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Rare Botticelli Painting Expected to Fetch Record-Breaking HK$620 Million

botticelli auction

A rare painting by Italian Renaissance master Sandro Botticelli is poised to achieve over US$80 million (HK$620 million) when it goes under the hammer in New York in January, according to Sotheby's — setting a record auction price for the artist.

"Young Man Holding a Roundel" has been billed by the auction house as one of the greatest paintings from the era still in private hands. It is expected to smash the US$10.4 million auction record set seven years ago for a painting by the Florence native.

The subject of the enigmatic portrait is not known, but art historians believe it could be a depiction of a close friend of the Medici family, which ruled the Italian city during Botticelli's life.

[caption id="attachment_210878" align="aligncenter" width="299"]botticelli auction 'Young Man Holding a Roundel' by Sandro Botticelli goes to auction in January. (Image: Sotheby's)[/caption]

The painting has been dated to the artist's most prolific years in the late 15th century, when Pope Sixtus IV invited him to help decorate the Sistine Chapel in Rome. During that period he produced some of his most famous works including "the Birth of Venus".

"This Botticelli is so much more spectacular in every way than anything we've seen coming to market," said Sotheby's senior vice president Christopher Apostle. "It says everything about Florentine culture and that moment of the Renaissance, when just everything fundamentally changes in Western thinking and art and literature."

Despite its age, the painting has been kept in an immaculate state and has been exhibited in several museums. It last changed hands in 1982, when a private collector bought it for about US$1.3 million. More details here.

The post Rare Botticelli Painting Expected to Fetch Record-Breaking HK$620 Million appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

Could There be Life on Venus? A US Aerospace Company Plans to Find Out

Can a small American aerospace company make its way to Venus before NASA's return?

That's what Peter Beck, the CEO of Rocket Lab, is hoping as he sets his sights on launching a low-cost probe to our superheated planetary neighbour in 2023.

Over the past decade his company has become very good at putting satellites into orbit — and his dream of taking the next step, an interplanetary mission, has received a shot of adrenaline recently with the surprising discovery of a gas linked to living organisms in Venus's corrosive, sulphuric atmosphere.

"What we're looking for on Mars is signs of previous life," Beck explains. "Whereas Venus, it's signs of potential life now."

[caption id="attachment_210861" align="alignnone" width="768"]venus The recent discovery by Earth-based radio telescopes of a gas called phosphine in Venus' atmosphere sparked a new wave of enthusiasm among scientists, who had for years defended the hypothesis that tiny organisms could live in the planet's clouds. (Image: NASA/ JPL-CALTECH/ AFP)
[/caption]

With its hellish landscape, Venus has been largely neglected by the major space agencies since the 1980s in favour of the Solar System's more distant bodies.

Dozens of missions have notably been sent to Mars seeking signs of ancient microbes. But the discovery by Earth-based radio telescopes of a gas called phosphine in Venus' atmosphere, reported on September 14, sparked a new wave of enthusiasm among scientists who had for years defended the hypothesis that tiny organisms could live in the planet's clouds.

Phosphine isn't definitive proof of life. But it is possible its presence is linked to living organisms, as it is on our planet. The finding led NASA to declare it was time to once more prioritise Venus.

Beck, however, has always been in the pro-Venus camp, and for two years has been contemplating sending an entirely privately-funded probe there, he said.

[caption id="attachment_210865" align="alignnone" width="768"]venus An artist's rendering of the Photon spacecraft, developed by Rocket Lab. (Image: Handout - Rocket Lab/ AFP)[/caption]

He calculated, with the help of a PhD student, that a small satellite called "Photon" that Rocket Lab developed in-house could be adapted into a spacecraft for an interplanetary voyage. Such bids have historically been the domain of national space agencies, given the enormous costs involved -- but Beck thinks he has developed a budget solution.

"I would expect a mission to Venus to be sort of US$30 million," he told AFP by video from Auckland, New Zealand.

"When you can measure interplanetary missions in tens of millions of dollars instead of billions, and months instead of decades, the opportunity for discovery is just incredible," he said.

