A Collector Clinched a Rare 17th-Century Terracotta Sculpture for a Record $2.85 Million at a French Auction. Now, the Louvre Is Snatching It
Close-up, it’s easy to overlook the architectural oasis fashioned from concrete, wood, and steel awaiting behind Casa TO’s half-door threshold. The hotel’s concrete clad exterior is draped in boa scarves of vines, with palms reaching upward and outward, barely contained by the various unions of rectilinear and curving brutalist planes that become evident with just a few steps back. Even so, the vigorous local vegetation cannot fully camouflage the hotel’s promise of architecture imagined to incite “a radical sensory experience upon entering.”
Designed by architect Ludwig Godefroy and sited in an inland corner of La Punta Zicatela, Puerto Escondido, the nine suite hotel offers an intimate respite from the festive Oaxacan surf scene weaving across the beachside streets. We found ourselves thankful of the contemplative refuge offered to us for a few morning hours during the recent 2023 Mexico Design Fair, indebted to its shaded cool cavern, enthralled by the contemporary reticulated interpretation of place and space designed to compel guests to do nothing but swim, rest, and occasionally sip something refreshing.
Godefroy’s inside-out approach invites light and shadow, sky and water, mass and emptiness all into an evocative interplay staged across the hotel’s varying heights. The cavernous central enclosure is most dramatically framed by a series of large circular concrete hole punches, allowing guests and the coastal breeze access across its length of water and herringbone brickwork floor – a span interspersed with low profile furniture built by carpenters from Oaxaca, Puebla, and Guadalajara. The height of furniture is easy to slump into, much more difficult to arise from (mentally, more so than physically, such is their comfort).
The architecture is intended to evoke the reticulated pattern of two historical projects of hydraulic nature rather than of hospitality: the 6th century AD Basilica Cistern of Istanbul, and the 19th century built Hornsey Wood Reservoir in Finsbury Park, London. Photo: Gregory Han
The hotel’s concrete mass is interjected by a sundry of windows, doorways, and other openings partially covered by the coastal region’s aggressive verdant vegetation, inviting passersby and the coastal breeze equal chance to make their way into the inner volume of Casa TO’s Oaxacan temple where the hotel’s spirit of serene contemplation comes into focus.
Tendrils of vines intrude, but privacy is otherwise retained inside the raw concrete confines of Casa TO. Photo: Gregory Han
The guest rooms continue the architectural narrative of contrasts, similarly cool and cavernous, inviting the elements at the cusp of its concrete walls. Garden Suites are furnished with king size beds with a small private garden, while the upper floor Terrace Suites are slightly larger and come with their very own outdoor tub with fresh water to easily slip into each morning or night from a king size bed.
What: Casa TO
Where: Brisas de Zicatela, 70934 Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca, Mexico
How much: From $274
Highlights: The covered solarium lobby running parallel alongside a long infinity pool framed by six enormous circular openings inspires travel photography. Don’t skip out on brunch upstairs.
Design draw: Designed by Mexico City-based architect Ludwig Godefroy, the hotel’s circular opening poolside and lobby are complemented with furniture built by carpenters from Oaxaca, Puebla, and Guadalajara. Japanese architect Tadao Ando’s Casa Wabi, Casa Naila by BAAQ, and Meridiano gallery by architect Tatsuro Miki and Axel Vervoordt are all located within Puerto Escondido’s driving distance perimeter.
Book it: Casa TO
Go virtually on vacation with more design destinations right here.
Gregory Han is the Managing Editor of Design Milk. A Los Angeles native with a profound love and curiosity for design, hiking, tide pools, and road trips, a selection of his adventures and musings can be found at gregoryhan.com.
By Admin in Photography

