A UNIQUE SPACE

Our friend, Sonja Rasula, talks her newly opened co-working space and creative community in the Los Angeles Art District with Apartment Therapy. Take a tour of the Cavern clad walls at The Unique Space.

hotos courtesy of Apartment Therapy and The Unique Space.

Cavern booth at the NYIGF

Thanks to everyone who popped by to visit us last week!

Lena Wolff

Designsponge.com posted some images today by Lena Wolff and that must be shared.

National Martin Ramirez Day

So I'm currently reading Murakami's, "Wind-Up Bird Chronicle"...( I know, I'm so late to that bus). Man in the well? I mean, the book and the these drawings should have tea together. I feel like they'd be best friends.

And for some facts on Martin Ramirez: ( I'm going to let wikipedia take this one): Having migrated to the United States from Tepatitlan, Mexico in 1925, Ramírez was institutionalized in 1931, first at Stockton State Hospital in Stockton, California, then, beginning in 1948, at DeWitt State Hospital in Auburn, near Sacramento, where he made the drawings and collages for which he is now known. At DeWitt, a visiting professor of psychology and art, Tarmo Pasto, came across Ramírez's work and began to save the large-scale works Ramírez made using available materials, including brown paper bags, scraps of examining-table paper, and book pages glued together with a paste made of potatoes and saliva. His works display an idiosyncratic iconography that reflect both Mexican folk traditions and twentieth-century modernization: images of Madonnas, horseback riders, and trains entering and exiting tunnels proliferate in the work, along with undulating fields of concentric lines that describe landscapes, tunnels, theatrical prosceniums, and decorative patterns.

L.A. Mart Gifts Show.

We were psyched to be included in interior designer Jason Oliver Nixon's "California Bespoke" booth at the LA Mart Gifts Show, this past july.

Check out his booth and Cavern's Palm in Mustard.

Off the Wall: Geometric

Intern at Large Karli Hendrickson just wrote me about a fantastic book she's reading: "Off the Wall, Wonderful Wall Coverings of the Twentieth Century"  by Lena Lencek and Gideon Bosker. In the second section of this book "Circles and Squares- Geometrics, Abstracts, Op Art, Minimalist Art" the book explains that geometric motifs were typical of the 1950's. Post World War II, low-cost screen printing inspired the production of more experimental and avant-garde patterns. Also during this time, an upwelling of ranch homes in the growing suburbs inspired the wallpaper industry to create bold patterns wallpaper to accent and jazz up the simple, open, and modern design of these ranch houses. Textile designs at this time were also very bold and featured prisms, grids, doodles, and loops of geometric inspired design.