[inline_related_article article_id="153217,63884"]

Free-falling

Rocket Lab's specialty is sending small satellites into Earth orbit with its small 18-metre high rocket — a highly lucrative market in recent years as demand for microsatellites has exploded.

The company's Venus probe will be very small, weighing around 80 pounds (37 kilograms) and just a foot (30 centimetres) in diameter. The trip from Earth will take 160 days, then Photon will launch the probe into Venus' clouds, where it will take readings as it falls, without a parachute, at almost 25,000 miles per hour (11 kilometres per second).

The probe will have between just 270 and 300 seconds to analyse an atmosphere that is almost a hundred times denser than Earth's before it disintegrates or crashes on the planet's fiery surface, where temperatures are hot enough to melt lead (900 degrees Fahrenheit, or 480 degrees Celsius). The hardest part is deciding on the scientific instrument: What molecules should it look for?

Miniaturisation is another problem. The probe will need to weigh seven pounds (three kilograms), which some experts doubt is possible, but Beck disagrees.

[caption id="attachment_210862" align="alignnone" width="768"]venus Rocket Lab's CEO Peter Beck expects his company's mission to Venus to cost around US$30 million. (Image: Kimberly White/ Getty Images North America/ AFP/ File)[/caption]

Rocket Lab will need help from leading scientists, and has already recruited MIT astronomer and planetary scientist Sara Seager.

The adventure is the latest chapter in a new era of space exploration fuelled not by governments but by individual curiosity and ambition, one that so far has been best symbolised by Elon Musk, the iconoclastic founder of SpaceX. SpaceX revolutionised the sector through its reusable rockets that have now sent astronauts to the International Space Station, and has its sights set on colonising Mars.

NASA is no longer afraid to subcontract missions to privateers, and Rocket Lab will be paid US$10 million to send a microsatellite into lunar orbit in 2021.

As for Venus, Beck would like to offer his services to NASA. The space agency is considering returning to Venus, but not until 2026 at the earliest. Its last Venus orbiter was Magellan, which arrived in 1990, but other vessels have made fly-bys since then.

"We want to do many, many missions a year," said the young CEO.

(Main image: NASA/ JPL-CALTECH/ AFP; Featured image: Handout - Rocket Lab/ AFP)

The post Could There be Life on Venus? A US Aerospace Company Plans to Find Out appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

The 2020 World Art Dubai Celebrates Art in All Its Forms

‘Free Your Mind’ theme celebrates the international community uniting to encourage creativity and escapism through art.” World Art Dubai 2020, the region’s most accessible and affordable retail art fair, will embrace its status as the first major event of the season by uniting an eager global art community at Dubai World Trade Centre (DWTC) starting October […]

The post The 2020 World Art Dubai Celebrates Art in All Its Forms appeared first on Upscale Living Magazine.

The 2020 World Art Dubai Celebrates Art in All Its Forms

‘Free Your Mind’ theme celebrates the international community uniting to encourage creativity and escapism through art.” World Art Dubai 2020, the region’s most accessible and affordable retail art fair, will embrace its status as the first major event of the season by uniting an eager global art community at Dubai World Trade Centre (DWTC) starting October […]

The post The 2020 World Art Dubai Celebrates Art in All Its Forms appeared first on Upscale Living Magazine.

The 2020 World Art Dubai Celebrates Art in All Its Forms

‘Free Your Mind’ theme celebrates the international community uniting to encourage creativity and escapism through art.” World Art Dubai 2020, the region’s most accessible and affordable retail art fair, will embrace its status as the first major event of the season by uniting an eager global art community at Dubai World Trade Centre (DWTC) starting October […]

The post The 2020 World Art Dubai Celebrates Art in All Its Forms appeared first on Upscale Living Magazine.

A T-Rex Skeleton is Expected to Fetch a Record Price at New York Auction

t-rex auction

The skeleton of a 40-foot (12-metre) dinosaur nicknamed "Stan", one of the most complete Tyrannosaurus rex (T-rex) specimens ever found, is going to auction in New York next month and could set a record for a sale of its kind.

