel Frank (February 28, 1895–1941) was a French interior designer http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifknowhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifn for minimalist interiors decorated with plain-lined but sumptuous furniture made of luxury materials, such as shagreen, mica, and intricate straw marquetry. Jean-Michel Frank was born in Paris, a son of Léon Frank, a banker, and his wife and cousin, the former Nanette Frank. From 1904, he attended the Lycée Janson de Sailly in Paris. From 1920 to 1925 he traveled and visited the world. In Venice he met the cosmopolitan society that gathered around Stravinsky and Diaghilev. Around 1927, Eugenia Errázuriz revealed to him the beauty of 18th Century styles and her own modern, minimalist esthetic, and he became her disciple. He then got in contact with a Parisian decorator called Adolphe Chanaux to do his apartment in the Rue de Verneuil. During the 1930's he worked with students at the Paris Atelier, now known as Parsons Paris School of Art and Design, where he developed the famous Parsons Table. In 1932, with Chanaux, he opened a shop at number 140 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. This was to be the consecration of ten years of collaboration, when he decorated for the Rockefellers and Guerlains. During the winter of 1939-40, he left France for Argentina. In Argentina, Jean-Michel Frank worked with his old friend and business associate Ignacio Pirovano on several important private and commercial projects.[1] Jean-Michel Frank kept his private apartment in Buenos Aires on the top floor of the company of which he was the Artistic Director[2] in Argentina, COMTE SA. This building was located on the corner of Florida Street and Marcelo T. De Alvear Avenue.[3] He also visited many of his clients in Buenos Aires including the Born family[4] whose mansion in the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires remains his single most important project. The entire collection is still intact and in-place in precisely the manner that Jean-Michel Frank conceived it.

In 1941, Frank made a trip to New York. Sadly overcome by depression he committed suicide by throwing himself from the window of a Manhattan apartment building, leaving all his personal possessions in his apartment in Buenos Aires.

Joseph Osborne
Co-founder Academy of Inspiration

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Sunday, March 6, 2011

What Lessons Can We Learn From The 2011 Grammys


What can we learn form Rihanna, Skylar Grey, and Dr. Dre about persistence and ones ability to overcome adversity? Is success about surviving adversity? Is being an entrepreneur about looking adversity in the face and learning our lessons so we can move to the next level of success? How can we go to the next level if we are not certain what level that is? Do we understand the power of a team?

Joseph Osborne
Co-founder Academy of Inspiration

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Sunday, February 13, 2011

"Macbeth" - Dench/McKellen -1979


We have heard it said that when we finally begin to get MacBeath it's almost to late. We at the Academy of Inspiration are getting MacBeth with this amazing performance by Judy Dench. What story is being told here by William Shakespeare? How dose this story of life and death relate to the lives of us in the year of 2011? What human stories never seem to change? What stories of love and tragedy are universal and it's just about our maturity to unlock the eternal key of understanding that unites us through our human suffering? Do we learn more from suffering than from our time of joy and peace? Do we Baby Boomers understand more about the twist and turns in life and how life is a contrast between deep tragedy and the joy of triumph? Funny how we can't have one without the other. Who is our modern William Shakespeare and what is their most famous play? Is it Walt Disney, Steven Spielberg, Spike Lee, Tyler Perry or someone else?

Joseph Osborne
Co-Academy Of Inspiration