Category Archives: ART
Super-Héros by Arian Noveir !
Superhero’s seem to be the topic of the month with artist at the moment and I’m lovin’ it! These great paintings by Arian Noveir ! More Here / Join us on Facebook or on Twitter
Nike: “It’s About Time”
If all the signs are correct. This next launch from Nike could be one of the most highly demanded products on the market for sneaker heads and collectors worldwide. Read the lead up story from FreshnessMag below and if the clues and these pictures aren’t enough of a hint of what’s to come. I’m disappointed in your cultural knowledge…. So just watch the following video post to see what all the hype’s about.
FreshnessMag – There were no indicators, no hints, even our Nike hosts answered our inquisitions with smiles and simple responses, “You’ll see”… Some hours later and still woozy from jet lags, we arrived in Los Angeles for a “secret event”. But not just any event, one that will include Nike Vice President of Design and Innovation, Tinker Hatfield, at its Keynote address. Yet, everyone hushed up at our inquests at L.A. too. Things became somewhat obvious a few minutes ago when we entered our hotel rooms. In each accommodation, a tricked out amenity package with a sleek aluminum shade tagged with “It’s About Time” at the ear piece. Along side it, a Apple iShuffle with message from Dr. Emmett “Doc” Brown saying “If my calculation are correct, for the next 24hrs you are gonna see serious stuff!” Things are becoming clearer now…
Muppet Fairytales
ELECTRIC Surf Team in NYC
NYC from electricvisual on Vimeo.
DIRTY PITS from electricvisual on Vimeo.
The boys from ELECTRIC getting some great pits at Long Beach, Long Island, NYC.
In order of appearance see: “NYC”, a brief look at the city these days (pre-celebration of 11 September), “Afternoon Delight” and “DIRTY PITS”, for some black and white sequence that shows some of the components team (MarkYonkers, Jeremy Johnston, Andrew Doheny and Mitch Crews)
INSA “Girls On Bikes” Project
INSA‘s ongoing public project combines the best of girls, bikes and murals to define his “Girls On Bikes” project. I like is style.
High5Collective Presents: Jay-Z and Kanye West’s “No Church in the Wild”
he collective describes themselves as people “who make art for artists that inspire them.” Their past work has included original takes on material ranging from Arcade Fire to The Weeknd.
Morning Deliveries: NYC Bike Messenger Video
Morning Deliveries – NYC Bike Messenger from Coca-Cola Content Factory on Vimeo.
A short film by burn.com, about the life of a bike messenger in NYC. I know it’s probably not the first messenger film or the last you’ll see, but this has been executed very well.
Theory One
Dylan Jones aka Theory One is a graphic designer and illustrator based in Cape Town, South Africa.
Philographics by Genis Carreras
Beautiful minimal illustrations series called “Philographics” explaining complex philosophical theories through basic shapes, by Genis Carreras, award-winner graphic designer based in London, born in Catalonia in 1987. Basically it’s philosophy explained through simple and effective design.
Don Diablo: In it to win it (X-Rated Version)
Don Diablo – In it to win it (X-Rated Version) from Don Diablo on Vimeo.
Wow! This is sensational!
‘Adam’ by Fintan Switzer
Great contrast painting by Fintan Switzer that combines a classical style with a modern street art technique.
Justice † Audio Video Disco
Justice – Audio, Video, Disco (Preview) by 1077 The End
According to Xavier de Rosnay of Justice, the band wanted to incorporate more “hard rock” elements into their signature electro house style. Most of the tracks will include heavy guitar riffs, and real drums, in order to give their music more “flesh”.
In contradiction to this, Xavier has also said that this would be a lighter album than the previous. With the first album being darker, and this one being “daytime music”, not as aggressive as the first.
I’m itchin’ for their second album, Audio, Video, Disco, to drop October 25, 2011.
Album Tracklist:
- “Horsepower”
- “Civilization (with Ali Love)” 4:11
- “Ohio (with Vincent Vendetta)”
- “Canon (Primo)”
- “Canon”
- “On’n’on (with Morgan Phalen)”
- “Brianvision”
- “Parade”
- “Newlands (with Morgan Phalen)”
- “Helix”
- “Audio, Video, Disco”
DSL: Supalove
The new DSL video directed by Mayson and Mayson and Thomas Tyman. I nice vibing track with a video to match.
