Me as Mad Man

July 28th, 2009 Comments Off

I adore this Mad Men avatar generator. Here’s the Sterling Cooper version of me, replete with bowtie and classy briefcase!

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My Public Radio Debut

July 8th, 2009 § 0

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While I was in Los Angeles last week for the very fun, very successful Dwell on Design Conference, I met up with Brendan F. Newnam, a friend of a friend and guy I’d been trying to hang out with either here in San Francisco or down in LA for some time. We finally got the chance at Lamill in Silver Lake and he, Drew and I had a fine breakfast and first rate coffee in the somewhat over-designed cafe that Brendan likened to “stepping inside a giant purse.”

After our breakfast, whose conversation touched on the former Yugoslavia, the works of Alan Furst, foraging for food and how the best minds of our generation have gone into stealth advertising, Brendan and I retreated to his car so that he could record me telling a joke.

Brendan’s day job is as a producer for the public radio show Marketplace, which I catch at least a couple times a week, and on the side he has a witty, short show called The Dinner Party Download. Each episode starts with a joke and here’s the one I told, or better yet, listen to the whole 15 mintue episode for free here and learn about the assassination of James Garfield, and the merits of really expensive charcoal. Brendan and his co-host Rico are smart, funny guys, and once you’re hooked you can check out the rest of the episodes on iTunes for the price of zero dollars.

The Pocket Square on All Plaidout

July 8th, 2009 Comments Off

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One of my favorite style blogs, All Plaidout by Max Wastler, asked me to contribute a Father’s Day tribute to my pop. The week before Father’s Day Max ran guest posts from writers across the men’s style spectrum in a series called What I Learned from My Father. Have a look at mine, and be sure to check them all out. Good ones all around.

The photo above was taken of me and my dad at my wedding in October of 2007. The photo is by Alexis Tjian.

Here’s what I had to say about my dad:

If we accept the notion, and teams of advertisers are hoping we do, that our clothes are some direct representation of who we are, then my father is a man unfettered. Bolo ties, multi-hued batiked shorts, a plumed fedora, and of late, even a warm, woolen beret have found their way into his wardrobe. He runs around the Northern California town in which I grew up in clothes I would never wear, stalking the garden in Keens, a tasseled fleece jester hat flapping behind him while snowboarding, the suspenders and 20s-inspired garb he sported at his wedding two years ago.

He didn’t always dress with such abandon, and in the main he still doesn’t. Most of his clothes are those of a small-town carpenter: work boots, dirty jeans, fleece jackets and t-shirts bearing his company’s logo. Growing up, working clothes defined my father’s style of dress—not the work wear now so voraciously embraced by the urban fashion set, work clothes in which you paint a house or set forms, work clothes you mar, then quickly destroy. Anything that was initially to be kept apart from the jobsite—corduroy pants or button-down shirt—invariably came home with flecks of dried concrete or marked with spray paint. He seemed to me a man largely defined by his work, and was at times reluctant to extend beyond that, and he dressed accordingly. Fashion was not his concern. He kept his head down. Little suggested an inconsequential person more than undue flash.

But since my parents’ divorce nearly seven years ago, this inward man has expanded. Suddenly free to break from old routines, root out what was inessential and honestly reckon with what he wanted from the rest of his life, the burdens of a long marriage and a glimpse of what might lay in store invigorated him. Bouts of sullenness, or ill-temper, things that I had taken to be essential elements of his personality were revealed as little more than entrenched habit, and were cast off. He became lighter, more open, more accepting and more fun. He had always been a very kind, generous and loving father, and I saw these qualities, those which I take to be his core, renewed. Like many things in his life, his sense of style was in for renaissance.

Now let me reiterate, I’m not terribly sanguine with all his choices, but to see him embrace so many new aspects of his life has been a joy for me. From his wild hats to his Jack Nicholson glasses to his bright yellow shirts, dressing is now one of his pleasures. He’s given himself license to play, to dress for pleasure, and for all the snappy patter in the media about what’s in, what’s out and what’s next, let us–men who give it a second thought when we put on our clothes in the morning–never forget to dress for the sheer fun of it. Perish vanity, perish self-consciousness, perish trends.

