
High fashion lives in Buford
By NEDRA RHONE
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 12/20/07
When it comes to shopping, Buford may best be known for Mall of Georgia. With about 225 stores (half as big as Minnesota's Mall of America),
Georgia's largest mall sounds intimidating, but there are some reasons to brave a visit.
First is the inevitable appearance of non-mall clothing boutiques in the area. Second, MOG has some surprising finds, and if nothing else, its sheer
size makes it feel a lot less crowded.
Locals lamenting the loss of trendy Buford boutique It Girl will find some solace in a new spot called DrewMatics, just down the street from
MOG. DrewMatics opened in late October with the motto of "taking fashion to the edge of the city," said store manager Joey Barrett.
Popular brands at the store include Ed Hardy, Free People and Dream Society. Recently spotted was a turquoise Ed Hardy geisha print hoodie
with crystal embellishment for $163, a Free People sweater jumper for $128 and a plaid belted crop jacket by House of Spy for $275. Among the
most expensive items in the store are the leather jackets by Vera Pelle Italia including a shearling version for $5,445 (3700 Euro). Premium denim
ranges from $138 to $250 and features brands such as William Rast, Adriano Goldschmeid and Seven for All Mankind.
Accessories by Atlanta jewelry designers Mark Edge and Jennifer Boaz round out the offerings. Stocking small quantities is a strategy of many
boutiques, and DrewMatics follows the same principle.
"We just want someone to be able to come in and enjoy exclusive clothing," Barrett said.
A lighted runway extending from the dressing rooms to a mirror-lined sitting area is an appropriate set-up for the recently launched service,
"Makeover Runway." Clients can create packages, starting at $300, which include a store gift certificate, catered food and drinks and even services
at nearby Karma Salon.
Back at MOG, the high-fashion action is more subdued. A few new stores have cropped up among the anchors, which include Nordstrom (though
this location doesn't stock some of the high-end lines at other stores), JC Penney and Macy's. Most recently, Chico's and Justice, specialty stores
serving opposite ends of the style spectrum, opened doors in the Village, a plaza-like area that once contained a covered skate park.
Escape mall ennui at Earthbound Trading Company (one of four locations in metro Atlanta). This world-bazaar-in-a-mall offers items such as $4
decorative soapstone boxes from India and $8 desk calendars made with hand-painted wooden blocks from Indonesia.
There's also Trio, an accessories store that offers designer-inspired handbags such as the look-alike Fendi Spy bags for $89 recently discounted to
50 percent off.
All in all, it makes for a good day of wandering.
DETAILS
DrewMatics. The Plaza at Mall of Georgia. 3420 Buford Drive. Buford. 770-831-1682; www.drewmatics.com. Hours: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
Monday-Thursday; 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, closed Sunday.
Mall of Georgia. 3333 Buford Drive. Buford. 678-482-8788; www.simon.com. Hours: 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Saturday, noon-6 p.m. Sunday.
Creative juices
Artist Marc Quinn and his wife, the brilliant children's author Georgia Byng, deploy their talent in the service of home cooking. By
Dominic Lutyens
Dominic Lutyens
Sunday December 16, 2007
Observer
It's always fascinating to see whether an artist's work has anything in common with their taste in interiors; and even whether there's
any connection between their art and their taste in food. When I first meet Marc Quinn at his north-London home, he's beating eggs in
a food processor for a chocolate, ginger and black-grape cake (his own concoction) in a kitchen featuring expanses of pristine white
marble he says he designed himself.
According to his wife Georgia Byng (author of the Molly Moon children's book series) it was more a case of him 'stipulating how the
kitchen should look' when they hired an architect. But the use of marble for all the work surfaces in their white-walled
kitchen-cum-dining room basement is interesting, because white marble happens to be one of Marc's favourite art materials. It was
Quinn who controversially perched his alabaster-white marble sculpture of a pregnant Alison Lapper - born without limbs - on the
empty fourth plinth of Trafalgar Square.
Of course, to equate an artist's work with the style of their home might seem rather trite. After all, Quinn's statue of Lapper is
scarcely equivalent to choosing paint colours or kitchen cabinets. It overturned the usual convention of public sculptures, which
idealise heroic, mainly male figures.
All the same, I ask him, in a general sort of way, why he likes white marble so much. His answer is more domestic than artistic. 'It's
the best kitchen surface. You can cut on it without damaging it, it cleans easily and when you chop on it, you don't get the nasty
scraping noise you get on stainless steel,' he replies, his manner almost as chilled as one of his other famous pieces - a self-portrait
made of frozen blood called Self. In fact, so chilled is he that he sometimes comes across as a little disengaged. But perhaps anyone
who could create Self - a macabre death mask made from 4.5 litres of blood pumped from his body over a period of five months - would
have to be.
