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Paragon
Nicolette Mayer
A modern textured layered approach to art.
Nicolette Mayer, the acclaimed product, wallpaper, and textile designer whose Wallpaper and Fabric collections are distributed through Scalamandre to the trade. Now Nicolette Mayer ventures into Bespoke Art, creating a new panel on Acrylic called Tree of Life, which can also work with SingleTree of Life, which together as a trio, becomes a Triptych. Recently, two sets of this Triptych were placed by Designer Cindy Rinfret on both sides of the main room in Kips Bay Showhouse in Palm Beach. Seen in Architectural Digest, Veranda, and Elle Decor, among many other magazines, this artwork is timeless Moorish and ottoman-influenced, yet modern and chic. The entry and living room at the prestigious Kips Bay Decorator Show House in Palm Beach, this important design event is the Florida iteration of the esteemed Kips Bay Decorator Show House in New York City. Nicolette Mayer’s Morrish grasscloth on metallic paper wallpaper titled Topkapi Garden was the inspiration for Cindy Rinfret’s entire design scheme of the Living Room and Entry, which is the first space that one enters when visiting the Kips Bay Decorator Show House.“Topkapi Palace, Iznik style pottery, and the beautiful Rugs in Palaces old and new inspired this design which presents a re-imagination of the ideal Ottoman aesthetic, with a new kind of chic that is entirely unique,” says Nicolette Mayer. Adds Cindy Rinfret, “This printed Morrish art inspired our color throughout the room and paired beautifully with the existing stone floors and arches. The space is so dramatic in scale, it needed a statement which was achieved with this gorgeous paper and the staggered Currey light fixtures.” Nicolette Mayer Wallcoverings were cut and applied next to the beams and dark blue ceiling, making for a custom, show-stopping experience upon entering the Show House. Unlike many Living Rooms, this space feels collected and lived in and just begs to be the site of a fabulous party. The historical reference in the design of the Topkapi Garden wall panels adds to the authentic, collected feeling of the overall design scheme. Nicolette Mayer, the designer, expertly incorporated lush blue colors that are fresh and modern, blended with themes that date back hundreds of years. Tree of Life is Art inspired by the Iznik tiled wall murals at the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, Turkey. A tree, tall as minarets and underplanted with hyacinth bells, often immortalized on tiles in an alcove in the harem, once the most private-and forbidden part of the palace.
RFA Decor
The face of a woman with long, blonde hair is partially concealed by a hat in this high-quality giclee print.
Yoffi
Bring the beauty of Portuguese architecture into your home with this stunning, frameless print of a palace interior. Crafted using advanced printing technology, this artwork boasts vivid details and vibrant colors. Easy to hang, "Palace Interior" adds a touch of European elegance to any space.
Sandi Neiman Lovitz
Sandi Neiman Lovitz applies acrylic paint to a gallery-wrapped canvas or panel with brushes, combs, wedges, water, or her hands. She puts on and digs outs paint. She demands spontaneity in gesture and enjoys watching paint move after applying it with the swipe of a brush, the push and pull of a rubber wedge, the spray from a can, or the splatter and splash from a vessel. The paint takes on its own energy and partners with Sandi’s understanding of composition, balance, space, and rhythm. From the artist “When I paint I feel like Alice in wonderland down the rabbit hole, but I am hosting the party. I invite all of the glorious shapes, phantasmal colors, and rhythmic marks to create harmony, hope, freedom, and power”.
Sandi Neiman Lovitz applies acrylic paint to a gallery-wrapped canvas or panel with brushes, combs, wedges, water, or her hands. She puts on and digs out the paint. She demands spontaneity in gesture and enjoys watching paint move after applying it with the swipe of a brush, the push and pull of a rubber wedge, the spray from a can, or the splatter and splash from a vessel. The paint takes on its energy and partners with Sandi’s understanding of composition, balance, space, and rhythm. From the artist “When I paint I feel like Alice in Wonderland down the rabbit hole, but I am hosting the party. I invite all of the glorious shapes, phantasmal colors, and rhythmic marks to create harmony, hope, freedom, and power”.
The liveliness and brilliance of exuberant color are painted with dancing gestures and marks by layering acrylics and other aqueous-based materials on gallery-wrapped canvas. I always strive to create a feeling of harmony and hope.
Sandi Neiman Lovitz applies acrylic paint to a gallery-wrapped canvas or panel with brushes, combs, wedges, water, or her hands. She puts on and digs out the paint. She demands spontaneity in gesture and enjoys watching paint move after applying it with the swipe of a brush, the push and pull of a rubber wedge, the spray from a can, or the splatter and splash from a vessel. The paint takes on its own energy and partners with Sandi’s understanding of composition, balance, space, and rhythm. From the artist “When I paint I feel like Alice in Wonderland down the rabbit hole, but I am hosting the party. I invite all of the glorious shapes, phantasmal colors, and rhythmic marks to create harmony, hope, freedom, and power”.
This is from my series, "Walls Tell Stories". Layers of marks and paint added and subtracted tell the story of the outside walls we pass every day and the stories hidden in them. These are inspired by my world and the many paths and journeys interpreted in intense colors and a variation of marks. I invite you, the viewer, to enter my world and experience your personal interpretations of what is happening on the canvas.
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