#Alexander Kravets
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
TEATRO ALLA SCALA: BORIS GODUNOV
TEATRO ALLA SCALA: BORIS GODUNOV
Ildar Abdrazakov com a Boris. Producció de Kasper Holten. Fotografia de © Brescia e Amisano – Teatro alla Scala Una inauguració de la Scala encara és quelcom important, continua sent un referent de les temporades operístiques i malgrat que el teatre milanès ha perdut aquella aurèola de temple referencial, exigent i entusiasta per esdevenir com totes les grans cases d’òpera mundial, centres més…
View On WordPress
#Agnieszka Rehlis#Ain Anger#Alexander Kravets#Alexey Markov#Anna Denisova#Coro ed orchestra del Teatro alla Scala di Milano#Dmitry Golovnin#Ildar Abdrakazov#Kasper Holten#Lilly Jørstad#Maria Barakova#Modest Mussorgski#Norbert Ernst#Oleg Budaratskiy#Riccardo Chailly#Roman Astakhov#Stanislav Trofimov#Vassily Solodkyy#Yaroslav Abaimov
0 notes
Text
skateontario: What a way to cap off an incredible day of skating! Congratulations to the Canadian Junior Dance champions, Layla Veillon & Alexander Brandys. 🥇🇨🇦👏 Having the 2nd best Free Dance today, Alisa Korneva & Kieran MacDonald moved up from 4th place in the Rhythm Dance to claim the bronze medal. 🥉 6th place - Dana Sabatini-Speciale & Nicholas Buelow 7th place - Sophia Gover & Billy Wilson-French 9th place - Nicole Bolender & Aiden Dotzert 12th place - Caroline Kravets & Jacob Stark 14th place - Charlotte Chung & Axel MacKenzie Coaches of the medallists: Layla & Alex - Cara and Scott Moir Alisa & Kieran - Carleigh MacDonald We are #SkateOntarioProud of all of you!
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
Contributors
Volodymyr Zelensky - President of Ukraine
Olena Zelenska - First Lady of Ukraine
Luke Harding - Foreign Correspondent, The Guardian
Ben Wallace - UK Defence Secretary 2019 - 23
Oleksandr Pikalov - Zelensky’s childhood friend, and collaborator in Kvartal 95 Comedy Troop
Vadim Pereverzev - Zelensky’s childhood friend, and collaborator in Kvartal 95 Comedy Troop
Olena Kravets - Zelensky’s childhood friend, and collaborator in Kvartal 95 Comedy Troop
Nancy Pelosi - Speaker, US House of Representatives 2019-23
Amanda Sloat - Special Advisor to President Biden
Dmytro Kuleba - Ukrainian Foreign Minister
Alexander Rodnyansky - Ukrainian TV Mogul and Zelensky’s mentor when an actor
Sir Roderic Lyne - UK Ambassador to Russia 2000 – 04
Boris Johnson - Former Prime Minister UK 2019 – 23
Oleksiy Danilov - Ukrainian National Security Advisor, 2019 – 24
Yuri Kostiuk - Scriptwriter, ‘Servant of the People’ with Kvartal-95
Davyd Arakhamia - Leader of Zelensky’s ruling party, and Lead negotiator with Russia early in the war
Andriy Yermak - Head of the Office of the President
Aleksey Kiryushchenko - Director, ‘Servant of the People’
Iuliia Mendel - Zelensky’s Press Secretary 2019 - 21
Kurt Volker - US Special Representative for Ukraine Negotiations, 2017 - 19
Ruslan Stefanchuk - Ukrainian Parliament Chairman
Mykhailo Podolyak - Adviser to the President of Ukraine
Simon Shuster - Foreign Correspondent, TIME Magazine
The Zelensky Story (BBC)
Synpopsis
This definitive boxset series tells the extraordinary story of Volodymyr Zelensky, a comedian who played the president, then became the real President of Ukraine… Told across three episodes, the series charts Zelensky’s journey from young actor and entertainer to one of the most recognisable leaders on the planet, presiding over a nation at war with Vladimir Putin’s Russia.