Palladium presents Tokyo Rising with Pharrell Williams Launch
Tokyo has always drawn creatives from around the world to take inspiration from the Japanese culture. So it’s no surprise to see Pharrell and Tokyo together. Palladium Boots presents “Tokyo Rising,” a new film featuring Pharrell Williams. Facing a new reality, what comes next for Tokyo?
Wacom Inkling Digital Stylus Pen
Get on this! I’m ordering one of these ASAP!!
Do you start your artwork with pen and paper? But at the same time regret that your work is stuck on paper until you have scanned the image? Then Inkling is an indispensable tool for you. This digital sketch pen allows you to sketch with a real ballpoint pen on any paper. While you are drawing, all strokes are recorded electronically which can then be imported as raster or vector artwork in to your preferred graphics applicationfor further editing. With just one button click you can record layers, for instance, to separate preparatory and final drawings. These layers are then retained after import.
- Enhance your professional workflow by capturing digital data while sketching with a ball-pen on normal paper
- The ink sketch can be structured in layers while drawing – no need to recreate layers in software
- 1,024 levels of pressure sensitivity for natural pen strokes
- Store hundreds of high resolution sketches on the receiver before transferring to your PC or Mac
- Save time and export your sketches with layers directly into Adobe® Photoshop® or Illustrator® (CS3 or higher), or Autodesk® SketchBook® Pro or SketchBook® Designer (2011 or higher) as vector graphics
- Be versatile by saving your sketches in the following formats: JPG, BMP, TIFF, PNG, SVG and PDF
Lightning At The Opera
Lightning At The Opera is a series of digital illustrations created for the group Sixty Watts by designer Gianmarco Magnani.
Sixty Watts does not actually exist, but gave Gianmarco an excuse to illustrate some beautiful posters and album covers.
Sneakerness Amsterdam 2011 Recap
Nothing beats the buzz of sneaker lovers all together in one space showing off their best kicks.
Terius Nash aka The Dream – 1977
Due to delays with his upcoming studio album and problems during negotiations, The Dream has decided to release an album on his own terms and presents today the free ‘1977′ album download. Not only is the method of releasing an album new to The Dream, the artist also for the first time uses his actual name on it – Terius Nash.
The-Dream – 1977
1. “Wake Me When It’s Over”
2. “Used to Be”
3. “Long Gone”
4. “Ghetto” feat. Big Sean
5. “Wedding Crasher”
6. “Rolex” feat. Casha
7. “Silly” Introducing Casha
8. “1977 (Miss You Still)”
9. “Wish You Were Mine”
10. “Real”
11. “Form of Flattery”
YOHJI YAMAMOTO: “PEOPLE HAVE STARTED WASTING FASHION”
Mr. Yamamoto, film director Wim Wenders said that when he bought his first piece of your clothing, he was fascinated because it felt new and old at the same time, and he felt protected by it. Would you say that describes your clothes quite well?
My starting point was wanting to protect a human’s body. This is the beginning, actually hiding women’s bodies. This is about sexuality, about protecting it. From the very beginning of my career I was not very sure that I would become a so-called “fashion designer”. The term “fashion designer” sounded very light.
What do you associate with that term?
When I think about the image of a fashion designer I think about trends. I have to think about what’s new, what’s next, what kind of feeling customers want. It’s too busy for me. So, from the beginning, I wanted to protect the clothes themselves from fashion, and at the same time protect the woman’s body from something – maybe from men’s eyes or a cold wind. I wanted people to keep on wearing my clothes for at least 10 years or more, so I requested the fabric maker to make a very strong, tough finish.
You say you wanted to protect the female body and your clothes often have a playful androgyny in them. Should men and women be able to dress more like each other?
When I started making clothes for my line Y’s in 1977, all I wanted was for women to wear men’s clothes. I jumped on the idea of designing coats for women. It meant something to me – the idea of a coat guarding and hiding a woman’s body. For me, a woman who is absorbed in her work, who does not care about gaining one’s favor, strong yet subtle at the same time, is essentially more seductive. The more she hides and abandons her femininity, the more it emerges from the very heart of her existence. A pair of brilliantly cut cotton trousers can be more beautiful than a gorgeous silk gown.
Over 30 years later, are people still too stuck up when it comes to what they wear?
