A Sign of the Times – in today’s Post

[ by Charles Cameron — on skilled design, and on choosing to purchase influence, elegance or beauty ]

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There’s something very neat about this front page:

Okay, okay, Jeff Bezos has bought the Washington Post. But what intrigues me about this front page of today’s digital edition as it appeared on my screen this morning was the way a color photo of Bezos sneaks in (left) below a larger black and while photo of Katharine Graham (center) — while an ad for the China Daily (right) takes up a third of the real estate (right), to be read, mark you, on Bezos’ own Kindle.

So we have today’s future, to coin a phrase, with the “pivot to Asia” and the “pivot to Bezos” right there together — and the “pivot to digital” pretty much a done deal.

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The price of the Post was $250 million, and plenty of people have talked about what Bezos could have bought instead — and while we’re on the topic of neat design, I couldn’t help but notice that there’s a $250 million penthouse under construction in Monaco, described by HiConsumption as The World’s Most Expensive Penthouse, and that one of the numerous architectural illustrations provided also features a striking lesson on graphics:

What catches my eye here is the parallelism between the window with its center divider and balcony rail (left) with the geometry of the painting on the wall (right) — that’s a brilliant design choice, as the photographer well knows.

In my dreams I’d prefer my own choice of art-work, frankly — and if I only had $250 million to play with, I’d go for a small craftsman cottage in Pasadena, perhaps — with that luminous $250 million Cezanne to grace one of my walls…

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That — and the digital Post on Kindle, I suppose.

  1. Curtis Gale Weeks:

    Charles, I think that painting on the wall is a flat screen television reflecting the scene outside. Mirrors and parallelism:  go figure!  (Check the photo right below that photo at the site….)

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    But maybe you were talking about the wall covering, which is either carved or painted on?  (Can’t tell.)  In another of the pictures, this of the bedroom, you can see a different wall behind the bed that also uses a similar effect, although this time squares.      

  2. Charles Cameron:

    I do believe you’re right — so the honor belongs to nature, not some artist or photographer!

  3. Grurray:

    I believe I’ve seen a similar piece of art 
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