Filmed over several trips to Ukraine, Series Director Michael Waldman is granted rare access to interview President Zelensky and First Lady Olena Zelenska, who speak in unguarded terms about their extraordinary lives. What emerges is a portrait of a young couple plunged into an extraordinary situation – childhood sweethearts who got married and rose to stardom, before being thrown into politics, and into the heart of the biggest invasion in Europe since World War II.
As well as interviews with the family and their inner circle, the series includes new accounts from world leaders including Boris Johnson, Nancy Pelosi, former UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, and Advisor to the President of Ukraine Mykhailo Podolyak, who each give dramatic first-hand testimony of their dealings with Zelensky – and Putin - in the lead up to a full-scale military invasion.
Combining exclusive interviews with extraordinary archive footage never before broadcast in the UK, the series sheds new light on the origins of the war in Ukraine and the two men at its epicentre: Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky.
With unique access to Volodymyr Zelensky and Olena Zelenska, this episode charts Zelensky’s extraordinary journey from aspiring comedian to president of his country.
Opening with the collapse of the Soviet Union – an event which had a profound effect on Volodymyr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin in very different ways - it features rarely seen footage of Putin in the early 1990s describing the collapse of the USSR as a “tragedy”.
Alongside archive footage of a young Zelensky performing, his wife, childhood friends and former colleagues describe how Zelensky became a famous comedian both in Ukraine and in Russia, at one point cracking an early gag about Putin. He goes on to win Ukraine’s Dancing with the Stars, and becomes the voice of Paddington Bear.
In 2014 the Maidan Revolution sparks an initial political awakening in Zelensky. When he is asked to go on live TV, he chooses to speak out against the corrupt Ukrainian president and, extraordinarily, addresses Putin directly.
Zelensky goes on to produce and star in a hit TV show about an ordinary Ukrainian who becomes president of his country, called Servant of the People. It proves to be a remarkable foreshadowing.
As Zelensky’s star continues to rise, First Lady Olena Zelenska makes a jaw-dropping revelation - he didn’t tell her that he had decided to run for president in real life. She recalls how she discovered the news along with the rest of the nation, while watching TV. President Zelensky responds by looking directly down the lens and apologising to his wife. As the episode comes to a close, Mrs Zelenska reveals, for the first time, that she had a faint hope her husband would not win the election.
Episode 1 (The Comedian and The Dictator)
With unique access to Volodymyr Zelensky and Olena Zelenska, this episode charts Zelensky’s extraordinary journey from aspiring comedian to president of his country.
Opening with the collapse of the Soviet Union – an event which had a profound effect on Zelensky and Vladimir Putin in very different ways – to the Maidan Revolution sparking a political awakening in Zelensky, this episode explores his role as the Ukrainian president in the hit TV show Servant of the People and his decision to run for president in real life.
(September 4)
Episode 2
After the high of his election victory, Zelensky is forced to face political reality. Using in-depth interviews with Zelensky, his wife Olena Zelenska, and their closest advisors, the film puts the viewer inside the room as Zelensky grapples with what it means to be the leader of a country.
From Zelensky’s infamous phone call with Donald Trump to his only meeting with Vladimir Putin in Paris, the former comedian has a brutal initiation into the ruthless world of power politics. As Putin becomes increasingly belligerent and the drumbeat of war grows louder, Zelensky is under a huge amount of pressure. Is Ukraine prepared for war? Is Zelensky up to the job?
Episode 3
Opening in the first hours of the Russian invasion, this final episode follows explores how Zelensky used the skills he’d honed as an entertainer to galvanise people, as well as taking viewers inside Ukraine’s peace negotiations with Russia. And the Zelenskys reveal what happened in the first hours of the Russian invasion, open up about the realities of living through war and the difficulty of making life and death decisions.
