Sunday, September 28, 2008

Viktor & Rolf


        i was reading Weekly Dig (boston's free weekly entertainment mag) and a really short article about eyelashes caught my attention! apparently, dutch fashion design duo Viktor and Rolf have done a collaboration with cosmetic store shu uemura consisting of three pairs of couture false eyelashes.
        one pair is simply long and beautiful, but the other two are pretty unique. one, which consists of upper and lower lashes, has tiny gold rhombus shapes fitted on for a super glam look. my personal favorite pair looks sort of like paper clips, but the way they suggest eyelashes- with empty space and delicateness that in some ways speaks to drawing- is SO interesting to me. they almost seem like something you would see on an odd old mannequin.
        they're really just what you would expect if you heard Viktor & Rolf were doing eyelashes. if you're not familiar with their fashions you should check them out, they do some VERY interesting things.

you can see (or buy, for $95 a pair...) the eyelashes here.


photos: http://www.shuuemura-usa.com/Products/subcategory2.aspx?categoryid=1026

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Daniel Roberts


        i found Daniel Roberts' fashion illustrations a while back and immediately bookmarked them intending to write a post about him, then forgot... so it was a really great surprise for me to stumble back across them in my bookmarks today! i love the way he takes modern fashion imagery and imposes his style on it. i just really love his drawing style... the faces are great, and the exaggerated necks and legs really appeal to me for some reason. fashion and illustrations... so good. i also like his use of color in a few of the pieces that are mostly black and white, with some parts colored in. (he also has a lot of drawings of gemma ward, who is my favorite model!)
        take a good look around his blog (use the site directory on the left) he has some REALLY cool things on there, like layered illustrations and window displays. his fashion illustration style also carries really well into his book illustrations. annnd, he has a whole page of images that have inspired him, which is beautiful in of itself. it's definitely worth taking the time to explore.

Roberts' blog; Igor and Andre
slide show of some of his fashion illustrations
annnd buy his prints! (i wish i could afford one!)




photos: http://www.slide.com/r/M7j79XwG4D-7rpqfCoWBSaL3jpnnDn2k?cy=xa
and http://igorandandre.blogspot.com

Friday, September 26, 2008

John Keating


        one of my first posts was about Dorothy Harvey's dollhouse grave marker, and i have found another one, created by a stone mason named John Keating (of Cincinnati), "to commemorate the deaths of his two children and a niece who died between the years of 1868 and 1878"*. it supposedly even had furniture in it when it was first built.
        i was surprised that Harvey (who died in 1931 at age 5) was not the only (or first) one to have a dollhouse grave marker. it's an interesting idea, a dollhouse a very quiet and lonely thing in a setting like that.

*St. Joseph New Cemetery Association (scroll down to bottom)

photo: http://www.stjoenew.com/history2.html

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Quickie: Sally Kendall


        mosaics are usually not my deal, but while browsing pictures of altered mannequins (i'm working on a few of my own) i stumbled across the site of Sally Kendall, and her BEAUTIFUL mirror mosaic mannequin. i love the way the glass follows the curves of the form, especially along her spine and breasts. i also think the space she left un-mosaic-ed is effective (particularly the way the mirror only creeps up the back of the neck).
        you can see the rest of her work here (it's all 2d, but there's a dia de los muertoes one!).


Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Raquel Aparicio


        i absolutely love these drawings by Raquel Aparicio... her airy and quirky style comes together in a really beautiful way. i'm also extremely jealous of her ability to transform a piece of an image into something different and odd in a way that's so clean and brilliant that it seems normal.
        Aparicio is from Spain (her website is in both english and spanish), and has done work for the The New York Times and various magazines, as well as illustrating multiple books and winning multiple awards. her images have a very narrative quality to them, so it was no surprise find that a group of her illustrations are of Russian fairy tales (one of which i recognized as the story of Baba Yaga!-hint: the one of the house on chicken legs) - there are also multiple references to red riding hood (again, i just can't stay away from wolf imagery lately, i don't know what it is).
        anyway, you should definitely check her out
Aparicio's website



photos: http://www.raquelissima.com

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Sara Lage

        i was browsing through pictures of madrid fashion week and started seeing these bizarre creations by Sara Lage. they're very horror film -esque. anyway, i found them to be very intriguing. she says she is inspired by dada and surrealism, so my attraction to them definitely makes sense. i like the color scheme she is working with as well (black white gray and dark purple).
you can see more here & here
        update:
Lage's myspace
video clip of some of her creations on the runway
two articles (translated from spanish on google, so not perfect, sorry!) 1 2






