Posted on 04/02/2006 4:21:23 PM PDT by RWR8189
Edited on 04/02/2006 4:48:26 PM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
I've heard 5 seconds.
When I saw this on Drudge I knew there would be a thread. lol!
Remember?! Where are all those pictures of Kackie's 'work'?!!! lol! It was hideous!
Except this:
How often was Barbra Streisand there?
Another prediction is a speedy makeover of the upstairs rooms that were done up by the Clintons' decorator, Kaki Hockersmith of Little Rock, a figure at the time unknown to fellow professionals and followers of the design press. Referred to in some of the more churlish circles of the interiors world as "Tacky Kaki," Hockersmith has been criticized for her elaborate quasi-Victorian schemes in the Lincoln Sitting Room and Treaty Room. According to one White House source who requested anonymity, "Kaki's taste is horrible: mixed metaphors in everything. The new First Family will have to change the Lincoln Sitting Room because you just couldn't sit in it."
http://tinyurl.com/fvunh
I just knew you'd remember Kaki!
It certainly doesn't sound like any other statements she's made.
She's always careful to be gracious.
I'm gonna go ahead and doubt it, unless I get more evidence.
Of course, all the items about Hillary's house sound dead on, but I doubt Larua was the one to point it out.
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3a7e31bc68f5.htm
and
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3a7cb10137b3.htm
So you think Hillary's bad taste was to save money?
Ooookaaay.
If Laura said it, I believe it.
http://www.kakihockersmith.com/images/kaki.jpg
The Monday after the presidential election in November 1992, interior designer Kaki Hockersmith received a phone call that would change her life. Following her successful design of the Arkansas Governor's Mansion for the Clintons, would she be interested in designing at The White House.
By the middle of the following week, Ms. Hockersmith had already toured The White House with Hillary Rodham Clinton as a guest of Barbara Bush and presented her initial designs to the President Elect in the governor's mansion in Little Rock that December. Since that time, she has designed, renovated and remodeled numerous public and private rooms in The White House including the Oval Office, Treaty Room, Family Dining Room, Solarium, Music Room, as well as many other family and reception areas. Acting on behalf of the Navy, Ms. Hockersmith also designed selected rooms at Camp David, including the President's Cabin "Aspen" and his dining hall and lodge "Laurel."
snip
Kaki Hockersmith lives in Little Rock with her husband, Max Mehlburger, in an Italian-style home she designed and built in the Edgehill neighborhood. She enjoys frequent entertaining in their elegant home for numerous fundraisers and personal gatherings. Her years of experience in design are reflected in the creative style of her parties.
http://www.kakihockersmith.com/
Kaki's national and worldwide connections help her remain current with industry products, and enable her to sense design trends before they are apparent to the public. This particularly benefits her Arkansas clients, since it gives them access to all major markets in this country. "Shopping at markets all over the country and in Europe helps us keep a fresh, unique perspective," she says. "Plus it makes finding exclusive items much easier." Kaki's Little Rock design center is overflowing with resources. Clients can come in and browse through samples to create a really custom look, rather like buying an unframed piece of art and framing it to suit your room."
Unlimited Access was a good book. I thoroughly enjoyed it, even though it sickened me, it was a very vivid portrayal of total corruption.
Free health care for everyone, you know!
A lotta Red Devil to bust through all of that.
And the library's crowning touch - figuratively if not literally - is the precise replica of the Oval Office as decorated by Kaki Hockersmith, Clinton's go-to interior designer. (Figurative, because the building's actual crown is a glass-box apartment where Clinton is expected to spend many a weekend in Little Rock. At press time, Hockersmith was still scratching her head over how to get the grand piano up there: The freight elevator stops at the fourth floor.)
http://tinyurl.com/pa9pf
Shoddy plumbing for a sink this expensive....
I'm sorry, what were we talking about??
The State rooms of the White House itself are off limits to the work of living artists, according to a policy set in 1964 by the Committee for the Preservation of the White House. The idea of contemporary art outside the White House was born the day after the inauguration, as Mrs. Clinton and her friend, designer Kaki Hockersmith from Little Rock, talked about bringing art into the living quarters and the Oval Office. "It was very clear we were both fans of contemporary art," recalls Hockersmith. "We went for a walk in the snow to check out the grounds18 acres of lawn and trees. Hillary said, I cant believe theres no sculpture on the grounds." Mrs. Clintons attention soon focused on the "First Ladies" Garden, conceived by Jacqueline Kennedy and designed for her by Mrs. Paul Mellon with Perry Wheeler, near the East entrance to the mansion. The 120-by-60-foot garden was a sculptural space in itself, with eight niches, like keyholes, in the shrubbery bordering a rectangular grassy lawn. "When I moved in here, and started wandering around the various parts of the house and yards and gardens, I kept coming back to that garden, which I found restful and private," says Mrs. Clinton. "I spent a lot of time there, sitting in the little trellised area, or out on one of the stone benches, and it just looked to me like a garden that should have some sculpture in it. It looked as though at some point someone had landscaped it with that in mind."
http://tinyurl.com/mr7m6
The complexity of the issue is illustrated by the fact that even Kaki Hockersmith Mehlburger, White House decorator for the Clintons and a member of the committee for the preservation of that august mansion, has succumbed to the teardown temptation. Last spring, she and her husband, attorney Max Mehlburger, paid $576,000 to buy a 1930s Dutch Colonial house in Little Rocks toniest old Heights neighborhood. They plan to tear it down and put up a brand-new house. "Im a preservationist," Kaki Mehlburger says, "but this is a classic example of a home, built in the 30s, that isnt historically significant. We dont know yet what kind of house were going to build, but we want one that will enhance the area. We want it to look like its been here forever. We hope that in a hundred years, the house we build will be considered historic."
******
In March, the Clinton Administration estimated that Mrs. Hockersmith's changes at the White House would cost $250,000. In June, the estimate was raised to $337,000. The White House attributed the difference in figures to "miscommunication" between the usher's office and Mrs. Hockersmith over labor costs, like overtime. Much of the renovation is being done on the weekends, which means that workers must be paid overtime. Usher's Office Denies Tension
http://tinyurl.com/h5a7d
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.