13 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Слуга народу / Servant of the People | first appearance
#servant of the people#sluga naroda#volodymyr zelenskyy#stanislav boklan#yevgeniy koshevoy#elena kravets#yuriy krapov#mika fatalov#alexander pikalov#filmtvdaily#dailytvfilmgifs#Слуга народу#Володимир Зеленський#moje
94 notes
·
View notes
Link
On June 29, the Moscow Culture Department dismissed the heads of three of the city’s theaters. At the Gogol Center, artistic director Alexey Agranovich and director Alexei Kabeshev will be replaced by Anton Yakovlev and Alexander Bocharnikov (and the theater will revert to its old name, the Gogol Theater). At the Sovremennik Theater, a new artistic council will replace artistic director Viktor Ryzhakov, and Yury Kravets will replace director Tatyana Baranova. Iosif Raikhelgauz is out at the Modern Play School theater, to be replaced by Dmitry Astrakhan. The official reason for the personnel changes is simple contract expirations — but the timing suggests otherwise. Meduza gives a rundown of who’s out and who’s in on the Russian theater scene.
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
History Articles Masterpost
I was going the files on my external hard drive today and found a bunch of journal articles and dissertations I downloaded and decided to upload them for people who are interested. They're mostly about the Middle Ages, women's history, troubadours, the Soviet Union, and/or historical figures I find interesting because ... that's just how I roll. MEDIEVAL HISTORY — GENERAL
The Armagnac Faction: New Patterns of Political Violence in Late Medieval France – Timur R. Pollack-Lagushenko
Exemplar King and Doting Parent: Examining the Role of Fatherhood in the Life of Edward III, c. 1320-1377 – Nicole Harding
Harold of England: The Romantic Revision of the Last Anglo-Saxon King – María José Gómez
Jews and Cathari in Medieval France – John M. O’Brien
King Henry III and Saint Edward the Confessor: The Origins of the Cult – D.A. Carpenter
Memory and Collective Identity in Occitanie: The Cathars in History and Popular Culture – Emily McCaffrey
Murder, Mayhem, and a Very Small Penis: Motives for Revenge in the 1375 Murder of William Cantilupe – Frederik Pedersen
The “Sale” of Carcassonne to the Counts of Barcelona (1067-1070) and the Rise of the Trencavels – Fredric L. Cheyette
Stephen of Blois, Count of Mortain and Boulogne – Edmund King
MEDIEVAL HISTORY — WOMEN
The Anglo-Norman Card of Adela of Blois – Kimberly A. LoPrete
The Campaigns of Matilda of Tuscany – Valerie Eads
“Désirant tout, envahissant tout, ne connaissant le prix de rien”: Materiality in the Queenship of Isabeau of Bavaria – Yen M. Duong
Gender and the Language of Politics in Thirteenth‐Century Queens’ Letters – Anaïs Waag
Heavy Is the Head That Wears the Crown: Contemporary Reputations and Historical Representations of Queens Regent – Jessica Donovan
Isabeau of Bavaria, Queen of France (1385-1422): The Creation of an Historical Villainess – Rachel Gibbons
Negotiating Princely Power in Late Medieval France: Jeanne de Penthièvre, Duchess of Brittany (c.1325-1384) – Erika Maëlan Graham-Goering
The Piety, Power, and Patronage of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem’s Queen Melisende – Helen A. Gaudette
The Politics of Queen Philippa’s Mottoes: Five English Words – Melissa Furrow
The Reputation of the Queen and Public Opinion: The Case of Isabeau of Bavaria – Tracy Adams and Glenn Rechtschaffen