For years my dad didn’t allow himself to dress for any reason save keeping out the cold. But of late his whole outlook has changed, and though he remains uninterested in what’s cool or what’s in, he has started asking himself, “What do I like?” In dressing to please only himself, in coming to see his clothes at as another avenue for expression and delight, my father has immensely pleased me. May I one day pass on that idea, that a man can do a thing to please himself without becoming inauthentic or solipsistic, to a son of my own.

- Aaron Britt

People Reading

May 18th, 2009 Comments Off

A photo Sonya Worthy of the blog People Reading took of me on BART tonight.

A photo Sonya Worthy of the blog People Reading took of me on BART tonight.

As I was taking BART home tonight I met a woman named Sonya who runs a blog called People Reading. I overheard her doing this funny, very informal interview with a guy reading a computer programming book in the Montgomery Station about what he was reading and what he likes to read. She took his picture, and a picture of the book and then got on the same train as me. As soon as I sat down and pulled out my book–Wuthering Heights–she started craning her neck to see what I had. As she was rather near, I held it up so she could have a look and before long she was sitting next to me asking me the very same sorts of questions. Suffice it to say, soon I was posing for a photo and discovered tonight that I’m now on her blog.

I think it’s a great idea, figuring out what people are reading and trying to engage them about books. We both rode BART to 24th St. and chatted about Cervantes and Witold Gombrowicz and then went our separate ways, but I’m so thrilled to learn of her blog. I confess that I’m rather like Sonya, very curious about others’ books though rarely do I jump right in to ask them anything. Good on you, Sonya. Here’s the post she did on me.

Designing Diplomacy at the Finnish Embassy

May 13th, 2009 § 0

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I wanted to post quickly to say that I’ll be in Washington DC next week for two events, one of which is listed above. I’m really excited to come back to the District and expect more to come on the other event, a walking tour of modern embassies. I hope to see you there.

Kilian Party at Sorokko Gallery

May 7th, 2009 § 0

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Fida, Jordan and I dropped into the Kilian fragrance party tonight at the Serge Sorokko Gallery on Grant St. Kilian Hennessy, parfumier, was on hand to hawk his latest line of wares including the men’s scents Straight to Heaven and A Taste of Heaven, each of which had a strong, clean masculine smell. The usual battery of black-clad waiters wandered around with boat-like endives and glasses of bubbling Veuve Clicquot rosé, no great surprise considering Hennesy’s the heir to the LVMH empire.

The Sorokko Gallery was an apt space considering the chichi nature of the whole affair, but the usual crowd of pricily-coiffed society types trotting out the latest cotoure and spikiest heels left one rather pleased to be left out of that particular demi-monde. I did wander off with a gift bag, though, and appear to have my choice of perfume samples. I don’t typically wear the stuff, so we’ll see how a splash tomorrow morning goes over. It will have to make a pretty big impression, however, because at $225 per overwrought bottle–an exercise in useless luxury design if I ever saw one–I’ll happily stick to the Old Spice. To Hennesy’s credit though, the bottle is made to be refilled, sparing the consumer the need to buy a whole new bottle when he’s simply out of cologne. Justifying the rest of it is on your soul.

After the party we three then hopped on down to Camper where I spied, for the first time in the flesh, the pair of plimsolls that have captured my heart. Mediterranean Sneakers, you shall be mine.

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Live-Tweeting Wuthering Heights

April 18th, 2009 § 0

I'm coming home to Wu-thering, Wu-thering, Wu-thering Heights.

I'm coming home to Wu-thering, Wu-thering, Wu-thering Heights.

