• Home
  • News
  • Restaurants + Bars
  • City Life
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Arts
  • Society
  • Home + Design
  • Fashion + Beauty
  • Innovation
  • Sports
  • Events
  • Submit New Event
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • series
  • Arden Test Capitalization
  • Arden testing
  • ACM Literature
  • Football and Fashion
  • Formula One
  • Off the Record 2011
  • On Location 2011
  • ACL Festival 2011
  • ATX Comforts of Home 2011
  • Divine Presents
  • Culture of Giving
  • Imagine Austin's Future
  • Austin Entrepreneur Video Series
  • The State of Love
  • Clifford on the Catwalk Atx
  • ATX State of the Arts 2012
  • Inside Tracks
  • ATX Green Living 2012
  • Atx SXSW 2012
  • Buying Austin 2012
  • ATX Staycation
  • Hidden Austin 2012
  • Road Trips
  • Picture Perfect
  • ATX London Dreams
  • ATX Football and Fashion 2012
  • ATX Fall For Fashion 2012
  • ATX Good Eats 2012
  • ACL Festival 2012
  • Fun Fun Fun Fest 2012
  • ATX Comforts of Home 2012
  • ATX Osborne Advisors
  • ATX Divine Presents 2012
  • Austin Culture of Giving 2012
  • ATX Sun and Ski
  • ATX Cars in Lifestyle
  • ATX Zimmet
  • ATX New Beginnings
  • ATX Longhorn Sports 2013
  • ATX Formula 1
  • ATX Songwriters
  • Picture This Pet
  • ATX Best of 2013
  • SXSW 2013
  • ATX City Centre 2013
  • ATX Music Scene 2013
  • ATX Breakfast Series 2013
  • Mothers Day Gift Guide 2021 Austin
  • First-time Homebuyers Austin 2021
  • Visit Frisco
  • Attic Austin
  • Dogfish Head Austin
  • LovBe Austin
  • AT&T Dell Childrens Ball
  • Howdy Cleaners
  • Claire St Amant podcast Austin
  • Visit Boerne Austin
  • The Listing Firm Austin
  • South Padre Austin
  • Texas Restaurant Association Austin
  • Nasher Austin
  • Pioneer Austin
  • Kuper Neighborhood Guide Austin
  • Luck Springs Austin
  • MileStone Builders
  • Rectanglo.com Austin
  • Weekend Event Planner Austin
  • ACL Fest 2021
  • Proximo Spirits Austin
  • Love Where You Live Austin 2021
  • Bandera Austin
  • Port Aransas Austin
  • Milan Laser
  • Highland Park Village Austin
  • Austin Tastemaker Awards 2021
  • COTA F1
  • Bordeaux Austin
  • Balcones Austin
  • Verizon Visible
  • COTA Peppermint Parkway
  • 2021 Gift Guide
  • World Interiors
  • Blue Circle Foods Austin
  • Construction Concepts
  • Athletic Brewing Austin
  • Austin Wedding Guide 2022
  • Get Help with Tula
  • Austin First-time Homebuyers Guide 2022
  • El Paso Austin
  • 2022 Tastemaker Awards
  • Visit Lubbock
  • Neighborhood Guide
  • Real Estate Insider
  • Central Market Austin
  • JW Marriott San Antonio Austin
  • Moody Center Austin
  • Lamar Union Plaza
  • Travel Texas
  • Shift Adapt
  • AC Marriott Hill Country
  • Austin Mecca Spa
  • ATX Sustainable Food
  • ATX Good Eats 2013
  • ATX Culture Motive
  • ATX Auto Awards
  • ATX Ski Magic
  • The Perfect Valentine's Day
  • ATX Zoltan David
  • SXSW 2014 spotlight: CultureMap presents 30 Days, 30 Artists
  • ATX SXSW 2014
  • ATX Tastemakers 2014
  • ATX Paypal
  • ATX_15Winks
  • ATX Smart Luxury
  • RedRover Alley ATX
  • atx woodford reserve manhattans
  • Jameson ATX
  • SXSW 2015
  • CultureMap Social ATX
  • Where to Eat
  • ATX Tastemakers 2015
  • Omni Hotel ATX
  • 2015 Austin Stylemaker
  • ATX New York Fashion Week spring 2016
  • Austin SXSW Eco
  • Formula 1 Giveaway
  • Kids in a Groove
  • NextSeed
  • Austin Charity Challenge 2016
  • Fresh Start Austin
  • Wedding Planner Austin
  • Texas Wine Talk Austin
  • JuiceLand
  • Metropia Austin
  • Gourmet by numbers
  • SXSW 2016
  • Minibar
  • Okay to Say
  • Tastemaker Awards 2016 Austin
  • Wilson Goldrick Realtors
  • Love Where You Live
  • Old Forester Austin
  • Car2Go
  • Texas Traveler Austin
  • Soldiers' Angels
  • Millennium Rainey Street
  • NMASS
  • Okay to Say Austin
  • Bob's Steak and Chop House Austin
  • Kuper Sotheby's Austin
  • Real Estate Confidential Austin
  • Top Texans Under 30 Austin
  • Stylemaker Awards 2016 Austin
  • Real Weddings Austin
  • Soldier's Angels Austin
  • Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino Austin
  • Brown Forman Cocktail Chronicles Austin
  • Gift Guide 2016
  • W Austin
  • Austin Charity Challenge 2017
  • Wedding Series Austin
  • SXSW 2017
  • Tastemakers Austin 2017