Studies in the History of Queen Melisende of Jerusalem – Hans Eberhard Mayer
Valentina Visconti, Charles VI, and the Politics of Witchcraft – Tracy Adams
The War of the Two Jeannes: Rulership in the Fourteenth Century – Katrin Sjursen
MEDIEVAL CULTURE
The Autumn of the Middle Ages by Johan Huizinga (review) – Max Staples
The Avatars of Orable-Guibourc from French chanson de geste to Italian romanzo cavalleresco. A Persistent Multiple Alterity – Philip E. Bennett, Krupina Zarker Morgan
Critical Analysis of the Roles of Women in the Lais of Marie de France – Jeri S. Guthrie
A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century by Barbara W. Tuchman (review) – Bernard S. Bachrach
Managing Medieval Misogyny – M. Wendy Hennequin
The Minor Trobairitz: An Edition with Translation and Commentary – Deborah Perkal-Balinsky
Poetry of Exclusion: A Feminist Reading of Some Troubadour Lyrics – Simon Gaunt
Private Desire and Public Identity in Trobairitz Poetry – Laurel Amtower
Writing Beneath the Shadow of Heresy: The Historia Albigensis of Brother Pierre des Vaux-de-Cernay – Christopher M. Kurpiewski
BYZANTINE HISTORY AND RUSSIAN HISTORY — MEDIEVAL AND TSARIST
Attacking the Empire’s Achilles Heels: Railroads and Terrorism in Tsarist Russia – Frithjof Benjamin Schenk
Kinship and the Distribution of Power in Komnenian Byzantium – Peter Frankopan
Lamentation, History, and Female Authorship in Anna Komnene’s Alexiad – Leonora Neville
Muscovy and the Mongols : What's What and What's Maybe – David M. Goldfrank
The Revolutionary, His Wife, the Party, and the Sympathizer: The Role of Family Members and Party Supporters in the Release of Revolutionary Prisoners – Katy Turton
RUSSIAN HISTORY — SOVIET
Agency and Terror: Evdokimov and Mass Killing in Stalin’s Great Terror – S. Wheatcroft
Between Right and Left: G. Ia. Sokolnikov and the Development of the Soviet State, 1921-1929 – Samuel A. Oppenheim
Bukharin and the Social Study of Science – Constantine D. Skordoulis
Did Stalin Kill Kirov and Does It Matter? – Matt Lenoe
First Russian Biographies of Trotsky: A Review Article – Ian D. Thatcher
“A Grand Bloodbath”: The Western Reaction to Joseph Stalin’s 1930s Show Trials as Foreign Policy – Jeffrey L. Achterhof
The Legacy of Lunacharsky and Artistic Freedom in the USSR – Howard R. Holter
Lunacharsky, the “Poet-Commissar” – A. L. Tait
Lunacharsky and the Rescue of Soviet Theatre – John J. Von Szeliski
Maria Spiridonova’s “Last Testament” – Alexander Rabinowitch
Marketing for Socialism: Soviet Cosmetics in the 1930s – Olga Kravets and Özlem Sandikçi
On the “Letter of an Old Bolshevik” as an Historical Document – Robert C. Tucker
Patronage and Betrayal in the Post-Stalin Succession: The Case of Kruglov and Serov – Timothy K. Blauvelt
“Socialism of Science” versus “Socialism of Feelings”: Bogdanov and Lunacharsky – Georgii D. Gloveli, John Biggart
Stalin and the Politics of Kinship: Practices of Collective Punishment, 1920s-1940s – Golfo Alexopoulos
Stalin’s Falsification of History: The Case of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty – Sydney D. Bailey
The Terrorist and the Master Spy: The Political Partnership of Boris Savinkov and Sidney Reilly, 1918-25 – Richard B. Spence
Trotsky’s Interpretation of Stalin – Robert H. McNeal
Tukhachevsky in Leningrad: Military Politics and Exile, 1928-31 – David R. Stone
Zinoviev: Populist Leninist – Lars T. Lih
Zinoviev’s Revolutionary Tactics in 1917 – Myron W. Hedlin
HISTORY — MISC.