Liveblogging some event is not real news, as a thousand bloggers have already set their minds to the Oscars, Super Bowl and Presidential election returns. Live-Tweeting however strikes me as just a touch more novel, and, hopefully, fun. In lieu of an event, though, I’ve decided to live-Tweet a book. I started Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights this week and have commenced the feed. My Twitter username is TheBrothersBell, a nod to the pseudonyms Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë used (watch those initials): Currer, Acton and Ellis Bell. I really have no idea how this little experiment will turn out, but at the very least it will serve as a decent journal of my thoughts as I go. My sincere hope is that others will join in the conversation and hopefully an informal book club will start. Check it out @TheBrothersBell or come check me out @ThePocketSquare.

Future Shock: Vancouver Public Library on Battlestar Galactica

April 17th, 2009 § 0

Boomer and Helo outside of Moishe Safdie's main branch of the Vancouver Public Library in the "Bastille Day" episode of Battlestar Galactica.

Boomer and Helo outside of Moishe Safdie's main branch of the Vancouver Public Library in the "Bastille Day" episode of Battlestar Galactica.

Films and TV shows have long been shot in Vancouver for the financial savings, North American cityscapes and significant natural beauty it offers. So it was little surprise to see the city in the “Bastille Day” episode of Battlestar Galactica I watched last night. As the characters Helo and Boomer, marooned on a scorched interstellar colony called Caprica, now run by the robotic Cylons, made their way through the deserted city, they came upon one of the worst buildings the city has to offer: The Vancouver Public Library. I’ve had mixed feelings on architect Moshe Safdie for some time. His claim to fame, and still his best building, wowed me when I saw it a couple years ago on a Dwell trip to Montreal. His Habitat 67 is unlike anything else in the city, a tessellated mound of geometric modules piling up cheek by jowl that served as housing during Montreal’s 1967 World’s Fair. It’s still the architectural hallmark of the city, and the work that catapulted the 24 year old Safdie to the international stage.

Moshe Safdie's wonderful Habitat 67.

Moshe Safdie's wonderful Habitat 67.

I saw other Safdie work while in Montreal, including an underwhelming department store that was little more than an exercise is aimless post-modernism: A tossed-off thing by an architect whose star was on the wane but still had plenty of brand recognition in the town that helped make his reputation.

So as I came to the Vancouver Public Library last summer I had a feeling that it would make or break my impression of the architect. Needless to say, I was underwhelmed. The blandness of a facade of beige concrete and high, opaque windows is only barely mitigated by the structure’s gentle nautilus curl. I appreciated the open-air arcade that allows one to pass through the structure while staying outdoors, but the high galleries inspired less awe than boredom. Enthralled with his homage to classical forms (one can’t help but think of a Greek amphitheater or the Coliseum) Safdie failed to say anything about the here and now. And considering what a milquetoast city Vancouver is architecturally, with slowly patinating copper condo towers dotting the skyline like stripped pine trees and elevated freeways marring the waterways, I held Safdie responsible for a severe lack of imagination. Not only does the library loom over a pedestrian mall, but it says little to the buildings around it, instead rising from its considerable plaza with an undue hauteur.

Why then did I like seeing it so much on Battlestar Galactica? I think it was because it managed to look at once futuristic and arcane. Like so much science fiction set in a galaxy far, far away, BSG manages to at once suggest the technologies and environments to come, while drawing heavily on antiquity for cultural touchstones (Caprica, Apollo, Thrace, Gemenon, Sagitarion, Cyranus and Agathon are the names in play), and human drama. Vancouver offers that well-scrubbed urbanity that we like to think the distant future holds, while still retaining styles and structures that many of us hope never to lose. Shot in heavy sepia tones, the lonely VPL, in its expanse of concrete, appears like a temple and a relic bereft of any recognizable iconography, an ancient form repurposed for advanced times. Though I’m not sure what he aims to do or say about present day Earth, Safdie, unbenownst to him, I’m sure, turns out to be the ideal architect for post-nuclear, Cylon-controlled Caprica. Though those commissions, one presumes, are far tougher to get.

Objectified in America

April 6th, 2009 § 0

Filmmaker Gary Hustwit (Objectified, Helvetica) will be one of the panelists at my April 24th Dwell Conversation.