I simply cannot stand people’s tendency to become conservative. There’s always a move back to established conventions, otherwise upcoming waves would be soon categorized as common sense. Even the term avant-garde – avant-garde is now just a tiny fashion category. It became so cheap and pretentious. I hate it. But still, I strongly believe in the avant-garde spirit: to voice opposition to traditional values. It is not just a youthful sentiment; I live my life by it. Rebellion. You will only be able to oppose something and find something of your own after traveling the long road of tradition.
You said in an interview that you hate fashion, yet you seem like you love it as well. Have you ever thought about giving it up? Quitting the fashion business?
About five or six years ago I felt strongly that my role was done. But nowadays, especially in Tokyo, New York and Los Angeles, everything is covered by fast fashion. Faster, faster, cheaper, cheaper. People have started wasting fashion. So suddenly, there was some space again for me to do something. Minor in terms of numbers, but there might be young people who have questions or doubts about this trend, they might be waiting for something to come back or for something new. So I said to myself: ”Yohji, you can continue to do your job. Don’t change. You can just continue to do it.” I told myself this last year.
Is that also the reason why you decided to publish your autobiography My Dear Bomb?
I got an invitation from the Belgium publisher Ludion, but yes it was a time, after all my company went through, to say “I am still here and I feel 10 times stronger!”
You seem to always do your own thing, but yet you are still bringing out collections twice a year like most other brands. Would you prefer to show whenever you please?
In 2002, I decided to show my ready-to-wear collection at the timing of the couture. I did it for 3 seasons. There were less people attending, so the possibility was there to have smaller places and allow people to actually hear the sound of the fabric. It was a very nice parenthesis.
Zac Posen told me in an interview that you influenced his decision to move his collection from New York to Paris. You said it is the only place worth showing. Why is that?
Paris is the place for establishing your brand as an international one.
How are your designs connected to your Japanese heritage?
Think of the association with Japan as an exotic exchange. It is fun. Japanese people, or Asian people, like European aesthetics and European people love Asian sensibilities. So as an exchange of senses it is all right. In that way I agree 100 percent. But when a paper writes about me, they start with “the Japanese designer…” We have to find a new vocabulary. I understand why European people take my creations as very Japanese. It is probably because if you see a creation as a whole, as 100 percent, I will always try to finish before arriving at 100. This five, seven, or ten percent we call empty or in between or uncompleted in Japanese.
Can you give me an example?
It’s when you go to shut a window or door and leave a space. We need this space, so I design space. Space has always been very important in Japanese traditional art of every genre – like painting, sculpting, or theatrical expression. The space of expression is even more important than the visual or written.
But you also still produce in Japan, which gives your clothes a certain Japanese feel because of the unique ways of treating fabric.
Maybe I will be the last designer who cares strongly about “Made in Japan”. If I stop, maybe young designers cannot afford to do business that way. It costs a lot; a Japanese man’s hand has become the most expensive in the world. So it’s my duty – not duty – it’s my desire to protect these small, traditional Japanese techniques. I use almost all family factories. The most important thing is to keep going, otherwise it will disappear.
Do you also live in Japan or do you spend the majority of your time in Paris where you present your collections?
I live in Tokyo. I only come to Paris around my fashion shows.
Which role does traveling play in your life?
Working time. I travel to Paris for Menswear and Womenswear collections in January, March, June, October, and to New York for my Y-3 collection in February, September.
How do you find peace within all these different places?
You need embellishment. You might be able to sleep with rock and roll music blaring full blast, but you can’t just have an absence of color. Transparency, that’s no good. I really enjoy being in cahoots with people, having fun with them, being connected. Equality, justice and all these values haven’t quite gone out the window, but we don’t find much evidence of them around either.
Depth of Speed: A Pinch of Salt
HBTV: Depth of Speed – A Pinch of Salt from HBTV on Vimeo.
Depth of Speed was born from a desire of story, travel and a love of anything automotive related. Next year my wife and I will be taking to the streets to uncover and document the greatest stories from the automotive world. From coast-to-coast and from top to bottom, finding the best stories will take the highest priority. Every time I meet someone new or attend an event I’m amazed at the depth, passion and love that the automotive world brings. Depth of Speed is just that – an in-depth look at these stories. There is something about motors and machines, that to an outsider looking in, would make us seem plain crazy.
We have begun the process of outfitting our trusty Scamp trailer to traverse the entire country. Known affectionately as a fiberglass egg, our Scamp will be our home for one year of our lives. At only 13 feet long it will make for a cozy year.