If Marc's manner can seem cool, his passion for cooking is undeniable. And this is where the relationship between his art, his taste for
food and the look of his house becomes even more apparent. Hot colours feature prominently in all three. At home, punctuating all
that Arctic white are several examples of Garden, Marc's series of ultra-psychedelic paintings and photographs based on an installation
of surreally frozen flowers, vegetables and fruit created for Miuccia Prada's Fondazione Prada gallery, Milan, in 2000. Two
large-format examples - picturing hothouse flowers bursting out of the ground like triffids on acid - hang in the kitchen.
Feisty colour is also an important element of the food Marc likes to rustle up: 'I love using red, yellow and orange ingredients.' Lunch
today for his family and guests is a richly hued 'cross between paella and a South Indian dish'. 'Marc likes to make strange rice dishes,'
teases Georgia. But she admits that 'he is a much better cook than me. I leave the fancy main courses to him. He gets excited about
them and can pull them off. I just do the salady things and table settings.' She's being modest: for lunch, she's roasted two chickens
with finely-chopped celery and carrot. 'It's a very simple dish in which the juices from the chicken combine with stock to make a
delicious gravy. It's a French way of roasting chicken.'
As they prepare for their guests, she and Marc make a good team. Georgia, wearing a silver, diamond-encrusted, strawberry-shaped
pendant designed by Marc, lines up small clear vases with single stems of orange gerberas and roses on the spotless white dining table.
It's a very Quinn colour combo.
As for that ambiguous rice dish, it is, he explains, a combination of 'brown rice with onion, chorizo, garlic, turmeric, cumin, mustard
seeds and saffron. After a bit, I switch the heat off and let the pan cool for a while, so the food doesn't overcook and the ingredients can
marinate. Just before serving, I'll heat the pan, take out the old bits of chorizo and replace them with fresh slices.'
Marc, who read history and history of art at Cambridge, defends his taste for mixing Spanish and Indian ingredients by arguing that
'all food is hybridised by its very nature. Spaghetti comes from China and Spanish food gets its strong flavours because the country was
under Moorish rule for 700 years.' On a recent trip to Kerala, he and Georgia learnt how to make the Indian bread paratha (it's made
of wholewheat flour and ghee, and often stuffed with vegetables like cauliflower or potatoes and the Indian cheese, paneer) and coconut
milk is another addition to his spicy paella. 'The coconut milk shifts the cultural resonance of the food - in this case, gives it some Far
Eastern flavour,' he explains.
Global though their taste in food is, it soon becomes obvious that he and Georgia are great Hispanophiles. It's not just Marc's twist on
paella that gives the game away: for lunch, the starter is paper-thin, ragged-edged jamon serrano. 'It's the pata negra [black-hoof] kind
made by feeding the pigs with acorns,' he tells me, adding that he loves Spain partly because the person he most closely collaborates
with for his art projects has a studio in Madrid.
He and Georgia are also big fans of the London eaterie Moro and Spain's most famous restaurant, El Bullì. In fact the entire Iberian
peninsula seems to exert a pull. 'I'm having a show in January at White Cube's Mason's Yard gallery [in London] which will include 12
sculptures made out of a pink marble you can only find in Portugal.'
Artists often say cooking is like painting - or art in general. Does Marc agree? 'Well, it is creative. And relaxing. But there's a
difference. Unlike art, cooking doesn't have to mean anything.' And he betrays a rebellious streak: 'I don't like to stick to recipes or
feel intimidated by them. No one should have to conform to exact measurements - 225g, say, of this or that. It only matters if you're
writing cookbooks.'
Before lunch Georgia takes me into her dinky office adjoining the vast ground-floor living room to talk about her books. Before the
Molly Moon series, she drew comic strips. The first was about the cartoony antics of different types of food in a fridge; another featured
sock-eating monsters. Then she invented her teenage hypnotist heroine Molly Moon, 'the world's most miserable orphan, living in a
most miserable orphanage' who compensates by acquiring, in each book, a new, thrillingly empowering superhuman skill, from
mind-reading to time-travelling. The Molly Moon series has proved phenomenally successful. 'They're translated into 36 languages,
including Chinese,' says Georgia. In fact, the books are proliferating at such a rate that they're skidding out of her control. 'You never
know what covers the foreign-language editions will have. It's quite worrying,' she jokes, showing me one picturing Molly dressed as a
saucy sorceress in the sort of get-up Britney might wear for Hallowe'en.