  • Medici
  • Love Where You Live Austin
  • PSW Real Estate Austin
  • Engel & Volkers
  • Galveston.com Austin
  • First-time Home Buyers
  • Reliant Bright Ideas Austin
  • Whisper Valley
  • Wedding Guide Austin
  • Austin Portfolio Real Estate
  • Urbanspace Real Estate Interiors
  • Braun Enterprises Austin
  • Impact Hub
  • Well Aware
  • Ronald McDonald House
  • Holiday Gift Guide 2017 Austin
  • Visit Houston Gift Guide 2017 ATX
  • Omni Hotels Austin
  • Ethan's View Austin
  • Wedding Guide Austin 2018
  • Austin Tastemakers 2018
  • Crosswinds
  • SXSW 2018
  • Gottesman Residential Real Estate
  • Milestone
  • Austin Charity Guide
  • Prospect Real Estate
  • San Luis Resort Austin
  • Whole Foods Austin 2018
  • Visit Houston spas Austin
  • Indochino Austin
  • Milestone 1306 West
  • Gardenio
  • GiftingMap Austin
  • WhiskyX
  • Scavenged Vintage
  • Love Where You Live 2018
  • Caliterra
  • FIA World Rallycross Austin
  • Watertrade
  • Milestone The Grove
  • Woodchuck Cider Austin
  • Wedding Guide Austin fall 2018
  • Camp Contemporary
  • ACL Music Fest 2018
  • Sam Adams
  • Wilson & Goldrick 2018
  • Four Seasons Austin
  • Dallas Bike Ride Austin
  • Whim Hospitality
  • South Congress Hotel
  • Holiday Gift Guide 2018 Austin
  • Fall Refresh
  • Milam Grove
  • Fresh Arts Austin
  • 2nd St District
  • Holiday Happenings Austin 2018
  • New Beginnings 2019
  • DON'T USE Crux Climbing
  • Galveston 2019 Austin
  • Roxan Coffman Properties
  • Austin Tastemaker Awards 2019
  • Visit Plano
  • SXSW 2019
  • Lake Charles 2019
  • GOGO Charters Austin
  • First-Time Homebuyers Guide 2019
  • Love Where You Live Austin 2019
  • Omni Barton Creek
  • Opendoor Austin
  • Woodford Reserve Austin
  • Visit Fredericksburg
  • Valencia Group Hotels Austin
  • The Isabella
  • Summer Getaways Austin
  • TenantBase Austin
  • Party at the Moontower
  • Austin WeWork
  • VRBO Austin
  • The Post Oak Hotel Austin
  • BestHotelRates.com Austin
  • Fairmont Austin
  • Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Austin
  • Legacy Communities
  • ACL Fest 2019
  • WhiskyX 2019
  • Keep Austin Weird Run to Brunch
  • Oskar Blues Wild Basin Austin
  • Camp Contemporary 2019
  • Vine Connections Austin
  • Sam Adams 2019
  • Echo Apartments Austin
  • Deep Ellum Brewing Co Austin
  • El Meson
  • Natiivo
  • Cigar City Margarita Gose
  • Holiday Happenings Austin 2019
  • Krewe Austin
  • Gift Guide 2019 Austin
  • Winestyr Austin
  • Getaways
  • Trail of Lights
  • Verizon 2019
  • Hatchet Alley
  • Austin Home and Garden Show 2020
  • Lincoln Properties The Grand Residences at The Domain
  • Nan & Co. Austin
  • Austin Tastemaker Awards 2020
  • Campfire Gathering 2020
  • SXSW 2020
  • COTA MotoGP Austin
  • Pinstack Austin
  • Kerbey Lane
  • CBD Take Out Austin
  • Father's Day Gift Guide 2020 Austin
  • Lantower Residential
  • Matthews and Associates Austin
  • 2nd Street District 2020
  • Sourced Craft Cocktails
  • Calibrate Austin
  • Compass Legacy Real Estate Group
  • Travel Juneau Austin
  • Nine Banded Whiskey Austin
  • Austin Connections
  • SouthStar Bank
  • Mad Tasty
  • Grandes Vinos Austin
  • Sustainable Food Center
  • Realty Austin Jean Bruns
  • RVshare
  • Castle Hill Fitness
  • Babe Wine Austin
  • Local Color Realty Group
  • Cutwater Spirits Austin
  • Greystar ATX
  • Riata Austin
  • Legacy Communities Cooper's Square
  • Bandd Design
  • Junior League Austin 2020
  • Skout
  • Moreland Properties
  • Music Lane
  • Evolve Cryo Wellness
  • ZeroDown
  • Brixos Austin
  • Gift Guide 2020 Austin
  • Tuft & Needle
  • Foxtrot Austin
  • Fine Art America Austin
  • South Congress Improvement District
  • Samsung 2020 Austin
  • Texas Original
  • NextGen Real Estate Austin
  • The Colony Bastrop
  • LW test series
  • Bourbon Takeover
  • The Tailgate
  • Northshore
  • Big Country
  • promoted
  • eventdetail
  • Charity Guide
  • Children
  • Education
  • Health
  • Veterans
  • Social Services
  • Arts + Culture
  • Animals
  • LGBTQ
  • New Charity
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy
  • Advertising Inquiry
  • Jobs
  • Suggestions
  • Authors
  • Love Where You Live
  • Small Business Spotlight
  • Vesper
  • Circuit of The Americas
  • Log in

