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Thursday, March 1, 2007

Tintoretto (Jacopo Robusti) (1518-94).


Art Review 'Tintoretto'
Lights! Darks! Action! Cut! Maestro of Mise-en-Scène
By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN
Published: March 1, 2007

MADRID, Feb. 26 — "I have sometimes seen Tintoretto as equal to Titian," the artist Annibale Carracci wrote, "and at other times as inferior to Tintoretto."



Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid

Stop-action and kinetic virtuosity: Tintoretto's "Rape of Helen" (around 1578-79), Helen, knocked over like a lamp in one corner, disappears amid a melee of archers, swords, horses and boats.

You can get the same impression trudging across Venice and peering in countless churches at big, generally brown, more or less legible pictures attributed to him, scratching your head, wondering how the same man could have painted them all.

The sheer acreage of canvas he covered was somehow meant to overwhelm the Venetian art scene during the 1500s, which he finally dominated once his older rival, Titian, died. He was pushy, impatient, squallish and, when he wasn't careless or wildly overextended, not a little too talented for Titian, who instead promoted the more easily loved Veronese. La Serenissima clearly doesn't describe the city in which they all jockeyed.

These days, with paintings shipped like Christmas cards across the globe for exhibitions, it's remarkable that the Jacopo Tintoretto show at the Prado here, through May 13, is the first full-dress retrospective since the one in Venice in 1937. Tintoretto painted too much, too unevenly, and too many of his pictures are too huge to be moved.

But the Prado has a few great pictures of his. They're supplemented by loans from Venice and elsewhere. With around three dozen paintings and a handful of drawings, the show, organized by Miguel Falomir, a Prado curator, is a model of connoisseurship and smart editing.

It occupies the central gallery of this sublime museum, placing Tintoretto beside rooms of Rubens, El Greco and Velázquez, who revered him. His "Last Supper" actually faces Velázquez's "Meninas" through an open door. (That view alone justifies the plane ticket.) This means that Velázquez, peering from behind a canvas in his own picture, stares at the Tintoretto, as if, perhaps, that is what he's painting.



Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid

"Jesus Among the Doctors" is part of a retrospective of the Venetian painter Jacopo Tintoretto, at the Prado Museum in Madrid.


All jutting diagonals and tumult, "The Last Supper" is typical of what Tintoretto managed: an improbable, acrobatic sort of balancing act, so that his pictures are like houses of cards. Their stop-action quality explains the standard linkage of him with film, and you can see it everywhere.

In "The Presentation of Christ in the Temple," staged from below so that we're put in the front row, the main protagonists, Mary and Jesus, occupy the middle ground, but another mother and child wait their turn for consecration. They're in the foreground, to one side, virtually in our laps. Through them, we're made aware that the scene is just a passing moment.

Tintoretto invented these standard subjects as if from scratch, as he did himself. He was born in Venice around 1518 into a Brescian family whose name turns out to have been Comin. His first biographer, Carlo Ridolfi, claimed that Tintoretto as a boy tutored briefly in Titian's workshop, before being thrown out, then taught himself to paint, which isn't likely, since Venetian law required six years of apprenticeship.

It's not known where he studied, only that he looked hard at Raphael and Michelangelo. Drawings show him copying Michelangelos from odd angles as if inspecting the sculptures like jewels in his hand.



Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid

"The Raising of Lazarus" (1573), a painting packed with a kind of centrifugal energy, is part of a retrospective of the Venetian painter Tintoretto, at the Prado Museum in Madrid.


His first works are awful. He was a slow starter. But by his late 20s he is painting "Venus and Mars Surprised by Vulcan," mixing hulking bodies with Titian's color and adding in a kind of earthy comedy that linked him to a circle of intellectuals who wanted to undercut artifice with wit. Mars cowers under a table. A yapping dog gives his hiding place away.

Everyday details also humanize his pictures, make them more immediate. An old man helps another codger pull off his pants in "The Washing of the Feet." A necklace of pearls scatters when Lucretia struggles against Tarquin, a symbol of her lost virginity, like the painting of the princess straddling a limp dragon, her flushed face reflected, fish-eyed, in the armor of St. George in "St. George, St. Louis and the Princess."



Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid
"The Burial of Christ"

Tintoretto had an official style when on duty for the Palazzo Ducale and, in these circumstances, having too much to do, he occasionally turned over commissions to his son Domenico and a changing staff of assistants. He also had a more personal style: looser, sketchier, more attuned to modern eyes. Dancing lines produce complex traceries like clouds of fireflies in the night air.