Discovered in 1987 near Buffalo, South Dakota, the 188-bone skeleton took more than three years to excavate and reconstruct by paleontologists from the state's Black Hills Geological Research Institute, where it has been exhibited since.

Stan, who researchers estimate died around 60 million years ago aged about 20, has since been used to make replicas for dozens of museums eager to acquire their own T-rex model. Only about 50 skeletons of one of the largest carnivores to roam Earth have been discovered since the first in 1902.

[caption id="attachment_210806" align="aligncenter" width="1024"]t-rex auction Stan — named after the amateur paleontologist responsible for his initial discovery — is now on display in a window at Christie's headquarters in New York City until October 21. (Image: Christie's)[/caption]

James Hyslop, of auctioneer Christie's, said: "There aren't very many very good complete skeletons in there...It is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to acquire a T-Rex as complete as this."

The auction will be held in New York on October 6, with bids expected from US$6 million to US$8 million -- putting it within reach of the US$8.4 million paid for a T-rex named Sue in October 1997. "Any natural history museum would consider him the crown of their collection," Hyslop said.

Stan -- named after the amateur paleontologist responsible for his initial discovery -- is now on display in a window at Christie's headquarters in New York City until October 21. Its head is so heavy that a replica sits atop the skeleton, with the real one presented alongside. More details here.

The post A T-Rex Skeleton is Expected to Fetch a Record Price at New York Auction appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

A Living Museum: Reshaping Space at the Jing’an International Sculpture Project

Public art is the lifeblood of one of the world’s foremost cultural hubs.

From 26 September to 31 December 2020, the historical and cultural heart of Shanghai, the Shanghai Jing'an Sculpture Park (JISP), brings the worlds of nature and design together by hosting the fifth edition of the Jing'an International Sculpture Project.

The city’s biennial sculpture exhibition was launched in Jing'an in 2008. Since then, sculpture has become an ever more distinguishing feature of the district’s urban landscape. Organised by the Jing'an District Government and curated with the Purple Roof Art Gallery, the project is an ongoing endeavour to introduce world-renowned international artists to the local community.

The Creative Minds

It is not typical for government-initiated public art projects to involve a creative team. In Jing’an, however, the District Government is seeking out and investing in the curatorial expertise of gallery professionals. With a keen eye on public art and sculpture, Shanghai Purple Roof Art Gallery has successfully organised the Jing'an International Sculpture Project since 2010.

Reshaping Space

In keeping with its fundamental characteristic as public art, the latest edition of the project, themed “Reshaping Space”, aims to boost public participation and interaction. The exhibition space extends from Wujiang Road Pedestrian Street Plaza, to Henglong Plaza, Fengshengli and other lively commercial areas. An exhibition area has also been set up at SISU Jing'an Foreign Language Primary School in order to inspire the creative minds of the future.

One of the indoor exhibitions, the “Floral·Art Space”, is being held in the Sculpture Park Art Center, and integrates floriculture and sculpture into a rich and colourful visual experience.

Twenty nine artists from 10 countries – China, Cameroon, German, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Spain, Ukraine and United Kingdom – were invited to exhibit, bringing with them 56 sculptures, which were divided into 33 groups.

“Amelia 1, Julian, Yasmin” by Julian Opie 

Born in London, Julian Opie graduated from Goldsmiths College of Art, University of London in 1983.  His work is exhibited in many major museum collections including the Tate Modern, UK, The British Museum in London and Victoria and Albert Museum in London. His exhibit is the representative work of the artist, which takes “walking men” as creative objects. Taking portraits as the main creative form, Opie considers those “walking” movements in people’s lives are to be the most natural and common movements, reflecting different moods and colours.

However, Opie does not hold a realistic mentality in creation, but takes the concept first and regards them as a symbol of a hidden environment. “How do people participate in a public environment” is used as the starting point for thinking. Like other representative works, the forms of Opie’s exhibitions are beginning to change, calling this movement as “moving painting”. His creation is not limited to the traditional art of painting and sculpture; he comprehensively uses sound and light and computer animation and other means in his work, combining these new materials with his paintings.

