Tag Archives: cup

Modern Art Monday Presents: A Cup of Tea By Lilla Cabot Perry

lilla cabot perry a cup of tea photo by gail worley
Photo By Gail

In this glowing portrait, the American impressionist painter Lilla Cabot Perry (1848 – 1933) renders,  in loose and expressive brush strokes, a fashionable young woman sipping a cup of tea. Initially trained in an academic style, Perry traveled to France in 1887, first to Paris and then to Giverny, where she forged the close friendship with Claude Monet. Her technical and aesthetic approach was further informed by three years in Japan, where she met Okakura Kakuzo (18631913), a cofounder of the imperial art school, who exhibited her work in Tokyo.

Photographed in the LA County Museum of Art (LACMA)

Pink Thing Of The Day: Tea is For Losers Coffee Mug

tea is for losers mug photoby gail worley
Photo By Gail

If you like your hot beverages with a side of brutal honesty, this Pink Coffee Mug from Fish’s Eddy — spotted at the Shoppe Object gift show —has you covered. Boldly emblazoned with the words “Tea is for Losers”, it’s the perfect vessel for sipping tea ironically, serving coffee smugly, or just making sure everyone knows you’re not here for herbal diplomacy.

Modern Art Monday Presents: The Cuckoo Egg Cup Under Spilling Plastic Flowers By Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt

cuckoo egg cup under spilling plastic flowers photo by gail worley
All Photos By Gail

The Cuckoo Egg Cup Under Spilling Plastic Flowers (1985) is as culpture by American artist Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt. This intricate assemblage measures 39 x 12 x 12 inches and incorporates materials such as foil, wood, plastic wrap, cellophane, tape, staples, a vinyl record, printed matter, plastic bottles, plastic flowers, and a plastic spoon.

cuckoo egg cup under spilling plastic flowers 5 photo by gail worley
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Nautilus Cup

Nautilus Cup
All Photos By Gail

If you enjoy seeing how very obscenely rich people lived 400 years ago or longer, go hang out at The Met for a few hours and have your mind blown. This fancy cup, made from a gilt-plated-silver shell of a Nautilus is a thing that you can see at this gargantuan museum, and it emphasizes the point that some rich people like to have really fancy things to look at and, maybe, use.
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