31 January, 2007

King of Curves

Cher:"This is an Alaia"
Her assailent:"An a whata"
Cher:"It's like a totally important designer"

10 Years Ago, Alaïa Launched His Revolution : Landmark for King of Curves
By Suzy Menkes International Herald Tribune
Tuesday, September 3, 1991

If there were any justice in this (fashion) world, Azzedine Alaïa would be a worldwide household name, instead of a cult hero. It is 10 years since the small, shy, Tunisian-born designer launched the body-conscious stretch looks that have defined the way an entire generation dresses and become the fashion revolution of the last decade. .
"Ten years? Yes, it is ten years!" said Alaïa at his Paris studio in the Marais, where he will open a boutique (decorated with panels by the New York painter Julian Schnabel) this month. While other designers celebrate landmark years as rites of passage, Alaïa will not be marking these first 10 years. Nor does he even admit the overwhelming influence on fashion of his ideas. .
"Who can really say who invents something first in fashion?" he says. "I had used the stretch materials for years to shape the inside of garments I made for private clients. Then I just started using them on their own. And look at the corset effects I have done in my new collection. They go back to the 18th century, even if no one had done them in knit before." .
The corsets in question include a lightly-boned version of the "body" - the one-piece foundation that was another of Alaïa's gifts to the fashion world. Other outfits in his new collection are made with a network of openwork seaming tracing the shape of the body without constricting it and revealing flesh in a subtle way. The thrust of the top halves is designed not just for sex appeal (although that never seems far from Alaïa's fashion vision), but also to balance the new mid-calf lengths. The designer who was the master of the skimpy skirt, showed, in a big collection, almost entirely skinny skirts falling to mid-calf. .
"IT is time to change," he says. "But you have to show them with high heels, or the long length looks drab." The alternative was a shorter skirt, flared at the front, cut on the bias, with a wrap at the back - a masterpiece of fashion origami that shows the designer's technical skill with the scissors. .

Alaïa, who originally studied sculpture at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Tunisia, and worked briefly with Thierry Mugler, launched his clingy line in 1981 - at the moment when fashion was entering the oversized, androgynous era. His body-conscious clothes seemed a deliberate challenge - throwing down a sexist gauntlet in a feminist world. The first collection included riveted gauntlets in the glove-soft leather that has become one of the hallmarks of his designs. Big leather riding coats and curvy wool jackets - shown this season with the skinny skirts, 1940s hairstyles and high-heeled ankle boots - are the commercial heart of Alaïa's line. Ah commerce! It is hard to believe that Alaïa himself has ever made a commercial decision. While the mass-market has fed off his clinging styles for at least seven years, he works in the back room, head down, perfecting the patterns that he cuts entirely himself. His lack of interest in self-promotion is legendary.

He does not speak English. He does not like airplanes. Another designer might have used his power as King of the Curves to take on quick-buck licensees for undies, swimsuits or exercise clothes - or even raised backing for a chain of boutiques. Alaïa prefers to work to his own standards and an idiosyncratic time scale. As it is, Bergdorf Goodman (which stopped carrying the line in 1985 after a contretemps with the designer) will put Alaïa back in the store this fall. The autumn collection was shown months after all other designers, who present in March, on a steamy Saturday night at the end of July, when the entire fashion world had left for vacation. Only the unswerving loyalty of the world's top models - Christy Turlington, Claudia Schiffer, Naomi Campbell, Elle MacPherson - kept them in town. Alaïa was the first to put them on the runway, thus starting yet another fashion trend of making models into superstars.

He created a fluffy-bunny white outfit in which Naomi Campbell paraded mouthing the words of her newly launched pop record. The recurring themes of the collection were the shapely tops and long skinny skirts, leopard prints and fabrics with a tactile feel, from fake fur, to a new boiled-up knit and sloppy Joe tunic sweaters in fruits-of-the-forest colors: hawthorn orange, bilberry and cranberry. "There is a sensuality about fabric," says Alaïa. "I think all materials should be inviting when they touch the skin. When I watch children stroking their mother's clothes, I feel that I have succeeded." ALAIA'S secret - and the reason why his clothes have such a faithful following - is his research into materials and above all the way he cuts them. "Although I was working with stretch from the beginning, I never made tubes," he says. "Jersey was always cut and pieced together. And these knits are not printed; the jacquard knit is worked to make the pattern fall like this." He is holding a body suit with a butterfly motif, inspired by Arletty, who is one of his heroines.