[gallery ids="210642,210653"]

"Four Ways” by Richard Long  

Sir Richard Julian Long is one of the best-known British land artists. He is the only artist to have been shortlisted four times for the Turner Prize. "Four Ways" is a self-portrait of his life on earth. It represents his participation in the world through walking, and the result of the interaction between his energy and natural materials and forces.

There is a duality in his works — traveling far away and taking root in his hometown. He was made a CBE in 2013 and knighted in the 2018 Honours List for his contributions to art.

[gallery ids="210648,210650"]

"Unite" by Pedro Reyes 

This work is one of Pedro Reyes’ most renowned large scale installations. Reyes' position, the use of pick-up materials, and the negation of the corporate mentality led him to support the art of poverty and gained unprecedented international attention through his unique views on society.

As the director and curator of the art organisation Torre de Vientos (windmills), Reye held exhibition tours in Harvard University, Cambridge University, Monte Carlo, Milan, Mexico City and Shangri-La in Puerto Rico. Reyes constantly explores how individuals can be liberated in a space, or how to inspire a group of people to coordinate their work.

[gallery ids="210656,210645"]

"Arbre à palabres" by Pascale Marthine Tayou 

Since the beginning of the 1990s, Pascale Marthine Tayou’s participation in Documenta 11 (2002) in Kassel and at the Venice Biennale (2005 and 2009) has introduced him to a broad international public. In some African traditions, “Arbre à Palabres” (a talking tree) is often a metaphor for everyday popular mass gatherings in which everyone can speak about the social, economic or political life of his or her community. Such a place is a city that matures based on the needs and experience of its residents.

[gallery ids="210644,210649"]

"Moon Bay" by Liang Shaoji

For nearly 30 years, Liang Shaoji has worked in domains spanning art and biology, installation and sculpture, new media and critical points of behaviours. “Moon Bay” is forged in stainless steel, crimping and destructing the oil fume pipe into the shape of a conch. Bathing under the gentle moonlight, surfing in the breeze, the sculpture sings lightly and plays a poetic imagination of environmental protection.

[gallery ids="210647,210646,210643"]

"Ever Time Gate" by Juan Garaizabal 

The work reproduces many of the lines with Chinese architectural elements that Juan Garaizabal has studied. Each element has its own greatness until now, not only in its own time.

[gallery ids="210657,210651"]

Purple Roof Art Gallery

After successfully hosting the Jing'an International Sculpture Project on four previous occasions, Julia Mao and Peter Zhao, founder of Purple Roof Public Art, believe the sustainability of the Project is a result of the close collaboration of professionals from multiple sectors, the benefits reaped by the local community and role the Project plays in boosting Shanghai’s reputation as a center for cultural exchange.

Founded in 2006, the Purple Roof Art Gallery is a fascinating public art space, as well as a multi-functional institute which features expressions of creativity through productions and exhibitions. Passionate about artistic creation and practice, the Gallery advocates the concept of “art is life” and provides strategic planning and innovative execution for public art events.

The post A Living Museum: Reshaping Space at the Jing’an International Sculpture Project appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

Marina Abramovic’s Mixed Reality Artwork Goes to Auction

Marina Abramović

By now, your bosses and colleagues have probably seen more of your abode than you would've ever expected to show them.

With many of us working from home these days, meetings held over video conferencing apps the likes of Zoom and Microsoft Teams have become the new normal. Inevitably, this means letting colleagues into our residences — albeit virtually — and having them catch glimpses of it via our backdrop. Depending on where your workspace is located, this view could range from a boring blank wall to windows or cluttered bookshelves.

Your makeshift office may not be the most glamorous, but there are several easy interior design tricks that you can employ to quickly jazz up the background of your Zoom calls.