The CultureMap Interview

Award-winning Austin jewelry designer Jeannie Vianney makes her Academy Awards debut

Rachael Abrams
Feb 23, 2013 | 9:00 am

Jeannie Vianney has had quite the ride. She went from studying computer science at the University of Texas to working at IBM to starting her own jewelry line. Then, in 2011, her delicate, lace-casted jewelry earned her the title of Texas' Next Top Designer.

When we met her at this year's event, Vianney modestly sat back as her boyfriend bragged about her online collection and told us that pieces from the line will be worn in the upcoming season of True Blood on HBO. Then we learned that Vianney's designs would be in the GBK Luxury Gift Lounge at the 2013 Academy Awards, so we had to touch base with the Austin resident before she gets too famous.

CultureMap: Is there something in your life that foreshadowed your future as a jewelry designer?

Jeannie Vianney: When I was younger, I loved making things. I would have craft-night sleepovers with friends, where we would make hair clips and beaded things. I remember going to a local bead store and carefully selecting five or 10 glass beads to work with. My first jewelry piece was a necklace made of copper wire that I formed into small flower connectors and beads. I enjoyed the creative process and feeling that I was able to make something with just my hands and simple materials.

My mother was also artistic and owned her own business. There were paintings all over the house that she had painted of family members. There was always a strong sense of entrepreneurial spirit in her and a sense that anything was possible if you worked hard at it. Both my parents moved to the United States without much but were able get advanced educations, own businesses and raise their family.

CM: How did you come up with lace-cast jewelry?

JV: I started collecting different pieces of lace with patterns and designs I was drawn to. I was amazed with all the intricacies and the texture that a little piece of fabric could have and wanted to use this in a unique way. I loved that lace could make you feel a certain way. For me, it reminds me of something classic, treasured or passed down from one generation to the next. It has an heirloom quality.