The suit sashayed down the runway spreading colorful wings across each buttock. Copyists would just splash on a print to give the same effect - but not, of course, the same fit. The irony of Azzedine Alaïa's work is that whereas his look has been molded to the mass market by using Lycra, his own versions are painstakingly crafted with traditional dressmaking skills.

Alaïa started his career as a dressmaker whose name was passed by word of mouth among chic Parisian women. And he still has as clients or customers women who look to him to iron out or reshape the little bulges. So while many women have rejected the body-hugging look as only for the young with beautiful bodies, the unsung fashion hero who started it all aims to dress every woman so that her body looks a cut above the rest.

etoiles

In the life, the objectives which one lays down have a priority importance. Yours imply the recourse to not very orthodoxe methods. You need also to rejoin the greatest number of people to your cause. Blow, you make pass your personal interests after your new conscience of the collective. 17, the New moon reveals a new order, and it is you who hold the rudder.
The 21, Venus is given the responsability to sublimate your beauty.
To remain faithful to yourself seemed more important forever. That it is about love, of practical life or simple pleasures of the existence. The events around the eclipse out of Ram of March will start on your premise a serious review of detail.
Later, you will say good-bye to familiar arrangements and will explore other possibilities. Await the developments of mid-May to make a decision: they will point the way towards the future. Certain changes are practical. However, you will decide that it is time to widen your horizon by the study, voyages or even spirituality.seek council near people whom you respect but base your choices on a conviction, and not on what the others consider wise.Certain proposals are perfectly honest but deserve a small investigation. If there or patience is no time to you, seek of the assistance near quite informed people. You will gain to listen to their councils, even if you do not like them.

29 January, 2007

Barbaro


Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro has been euthanized after new setbacks in the attempt to save the colt's life after a broken hind leg ended his career in the Preakness Stakes race in May. Barbaro, who was 4 years old, received an outpouring of public support and interest after his injury.

"This wasn't just the animal-owning, pet-loving public," said Joan Hendricks, dean of the University of Pennsylvania's Veterinarian School, on the outpouring of emotion for Barbaro. "This was the general public."

It had been a rocky road for Barbaro since the bay colt became racing's sweetheart at Churchill Downs. He survived major surgery on his shattered right hind leg in May, only to develop laminitis, a painful and often fatal inflammation, in his left hind foot in July — a direct result of standing on that foot while the right leg healed.

The laminitis required surgeons to cut away nearly 80 percent of his left hoof.

Both legs seemed to heal slowly through the fall, but a few weeks ago, Barbaro began experiencing more pain in his left hind foot, which caused him to put more weight on his right, which, in turn, developed an abscess.

Saturday, veterinarians at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center surgically implanted a device at the base of his right hind leg. They hoped to take weight off the abscess. But the procedure had risks of its own: In taking the weight off of Barbaro's foot and putting it on his leg bone, they were placing stress on the bone that just finished healing.

CROSSOVER

Synthèse



Contexte : Vous
Carte : La papesse
Trop de possibilités cachées vous échappent encore, car vous ne savez pas appréhender votre vie dans toute sa richesse et ses facettes les plus multiples. Il faut parfois savoir s'arrêter pour repartir de plus belle. C'est le moment d'une vraie réflexion qui vous conduira à des choix forts et importants dans vos projets. La concentration s’impose...
Context: You
Chart: The papess
Trop of hidden possibilities still escape to you, because you cannot apprehend your life in all its multiple richness and its facets. Sometimes it is necessary to know to stop to set out again of more beautiful. It is the moment of a true reflexion which will lead you to strong and important choices in your projects. The concentration is essential…

context: Around you
Chart: Justice
to imply itself more in collective work, to take your responsabilities while being faithful to your most expensive principles, here are obsessions which will animate you and change in-depth your report/ratio with the others, professionally or not. But it is necessary to be oneself in all things


Context: Prospects
Chart: The world
Tomorrow, your dreams of always are indeed likely to be carried out, at the moment when you will however almost have made your mourning of it. You will be able to then enjoy fully this just reward of the things, and to peacefully taste a pleasure frustrated too a long time. It will be the moment to be rewarded for all your efforts.