Textiles and cushions

If your workstation of choice is the couch or bed, all it takes is a few snazzy throw pillows wrapped in eye-catching fabrics and prints to provide visual interest in the space behind you. Consider dressing your cushions in the Armani/Casa Exclusive Textiles by Rubelli collection, which is inspired by modern art — specifically works by Henri Matisse, Vasilij Kandinskij and Paul Klee.

It showcases striking colour blocks embellished with embroideries, ikat details and intertwined motifs. These are available in various patterns and shades ranging from pastel to neutral hues. More details here.

Houseplants and greenery

interior design zoom calls
Fiddle leaf fig. (Image: Flora Houses)

Adding houseplants to your home office will help the space look less spartan and bland. Smaller plants like cacti, succulents and spider plants can be displayed on shelves or tables, while larger ones such as philodendrons, snake plants and ZZ plant (Zanzibar Gem) can be placed on the floor to break the monotony of blank walls.

Online plant retailer Flora Houses offers a wide variety of houseplants that will thrive indoors and are generally low-maintenance. Its range includes Japanese fir, fiddle leaf fig and Bird of Paradise. The store provides free doorstep delivery with a minimum spend.

Artworks and paintings

interior design zoom calls
Small Yellow Flower Pot by Micke Lindebergh. (Image: Odd One Out)

Perhaps houseplants may seem like too much of a commitment, or you simply don't have green fingers. This is where paintings and art pieces make an easier alternative. You can simply hang a couple of them on the wall that constantly forms your video call backdrop.

An Andy Warhol or Basquiat will certainly impress your co-workers, but your art doesn't necessarily have to be expensive or by big name artists. Consider procuring artworks instead from indie galleries such as Odd One Out, which boasts an array of creations by local and international printmakers and illustrators. We can't take our eyes off the above acrylic painting by Micke Lindebergh, which is titled 'Small Yellow Flower Pot' and features colourful blooms accented by quirky squiggles and bright hues.

Statement ornaments and furniture

interior design zoom calls
Dancing Circus Crane from Lala Curio. (Image: Lala Curio)

Inject a dose of quirk into your meeting setup by peppering your background with assorted decorative items and statement furniture pieces. These can be anything from figurines to colourful tiles and dramatic room dividers.

Our go-to is Lala Curio, which is a whimsical wonderland of objets d'art such as brass monkey sculptures, cloisonné birds, and, one of our favourites — an adorable trio of cranes adorned with rock crystal feathers and perched on crystal balls.

Wallpaper

interior design zoom calls
Christian Lacroix Oiseau Fleur wallpaper. (Image: Christian Lacroix)

Why settle for one specially curated work area, when you can turn your whole room into an Instagram-worthy space? Wallpaper is a bold and easy solution — if every wall in your room is clad in beautiful prints, you can essentially park yourself in any corner and still have an envy-inducing Zoom backdrop.

Designer wallpaper has seen a resurgence in recent years, and we're obsessed with Christian Lacroix's exquisite Oiseau Fleur vinyl wallpaper, which depicts vibrant botanical and bird motifs against a silk effect embossed base. It comes in two colourways of pink and grey.

(Main image: Brina Blum/ Unsplash; Featured image: Christian Lacroix)

The post Marina Abramovic’s Mixed Reality Artwork Goes to Auction appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

The Most Underrated European TV Series to Binge-Watch

underrated european tv series

By now, your bosses and colleagues have probably seen more of your abode than you would've ever expected to show them.

With many of us working from home these days, meetings held over video conferencing apps the likes of Zoom and Microsoft Teams have become the new normal. Inevitably, this means letting colleagues into our residences — albeit virtually — and having them catch glimpses of it via our backdrop. Depending on where your workspace is located, this view could range from a boring blank wall to windows or cluttered bookshelves.

Your makeshift office may not be the most glamorous, but there are several easy interior design tricks that you can employ to quickly jazz up the background of your Zoom calls.

Textiles and cushions

If your workstation of choice is the couch or bed, all it takes is a few snazzy throw pillows wrapped in eye-catching fabrics and prints to provide visual interest in the space behind you. Consider dressing your cushions in the Armani/Casa Exclusive Textiles by Rubelli collection, which is inspired by modern art — specifically works by Henri Matisse, Vasilij Kandinskij and Paul Klee.