CM: What's the design process like?

JV: I create the initial designs and prototypes, but I do have help with larger production runs. My studio is in my home, but I am looking to expand and would love to have my own store one day. I use lost wax casting, which is an ancient jewelry process going back many thousands of years.

First, I make the lace pieces into wax models. These models then get cast into metal castings. From these, I make molds from the metal castings so I can make multiples of the same lace design. For the actual design of the piece, I use a hands-on approach. I will put different materials and stones together and see how they will look or sketch out my ideas on paper.

CM: What is the most essential piece of jewelry?

JV: A jewelry piece should be wearable with a simple dress or top and be able to transform its look; it should also complement a great outfit. I tend to gravitate toward necklaces as my go-to pieces. Most days I wear a really simple outfit like jeans and a tee and throw on a necklace and heels to dress it up for an evening out. The most important part of wearing jewelry is that it makes you feel great wearing it.

CM: How were you approached about having your designs in the gift lounge at the Academy Awards?

JV: Costume designers from True Blood, the HBO show, selected one of my pieces to be featured in an episode for the upcoming season. The people that help scout for the show selected me to join a group of artists and designers doing the gift lounge for the Academy Awards. I thought this would be a great opportunity for exposure to a market that I haven’t fully explored.

I’m honored to be chosen to have my jewelry showcased in front of a high-profile new audience. This is my first celebrity showcase and product gifting, so I’m excited to see what the results are!

CM: What does the future hold for Jeannie Vianney?

JV: I will be releasing a new collection in the coming weeks. There are more statement pieces and more of an edge to them. There are strong colors of blue and emerald green in the stones used to complement the lace.

Vianney's pieces will be displayed at the 2013 Academy Awards, in the GBK Luxury Gift Lounge.

Jeannie Vianney
Photo by Peter Tung Photography
Vianney's pieces will be displayed at the 2013 Academy Awards, in the GBK Luxury Gift Lounge.
unspecified
news/fashion

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Austin intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Austin cozies up as No. 2 best winter travel destination for warm-weather lovers

Here are the top 5 things to do in Austin this weekend

New music festival two-steps into Georgetown with classic and cutting-edge country stars

Bonus Event

Entertainment chain Main Event serves up new restaurant at Austin location

Brianna Caleri
Nov 4, 2022 | 1:08 pm
Platter from Main Event restaurant Family Kitchen in Austin
Photo courtesy of Main Event
Main Event just opened its Family Kitchen restaurant in Austin.

Main Event, the entertainment chain known for its arcade games, sports, and prizes, can’t resist adding even more to its roster. At its Austin location on North US Hwy 183, the games are still the main event, but now dinner is taken care of too — not just a few items at a concession window, but a full restaurant called Family Kitchen that boasts “nearly 50 new and unique menu items.”

These items start with the standard arcade food staples — burgers, sandwiches, pizza — but Family Kitchen applies its own spins for a more creative menu. Whereas before, the entertainment venue served many more generic items, Family Kitchen revamped every item to make sure it was unique to the restaurant, in addition to adding new ones.

A Triple Lava Burger comes with cheese and cheese sauce; a PBB&J Burger combines the classic peanut butter and jelly sandwich with a less-expected blueberry jam and a totally left-field burger, bacon, and cheese; and chicken wings come in eight different sauces and rubs, including a Nashville hot blend and a lemon pepper rub.

“Family Kitchen was developed with extra care, attention to detail and a focus on premium quality ingredients,” said Chef Wiley Bates III, director of culinary innovation at Main Event Entertainment, in a press release. “We’re excited for our guests to experience our new menu offerings, which have been seasoned with salt, pepper and love, and added playfulness that customers experience throughout the rest of the Main Event center.”

As expected at the arcade, the first priority across much of this menu is shareables, including loaded fries, nachos, and pizzas. The shareability does start with volume, with “Family Feasts” bundling commonly ordered items for four to six people, but it also means more inclusive options like vegan Beyond Meat substitutes and salads. Mocktails are also available, although the presence of a “Cotton Candy Shirley” makes it clear these selections are more about being fun for kids than catering to sober adults. (Alcoholic drinks are available at the bar or the restaurant, but are not included on the online menu.)