Contexte : Synthèse
Carte : Les amants
L'affectif s'exprimera davantage dans toute votre vie, vous vous montrerez plus passionnée et sensuelle dans votre travail ou le cercle de vos amitiés. S'il en ressort une énergie toute nouvelle, vous voilà aussi plus vulnérable et plus fragile. Vous n'assumerez pas toujours après coup les audaces dont vous aurez été capable.
Context: Synthesis
Chart: The lovers
the emotional one will be expressed more in all your life, you will show yourselves more impassioned and sensual in your work or the circle of your friendships. If it comes out a very new energy from it, you here also more vulnerable and more fragile. You will not assume always afterwards the audacities of which you will have been able.

28 January, 2007

wild horses

STEPHEN G. RHODES

THE NEW YORK TIMES
Published: January 26, 2007

STEPHEN G. RHODES
Recurrency
Guild & Greyshkul
28 Wooster Street, SoHo
Through Feb. 10



It’s great when someone gets ambitiously complicated and makes it work, as the young Los Angeles-based artist Stephen G. Rhodes does in his first solo show. Formally, he juggles video, sculpture, photographs and drawings, and hooks them up in a circling narrative that ricochets from 19th-century fiction to B films to Hurricane Katrina.

The main event is a double-screen video based on Ambrose Bierce’s macabre short story “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge.” Set during the Civil War, the story revolves around a hanging that is aborted when the rope breaks. The prisoner escapes and makes it back home to his wife, at which point Bierce yanks us back to the gallows: the rope, it turns out, didn’t break, after all; the escape was the man’s dying fantasy.

Mr. Rhodes, who grew up in Louisiana, saw a film based on the story repeatedly in grade school; has replayed it in his mind often since; and now does so in his art. In the videos we see a gallows trapdoor open, and a body plummet into water. A man with a noose around his neck races through a forest. The trailing rope takes on a life of its own, slithering around trees and over rocks, stretching out endlessly.

A plantation house appears, and suddenly we are back at the opening scene, watching the trapdoor open again, and the sequence starts anew, like an unstoppable narrative in a panic dream. Objects from the dream are scattered through the gallery: a wooden gallows; stiffened lengths of rope rearing like serpents.

On the back wall another video plays, this one a sped-up, scrambled version of a Cecil B. DeMille potboiler, “The Buccaneer,” about the 1815 naval siege of New Orleans. History — or an absurdist pop-culture version of it — flashes before our eyes. Dark collages on the walls mix images of the Louisiana bayous, Disney World and post-Katrina destruction; large X’s spray-painted over each collage recall the identifying marks made by officials on houses after the storm.

Mr. Rhodes’s looping play of history, fiction and recent reality is memorably atmospheric. That he has ingeniously enlisted so many mediums in its cause makes the mechanics of eternal recurrence seem particularly tangled and insidious.
*HOLLAND COTTER

forever free

Forever Free is the debut album by LA’s favorite avant-rockers The Spirit Girls. The band has an interesting origin – it grew out of “The Spirit Girls: Songs that Never Die,” a rock opera created by noted LA artist Marnie Weber. The opera follows a group of ghost girls on a fairytale-like journey as they search for a place to perform their songs and tell their stories.

Forever Free chronicles the lives and deaths of the Spirit Girls through expressive, multi-dimensional vocals, powerful, melodic guitars, thick psychedelic synths, and mournful cello riffs. The Spirit Girls’ sound has been described as something of a cross between Sonic Youth, King Crimson and 17th Century French Romantic paintings.

After performing “Songs That Never Die” to sellout crowds, Marnie decided to expand her original concept into a separate, but unique musical group. As an original member of LA’s legendary 80’s band The Party Boys, Marnie had little trouble recruiting the musicians she needed. Such notable musicians as Dani Tull (Polar Bear), Tamara Sussman (Bertha Mason and The Polio Kids), Tanya Haden (Silver Sun Pickups & the Haden Three) and Debbie Spinelli (Rad Waste, 17 Pygmies) all signed on as active members of the Spirit Girls.