It showcases striking colour blocks embellished with embroideries, ikat details and intertwined motifs. These are available in various patterns and shades ranging from pastel to neutral hues. More details here.

Houseplants and greenery

interior design zoom calls
Fiddle leaf fig. (Image: Flora Houses)

Adding houseplants to your home office will help the space look less spartan and bland. Smaller plants like cacti, succulents and spider plants can be displayed on shelves or tables, while larger ones such as philodendrons, snake plants and ZZ plant (Zanzibar Gem) can be placed on the floor to break the monotony of blank walls.

Online plant retailer Flora Houses offers a wide variety of houseplants that will thrive indoors and are generally low-maintenance. Its range includes Japanese fir, fiddle leaf fig and Bird of Paradise. The store provides free doorstep delivery with a minimum spend.

Artworks and paintings

interior design zoom calls
Small Yellow Flower Pot by Micke Lindebergh. (Image: Odd One Out)

Perhaps houseplants may seem like too much of a commitment, or you simply don't have green fingers. This is where paintings and art pieces make an easier alternative. You can simply hang a couple of them on the wall that constantly forms your video call backdrop.

An Andy Warhol or Basquiat will certainly impress your co-workers, but your art doesn't necessarily have to be expensive or by big name artists. Consider procuring artworks instead from indie galleries such as Odd One Out, which boasts an array of creations by local and international printmakers and illustrators. We can't take our eyes off the above acrylic painting by Micke Lindebergh, which is titled 'Small Yellow Flower Pot' and features colourful blooms accented by quirky squiggles and bright hues.

Statement ornaments and furniture

interior design zoom calls
Dancing Circus Crane from Lala Curio. (Image: Lala Curio)

Inject a dose of quirk into your meeting setup by peppering your background with assorted decorative items and statement furniture pieces. These can be anything from figurines to colourful tiles and dramatic room dividers.

Our go-to is Lala Curio, which is a whimsical wonderland of objets d'art such as brass monkey sculptures, cloisonné birds, and, one of our favourites — an adorable trio of cranes adorned with rock crystal feathers and perched on crystal balls.

Wallpaper

interior design zoom calls
Christian Lacroix Oiseau Fleur wallpaper. (Image: Christian Lacroix)

Why settle for one specially curated work area, when you can turn your whole room into an Instagram-worthy space? Wallpaper is a bold and easy solution — if every wall in your room is clad in beautiful prints, you can essentially park yourself in any corner and still have an envy-inducing Zoom backdrop.

Designer wallpaper has seen a resurgence in recent years, and we're obsessed with Christian Lacroix's exquisite Oiseau Fleur vinyl wallpaper, which depicts vibrant botanical and bird motifs against a silk effect embossed base. It comes in two colourways of pink and grey.

(Main image: Brina Blum/ Unsplash; Featured image: Christian Lacroix)

The post The Most Underrated European TV Series to Binge-Watch appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

Musicians Ellie Goulding, FKA Twigs and Grimes are Giving Art Lessons Online

art lessons

By now, your bosses and colleagues have probably seen more of your abode than you would've ever expected to show them.

With many of us working from home these days, meetings held over video conferencing apps the likes of Zoom and Microsoft Teams have become the new normal. Inevitably, this means letting colleagues into our residences — albeit virtually — and having them catch glimpses of it via our backdrop. Depending on where your workspace is located, this view could range from a boring blank wall to windows or cluttered bookshelves.

Your makeshift office may not be the most glamorous, but there are several easy interior design tricks that you can employ to quickly jazz up the background of your Zoom calls.

Textiles and cushions

If your workstation of choice is the couch or bed, all it takes is a few snazzy throw pillows wrapped in eye-catching fabrics and prints to provide visual interest in the space behind you. Consider dressing your cushions in the Armani/Casa Exclusive Textiles by Rubelli collection, which is inspired by modern art — specifically works by Henri Matisse, Vasilij Kandinskij and Paul Klee.