Dark Religion? Aztec Perspectives on Human Sacrifice – Ray Kerkhove
The Empress Elisabeth of Austria and Her “Untidy” Collection – Beth Muellner
Isotta Nogarola: The Beginning of Gender Equality in Europe – Luka Borsic and Ivana Skuhala Karasman
Love (and Marriage) Between Women – Alan Cameron
Pari Khan Khanum: A Masterful Safavid Princess – Shohreh Gholsorkhi
#history#medieval history#medieval#journal articles#european history#russian history#french history#resources
54 notes
·
View notes
Text
Bitcoin Price Predictions from Industry Leaders from the last few weeks
Cryptocurrency news from CryptoUnit - Read more - https://cryptounit.com/2020/03/01/bitcoin-price-predictions-from-industry-leaders-from-the-last-few-weeks/
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf (Stage Name: Alexander Kravets) sings Schabige in Lady Ma...
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf (Stage Name: Alexander Kravets) sings Schabige in Lady Ma...
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf (Stage Name: Alexander Kravets) sings Schabige in Lady Ma...
0 notes
Text
L’any 2016 us deia a proposit de l’estrena de la producció de Pikovaia Dama a Àmsterdam:
La nova genialitat de Stefen Herheim, el director noruec que ja havia fet per a aquest mateix teatre (Òpera Nacional Holandesa) una producció genial d’Evgeni Onegin on al llarg de la representació passava per sobre de l’escenari tota la història de Rússia, com pocs anys més tard faria passar tota la història de Alemanya en aquell monumental Parsifal a Bayreuth, es podrà discutir per l’obsessiva manipulació del llibret per explicar moltes més coses de les que el propi llibret pot arribar a suggerir, ja que la inventiva teatral del director no té ni límits ni aturador, i per aquesta Pikovaia Dama, que no traeix mai l’original, Herheim ha volgut explicar-nos el conflicte vital del propi Txaikovski, que és l’eix central de la dramatúrgia.
Txaikovski és també el princep Jeletskyy, un personatge condemnat a casar-se amb una dona que pot admirar però no estimar, ja que la seva homosexualitat en el tortura i condiciona.
El plantejament és sorprenent, si voleu rebuscat, però és un treball teatral admirable, grandiós i colpidor.
Com sempre succeeix en Herheim envolta l’acció en un marc imponent gràcies a una escenografia de Philipp Fürhofer que situa l’acció en els salons de la casa de Txaikovski, un disseny de vestuari elegantíssim i imaginatiu, un disseny de llums que atorga a cada escena el clima just i variat, tot i situar l’escena sempre en el mateix entorn.
Amb la qüestió estètica esplèndidament resolta, el director ens fa viure el procés creatiu de l’òpera, amb un Txaikovski sempre assegut al piano i envoltat dels personatges, amb els que interactua, personatges que a vegades són el mateix compositor, en un desdoblament psicològic complexa i críptic.
L’acció escènica s’inicia abans de que l’orquestra ataqui l’inquietant preludi i intuïm a Txaikovski fent una felació a un militar assegut en una butaca d’esquena al públic. Aquest militar no serà altre que Hermann, que cobrarà els respectius honoraris pel servei abans de marxar i deixi al compositor abatut a punt per començar a sonar el malaltís tema del destí. La imatge és més potent que provocadora i tot el que es desenvoluparà després en aquell saló elegant i burgés de la casa de Txaikovski és un perfecta simbiosi de la lluita personal del compositor i dels seus torturats personatges de l’òpera.
Hi ha molts copets d’ull en el muntatge, com sempre farcidíssim de detalls i referències erudites que necessiten més d’un visionat i sense cap mena de dubte un coneixement que a molts espectadors, com em succeeix en a mi, els passaran per alt, però coneixent l’admiració que Txaikovski sentia per Mozart, no ens ha d’estranyar gens la referència a Zauberflöte a l’inici de l’obra i més tard en la gran pantomima del segon acte, amb Plutos i Daphnis personificant el famós duo d’ocellaires mozartians.