And so the saga of this band of ghost girls continues, as they wander through a series of imaginary landscapes similar to those in the collages and films of Marnie Weber. With the renewed interest in 80’s “post-punk” music, Forever Free is sure to play well to today’s “alternative” audience while still appealing to the original punk set that still like to take a walk on the wild side.

Hanoi Jane

Tens of thousands of protesters have demonstrated in Washington to demand the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq.
The rally comes days before Congress is to discuss President George W Bush's new strategy for Iraq - including the despatch of 21,500 additional troops.

The protesters, chanting "Bring the troops home", were joined by Vietnam War-era protester, actress Jane Fonda.

Violence continued in Iraq on Saturday, with at least 15 killed in a suicide bomb attack in a Baghdad market.

The BBC's James Coomarasamy in Washington says this anti-war rally at the foot of the US Capitol was a marked shift away from the White House and on to Congress.

The protesters want Congress, now run by the Democrats, to block funding for the president's new strategy, our correspondent says.

Resolution

Jane Fonda, the Hollywood actress who angered many Americans by visiting Hanoi in 1972 during the Vietnam War, told the crowd: "I haven't spoken at an anti-war rally for 34 years. But silence is no longer an option."

She added: "I'm so sad that we still have to do this, that we did not learn the lessons from the Vietnam War."
Fonda was joined by fellow actors Sean Penn and Tim Robbins. Robbins said: "What we need is courage, courage and conviction and we need people to represent the voice of the American people, a very clear voice last November, a voice that said: 'We're done with this war'."

The Democrats took control of both Houses in November's mid-term election, sparking Mr Bush's decision to form a new strategy for Iraq. But our correspondent says Congress has so far balked at using the power of funding and only a handful of staunch anti-war Congressmen were present at the rally. A man brings a child to hospital after Saturday's Baghdad bombing
Although nearly all Democrats and a growing numbers of Republicans oppose the president's plans, he says, senators have not been able to agree yet on a single non-binding resolution expressing their concerns. At the rally a coffin covered with a US flag and a pair of military boots was put on display. Organisers also filled a large bin with tags bearing the names of Iraqis who have died. More than a dozen veterans, anti-war activists, religious heads and actors addressed the crowd.
A small counter-protest held up a Fonda doll with the sign "Jane Fonda American Traitor". Mr Bush reportedly reaffirmed his commitment to the troop increase in a phone call with Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki on Saturday.

White House national security adviser spokesman Gordon Johndroe said: "Americans want to see a conclusion to the war in Iraq and the new strategy is designed to do just that."



Violence continued in Iraq on Saturday:

At least 15 people were killed and 55 injured when twin suicide car bomb attacks struck a market in the mainly Shia New Baghdad district

Iraqi police said eight computer firm employees were kidnapped by men in police uniforms in central Baghdad

The US military said it had killed 14 suspected insurgents during an air strike on a building used as a hideout south of Baquba

The US military announced the death of seven more soldiers. Three were killed by a roadside bomb north of Baghdad on

Saturday, two by roadside bombs in Diyala province on Friday and two by a bomb in east Baghdad on Thursday.

Also on Saturday, Russia said it planned to question the US on its increasing military presence in the Middle East.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he would seek an explanation during a visit to Washington next week.

He also said it was his "deep conviction that Iran and Syria should not be isolated and must be involved in the settlement process".

27 January, 2007

Leisure: an art journal 2


Bobbi Woods & Brian Kennon aka Leisure

26 January, 2007

chanel & catpower



PARIS, January 23, 2007 – The genius of Karl Lagerfeld is his way of whacking a topical spin into every couture collection without ever compromising the ineffable core of Chanel.


This time, he had a phalanx of men roll out a giant double-C rug, and struck up the band—Cat Power, who laid into some punked-up Stones and Smokey Robinson classics. So it was with the opening volley of clothes—sixties-but-modern supershort coat-dresses and even more abbreviated jackets, all striding out on a base of leggy black tights.


the seagull

The scene is laid in the park on SORIN'S estate. A broad avenue
of trees leads away from the audience toward a lake which lies
lost in the depths of the park. The avenue is obstructed by a
rough stage, temporarily erected for the performance of amateur
theatricals, and which screens the lake from view. There is a
dense growth of bushes to the left and right of the stage. A few
chairs and a little table are placed in front of the stage. The
sun has just set.