It showcases striking colour blocks embellished with embroideries, ikat details and intertwined motifs. These are available in various patterns and shades ranging from pastel to neutral hues. More details here.

Houseplants and greenery

interior design zoom calls
Fiddle leaf fig. (Image: Flora Houses)

Adding houseplants to your home office will help the space look less spartan and bland. Smaller plants like cacti, succulents and spider plants can be displayed on shelves or tables, while larger ones such as philodendrons, snake plants and ZZ plant (Zanzibar Gem) can be placed on the floor to break the monotony of blank walls.

Online plant retailer Flora Houses offers a wide variety of houseplants that will thrive indoors and are generally low-maintenance. Its range includes Japanese fir, fiddle leaf fig and Bird of Paradise. The store provides free doorstep delivery with a minimum spend.

Artworks and paintings

interior design zoom calls
Small Yellow Flower Pot by Micke Lindebergh. (Image: Odd One Out)

Perhaps houseplants may seem like too much of a commitment, or you simply don't have green fingers. This is where paintings and art pieces make an easier alternative. You can simply hang a couple of them on the wall that constantly forms your video call backdrop.

An Andy Warhol or Basquiat will certainly impress your co-workers, but your art doesn't necessarily have to be expensive or by big name artists. Consider procuring artworks instead from indie galleries such as Odd One Out, which boasts an array of creations by local and international printmakers and illustrators. We can't take our eyes off the above acrylic painting by Micke Lindebergh, which is titled 'Small Yellow Flower Pot' and features colourful blooms accented by quirky squiggles and bright hues.

Statement ornaments and furniture

interior design zoom calls
Dancing Circus Crane from Lala Curio. (Image: Lala Curio)

Inject a dose of quirk into your meeting setup by peppering your background with assorted decorative items and statement furniture pieces. These can be anything from figurines to colourful tiles and dramatic room dividers.

Our go-to is Lala Curio, which is a whimsical wonderland of objets d'art such as brass monkey sculptures, cloisonné birds, and, one of our favourites — an adorable trio of cranes adorned with rock crystal feathers and perched on crystal balls.

Wallpaper

interior design zoom calls
Christian Lacroix Oiseau Fleur wallpaper. (Image: Christian Lacroix)

Why settle for one specially curated work area, when you can turn your whole room into an Instagram-worthy space? Wallpaper is a bold and easy solution — if every wall in your room is clad in beautiful prints, you can essentially park yourself in any corner and still have an envy-inducing Zoom backdrop.

Designer wallpaper has seen a resurgence in recent years, and we're obsessed with Christian Lacroix's exquisite Oiseau Fleur vinyl wallpaper, which depicts vibrant botanical and bird motifs against a silk effect embossed base. It comes in two colourways of pink and grey.

(Main image: Brina Blum/ Unsplash; Featured image: Christian Lacroix)

The post Musicians Ellie Goulding, FKA Twigs and Grimes are Giving Art Lessons Online appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.

Sherree Valentine Daines – Portrait Artist To Royalty & The Stars

She’s known as ‘The Face of Modern British Impressionism,’ with 2020 seeing her celebrating four decades at the forefront of her field. Angela Sara West talks to the UK’s leading modern Impressionist, Sherree Valentine Daines, about her passion for painting, capturing famous faces and high-society events on canvas, collaborating with Bollinger Champagne, recreating Royal Ascot […]

The post Sherree Valentine Daines – Portrait Artist To Royalty & The Stars appeared first on Upscale Living Magazine.

Sherree Valentine Daines – Portrait Artist To Royalty & The Stars

She’s known as ‘The Face of Modern British Impressionism,’ with 2020 seeing her celebrating four decades at the forefront of her field. Angela Sara West talks to the UK’s leading modern Impressionist, Sherree Valentine Daines, about her passion for painting, capturing famous faces and high-society events on canvas, collaborating with Bollinger Champagne, recreating Royal Ascot […]

The post Sherree Valentine Daines – Portrait Artist To Royalty & The Stars appeared first on Upscale Living Magazine.

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