Són genialitats d’un treball teatral profund, erudit, enginyós i atrevit, amb acabats luxosos i càrregues de profunditat que van molt més enllà d’una posada en escena brillant i provocativa.
Sempre cap la possibilitat de no pensar, quelcom que sembla impossible en els muntatges de Herheim, i deixar-se endur per l’allau d’imatges, totes elles tan potents com belles i elegants. Fixeu-vos que no se m’acut dir-vos tancar els ulls i gaudir de la imponent banda sonora com altres vegades he aconsellat. En els muntatges de Herheim això és contraproduent.
No vull intentar explicar-vos més del compte, amb Herheim sempre resulta fascinant anar descobrint tot el que amaguen les seves propostes sense gaires explicacions prèvies i per això em limito tant.
Doncs bé, una vegada re visitada en ocasió de les representacions d’aquesta òpera al Covent Garden, em reafirmo amb el que vaig dir, si bé l’experiència ha estat radicalment diferent ja que la representació londinenca m’ha semblat globalment molt decebedora i notablement inferior en la totalitat del seu conjunt a aquella enlluernadora representació holandesa.
Per començar ni el sempre excel·lent Antonio Pappano, ni la meravellosa orquestra de la Royal Opera House Covent Garden brillen a la mateixa alçada que la del Royal Concertgebouw sota la direcció de Mariss Jansons. Potser Pappano amb un equip vocal millor hauria brillat més, però tot i els bons resultats no aconsegueix aquell esplendor passional del letó amb la luxosa orquestra.
I el cast londinenc és molt decebedor, en algun moment al límit de la catàstrofe. Només el Jeletzki de Stoyanov i la Polina de Goryachova que curiosament ja varen cantar aquests rols a Amsterdam, estan bé, tot i que ell per sota de l’any 2016, la resta m’han semblat poc rellevants i en alguns cas desastrosos, començant pel rol protagonista, el Hermann del tenor Sergey Polyakov, absolutament insuficient i només vàlid si el considerem com un substitut d’última hora per salvar una representació, perquè el resultat és caòtic per la poca qualitat del cant, la veu i la tècnica.
Eva-Maria Westbroek continua lluint una veu sumptuosa quan es situa en una zona còmode al voltant del centre del seu registre, però a la que ha de pujar a l’extrem de la seva zona aguda, aleshores tot és problema, un neguit i una indecisió que culmina normalment amb un agut estripat, calat, obert i imprecís. És una llàstima perquè la cantant continua sent poderosa, però segurament provar en repertoris excessivament dramàtics l’ha portat a un deteriorament prematur de la veu.
John Lundgren fa un correcte, però sense més Tomsky, mentre que la veterana Felicity Palmer no pot dotar a la seva Comtessa de la grandiositat mítica que cantants de primer nivell en la darrera fase de la seva vida operística li han atorgat.
Fantàstica la Polina d’Anna Goryachova. Veu fresca i vellutada i condemnadament malaltís i nostàlgic el Jeletzki/Txaikovski de Vladimir Stoyanov.
Amb tantes mancances al capdavant de l’equip vocal, els rols més petits, servits amb la deguda professionalitat van quedar ofegats en un arepresentació més aviat gris que la brillantor escènica es va mostrar incapaç de fer aixecar el vol, perquè agradi o no, les veus continuen sent les protagonistes principals d’una representació operística. .