photos: http://www.reuters.com
and http://lavozdigital.es

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Fatima Mayfield (Renee Stout)


        i just finished an anthropology of religion course at tufts university, with a focus on how witchcraft, magic, and rituals of lesser practiced religions play a part in religion as a whole. it was a really great class, and has opened me up to a lot of interesting ideas and thought processes. one of the religions that we spent a good deal of time on was Haitian Vodou. (in fact, aside from our textbook, the only other reading we did was an amazing book i would definitely recommend, Mama Lola by Karen McCarthy Brown, which is about a mambo (Vodou priestess) who lived in brooklyn).
        i was looking up Vodou imagery the other day (Vodou has a focus on spirit worship, and some of the goddess imagery is really interesting. they also use altars quite frequently, which you may know i am also greatly interested in) and i came across the artwork of Renee Stout -or Fatima Mayfield, her alter ego who she uses "to help confront [the] issues... in a way that's open, creative. and humorous" (see her artist statement for full quote).
        much of her work seems to be inspired or dealing with Vodou beliefs and spirits, and her monoprints and silkscreens in particular are really beautiful. her work is a combination of installation, photography, printmaking and painting. it's definitely worth checking out.

Stout's website



photos: http://www.reneestout.com/

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Kevin Scott Hailey

        i went to a Vetiver concert at the MFA on august 1st (it was amazing, i'm not even going to get into it or this post will never end). anyway, i bought a tshirt, and it is so so great.
        observe (image brought to you via the wonders of photobooth):

        i had to know who the artist was that drew it, and after spending more time on google than i should have, i ended up emailing Vetiver, and from them i found out that the artist's name is Kevin Scott Hailey. and his work only gets better. (i like it so much that i had a nearly impossible time deciding which of his pieces to put in this post, so just look at his sites, please. and i am also trying very hard not to blow all my money on his shirts - he has his own clothing company, Coma & Cotton.)
        anyway, his drawings have a definite folk art feel to them, and are pretty intricate and very well done. they really speak better for themselves than i can for them. Hailey also speaks volumes in his brief artist statement, which you can find here.

Haily's website
Haily's Flickr (more works here than on his website)
Coma & Cotton (if you love drawings and clothes, proceed with caution, you could end up losing a lot of money here. the shirts are fabulous.)



photos: http://www.kevinscotthailey.com

Friday, August 8, 2008

Quickie: Tv on the Radio

i ordered tickets yesterday to see my favorite band in october!!!!

for anyone who hasn't heard of/listened to Tv on the Radio, they are AMAZING. they have remained in the #1 slot for me since high school, and that is quite a feat, as i tend to go through phases when it comes to music. i frequently listen to them while doing artwork, and i think they definitely have an effect on it. you may have to take a few listens before you understand what they're doing, but trust me, once you do, it will be a magical moment.

this is their website: http://www.tvontheradio.com/
as of right now you can buy presale tickets there for all of their shows, (normal tickets are also available on ticketmaster).

and, in running with my recent theme of posts on music videos and wolves,
i give you a combination of the two:
the music video for one of my favorite songs Wolf Like Me, by Tv on the Radio. (the video is absolutely BRILLIANTLY made, directed by Jon Watts. not only do i find the song energizing and beautiful, but the music video is incredibly visually stimulating. the combination of the inspiration from the song and the visuals seriously blow me away. i get really excited about this video. i can be a little geeky when it comes to TOTR.)

Monday, August 4, 2008

Danny Clinch

        watch this
        alright, now, what you just saw was a music video (Lie To Me by Tom Waits) directed/shot by Danny Clinch. it was brilliant, no? a relatively simple idea, but not quite as easy to do i'm sure, and wonderfully executed (despite the fact that you can see by the numbers on the film that a little bit of understandable cheating is going on) and definitely inspiring to me, hence my mentioning it here.


(i found this while watching Tom Waits music videos on youtube -he picks GOOD directors, let me tell you. the videos for his songs are all rather strange but very artistic -and thus quite suiting to his musical style and character. another good one worth watching is God's Away on Business, directed by Jesse Dylan. this one is my personal favorite of Waits'; jittery camera work, emus, bubbles, how could they go wrong?)

        anyway, Danny Clinch is a photographer worth checking out. his style is very commercial (he does mostly musician portraits/promo work) but he has an outstanding concept of light and color. he started off interning for famed photographer Annie Leibovitz, and has since been published in magazines such as vanity fair and rolling stone, and has photographed greats such as Johnny Cash and Tupac. Clinch also started the film company Three on the Tree Productions (under which Lie To Me was filmed).