You see it in "St. Augustine Healing the Lame," the great S-curve of its composition, packed with brawny pilgrims, straight out of Michelangelo's Sistine, set against a chalky backdrop of bright light. You see the same brushwork in "The Kidnapping of Helen," a miracle of kinetic virtuosity. Bare-breasted Helen, knocked over like a lamp in one corner, disappears amid a melee of archers and swords and big-rumped horses and teetering boats, the panorama sharply receding into a swarm of filigreed white-on-dark brushwork signifying distant skirmishes. The effect dazzles, stopping the eye suddenly at the sight of a drowning man in the middle ground, his tiny head serenely bobbing in the water.



National Gallery, London
"The Origins of the Milky Way"

That's my second-favorite moment in the show. My favorite is in "The Raising of Lazarus," a small, not great picture, but densely packed with a kind of centrifugal energy coiling around the ungainly figure of Lazarus, who's green. His head recedes into shadow, so you barely see his face. But a tiny fleck of white in his eye, a light that kindles his reawakening, brings him to life. It's what Roland Barthes, the French critic, liked to call a punctum, the spot, marking time, that burns an image into memory.

"Left to himself, he would have covered every wall in the city with his paintings," wrote another Frenchman, Sartre. "He would have covered the ceilings, people would have walked across his most beautiful images; his brush would have spared neither the facades of the palaces, nor the gondolas, nor perhaps, the gondoliers."

If a kind of visual logorrhea has obscured Tintoretto's achievement, it doesn't negate his best work. He was his own worst enemy in the end. The Prado's tact does him, and us, a service. In an age of overblown exhibitions and general excess, it's a rare show that manages this.

The exhibition "Tintoretto" remains at the Prado Museum, Paseo del Prado, Madrid, through May 13;

museoprado.mcu.es.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Varia Favorites 004





Tuesday, February 27, 2007

2007-Los Oscares. Nominados y Ganadores.




Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of
2006 were presented on Sunday, February 25, 2007, at the
Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center®.

Performance by an actor in a leading role

  • Leonardo DiCaprio in "Blood Diamond" (Warner Bros.)

  • Ryan Gosling in "Half Nelson" (THINKFilm)

  • Peter O'Toole in "Venus" (Miramax, Filmfour and UK Film Council)

  • Will Smith in "The Pursuit of Happyness" (Sony Pictures Releasing)

  • Forest Whitaker in "The Last King of Scotland" (Fox Searchlight)

Performance by an actor in a supporting role

  • Alan Arkin in "Little Miss Sunshine" (Fox Searchlight)

  • Jackie Earle Haley in "Little Children" (New Line)

  • Djimon Hounsou in "Blood Diamond" (Warner Bros.)

  • Eddie Murphy in "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount)

  • Mark Wahlberg in "The Departed" (Warner Bros.)


Performance by an actress in a leading role

  • Penélope Cruz in "Volver" (Sony Pictures Classics)

  • Judi Dench in "Notes on a Scandal" (Fox Searchlight)

  • Helen Mirren in "The Queen" (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)

  • Meryl Streep in "The Devil Wears Prada" (20th Century Fox)

  • Kate Winslet in "Little Children" (New Line)

Performance by an actress in a supporting role

  • Adriana Barraza in "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)

  • Cate Blanchett in "Notes on a Scandal" (Fox Searchlight)

  • Abigail Breslin in "Little Miss Sunshine" (Fox Searchlight)

  • Jennifer Hudson in "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount)

  • Rinko Kikuchi in "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)

Best animated feature film of the year

  • "Cars" (Buena Vista) John Lasseter

  • "Happy Feet" (Warner Bros.) George Miller

  • "Monster House" (Sony Pictures Releasing) Gil Kenan

Achievement in art direction

  • "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount)Art Direction: John Myhre Set Decoration: Nancy Haigh

  • "The Good Shepherd" (Universal)Art Direction: Jeannine Oppewall Set Decoration: Gretchen Rau and Leslie E. Rollins

  • "Pan's Labyrinth" (Picturehouse)Art Direction: Eugenio Caballero Set Decoration: Pilar Revuelta

  • "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" (Buena Vista)Art Direction: Rick Heinrichs Set Decoration: Cheryl Carasik

  • "The Prestige" (Buena Vista)Art Direction: Nathan Crowley Set Decoration: Julie Ochipinti