An urban explorer photographer was arrested and put in an Albanian jail for nine months.
Russian photographer and blogger Svetlana Timofeeva — who goes by Lana Sator professionally — was arrested on spying charges while allegedly urban exploring in Albania in August 2022.
34-year-old Sator, who is considered one of Russia’s most famous urban explorers, was arrested last year while entering the former communist military factory of Gramsh which is 50 miles (80km) from the Albanian capital of Tirana.
When Albania was under communist rule, the rundown weapons factory had once been used to make Russian-designed AK-47 rifles. The Gramsh plant was also used to dismantle small arms and ammunition.
Sator — who has over 250,000 followers on Instagram — says that the only reason she was visiting the area was her desire to film abandoned buildings from the Cold War era.
According to Reuters, Sator claims that she believed the factory was abandoned and there was no sign suggesting any military facility and people and animals were moving in and out freely.
However as she entered the premises, Sator was arrested on suspicion of spying on Albanian abandoned factories by two army guards — along with Russian companion Mikahil Zorin and Ukranian Fedir Alpatov.
Albanian prosecutors claim investigators discovered cameras, drones for taking photographs, phones, hand-drawn maps, and $6,000 in cash.
Sator was charged with espionage after her ill-fated adventure in Gramsh and the photographer has since spent nine months in an Albanian prison.
According to her social media profile, it appears that she has now been released from prison. However, in an Instagram caption posted on May 28, Sator says that her “investigation [is] still pending” and there is “no final trial in which I could be fully acquitted yet.”
Sator’s supporters have questioned why the Albanian military value the long-disused Gramsh factory. Meanwhile, the Albanian Ministry of Justice’s website says the Gramsh plant now provides manufacturing services for the defense industry.
The Washington Street Journal reports that Sator is well-known in the world of urban exploration. She has taken photographs in abandoned locations in over 30 countries and published two books on her images.
Sator has primarily built a career photographing abandoned sites around the former Soviet Union — sometimes from the inside of tightly guarded military sites.
In 2012, she snuck into a Russian rocket factory and posted striking images from its interior.
Image credits: Header photo via Instagram/@lanasator.
By Admin in Photography
An umbrella and a bowler hat sit on a windowsill in a pub – patiently waiting, it seems, for their boozing owner to return. This striking black and white vignette of British culture is an unusually playful photograph by Evelyn Hofer, taken in London in the 1960s, presented with many others that depict the capital as a hostile city, as part of the artist’s first UK exhibition.
Split across two floors of the Photographers’ Gallery in London, the show focuses on the photographs Hofer took in Europe and the US in the 60s and 70s. An early pioneer of new colour techniques, working with a more collaborative approach than her shoot-from-the-hip predecessors, she quietly changed the course of documentary photography.
Hofer was born in Germany in 1922, and her early life was itinerant. The family fled the Nazis, moving to Switzerland, where Hofer began to study photography, taking private lessons with Hans Finsler, who was associated with the modernist new objectivity movement that also included August Sander. The family later moved to Spain but, after Franco’s rise, they left Europe, arriving in Mexico in the 1940s.

By 1946, Hofer had moved to New York, but she continued to travel back to Europe. Upstairs are her visionary views of European cities in the 60s, most of them shot in black and white and evoking a sombre atmosphere: there are photographs of Paris, Barcelona, Rome and Dublin, alongside a body of work made while she was living in London, produced for a book by VS Pritchett. London, through Hofer’s eyes, appears smoky, industrious and austere. Even children she photographed in Notting Hill Gate and Battersea look baleful or despondent.
Descending a floor, the exhibition switches gear – from black and white to dazzling colour, from Europe to the US. Some of her early successes with the complex colour dye transfer printing process are here: a bar on Mercer Street, a car park in New York, signs in Coney Island – the most humdrum of scenes scintillate with the particular qualities of the technique. US cities pulse with heat and joy: the series Just Married presents 12 couples, taken one morning in 1974 outside the New York civil register office. Hofer didn’t choreograph the newlyweds, but the details of their clothing, gestures and poses suggest much about their circumstances and dynamics.
While love and leisure are common themes in the American pictures, when Hofer does turn to labour, it feels exuberant and fresh: in Secretaries in Rawlings Park, Washington DC and Chauffeurs, Washington (both 1965) she pays homage to the inexorable power of immaculate style. In contrast to her abject view of an old-fashioned Europe, the US appears modern, consumer-friendly and free.
Hofer remained concerned with society’s outliers – working-class people, people of colour and women are frequent subjects, all of them exuding a certain self-confidence. The pictures of unnamed cockle pickers and coalminers, secretaries and seminarians, gravediggers and lorry drivers have aged – but they also capture something timeless. It is in these subtleties that Hofer is most subversive, asserting the authority of her sometimes idiosyncratic interests in what, or who, could be revered in an image. In her photographs, a quivering, impossibly high beehive hairstyle or an impeccably dressed elderly woman sitting on a bridge are treated with the same respect as buildings on Park Avenue or olive trees in Spain.