Clinch's website (with portfolio of his photography)
Three on the Tree Productions (with more of his videos)



photos: http://www.dannyclinch.com

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Cai Guo-Qiang

        this spring i went to NYC for the day with one of my good friends, to go to the MOMA. we finished at the MOMA, and rushed over to the Guggenheim, hoping to get in before it closed to see Cai Guo-Qiang's exhibition, I Want to Believe (if you do not know who Cai Guo-Qiang is, i recommend you look at his website because he is not only internationally acclaimed, but an amazing and unique contemporary artist whose work, i believe, could do anyone well to see). we got there with 45 minutes to walk around, which unfortunately was just barely enough time to see it all, but more than enough to blow my mind.

        i'm going to focus on one piece in particular, but just briefly; a few things. first, if you have never been to the Guggenheim, go. i'd never been before, and the setup of the museum alone intrigued me. second, Guo-Qiang is brilliant. there was not one piece that i didn't notice individually, which is quite a feat, considering my short attention span and my nature of hopping around museums to pieces that stand out to me. lastly, while i simply couldn't walk you through every piece of the exhibition, i wouldn't be doing it justice if i didn't at least mention the centerpiece, Inopportune: Stage One (which you can see a video of here -on the NY Guggenheim website).
Inopportune: Stage One is Cai Guo-Qiang's largest installation to date, and simulates a car bombing. the video really says more than i could, so you should watch that. unfortunately, the exhibition closed in may, but let me tell you, nothing can compare to standing on the top floor of the Guggenheim and looking down on this piece.

        my favorite part of the exhibition however, and the piece that has stuck with me is Head On. i'm not sure if this is because of my current fascination with wolves, the strange beauty of the piece, or the sheer size and feel of it. i suspect it is a combination of these and other things. the installation consists of 99 life-sized replica wolves (made of papier mâché, plaster, fiberglass, resin and painted hide) and a glass wall. the wolves start on the ground, in a small pack, and continue, running in rows, gradually lifting off the ground until they are over the viewers' heads, until they hit the glass wall, and come tumbling back down into a pile on the floor. odd as this may sound (or perhaps not odd, for anyone who knows me particularly well, or anyone who has also seen this installation), it is probably one of the most beautiful things i have ever seen. as with any installation, photos do not do it any sort of justice, but here are a couple:


Cai Guo-Qiang's Website
The Guggenheim's information on I Want to Believe (with photos)
Book of Cai Guo-Qiang's work, that i own & recommend

photos: http://www.caiguoqiang.com/

*edit: august 6th
        it was mentioned to me that this installation is much more appreciable after having read Guo-Qiang's intentions for it, and i agree, so for anyone who doesn't want to have to navigate around the Guggenheim's information on the exhibit (although i still recommend you do) here's what it says about Head On:
        "Head On was created for Cai's eponymous solo exhibition at the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin and exemplifies how local history and culture play a central role within his working process. In this tableau, a pack of 99 life-sized wolves gallops at full force toward a transparent glass wall, leaping through the air in a unified arc, only to collide head on into the unyielding barrier. The wall—first realized to the exact height and thickness of the Berlin Wall—represents society's tendency to search only for the obvious, missing instead what may not be immediately evident but ultimately more dangerous. In Cai's artistic iconography, wolves possess a ferocity and courageousness similar to tigers and achieve heroism through their collective unity. In this installation, however, their cohesiveness leads to their ultimate downfall. Here, through the emblematic imagery of wolves, Cai intends to address the human fallibility of following any collective ideology too blindly and humankind's fate to repeat mistakes unthinkingly. Illusion II—a two-channel video installation that was also included in the Head On exhibition—documents an explosion event of the same title. A German-style house was fabricated by Cai on a lot adjacent to the Anhalter Bahnhof, which was once Berlin's largest train station but almost completely destroyed during World War II. The video's documentation of the small house being decimated by explosives, with the station's ruins in the background, illustrates the artist's ongoing exploration of the contradictions involved in perceptions of beauty and violence. —MICHELLE YUN"

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Quickie: Joanna Newsom

        i was reading an interview with joanna newsom a few days ago, when i came across a particularly striking question!