Achievement in cinematography

  • "The Black Dahlia" (Universal) Vilmos Zsigmond

  • "Children of Men" (Universal) Emmanuel Lubezki

  • "The Illusionist" (Yari Film Group) Dick Pope

  • "Pan's Labyrinth" (Picturehouse) Guillermo Navarro

  • "The Prestige" (Buena Vista) Wally Pfister

Achievement in costume design

  • "Curse of the Golden Flower" (Sony Pictures Classics) Yee Chung Man

  • "The Devil Wears Prada" (20th Century Fox) Patricia Field

  • "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount) Sharen Davis

  • "Marie Antoinette" (Sony Pictures Releasing) Milena Canonero

  • "The Queen" (Miramax, Pathé and Granada) Consolata Boyle

Achievement in directing

  • "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage) Alejandro González Iñárritu

  • "The Departed" (Warner Bros.) Martin Scorsese

  • "Letters from Iwo Jima" (Warner Bros.) Clint Eastwood

  • "The Queen" (Miramax, Pathé and Granada) Stephen Frears

  • "United 93" (Universal and StudioCanal) Paul Greengrass

Best documentary feature

  • "Deliver Us from Evil" (Lionsgate)A Disarming Films Production Amy Berg and Frank Donner

  • "An Inconvenient Truth" (Paramount Classics and Participant Productions)A Lawrence Bender/Laurie David Production Davis Guggenheim

  • "Iraq in Fragments" (Typecast Releasing in association with HBO Documentary Films)A Typecast Pictures/Daylight Factory Production James Longley and John Sinno

  • "Jesus Camp" (Magnolia Pictures)A Loki Films Production Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady

  • "My Country, My Country" (Zeitgeist Films)A Praxis Films Production Laura Poitras and Jocelyn Glatzer

Best documentary short subject

  • "The Blood of Yingzhou District" A Thomas Lennon Films Production Ruby Yang and Thomas Lennon

  • "Recycled Life" An Iwerks/Glad Production Leslie Iwerks and Mike Glad

  • "Rehearsing a Dream" A Simon & Goodman Picture Company Production Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon

  • "Two Hands" A Crazy Boat Pictures Production Nathaniel Kahn and Susan Rose Behr

Achievement in film editing

  • "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)Stephen Mirrione and Douglas Crise

  • "Blood Diamond" (Warner Bros.) Steven Rosenblum

  • "Children of Men" (Universal) Alex Rodríguez and Alfonso Cuarón

  • "The Departed" (Warner Bros.)Thelma Schoonmaker

  • "United 93" (Universal and StudioCanal) Clare Douglas, Christopher Rouse and Richard Pearson

Best foreign language film of the year

  • "After the Wedding" A Zentropa Entertainments 16 Production Denmark

  • "Days of Glory (Indigènes)" A Tessalit Production Algeria

  • "The Lives of Others" A Wiedemann & Berg Production Germany

  • "Pan's Labyrinth" A Tequila Gang/Esperanto Filmoj/Estudios Picasso Production Mexico

  • "Water" A Hamilton-Mehta Production Canada

Achievement in makeup

  • "Apocalypto" (Buena Vista) Aldo Signoretti and Vittorio Sodano

  • "Click" (Sony Pictures Releasing) Kazuhiro Tsuji and Bill Corso

  • "Pan's Labyrinth" (Picturehouse) David Martí and Montse Ribé

Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original score)

  • "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage) Gustavo Santaolalla

  • "The Good German" (Warner Bros.) Thomas Newman

  • "Notes on a Scandal" (Fox Searchlight) Philip Glass

  • "Pan's Labyrinth" (Picturehouse) Javier Navarrete

  • "The Queen" (Miramax, Pathé and Granada) Alexandre Desplat

Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original song)

  • "I Need to Wake Up" from "An Inconvenient Truth" (Paramount Classics and Participant Productions) Music and Lyric by Melissa Etheridge

  • "Listen" from "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount) Music by Henry Krieger and Scott Cutler Lyric by Anne Preven

  • "Love You I Do" from "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount) Music by Henry Krieger Lyric by Siedah Garrett

  • "Our Town" from "Cars" (Buena Vista)Music and Lyric by Randy Newman

  • "Patience" from "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount)Music by Henry Krieger Lyric by Willie Reale

Best motion picture of the year

  • "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage) An Anonymous Content/Zeta Film/Central Films Production Alejandro González Iñárritu, Jon Kilik and Steve Golin, Producers

  • "The Departed" (Warner Bros.)A Warner Bros. Pictures Production Graham King, Producer

  • "Letters from Iwo Jima" (Warner Bros.)A DreamWorks Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures Production Clint Eastwood, Steven Spielberg and Robert Lorenz, Producers

  • "Little Miss Sunshine" (Fox Searchlight)A Big Beach/Bona Fide Production David T. Friendly, Peter Saraf and Marc Turtletaub, Producers

  • "The Queen" (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)A Granada Production Andy Harries, Christine Langan and Tracey Seaward, Producers

Best animated short film

  • "The Danish Poet" (National Film Board of Canada)A Mikrofilm and National Film Board of Canada. Production Torill Kove.