Piotr Iliitx Txaikovski PIKOVAIA DAMA
Sergey Polyakov, Hermann John Lundgren, Count Tomski, Zlatogor Vladimir Stoyanov, Txaikovski/Prince Jeletzki Alexander Kravets, Tschekalinski Tigran Martirossian, Surin Konu Kim, Tschaplizki Michael Mofidian, Narumov Felicity Palmer, Countess Eva-Maria Westbroek, Lisa Anna Goryachova, Polina, Milovzor Louise Winter, Governess Renata Skarelyte, Mascha Jacqueline Stucker, Prilepa Harry Nicoll, Master of Ceremonie
Royal Opera Chorus Director del cor: William Spaulding
Orchestra of The Royal Opera House Director musical: Antonio Pappano
Director d’escena: Stefan Herheim Escenografia: Philipp Fürhofer Disseny de vestuari: Philipp Fürhofer Disseny de llums: Bernd Purkrabek Dramatúrgia: Alexander Meier-Dörzenbach
ROH 2018/2019: PIKOVAIA DAMA (POLYAKOV-WESTBROEK-LUNDGREN-STOYANOV-PALMER-GORYACHOVA;HERHEIM-PAPPANO) L'any 2016 us deia a proposit de l'estrena de la producció de Pikovaia Dama a Àmsterdam:
#Alexander Kravets#Anna Goryachova#Antonio Pappano#Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House#Eva-Maria Westbroek#Felicity Palmer#Harry Nicoll#Jacqueline Stucker#John Lundgren#Konu Kim#Louise Winter#Michael Mofidian#Renata Skarelyte#ROH#Sergey Polyakov#Stefan Herheim#Tigran Mansourian#Vladimir Stoyanov
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf Artist name Alexander Kravets as Astrolog
0 notes
Text
5 Show-Stopping Looks From Instagram That’ll Add Luxury to Your Bedroom
KatarzynaBialasiewicz/Getty Images; realtor.com
You don’t need a whole new bedroom set to give your space a show-stopping look. All you really need are a few key statement pieces, and thanks to the design geniuses of Instagram, we have some new favorites this week.
For this week’s installment of our top design picks of Instagram, we’ve rounded up five glam looks for your bedroom that are sure to bring back all that bold intrigue.
Ready for a whole new look with a few simple upgrades? Keep reading to find the perfect glamorizer for your bedroom.
1. Eye-catching rattan headboard
View this post on Instagram
Say yes to colour this season!
Halo in Eucalypt, Avery Arch Diamond Bedhead, Jute Rug in Natural, and Vega Pendants. #aurahome #organiccotton #newcollection
A post shared by AURA Home (@aurahome) on Feb 29, 2020 at 3:11am PST
Although bulky wood bed frames are out, that doesn’t mean you can’t make a statement with your master suite headboard—especially if it’s as stunning as this rattan one featured by @aurahome.
Wicker and rattan headboards exemplify the “emerging trend of biophilic design—the idea that design that connects people with nature is beneficial for health and well-being,” says Janet Lorusso, CEO and principal designer of JRL Interiors. “Wicker and rattan furniture is a trend that ticks all the boxes.”
Get the look: Find the perfect addition to your bed frame by shopping these custom-made rattan headboards from Etsy.
2. Lustrous geometric wallpaper
View this post on Instagram
In our client's Guest Bedroom, we created a statement feature wall using geometric gold wallpaper, behind a bespoke vertical tubed headboard, creating a contemporary yet palatial feel in this design. #bedroom #bedroomdecor #bedroomdesign #bedroominspo #bedroomideas #bedroomstyle #luxuryinterior #luxuryinteriors #luxury #luxurylifestyle #luxuryhomes #luxurydesign #luxuryrealestate #bedroomstyling #bedroominterior #homedecor #interiordesign #interiør #interieur #interiordesign
A post shared by Alexander James Interiors (@alexanderjamesinteriors) on Feb 29, 2020 at 1:01am PST
Here’s another ridiculously easy way to bring the glam in your bedroom this season: Hang some lustrous geometric wallpaper as featured in this post from @alexanderjamesinteriors.
“In modern bedrooms, the current trend to create a feature wall behind the bed has given rise to a collection of edgy and elegant wall coverings in bold geometrics and striking textures,” Lorusso says.
“Covering just one feature wall makes it possible to splurge on a great wall covering without breaking the bank,” she adds.