"chickfactor: do you collect anything?
joanna: embroidery, bones, teeth, vintage dresses, flowers preserved behind glass, friends' art, unredeemed gift certificates, diamonds."

        that's right, anyone who has ever come into my apartment for the first time and judged me by my jelly jars of teeth and small bones, i am not alone. and not only am i not alone, but i am in the company of JOANNA NEWSOM. needless to say i couldn't be more pleased.

        if you don't know who joanna newsom is, she is a harpist/singer-songwriter/pianist/harpsichordist. what first drew me to her music were her lyrics, which evoke a lot of imagery/inspiration for me, and are not only (in my mind) absolutely beautiful, but also definitely place her as a storyteller, something i admire greatly. she has two albums, The Milk-Eyed Mender (2004) and Ys (2006), both of which i would recommend.

check her out!
chickfactor interview

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

"Tatt2 Tammy" Jean Lange


        i'm aware that this is no good way to start a blog entry, but i would like to begin this with a preface of sorts. this blog is a way for me to share (rather than hoard to myself, as i am admittedly too often tempted to do) everything that inspires me, because i believe it is important not only to the continuance of the sort art-making i love and interesting people, but also to my personal growth. that said, this post was SO hard for me to give up. she would've been my first post, but i needed a little time to convince myself to do this. so, here goes.

        Tammy Jean Lange (better known as Tatt2 Tammy - a name she got for her former career as a tattoo artist) is who i want to be when i grow up. and i am not even joking/exaggerating. i am 100% serious. she is all and everything that i want to be in life.

        (fast background info, during the summer of 2007 i went to New Mexico to explore ghost towns and pueblos)
        hours off any main roads, just outside of Madrid (a ghost town turned artist's community in New Mexico) is the trailer home of Tatt2 Tammy. it is marked by a sign that reads "Tiny Town", and her yard is what i can only describe as a found art installation of epic proportions. it is difficult to explain exactly what is going on there (it's overwhelming to say the least). i was there for quite some time, took over 70 pictures, and still can't imagine i saw everything. there is a "river" made of broken glass, a city of old dollhouses - each with odd and elaborate setups inside (including some of barbies doing questionable things like hanging out at bars), old toys set up into makeshift nativity scenes, bones, street signs, parts of mannequins, bowling sets, bird cages, old appliances, honestly - you name it and it was probably there. but things aren't just there, everything is set up to create an absolutely surreal environment.

        i feel like i'm on the right track to becoming her (ha, i wish), as we share some rather bizarre things in common. much of her art is created from the bones of roadkill (i presently have a partially decomposed dead bird in my freezer) which she buries to decompose, then digs up and bleaches the bones. she also (obviously) uses a great deal of found objects, some of which are even left for her outside her yard.
        seriously though, this is THE coolest place i have ever been. it is very surreal and has a real life to it that is evident the moment you pull up. she has made the idea of retiring or settling somewhere out of the way and just creating outsider art very appealing to me.

        you can't get a real feeling for "Tiny Town" from photos, but i've included a few that i took, for a general idea of the place (and even one with yours truly right in the middle of it all!). if you're ever in New Mexico though, GO! -and if it's about thirty years from now, look for me too.





photos: copyright daylynn richards

Monday, July 21, 2008

Floria Sigismondi


        a year or two back i came across the music video for the White Stripes' Blue Orchid, and was entirely sucked in (it remains my all-time favorite music video, and a huge inspiration to me). the director, i quickly looked up, was Floria Sigismondi. i discovered that i had seen some of her other videos in the past and been intrigued by (but had not looked up) them, including Christina Aguilera's Fighter. (she has directed over forty other videos, including for Björk, David Bowie, and Marilyn Manson). anyway, after watching more of her videos and looking at her photography, she quickly rose onto my list of favorite artists, and has remained there.
        i can't give a better bio of her than is on her website (so i absolutely recommend checking that out). briefly though, directing-wise, she is known (and has influenced others) by her dilating, jittery camerawork, and "images derived from hallucinatory dream-states". her entire body of work includes not only her videos, but also some astounding photography (she started off as a fashion photographer) and sculpture/installation. they all tie together beautifully, and it is obvious that they are all coming from the same place and are very much in conversation with one another.
        also notably, her work has been shown with photo greats such as Cindy Sherman and (one of my personal favorites, and surely a subject of a future post) Joel-Peter Witkin.
        what really grabs me, i think, about Sigismondi's work is the bizarre and dark (though sometimes disturbing) insight that you get into her imagination while watching one of her videos (or viewing her photography). the imagery that she comes up with just blows my mind really. her imagination is out of this world.
        in short, her work mesmerizes me. check it out.