Filmmaker Gary Hustwit (Objectified, Helvetica) will be one of the panelists at my April 24th Dwell Conversation. Photo from www.objectifiedfilm.com

I’m really excited to announce that I’ll be moderating a panel called Objectified in America: Design, Consumerism and Sustainability in Our Changing Economy for the next Dwell Conversations on April 24th at the AutoDesk Gallery space at 1 Market St. Suite 200, San Francisco, California.

The panelists include filmmaker Gary Hustwit, who made 2007’s wonderful Helvetica and has just come out with a new film examining our material culture called Objectified. I’ve not seen it yet, but there are some upcoming screenings co-sponsored by Dwell at the Sundance Kabuki Theaters.

Founder of CITIZEN:Citizen and my neighbor, Philip Wood (pictured here with his wife and radio journalist Tania Kentenjian) is just one of the speakers on the panel.

Founder of CITIZEN:Citizen and my neighbor, Philip Wood (pictured here with his wife and radio journalist Tania Kentenjian) is just one of the speakers on the panel. Photo from last year's Dwell on Design conference taken from www.roseapodaca.com

Also on the panel is CITIZEN:Citizen founder Philip Wood, a very smart and charming guy who I see around town pretty often. I just got off the phone with him and he’s got loads to say about how we view objects in terms of materials and use but also for their talismanic, iconic nature. He’s spoken on Dwell panels before, and will be on another I’m doing on Design Entrepreneurs at this year’s Dwell on Design Conference in Los Angeles. Bill Moggridge, co-founder of IDEO and Tom Dair, co-founder of Smart Design will also be on the panel, round out a really bright and engaged group, one I’m quite pleased to lead in discussion.

Buy your tickets to the event here. They go for $15 and we’re expecting a big crowd, so get them soon. I hope you all can make it, and do go see Objectified. If it’s half as good as Helvetica (which you can watch On Demand on Netflix) you won’t be sorry.

Self Edge Soiree Last Night

April 5th, 2009 Comments Off

Jeans galore and beers to match at the Self Edge/Style Forum party last night on Valencia St.

Jeans galore and beers to match at the Self Edge/Style Forum party last night on Valencia St.

After a late dinner of salad and Spanish tortilla–I do make a mean tortilla–Drew and I took a walk down Valencia St. and stopped into Self Edge as the Self Edge/Style Forum party was winding down. I missed the old time motorcycles that Paul d’Orleans had brought over for the event, but was happy to arrive when I did. The chilled-out vibe and not-too-crowded lower level made for easy browsing and an unexpectedly interesting theological debate with Mark Miller, a professor of Catholic Studies at USF.

I approached Mark to compliment him on his rather natty double-breasted chambray blazer, but before long things turned to precisely why God hardened Pharaoh’s heart against the Jews as they sought to gain their freedom in Exodus. It’s been on my mind lately as Drew and I prepare for our annual seder this Wednesday, and it seems that God deliberately set up Pharaoh as an adversary to the Jews with no possible chance of his freeing them on his own. Drew made the point that the Exodus story is more about the founding of a nation than anything else, and though it works as a narrative device, it certainly appears that God’s love isn’t available to all when he sets certain people against him. Mark argued that God’s love is available to all–certainly a more embracing Catholic notion than the chosen people mentality of the Old Testament–but in my view he didn’t fully satisfy the question. He talked about Pharaoh turning away from God and essentially hardening his own heart, but I still read it as the first step in a display of God’s power to and for the Israelites (the plagues, parting the Red Sea) not to all of his creations.

Another element of the Exodus story with which I have always struggled is how Pharaoh’s magicians managed to perform some of the same feats as Moses and Aaron, such as turning their staffs into snakes. On what power do the magicians draw? Demons, their own gods? If there are no other gods than the God of Israel, and Exodus is certainly His book, whence the ability to turn staffs into snakes unless it is in fact God who is doing it. Considering that he hardened Pharaoh’s heart in order to display his might to his people, certainly doing the covert bidding of the magicians only adds to the theater. Puzzling, and at some level, rather disquieting.

Nonetheless, it was a really fun time so thanks to Kiya at Self Edge and to Style Forum for a fun night.