As well as Hofer’s exhibition, the gallery is showing Johny Pitts’ Home is Not a Place, a series that also seeks to convey the atmosphere of a city while dissolving a sense of time. Like Hofer, in 2021 Pitts embarked on a roving journey with his camera, following the Thames east to Tilbury – where the Windrush docked in 1948 – then moving along the coast, from Dover to Plymouth, Liverpool to Edinburgh, in search of Black communities.
As well as photographs, Pitts’ installation includes objects, furniture, text and video. Rather than presenting a linear narrative, the photographs – left uncaptioned – move back and forth in time and place. At times, Pitts brings the camera very close to his subjects, or submerges them in hazy light, so they are cast as silhouettes, bodies in spaces that remain ambiguous.
Photographs can create a sense of belonging: alongside his search for a collective image that might reflect his experiences, he has also included personal family albums from a formative period in the late 80s when he lived in Japan. Spliced and reshuffled with more recent photographs taken on return visits, Pitts examines the impulse to archive, and photography’s relationship to memory.
The wistful beauty of the photographs, however, is swamped by the other elements of the installation which make it feel crowded, physically and conceptually, with an avalanche of references and ideas. The original impetus of the project – the journey around Black Britain – feels lost. A reconstruction of a living room – which now seems to be de rigueur in photography exhibitions – stuffed with relics of Pitts’ childhood home in 80s Sheffield, seems to suggest home is in fact a place, with a leather sofa, artworks on the wall and books on the shelf.
By Admin in New Mexico Art
By Admin in New Mexico Art
By Admin in New Mexico Art
By Admin in Photography
All photographs by Malcolm Ferguson.
“One Life: Frederick Douglass” at Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery offers an image-based timeline of the orator and statesman’s life and work from his days of enslavement up until his postwar activities and beyond.
The show, which opened the weekend of Juneteenth, centers on Douglass’s obsession with photography. Often called the most photographed American of the 19th century, Douglass had an acute understanding of the power that photography had in the struggle for African American equality. He simultaneously recognized the widespread familiarity that images bred, and the fact that images—particularly portraits—were the most authentic way for him to be seen.
That understanding is a huge part of why there are so many more photos of Douglass. He had a healthy skepticism of “the hand of the white artist,” which he might distort his features or misinterpret him in paintings or drawings. Douglass often frequented the numerous studios of Black photographers instead.
Douglass “had faith in the ‘truth value,’ as well as the beauty, of photography,” says John Stauffer, a professor of history at Harvard University and author of Picturing Frederick Douglass who guest-curated the exhibition. “He was one of the first to recognize the politics of aesthetics, that art can be a very powerful engine of change…for Douglass, there’s a greater likelihood that someone can be converted into an activist through images at least as much, if not more, than through words.”
The first section, “Enslavement & Escape,” focuses on Douglass’ period of enslavement from his recorded birth in 1818 until he fled to New York in 1838 with the help of his future wife Anna Murray Douglass, a free Black woman from Caroline County, Maryland. The section contains a classic photograph of Murray, a print of the famous “Fugitive’s Song” sheet music cover dedicated to Douglass, and the faded paper ledger of his first owner Aaron Anthony, who recorded Douglass’s birth to Harriet Bailey in 1818.


Next, the “Circle of Activists” highlights Douglass’ enthusiastic collaboration with the women’s suffrage movement. Douglass, the only African American present at the seminal Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, was a friend and ally to campaigners like Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, who were among the founders of the American Equal Rights Association in 1866. This section holds a portrait of seven notable 19th-century suffragists, as well as a famous photo of activist Sojourner Truth.
There’s also a daguerreotype gallery, a small collection of some of the earliest forms of photographs. Each image is around the size of an index card and slightly obscured by an eerie haze. The stark stare of a young Frederick Douglass, his afro in all its glory, can be viewed alongside daguerreotypes of abolitionists John Brown, William Lloyd Garrison, and Gerrit Smith. Another section, “Douglass and Brown,” includes more photos of Brown and Douglass, and more information on their relationship, which, according to Stauffer, was in a sense optically easier at the time because it preceded the bogus science like phrenology that helped inspire brutal Jim Crow laws.


