Name:

judy

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i am a director. i travel around the world telling stories. i am fan of the underdog and the spotty dog alike. i enjoy working with my hands and have been a metal-smither for four years. i have a healthy sense of curiosity, but not entitlement.
www.judystarkmanjewelry.com
www.judystarkman.com

Architecture Archives

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When I was a kid growing up in Northern California, we lived in a Joseph Eichler home. I'm convinced that was a beautiful accident, because if you ever met Leon and Elaine, my parents, you would immediately understand that they are not style mavens, quite the opposite, to say the least. They are NOT and were not they kind of parents you see here in this glamorous publicity photo for an Eichler house. 


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Joseph Eichler was the only merchant builder in America who built modernist style homes on a large scale, designed by skilled architects and using quality materials. His contemporary houses have not been equaled since, and 50 years on they still look 'modern'. The homes were also inexpensive.


My parents were attracted to the atrium styled layout. They loved the light streaming in and they liked the price tag even more. It was only $60,000.  This was about thirty years ago... can you imagine? So that's where we lived and they still live there today. Leon and Elaine have no idea  how valuable the homes have become an are completely oblivious to the fact that they are sitting on architectural history.  A couple  (collectors) from San Francisco wanted to buy the house for a huge amount of money, but my parents were not interested in moving. They said, 'where would we go?"  And, indeed, they did not sell. www.eichlernetwork.com

saucer.jpgAnother design accident of my childhood, was my mother's purchase of entire twelve piece "Romancz" set of Rosenthal China. It was 1957, she was about to marry Leon and she was traveling around Germany with her best friend, Marlene.  Somehow, she had good sense to buy herself an astonishingly  beautiful and modern set of china.

 Philip Rosenthal Sr. founded the company in 1879 in Selb, Germany. Over the decades, it emerged to one of the world's finest porcelain and crystal manufacturers in the world. Rosenthal has been around for a long time--over 100 years.  The company was also known for working closely with about 1000 artists, designers, architects, couturiers and prominent people from all over the world. There are pieces in museums for crying out loud.


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 So, here's my mom, at 24, traveling around Germany and I actually have no idea what processed her to buy something so exquisite because she hates to cook (never has), would be the first to admit that she is not exactly what you would call the hostess with the mostest and quite frankly, never once did we use them during my entire childhood.

 But, I always admired the simplicity, the clean elegance, their minimal lines and utter architectural pureness. They were the most delicate items in our entire home.  They are truly amazing classics and they are no longer made. She gave them to me as a wedding gift. I was the only thing I've ever taken from her and quite happily, I might add. 


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Now, at some point, we also seemed to acquire some amazing modernist furniture. Again, I'm not really sure how that happened because my parents did not like to take care of things. They were not shoppers, more like schleppers.  I think it was simply a matter of economics because thirty years ago, people were not swarming to buy modern furniture as they are today.   So, here we lived in suburbia, in an Eichler house filled with amazing Scandinavian furniture. 

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Our chairs were by Hans Wegner, the tables were by Kaare Klint, the lights were Verner Panton. 

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My bunk-bed however, was made my Leon Starkman and it was a sleep-at-your-own-risk kind of situation because every night as I climbed into bed, the entire thing would wobble and wheeze and I was certain it would come crashing down into many pieces.  This is the kind discrepancy that lives on even today with my parents. But, I have to say, growing up in that environment completely shaped my entire life. 






Who doesn't love a Hans-Agne Jakobsson light? 

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I love modern architecture, furniture, and simple classic lines. I even like nature that is modern, clean, graphic. I love the indoor outdoor living we have here in California and I wish I had rescued a few more pieces of furniture from my parents.

 But that brings me to this wonderful website for rare, modern furniture.

 KLASSIK is an amazing resource.  They are based in Denmark. They buy and sell original classic Scandinavian Modern or Danish Modern furniture.  They have a large collection from  1920-1975.  Not only do they have furniture, but ceramics, fine art, lighting and more.  They ship anywhere, even to Suburban California. But, I'm pretty sure Leon and Elaine have never heard of them. . 

 www.klassik.dk

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