“The Family Kitchen was largely inspired by Main Event’s brand promise to be a place for families to bond,” said Main Event Chief Marketing Officer Ashley Zickefoose. “From shareable favorites with our Family Feasts to offering something tasty and memorable for everyone in the family….”

Main Event may remind visitors of Dave & Buster’s, for good reason: the two entertainment and food venues are owned and operated by the same parent company. Dave & Buster’s, initially from Dallas, is the significantly larger brand with 148 stores, but Main Event is catching up. The latter is founded and headquartered in Coppell, Texas, and now has 52 locations. Main Event centers are also more kid-focused, and typically larger than those in the Dave & Buster’s, since they offer games like laser tag and escape rooms.

Family Kitchen is accessible to any visitors, whether or not they play any games, but there are food and game bundles to streamline the experience. More information about Main Event and the new restaurant are available at mainevent.com.

dinnerlunchburgerspizzacocktailsbeerkidsfamiliesentertainment
news/fashion

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Austin intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Austin cozies up as No. 2 best winter travel destination for warm-weather lovers

Here are the top 5 things to do in Austin this weekend

New music festival two-steps into Georgetown with classic and cutting-edge country stars

How Bazaar

Armadillo Christmas Bazaar gathers miraculous music lineup and 200 artisans

Brianna Caleri
Nov 4, 2022 | 10:46 am
A musician dressed as Santa at the Armadillo Christmas Bazaar in Austin
Photo by Jennifer M. Ramos

Armadillo Christmas Bazaar is back again December 17-23.

Austinites are lucky as the holidays roll around. The city is brimming with creatives, yes, but also organizers who make sure these artisans can get their products in front of as many people as possible. No one takes this as far as Armadillo Christmas Bazaar, back again this December 17-23.

More than 200 artists — the most the event has ever curated — will gather for the shopping portion of the bazaar, many of whom carry wall art, pottery, and wood crafts. Much of the variety comes from different styles of similar arts, but there are outliers on the roster: The Austin Museum of Popular Culture will be there (presumably selling collectible posters or museum experiences), along with Crysalis Hammocks, Got Toys, Latika Beauty, and Luna Tigre Candles, to name a few.

The bazaar has been around so long that this year’s featured artist represents the second generation of a family’s work at the festival. Caya Crum, from Fort Worth, went to the bazaar for “nearly a decade and a half” with her parents, and this year created the original marketing materials for the event. Although the streak is impressive for a single family, it’s just a portion of the event’s history, which started in 1975 when country singer Lucinda Williams lamented that artists would not have a comfortable place to sell wares for Christmas.

Shoppers have the other half of the bazaar to look forward to as well, with live performances by two dozen local musical acts. Highlights include Latin Grammy nominee Gina Chávez, longtime Texas songwriter Ray Wylie Hubbard, rockabilly guitarist Rosie Flores, and one of Austin’s more recent breakouts, Sir Woman.

In 2022, the bazaar adds a second stage, turning this annual live music celebration into something more like a festival. A press release promises an “even more intimate music experience” at the second stage, called “Stage Side.” Revelers can stop at the full bar or the “mobile honky tonk,” Hello Trouble Hall. This year is also the first time the bazaar is held indoors since 2019, and the first season that allows online buyers.

“The Stage Side will feature up-and-coming musicians and solo acts ... some of which have never played the Armadillo,” said booking agent Nancy Coplin in a press release. “For 33 years, I have had the honor of booking the music for this iconic event. We are so fortunate to be able to showcase both Austin music legends and upcoming artists who are rising stars. I am very excited that we are kicking off this year’s event with Gary P. Nunn, whose famous song ‘London Homesick Blues’ resonates the spirit of the Armadillo World Headquarters with the line, ‘I wanna go home to the Armadillo.’”

Producer and general manager Anne Johnson pointed out, “It’s the best live music deal in town…$2.25 a band is hard to beat anywhere! No other festival in Austin gives you more value for your money.”

The timing of the Christmas Bazaar also overlaps the majority of Chanukah, which starts on December 18. (It also ends on Festivus … just saying.)