  • "Lifted" (Buena Vista)A Pixar Animation Studios Production Gary Rydstrom

  • "The Little Matchgirl" (Buena Vista)A Walt Disney Pictures Production Roger Allers and Don Hahn

  • "Maestro" (SzimplaFilm)A Kedd Production Géza M. Tóth

  • "No Time for Nuts" (20th Century Fox)A Blue Sky Studios Production Chris Renaud and Michael Thurmeier

Best live action short film

  • "Binta and the Great Idea (Binta Y La Gran Idea)" A Peliculas Pendelton and Tus Ojos Production Javier Fesser and Luis Manso

  • "Éramos Pocos (One Too Many)" (Kimuak)An Altube Filmeak Production Borja Cobeaga

  • "Helmer & Son" A Nordisk Film Production Søren Pilmark and Kim Magnusson

  • "The Saviour" (Australian Film Television and Radio School) An Australian Film Television and Radio School Production Peter Templeman and Stuart Parkyn

  • "West Bank Story" An Ari Sandel, Pascal Vaguelsy, Amy Kim, Ravi Malhotra and Ashley Jordan Production Ari Sandel

Achievement in sound editing

  • "Apocalypto" (Buena Vista) Sean McCormack and Kami Asgar

  • "Blood Diamond" (Warner Bros.) Lon Bender

  • "Flags of Our Fathers" (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by Paramount)Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman

  • "Letters from Iwo Jima" (Warner Bros.)Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman

  • "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" (Buena Vista)Christopher Boyes and George Watters II

Achievement in sound mixing

  • "Apocalypto" (Buena Vista)Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell and Fernando Cámara

  • "Blood Diamond" (Warner Bros.)Andy Nelson, Anna Behlmer and Ivan Sharrock

  • "Dreamgirls" (DreamWorks and Paramount)Michael Minkler, Bob Beemer and Willie Burton

  • "Flags of Our Fathers" (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by Paramount) John Reitz, Dave Campbell, Gregg Rudloff and Walt Martin

  • "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" (Buena Vista) Paul Massey, Christopher Boyes and Lee Orloff

Achievement in visual effects

  • "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" (Buena Vista)John Knoll, Hal Hickel, Charles Gibson and Allen Hall

  • "Poseidon" (Warner Bros.)Boyd Shermis, Kim Libreri, Chas Jarrett and John Frazier

  • "Superman Returns" (Warner Bros.)Mark Stetson, Neil Corbould, Richard R. Hoover and Jon Thum

Adapted screenplay

  • "Borat Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan" (20th Century Fox) Screenplay by Sacha Baron Cohen & Anthony Hines & Peter Baynham & Dan Mazer Story by Sacha Baron Cohen & Peter Baynham & Anthony Hines & Todd Phillips

  • "Children of Men" (Universal)Screenplay by Alfonso Cuarón & Timothy J. Sexton and David Arata and Mark Fergus & Hawk Ostby

  • "The Departed" (Warner Bros.) Screenplay by William Monahan

  • "Little Children" (New Line) Screenplay by Todd Field & Tom Perrotta

  • "Notes on a Scandal" (Fox Searchlight) Screenplay by Patrick Marber

Original screenplay

  • "Babel" (Paramount and Paramount Vantage)Written by Guillermo Arriaga

  • "Letters from Iwo Jima" (Warner Bros.)Screenplay by Iris Yamashita Story by Iris Yamashita & Paul Haggis

  • "Little Miss Sunshine" (Fox Searchlight)Written by Michael Arndt

  • "Pan's Labyrinth" (Picturehouse)Written by Guillermo del Toro

  • "The Queen" (Miramax, Pathé and Granada)Written by Peter Morgan




2007© Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences



Monday, February 26, 2007

Matemáticas de Avanzada en la Arquitectura Árabe Medioeval.



In Medieval Architecture, Signs of Advanced Math

By JOHN NOBLE WILFORDK.