Sigmondi's website
music video for The White Stripes' Blue Orchid



photos: http://www.floriasigismondi.com

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Antonio López García


        i went to the Antonio López García exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston last week, with the expectation of being extremely impressed, but probably not particularly interested. boy, was i wrong. i had seen one of his paintings before (Sink and Mirror, 1967, oil on wood) in a photo history lecture, and had done a little background research on him, so i knew about his style of borderline obsessive realism (he is considered a “master realist” and sometimes takes years to finish a single piece), a skill which impresses me to no end, but does not generally capture my enthusiasm.
        before i get to how terribly wrong i was about García; some quick background information. García is a 72 year old working and revered Spanish artist, who has rarely been shown in the US, this exhibit is in fact, his first solo museum show in the US. he is proficient in drawing, oil painting, carved wood sculpture and plaster bas-relief.

        the first piece that really grabbed me was a 3D piece, Percha con Ropa (1963-64, Polychromed wood). it’s an actual door along with some of García’s own clothes, that creates a beautiful dusty bronze composition that also serves as a self portrait. i was then drawn to another 3D piece, which really struck me- it was a drastic change from the panoramic paintings of Madrid and hyper-realistic life-sized refrigerator that had been in the last room- it was a wood sculpture painting of a woman peering down the hall at a levitating child. as it turns out, García had a stranger side, and some of his work (particularly from 1957-64) could fit into the category of “magic realism”.
        this happened again and again throughout the exhibit, amongst the realistic paintings (with a fantastic understanding of depth i might add) there would be pieces that were slightly off, or odd, in some way.
        probably my favorite piece in the exhibit, La Cena (1971-80, oil on board) i wrote off as uninteresting at first, but quickly noted that it had multiple quirky things going on. the woman on the right’s face seems to be painted over, moved lower, but leaving traces of the old face behind, creating a disturbing and surreal image. a piece of meat on the table, under closer inspection, is actually a magazine cutout, which leads to further inspection of the other food items, such as the apple, which is also a magazine cutout, but mostly painted over.
        my close second favorite piece in the exhibit is a beautiful painting, again falling into the magic realism category, Niña Muerta (1957) which depicts a small dead girl in a box that looks, to me, like a cigar box.
        needless to say, he piqued my interest. the exhibit is definitely worth checking out. it closes July 27th, and contains over 60 paintings, drawings and sculptures, so everyone should hurry to go see it!

website with photos of 113 of Garcia’s works
MFA’s information on the exhibit
really informative Audio Slideshow from Boston.com




photos: http://www.mfa.org/exhibitions/sub.asp?key=15&subkey=5339
and http://pintura.aut.org/BU04?Autnum=5.787

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Mafuyu & Yoshikazu Yamagata


        in keeping with the dollhouse theme from my last post, i present “My Town in My Home”, the product of a collaboration between knit artist Mafuyu and Japanese fashion designer Yoshikazu Yamagata. the series is made up of several knit houses that can be worn as clothing (Yamagata describes them as “home wear”). they are also intended to be fun for children. the series was displayed at the Arnehem Mode Biennale (in Holland) in 2007. i think they are incredibly playful, and very clever, as well as vibrant and visually pleasing. i have to say, i would totally wear one...

Mafuyu’s site
“writtenafterwards inc” the designs of Yoshikazu Yamagata



photos: http://www.writtenafterwards.com/en/info_mytown.html

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Dorothy Harvey


        i have a love not only for all things strange or slightly creepy, but also for dollhouses, so it would only make sense that this inspires me (and i hope that everyone else finds it at the very least interesting).
        this grave site, in Medina, Tennessee, is the marker for five-year-old Dorothy Marie Harvey, who died in 1931. she supposedly loved dolls, so her parents had a dollhouse grave marker built. (there is a local legend - which i find much less interesting/cool than the marker itself- which says that if you look into the dollhouse you may see her ghost.)

photo:http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/7710

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Elle Muliarchyk




     i believe that for my first post, there is no better subject than Elle Muliarchyk. not only are her photographs absolutely beautiful, but she is probably the coolest person in the world. a former model, Muliarchyk achieved infamy by sneaking a camera and large or numerous props into high-end fashion boutiques and photographing herself in gorgeous gowns in the dressing rooms. she has been hit on the head by doors opened by suspicious employees, and even arrested. her current work, displaying clothing by designer Bella Freud, are more self portraits, but she has moved from dressing rooms to desolate night locations.
     the photographs are stunning, and evoke a palpable melancholy. Mulliarchyk’s drive is just as impressive. traveling mostly alone in these often undesirable areas, she has already been attacked once, having everything except her camera stolen.

Muliarchyk’s current series
NY Times article on her first series (2006)
Fashion TV interview on first series
Fashion TV interview on second series



photos: http://www.showstudio.com/viewers/5632