The guests for lunch with Marc, Georgia and their two young sons Lucas and Sky prove to be a boho mix of art and fashion. There's
Gawain Rainey, producer of fashion shoots and shows including Burberry, his partner, model Jasmine Guinness (co-owner of Notting
Hill toy shop Honey Jam) and their sons Otis and Elwood. Film-maker Gerald Fox (who made a documentary about Quinn for the
South Bank Show in 2000 and is about to exhibit a multi-screen film, Living London, at the north London gallery 176), turns up with
his partner Josie (who works for a film-funding company) and their daughter, Frankie. Also round the table are Byng's teenage
daughter Tiger (by her first husband, the artist Daniel Chadwick) and Tiger's friend Lily.
Lunch is mellow and kid-friendly. Forget the laddish escapades of the YBA crowd, of which Marc was once a key member: there are
more bottles of San Pellegrino water on the table than wine (a light rosé). After helpings of paella, chicken and green salad comes the
chocolate cake. At first resembling, none too promisingly, a crusty school-dinner sponge, it turns out to have a sumptuously gooey
centre. Sky and Lucas, meanwhile, are invited to sample Molly Moon's favourite grub, bread spread with ketchup, and her favourite
drink, concentrated orange squash.
After lunch, when the children have been rounded up and the guests have gone home, I'm shown Marc and Georgia's art collection in
the hallway and living room. It includes a sculpture of an inflatable safety jacket lined with cigarettes by Sarah Lucas, a Tracey Emin
etching, a Pop Art painting of a packet of the pain-reliever Solpadeine by Jason Shulman and a work from Gary Hume's recent series
of cartwheeling American cheerleaders. I can't spot any pieces here by arch-YBA Damien Hirst, but I suggest to Quinn that he shares
with Hirst an obsession with delaying decay - the difference being that while Marc has frozen nature, Hirst has pickled it. Quinn eyes
me a little warily before replying: 'Yes, in the sense that we're both concerned with art's classic themes of life and death.'
Also on display are several pieces by Marc. There's a snow-white marble sculpture of a male amputee, his statue of Kate Moss striking
an impossibly contorted yoga pose and an airbrushed Garden painting brimming with Disney-bright hothouse blooms. The collection,
with two of Hume's high-gloss canvases, is an indicator of the couple's taste for bold modernity. 'Gary's work is so vibrant, it feels very
current,' say Georgia. 'I love all things new and contemporary. I just couldn't live in a house filled with 19th-century paintings. They'd
make me feel half-dead.'
Lunch at the Quinns: Chicken and rice
Georgia Byng's roast chicken
Serves 8
This makes a really moist chicken and then also means there is excellent ready-made gravy. Very simple and the best way of making
chicken I think.
2 chickens, approx 1 kilo each
225g carrots, finely chopped
125g celery, finely chopped
8 garlic cloves
750ml chicken stock
Preheat oven to 220°C. Put the chickens in a deep dish. Crush the garlic cloves and rub over the birds. Surround with the carrots and
celery and pour over the stock. Cover the dish with silver foil and cook for an hour and a quarter, or until the chickens are completely
cooked through. For the last 15 minutes remove the foil in order to crisp the skin. To make the gravy, drain liquid from dish, skim off
any fat and either thicken with a little flour if required, or simply serve in a jug.
Marc Quinn's rice and chorizo
Serves 8
2 large onions
4 chopped garlic cloves
2 small chillis
large knob of ginger peeled and finely chopped
1 tsp turmeric
1 tsp mustard seed, ground
1 tsp coriander seed, ground
500g chopped chorizo sausage
500g wholegrain brown rice
1 litre chicken stock
1 tin chopped tomatoes
1 tin coconut milk
5 saffron strands
cooking oil
Heat 2 tbs oil in a large frying or paella pan and gently cook onions, garlic, chillis, ginger, turmeric, mustard seed, coriander seed and
half the chopped chorizo. Add rice, stock, tomatoes, coconut milk, saffron. Cook for at least 40 minutes, adding more stock if necessary.
Fry remaining chorizo in a pan. Remove chorizo from rice and replace with the fresh.
· Molly Moon, Micky Minus and the Mind Machine, by Georgia Byng, is out now (Macmillan, £9.99). Marc Quinn's show at White
Cube, 25-26 Mason's Yard, London SW1, runs from 23 Jan - 23 Feb 2008 (whitecube.com).
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