MEDVIEDENKO. Why do you always wear mourning?

MASHA. I dress in black to match my life. I am unhappy.

MASHA. [Looking in the direction of the stage] The play will soon
begin.

Written by Anton Chekhov
18 JANUARY - 17 MARCH
Royal Court Theatre, London

24 January, 2007

Christopher Russell

christopher russell
together



"Russell’s writing is intense, creepy, occasionally violent, but always intended to be felt as it’s read. In his second solo show at the Acuna-Hansen Gallery, Together, he uses the text of his recently completed novel as the basis for an installation of photographs, drawings (scratched into photographs with the tip of an X-acto blade) and books."

january 27 - february 24 . 2007

reception:
saturday . january 27 . 6-9 pm

427 Bernard Street
Los Angeles
www.ahgallery.com

Ami Tallman

Saturday January 27, 2007 4-7 pm
Braveland: Chris Oatey, Greg Santos, and Ami Tallman

Seeline Gallery
1812 Berkeley Street Santa Monica, CA 90404


AFC * write up

posted by Art Fag City at 11:55 AM
Artists Speak Up About Radness

Leisure: An Art Journal: Issue #0, a questionnaire


"Brian Kennon and Bobbi Woods at 2nd Cannons Publications land the subject of yet another post here at AFC, releasing my new favorite journal, Leisure: An ArtJournal: Issue # 0, a questionaire. In this series, Kennon and Woods ask artists, writers and gallerists to discuss radness and artistic production. The questions are as unexpected as many of the answers, and the work once again takes on the alluring 2nd Cannons Publications trademark look. Typically characterized by a hip image made more "fun" through graphic design and text, the publishing houses does an excellent job of creating books that are carefully curated and frighteningly clever. Of course, you can feel free to take all of this with a Paddy Johnson grain of salt, as I am one of the contributors to the first issue. 2nd Cannons published a number of the responses from artists like AA Bronson and Michael Smith on their site, but if you want to read what I have to say on the subject of radness, Wegman, and other pressing issues, for once you'll have to pay for it. It's counterintuitive I know, but look at it this way: You need a book with a skateboarder on it to round out your collection."

Favorite Q&A
Q: What is your name? Automatron@earthlink.net
Q: Radicality or total radness? Bitchin'
Q: How does radness fit into your practice? PRAC-rad-ICE-ness
Q: What is wrong with Entertainment? What is wrong with you?
Q: Have you ever personally seen a mystic truth? Coincidence
Q:Total deconstruction or total destruction? Fuck You
Q: Avant-garde or Avant grad? Gradually avante
Q: Name the funniest piece of art ever created. Ok..."I just farted", mixed media, 2006
Q: William Wegman: Great artist? Or the greatest artist? I love dogs. Who doesn't love dogs?

little bear studio

23 January, 2007

studies for sculptures



THIS IS NOT A LOVE SONG
(Lydon/Levene/Atkins)

This is not a love song
This is not a love song
This is not a love song

This is not a love song
This is not a love song
This is not a love song
This is not a love song

Happy to have
Not to have not
Big business is very wise
I'm crossing over into free-enter-prize

This is not a love song
This is not a love song
Not a love song
Not a love song

I'm going over to the other side
I'm happy to have not to have not
Big business is very wise
I'm inside free enterprise

I'm adaptable
I'm adaptable

I'm adaptable
Now I like my new role
I'm getting better and better
I have a new goal
I'm changing my ways
Where money applies

This is not a love song
This is not a love song
This is not a love song
This is not a love song
This is not a love song
Not a love song

Now are you ready
To grab the candle
That tunnel vision
Not television
Behind the curtain
Out of the cupboard
You take the first train
Into the big world
Now will I find you
Now will you be there

Not a love song (echo)
Not a love song
Not a love song (repeat)

Happiness and sunshine
Not a love song
Oh no
Not a love song
Oh no
Not a love song
Oh no (repeat)

hounddog

HOUNDDOG
U.S.A., 2006, 98 Minutes, color

Like a lily growing in the swamp, Lewellen, a precocious southern girl, radiates splendor amidst the murk that surrounds her. She is being raised by her abusive father and disciplinarian grandmother, and finds comfort, joy, and strength in music--she is obsessed with Elvis Presley and breaks into his songs whenever the mood strikes. In addition to music, playing in the woods with her friend, Buddy, brings a few other moments of childhood happiness. Their playing drifts toward innocent sexual games, however, and it becomes evident that Lewellen has a painful history that she keeps buried inside. When another tragedy strikes, will her spirit finally break, or will her inspiring resiliency carry her on?