The Civil War section centers Douglass’ friendship with President Lincoln. The first African American to meet and advise a US President, Douglass often had Lincoln’s ear during the Civil War. When the war began, Douglass implored Lincoln to arm every Black person enslaved in the South, citing their knowledge of the terrain and desire for freedom, but to no avail. The section holds a letter from Douglass to Lincoln regarding reelection strategies, and a massive painting, The Result of the Fifteenth Amendment, which depicts African Americans marching parading through Baltimore in celebration of Black men receiving the constitutional right to vote.
The “Post War” section is a bit more personal, focusing on Douglass’ travels as an orator, his somewhat controversial marriage to his second wife, white abolitionist Helen Pitts Douglass, and his time as a resident of Washington, DC.
Douglass moved to DC, Stauffer says, because it was a Black metropolis in ways that other cities in which he lived, including Boston and Rochester, New York, were not. “Douglass knew there were a large number of African Americans, he wanted to be a part of an African American community, and he knew he could have an influence with African Americans because they listened to him more than whites did.”
The exhibit concludes with the “Afterlife” section, an homage to other African American activists who either knew Douglass personally or were particularly inspired by his activism. There are portraits of Ida B. Wells, W.E.B Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, and Langston Hughes, all of whom share Douglass’ legacy.


Stauffer believes that the public still has much more to learn regarding Douglass. “In my view, he was as important as someone like Lincoln. And I say that because far more people heard Douglass speak, read Douglass, than they did any other figure, with the possible exception of Mark Twain, who was a whole different generation. Just in terms of his fame and popularity, Douglass was like the LeBron James of his day,” he says. Douglass’s significance “is in a combination of the popularity, the accuracy and detail of a photograph. Our aim is to highlight the long arc of that extraordinary life.”
“One Life: Frederick Douglass” is open now until April 21, 2024. Learn more here
Editorial Fellow
By Admin in Photography
LOS ANGELES, June 22, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — Leica Gallery LA announces the opening reception of “Yul Brynner’s Photography: An Extraordinary Vision,” an exhibition showcasing the photographic work of the iconic actor, Yul Brynner. The opening reception will be held on Saturday, July 8, from 6-8 PM, followed by a meet and greet with Victoria Brynner on Sunday, July 9, from 1-3 PM. The exhibition will run until July 31.
Brynner, best known for his acclaimed performances in The King and I, The Ten Commandments, and The Magnificent Seven, was also a passionate photographer who had a remarkable ability to capture the essence of mid-century Hollywood. This showcase will present 25 images from Brynner’s unique photographic collection. Additionally, a selection of Brynner’s Leica MP cameras will be on display, one of which will be auctioned at the upcoming Leitz Photographica Auction in November.
Brynner’s photography reveals his extraordinary vision. Influenced by legendary photographers Henri Cartier-Bresson and André Kertész, Brynner used Leica cameras to capture moments that collectively narrate the story of old Hollywood. Traveling from western Europe to southern California, Brynner’s work provides an insider’s look into his personal experiences with friends, who also happened to be the stars of his generation, such as Elizabeth Taylor, Audrey Hepburn, Frank Sinatra, Ingrid Bergman, and Sofia Loren.
The essence of Brynner’s work lies in his empathetic intelligence that enabled him to beautifully render both the intimate and artistic aspects of his subjects. This exhibition seeks to commemorate Brynner’s talent and contribution to the field of photography.
In conjunction with the exhibition, a series of limited-edition prints of some of his most important images will be made available.
The exhibition opens July 8 and runs through July 31. Admission is free via Eventbrite. The Leitz Photographica Auction will be held November 24 & 25 in Vienna, Austria.
About Leica Gallery LA:
Leica Gallery LA showcases the works of both international and American photographers and features an impressive roster of artists and collections in its archives. The gallery is dedicated to crafting engaging exhibitions that speak to the cultural significance of photography in the 21st century.
Note to Editors:
High-resolution images and interviews are available upon request.
Press Contact:
Nike Communications Inc.
Phone: 201-995-0051
Email: [email protected]
Internet: www.leica-camera.com
SOURCE Leica Camera

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