Tickets ($12 for the day, $47 for the season) are available at armadillobazaar.com. The sale and festival takes place at the Palmer Events Center from December 17-23, 11 am to 8:30 pm.

live musicshoppingartisansholidaysfestivals
news/fashion

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Austin intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Austin cozies up as No. 2 best winter travel destination for warm-weather lovers

Here are the top 5 things to do in Austin this weekend

New music festival two-steps into Georgetown with classic and cutting-edge country stars

Movie Review

Life lessons abound in Oscar hopeful Armageddon Time

Alex Bentley
Nov 4, 2022 | 10:46 am
Life lessons abound in Oscar hopeful Armageddon Time
Photo by Anne Joyce/Focus Features

Banks Repeta and Anthony Hopkins in Armageddon Time.

When a filmmaker decides to tell a personal story about their life growing up, it can go one of two ways. It can be a nostalgic, candy-coated vision of an idealized childhood, or it can be a warts-and-all endeavor, digging deep to expose their bad family experience and the state of the world at that time.

Writer/director James Gray tries to find the middle ground in his new film, Armageddon Time. Set in Queens, New York, in 1980, the film centers Paul Graff (Banks Repeta), a Jewish tween boy with a love of art and a bent toward troublemaking. His mom, Esther (Anne Hathaway), and dad, Irving (Jeremy Strong), have kept him in public school even though his brother, Ted (Ryan Sell), goes to a private school.

Banks Repeta and Anthony Hopkins in Armageddon Time
Photo by Anne Joyce/Focus Features

Banks Repeta and Anthony Hopkins in Armageddon Time.

Paul strikes up a friendship with Johnny Davis (Jaylin Webb), one of the few Black kids at his school. Finding common ground over raising the ire of their teacher, whether warranted or not, the two conspire on a number of minor-to-major infractions. Paul is also close with his grandfather Aaron (Anthony Hopkins), who provides him with pearls of wisdom that come with his age and worldly experience.

On the surface, the film is a type of coming-of-age story as Paul pursues his passion, learns about bigotry, and tries to survive his sometimes-abusive father. Taken on this level, it’s an interesting if uncomplicated narrative. The situations that Paul goes through are typical of a suburban New York kid, with some slight deviations given his choice of friend and inability to stay on the right side of his parents and teacher.

There are several elements that indicate Gray is trying to tell a deeper story. Paul’s family being Jewish is a big part of the film, whether at family dinners or stories about past persecution. And the treatment of Johnny by his teacher and others is an undeniable parallel, with him experiencing subtle and not-so-subtle acts of racism on multiple occasions.

But a few other storytelling choices make it seem as if Gray wants tell an even more expansive allegorical story, as the film’s tagline – “The end of an era. The beginning of everything.” – illustrates. Ronald Reagan, who was running for his first term in 1980, pops up in television clips on a couple of occasions, even referencing his fear of Armageddon in one interview.

Fred Trump (John Diehl) and his daughter Maryanne (Jessica Chastain) are benefactors of the private school, making an appearance in one brief scene (why an Oscar winner was chosen to deliver less than 30 seconds of dialogue is unclear). Fred’s son Donald is not present, but the inclusion of the Trump family at all, especially for the very short time they’re on screen, speaks volumes.

Child actors can be hit-and-miss, but both Repeta and Webb turn in solid performances, making it feel like their characters have a true friendship. Both Hathaway and Strong live up to their reputations, inhabiting their roles fully, although their strong accents might be too much for some. Hopkins, who speaks in his normal voice, doesn’t exactly scream “old Jewish grandfather,” but his excellent acting makes up for that fact.

No matter if you fully grasp Gray’s actual intentions with the film or just take in its basic story, Armageddon Time is one of the best-acted films of the year. At its core, it’s a tale about a family going through a time of change, a universally-relatable idea regardless of where you grew up.

---

Armageddon Time opens in theaters on November 4.

filmmovies
news/fashion

CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
Get Austin intel delivered daily.

We will not share or sell your email address.

most read posts

Austin cozies up as No. 2 best winter travel destination for warm-weather lovers

Here are the top 5 things to do in Austin this weekend

New music festival two-steps into Georgetown with classic and cutting-edge country stars

Loading Next Story...