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Hardcover My Prescription for Anti-Depressive Living Book

ISBN: 0060820535

ISBN13: 9780060820534

My Prescription for Anti-Depressive Living

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

My Prescription for Anti-Depressive Living offers a window into the life and mind of an extraordinarily creative person who was once told by a pottery professor that he had no talent and should consider another career. Not only did Adler stick with pottery, he transformed it from a dreary, unappealing summer camp craft into a contemporary signifier of modern, handcrafted luxury and became America's first (and only) celebrity potter. Interior designer...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I love this book!!!

I've been collecting many interior-decorating books in the past several years, and this was the last one I bought for my collection. In short what is different about this book is that the message of the author is not "how to create a good looking space" but one about "how to create a space that f-e-e-l-s good." Personally, I live with a huge load of STUFF - and this book in nowhere describes how to solve the problem of "storing stuff". But the book title lives up to its promise - "My Prescription for Anti-Descriptive Living" and I am a satisfied customer. The added bonus is the generous inclusion of his personal history - I think it is very brave and courageous to share so much of personal stuff here. He shares about his experience at school as a ceramic art student, and how his teacher discouraged him, and how he finally overcame this discouragement, and became a ceramic artist ANYWAY and that his business is doing well. Dunno. I think what I'm trying to say is how much I love the "attitude" that is obvious and contagious from the book. I think the photograhed interiors are highly eclectic and whimsical, full of humour, wit, and charm. But do be aware, this is not a book on "pragmatics of interior decorating".

This book was better than dessert.....

Love, love, love this book! I finally feel I have the green light to decorate in the style I've always wanted. I was slightly afraid to put certain pieces out for show, but at the same time I didn't want to stash them in the closet. Everything has been set free and now I can breathe. Thank you Jonathan for your amazing talent, your fearless decorating style, and your oh, so hilarious advice on life.

Channeling Mrs. Goldstein

So while I was sitting on the couch yesterday, sick as a dog, I noticed my partner's new Jonathan Adler design book. The cover features Jonathan perched awkwardly on a couch, surrounded by his whimsical pottery and the typical Hollywood Regency-inspired design motifs one sees repeated in design magazines these days. Juxtaposed with his his super-cool pottery designs, the cover comes across as forced, tacky, and aimed at selling the maximum number of copies to the maximum number of people. Had I not been sick and had the book not been within arm's length, I never would have cracked it open. Strangely enough, it turned out to be one of the more entertaining and inspirational things I have read in a very long time. Jonathan begins his tome by stating: "This book is about how design can change your life." In the proceeding pages, Adler lays out his design philosophies in the wittiest manner imaginable, often using text and color alone to outline his anti-formal aesthetic. An example of this is the section titled My Prescription For Maximalist Merriment. Striking out boldly against the confines and conformity of minimalism, Tip #5 reads: "Get rid of all your boring, tiresome friends. Make friends with cabaret stars, exotic dancers, and down-on-their-luck royality instead." The book, in this way, deconstructs design as conformist modality and reconstructs it, Star Trek transporter beam style, in a totally different, purely subjective form altogether. Adler rages, in his whimsical and wacky way, against the the urge to create cold spaces defined by exterior influences. He instead asks, nay begs, the designer-to-be to recharge one's inactive design batteries by channelling the phantasmagorical landscape of the child's mind. His recollection of a Mrs. Goldstein is a fine example of this: "The Goldsteins were my next-door neighbors and best friends growing up in suburban New Jersey, and their house was the ne plus ultra of fabulous modern decorating. I have always been completely obsessed with Mrs. Goldstein's style. Often, when I am making something groovy, I think to myself: "How would this look chez Goldstein?" Allow me to describe chez Goldstein. In the foyer was a giant Murano light fixture hanging over a pop-art painting of a gorilla. The kitchen walls were decoupaged (by Mrs. G herself) in New Yorker magazine covers. The den had a George Nelson sectional sofa upholstered in bright red, which was surrounded with African art, groovy C. Jere wall sculptures, and a Knoll coffee table supporting a giant sculpture of a hippopotamus. The living room was heaven. In one corner was a black lacquered piano with a ceramic leopard under it sitting on a white flokati rug. The coffee table was mirrored, the sofa-back table was covered in snakeskin, and on a shelf there was a ceramic piece of cake. It was all put together with a sense of panache and confidence that I strive to equal to this day. Nothing was chosen to blend in -- everything took center stage.

Decorating can make you happy!

This book is a real surprise. So often design books seem deadly serious and make you feel like you've got to follow a strict set of rules. But here's a major designer who actually believes that home design should be fun and make you happy. The book is filled with great decorating ideas that are chic, irreverent, and often drop-dead gorgeous. It's also funny, self-deprecating and has tons of stunning pictures that will get your creative juices flowing. I really loved this book!

A FUN Book on Interior Decorating

There are a very large number of house design books. Compared with this one, they are all very dull. Johathan Adler writes (and decorates) with a abandonment of traditional values that's borderline nuts. The hell of it is that he pulls it off. For instance, point one of his manifesto says: 'I believe that when it comes to home decorating, the wife is always right (unless the husband is gay). Well, I've ceratinly learned (through painful experience) that the best answer to any decorating question is 'Yes, dear.' Jonathan's design ideas are nothing if not innovative. I don't quite know what to call them. Here's a pop-art painting, here's some highly tectured fabric. Colors are bright, walls are white, unless, of course, they're bright red or wood paneling or something else. Put them all together, and you wind up with a suprising look for a house, a restaurant or something else. My favorite of his prescriptions for anti-depressive living is: 'Obey every command in this book. Or Don't. I want you to do whatever makes you happy." Great Fun.
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