Published: February 27, 2007


Related
Web Link

Decagonal and Quasi-Crystalline Tilings in Medieval Islamic Architecture (Science)








K.Dudley and M. Elliff

MOSAIC SOPHISTICATION

A quasi-crystalline Penrose pattern at the Darb-i Imam shrine in Isfahan, Iran.

In the beauty and geometric complexity of tile mosaics on walls of medieval Islamic buildings, scientists have recognized patterns suggesting that the designers had made a conceptual breakthrough in mathematics beginning as early as the 13th century.

A new study shows that the Islamic pattern-making process, far more intricate than the laying of one’s bathroom floor, appears to have involved an advanced math of quasi crystals, which was not understood by modern scientists until three decades ago.

The findings, reported in the current issue of the journal Science, are a reminder of the sophistication of art, architecture and science long ago in the Islamic culture. They also challenge the assumption that the designers somehow created these elaborate patterns with only a ruler and a compass. Instead, experts say, they may have had other tools and concepts.




Science
A piece from a mausoleum in Turkey.

Two years ago, Peter J. Lu, a doctoral student in physics at Harvard University, was transfixed by the geometric pattern on a wall in Uzbekistan. It reminded him of what mathematicians call quasi-crystalline designs. These were demonstrated in the early 1970s by Roger Penrose, a mathematician and cosmologist at the University of Oxford.

Mr. Lu set about examining pictures of other tile mosaics from Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq and Turkey, working with Paul J. Steinhardt, a Princeton cosmologist who is an authority on quasi crystals and had been Mr. Lu’s undergraduate adviser. The research was a bit like trying to figure out the design principle of a jigsaw puzzle, Mr. Lu said in an interview.

In their journal report, Mr. Lu and Dr. Steinhardt concluded that by the 15th century, Islamic designers and artisans had developed techniques “to construct nearly perfect quasi-crystalline Penrose patterns, five centuries before discovery in the West.”

Some of the most complex patterns, called “girih” in Persian, consist of sets of contiguous polygons fitted together with little distortion and no gaps. Running through each polygon (a decagon, pentagon, diamond, bowtie or hexagon) is a decorative line. Mr. Lu found that the interlocking tiles were arranged in predictable ways to create a pattern that never repeats — that is, quasi crystals.

“Again and again, girih tiles provide logical explanations for complicated designs,” Mr. Lu said in a news release from Harvard.

He and Dr. Steinhardt recognized that the artisans in the 13th century had begun creating mosaic patterns in this way. The geometric star-and-polygon girihs, as quasi crystals, can be rotated a certain number of degrees, say one-fifth of a circle, to positions from which other tiles are fitted. As such, this makes possible a pattern that is infinitely big and yet the pattern never repeats itself, unlike the tiles on the typical floor.




W. B. Denny
A pattern taken from a Turkish mosque.

This was, the scientists wrote, “an important breakthrough in Islamic mathematics and design.”

Dr. Steinhardt said in an interview that it was not clear how well the Islamic designers understood all the elements they were applying to the construction of these patterns. “I can just say what’s on the walls,” he said.

Mr. Lu said that it would be “incredible if it were all coincidence.”

“At the very least,” he said, “it shows us a culture that we often don’t credit enough was far more advanced than we ever thought before.”

From a study of a few hundred examples, Mr. Lu and Dr. Steinhardt determined that the technique was fully developed two centuries later in mosques, palaces, shrines and other buildings. They noted that “a nearly perfect quasi-crystalline Penrose pattern” is found on the Darb-i Imam shrine in Isfahan, Iran, which was built in 1453. The researchers described how the architects there had created overlapping patterns with girih tiles at two sizes to produce nearly perfect quasi-crystalline patterns.

In the report, Mr. Lu and Dr. Steinhardt said the examples they had studied so far “fall just short of being perfect quasi crystals; there may be more interesting examples yet to be discovered.”

In a separate article in Science, some experts in the math of crystals questioned if the findings were an entirely new insight. In particular, Emil Makovicky of the University of Copenhagen in Denmark said the new report failed to give sufficient credit to an analysis he published in 1992 of mosaic patterns on a tomb in Iran.

Mr. Lu and Dr. Steinhardt said they regretted what they called a misunderstanding. They pointed out that the length of their report was strictly enforced by journal editors, but it did include two footnotes to Dr. Makovicky’s research. None of the referees or editors who reviewed the paper, Dr. Steinhardt said, asked for more attention to the previous research.

Although their work had some elements in common with Dr. Makovicky’s, Dr. Steinhardt said in an interview that their research dealt with not one but a “whole sweep of tilings” interpreted through a few hundred examples.