T. Hardy

HER IMMORTALITY

by: Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)

PON a noon I pilgrimed through
A pasture, mile by mile,
Unto the place where I last saw
My dead Love’s living smile.

And sorrowing I lay me down
Upon the heated sod:
It seemed as if my body pressed
The very ground she trod.

I lay, and thought; and in a trance
She came and stood me by--
The same, even to the marvellous ray
That used to light her eye.

“You draw me, and I come to you,
My faithful one,” she said,
In voice that had the moving tone
It bore in maidenhead.

She said: “‘Tis seven years since I died:
Few now remember me;
My husband clasps another bride;
My children mothers she.

My brethren, sisters, and my friends
Care not to meet my sprite:
Who prized me most I did not know
Till I passed down from sight.”

I said: “My days are lonely here;
I need thy smile alway:
I’ll use this night my ball or blade,
And join thee ere the day.”

A tremor stirred her tender lips,
Which parted to dissuade:
“That cannot be, O friend,” she cried;
“Think, I am but a Shade!

“A Shade but in its mindful ones
Has immortality;
By living, me you keep alive,
By dying you slay me.

“In you resides my single power
Of sweet continuance here;
On your fidelity I count
Through many a coming year.”

--I started through me at her plight,
So suddenly confessed:
Dismissing late distaste for life,
I craved its bleak unrest.

“I will not die, my One of all!--
To lengthen out thy days
I’ll guard me from minutest harms
That may invest my ways!”

She smiled and went. Since then she comes
Oft when her birth-moon climbs,
Or at the seasons’ ingresses
Or anniversary times;

But grows my grief. When I surcease,
Through whom alone lives she,
Ceases my Love, her words, her ways,
Never again to be!

22 January, 2007

leisure an arts journal

Leisure: An Art Journal: Issue #0, a questionnaire
Edited by Brian Kennon and Bobbi Woods


www.2ndcannons.com

Leisure Launch Party! This Friday!
January 26, 9pm-midnight.
Daniel Hug gallery
part of the ArtLA after-party

THE DARKLING THRUSH


"At once a voice arose among
The bleak twigs overhead
In a full-hearted evensong
Of joy illimited;
An aged thrush, frail, gaunt, and small,
In blast-beruffled plume,
Had chosen thus to fling his soul
Upon the growing gloom."

lansing dreiden

20 January, 2007

the eyes of another

Tom Spanbauer: There is a Zen saying that goes: When you look into the eyes of another, be kind — for inside there is a huge battle going on. It is just the way life is that there is darkness and there is light. So many artists, I think make the mistake of either trying to create an upbeat message or a nihilistic one. An artist doesn’t really have to try for either because if he looks closely at his world, he will find great tragedy and great ecstasy standing right next to each other.

In each of us, there is great sadness, great pettiness, great grief, and great selfishness. During a day, I may feel jealousy, rage, disdain, homophobia, and racism. Yet, I am a good man, or I am striving for good, so my negative feelings don’t stop me because I am also forthright, honest, empathetic, and sensitive to other people’s feelings.

in and I'm in to win

"I'm not just starting a campaign, though, I'm beginning a conversation with you, with America. Let's talk. Let's chat. The conversation in Washington has been just a little one-sided lately, don't you think?"

Clinton, who was re-elected to a second term last November, said she will spend the next two years "doing everything in my power to limit the damage George W. Bush can do. But only a new president will be able to undo Bush's mistakes and restore our hope and optimism."

"I have never been afraid to stand up for what I believe in or to face down the Republican machine. After nearly $70 million spent against my campaigns in New York and two landslide wins, I can say I know how Washington Republicans think, how they operate, and how to beat them."

Emmanuelle Alt







Emmanuelle & Amanda Harlech

Emmanuelle & Emmanuelle!