Get the look: Snag this gilded glam look by shopping the Kravet La Pointe gilt wallpaper from Decorator’s Best.
3. Romantic candelabra chandelier
View this post on Instagram
Don't you wish your room was so light and airy as @blessedhouseofthree?! Like how does she do it?!
We are loving her use of neutral and pinks for her spring bedroom. We even spot a couple of steals in her beautiful cottage style bedroom. TAG A FRIEND who would love staying in a space like this!
FOLLOW US for more spring decor inspiration!
@decorsteals
A post shared by DECOR STEALS: Home Decor Deals (@decorsteals) on Feb 26, 2020 at 6:15am PST
Chandeliers aren’t just for the dining room! Break away from your boring old bedside lamps and opt instead for something dreamy and dramatic like this candelabra chandelier featured by @blessedhouseofthree.
“A chandelier in the bedroom is so romantic,” says Pamela Durkin, owner of Pamela Durkin Designs. “It improves the whole space and makes it look very luxurious.”
Get the look: Swap out your starter home ceiling lamp for something more luxe, like this Hayden antler pendant from CB2.
4. Bohemian neutral bedding
View this post on Instagram
They are BACK!! Our best selling Boho Tassel Duvets are finally restocked
#taptoshop and get them why you can! Looking oh so good in @dustedwithglitter GORG bedroom! (Also available in gray) • • • • • #homedecor #homebeautiful #ggathome #neutralhome #mybhghome #mybhgstyle #sodomino #showemyourstyled #abeautifulmess #theeverygirlathome #bohobedroom #bedroomdecor #bedroom #bedroominspo #bedroomstyling #interiordesign #interiordesigner #interiordesigning #interiordesigninspo #interiorstruly #interiorstyled
A post shared by Eclectic goods (@eclectic_goods) on Feb 27, 2020 at 9:00am PST
If trending Instagram posts are any indication, we’ll soon be swapping our pure white linens for boho-chic neutrals like these cream and burnt-orange hues featured by @eclectic_goods.
“Ivory bedding is classic and works in any genre, creating a fresh feel in both neutral rooms and alongside a punch of color,” Lorusso says. “The neutral bedding from Anthropologie adds a soft, tranquil feel with a touch of boho in the textures and a bit of classic refinement in the detailing.”
Get the look: Update your bedding for something on-trend (and off-white) by shopping this textured yucca duvet cover from Anthropologie.
5. Dreamy, dark statement walls
View this post on Instagram
I don’t get the luxury of staying in bed all day but if I did this is where you would find me.
Freshening up our bedroom with some beautiful @unisonhome European flax linen sheets and this super unique knit throw has given some texture and interest to our previous all-white bedding setup. I also always believe in waiting to get things on sale and they are having their annual White Sale of 25% off select bed + bath textiles so perfect timing!
Sharing in my stories today so check it out
A post shared by A S H L E Y • H A N E S (@houseofhanesinteriors) on Feb 18, 2020 at 2:53pm PST
If your bedroom has started to look washed out in light colors, then we have just the thing to bring back some glam. The best part? All you’ll need is a can of paint to create this moody statement wall featured by @houseofhanesinteriors.
“I am a huge fan of dark walls in general, and there is no better place than in the bedroom,” Durkin says. “The dark color makes the space feel cozy and safe, definitely the right place for this mood. It also adds a level of drama when the walls are dark, which makes this room feel really unique and sophisticated.”
Get the look: Bring all that bold and dramatic glam back into your bedroom with this exact featured color—Sherwin Williams Tricorn Black.
The post 5 Show-Stopping Looks From Instagram That’ll Add Luxury to Your Bedroom appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf (Stage Name: Alexander Kravets) sings Schabige in Lady Ma...
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf (Stage Name: Alexander Kravets) sings Schabige in Lady Ma...
0 notes
Video
Alexander Graf (Stage Name: Alexander Kravets) sings Schabige in Lady Ma...
0 notes