The article quoted two other experts, Dov Levine and Joshua Socolar, physicists at the Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa and Duke University, respectively, as agreeing that Dr. Makovicky deserved more credit. But, the article noted, they said the Lu-Steinhardt research had “generated interesting and testable hypotheses.”


Copyright by the New York Times 2007

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Reina Africana. La supermodelo Liya Kebede.

African Queen
This season, black power rules the runways

Photos by Paolo Roversi
Published: February 25, 2007


African Queen. The supermodel Liya Kebede wears a



Paolo Roversi

  • Christian Lacroix cotton dress, $5,100 (on top of a turquoise blouse). To order only at www.christianlacroix.com.
  • Vintage Yves Saint Laurent blouse with ruffle collar from Anouschka.Call 011-33-1-48-74-37-00. Yazbukey hat. Go to www.yazbukey.com.
  • Taher Chemirik earrings. At Jeffrey, 449 West 14th sStreet.
  • Naïla de Monbrison necklace with large pendant. Call 011-33-1-47-05-11-15.
  • Jacques Carcanagues prayer-bead necklace.Go to http://www.jacquescarcanagues.com



Paolo Roversi
  • Hermès silk chiffon bustier dress (bottom), $8,800,and silk crepe dress over silk chiffon dress, sold as ensemble, $6,700. At Hermès stores.
  • Stella Mccartney puff-sleeve dress (under printed dresses), $1,530. At Stella Mccartney, 429 West 14th Street.
  • Melet Mercantile fabric (as headdress). Call (212) 925-8353.
  • Lynn Ban earrings. At Barneys New York.
  • Dean Harris necklace. Go to www.deanharris.net.
  • Giorgio Vigna large bracelet. At Naïla de Monbrison.
  • Jacques Carcanagues silver bracelet. Lydia Courteille ring. Call 011-33-1-42-61-11-71.



Paolo Roversi
  • Jumble Fever Roberto Cavalli silk blouse, $3,010, and silkand- linen skirt, $6,830. At Roberto Cavalli stores.
  • Antique earrings. At Karry 'O, Paris. Fabrice necklace. Go to www.bijouxfabrice.com.
  • Bergdorf Goodman. Vintage Yves saint Laurent belt from Anouschka.
  • Csao Shawl (at waist) and cuff bracelets. Go to www.csao.fr.
  • Thierry Resling triangle ring and Naïla de Monbrison ring. Both at Naïla de Monbrison.
  • Azzedine alaïa shoes.



Paolo Roversi
  • Prada dress, $6,535. At select Prada stores.
  • Miu Miu satin dress (underneath), $2,373. At select Miu Miu stores.
  • Melet Mercantile Sashes (in hair and around waist).
  • Kris Ruhs bar necklace. At 10 Corso Como, Milan.
  • Vicki Turbeville beaded necklace. Go to www.southwesternjewelry.net.
  • Jacques Carcanagues bracelets.
  • Lydia Courteille ring.
  • Christian Lacroix bag.



Paolo Roversi
  • Tribal Brights Chanel cotton tweed jacket, $8,690. At Chanel boutiques.
  • Pollini Chiffon tunic (underneath), $730. At Forty Five Ten, Dallas.
  • Vintage Yves Saint Laurent skirt and vintage beaded belt At Anouschka.
  • Jacques Carcanagues necklace.
  • Dean Harris bracelets.
  • Lydia Courteille ring.



Paolo Roversi
  • Ralph Lauren collection linen silk caftan, $2,398. At select Ralph Lauren stores.
  • Donna Karan collection dress, $7,500. At Donna Karan collection stores.
  • Melet Mercantile head scarves.
  • Yves Saint Laurent necklace.
  • Alexis Bittar colored bangles. Go to www.alexisbittar.com.
  • Lynn Ban white bracelet (right).
  • Lydia Courteille antique carved ivory bracelet and ring.



Paolo Roversi
  • Beauty Mask
  • Emanuel Ungaro silk-and-sequin bolero jacket, price on request.
  • Silk chiffon dress, $2,430. At Emanuel Ungaro, 792 Madison Avenue.
  • Yazbukey mask.
  • Lanvin earrings.



Paolo Roversi
  • Dries van Noten embroidered jacket, $1,974. At Barneys New York.
  • Vera Wang paper brocade blouse, $1,375. At Holt Renfrew.
  • Les Touristes mask. Call 011-33-1-42-72-10-84.
  • Kentshire necklace. Go to www.kentshire.com.