Saturday, March 12, 2011

MOVIE JANE EYRE - CARY FUKUNAGA - MARCH 2011









After a bleak childhood, Jane Eyre goes out into the world to become a governess. As she lives happily in her new position at Thornfield Hall, she meet the dark, cold, and abrupt master of the house, Mr. Rochester. Jane and her employer grow close in friendship and she soon finds herself falling in love with him. Happiness seems to have found Jane at last, but could Mr. Rochester's terrible secret be about to destroy it forever?


Genre: Drama, Romance
Actors: Michael Fassbender, Jamie Bell, Mia Wasikowska, Judi Dench, Imogen Poots, Sally Hawkins, Tamzin Merchant, Craig Roberts, Freya Wilson, Jayne Wisener, Holliday Grainger, Simon Mcburney, Harry Lloyd, Sophie Ward, Valentina Cervi
Director: Cary Fukunaga
Producers: Alison Owen, Paul Trijbits
Writers: Charlotte Bronte, Moira Buffini










IDA KAR - BOHEMIAN PHOTOGRAPHER - 1908-74 - NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY - 10 MARCH - 19 JUNE 2011 - LONDON






Ida Kar



London Ida Kar, late 1950s - National Portrait Gallery



Sylvia Syms by Ida Kar, 1950s vintage bromide print © National Portrait Gallery

Ida Kar: Bohemian Photographer, 1908-74 highlights the crucial role played by this key woman photographer at the heart of the creative avant-garde. With striking portraits of artists such as Henry Moore, Georges Braque, Gino Severini and Bridget Riley, and writers such as Iris Murdoch and Jean-Paul Sartre, this exhibition offers a fascinating insight into the cultural life of post-war Britain and an opportunity to see iconic works, and others not previously exhibited.

On display for the first time is a portrait of artist Yves Klein, shown at his first and highly controversial London exhibition in 1957 in front of one of his famous monochrome works, in the distinctive blue-colour he was later to patent as his own. (‘The artist who paints nothing’ was one newspaper headline at the time.)

A portrait of the ‘art strike’ artist and political activist Gustav Metzger – taken at an exhibition entitled Festival of Misfits – is another discovery in an exhibition which partly chronicles 1950s and 1960s Bohemian London society. A photograph of Royston Ellis, a poet and friend of John Lennon who inspired the song ‘Paperback Writer’ and introduced Lennon to ‘Polythene Pam,’ the subject of the Beatles song, is also on display for the first time. As is one of Kar’s earliest works, a beautiful portrait of the actress and director Sylvia Syms from the beginning of her career in 1953.


Russian-born, of Armenian heritage, Ida Kar (1908–74) was instrumental in encouraging the acceptance of photography as a fine art when, in 1960, she became the first photographer to be honoured with a major retrospective in London, at the Whitechapel Art Gallery. She later continued to document conceptualist artists such as Gustav Metzger and John Latham and life in Cuba and Moscow. Featuring unseen archive material, this reappraisal provides a valuable record of the international art world as documented by Kar over three decades while literary subjects exhibited include Doris Lessing, Colin MacInnes and T S Eliot.

Ida Kar: Bohemian Photographer, 1908-74 charts the photographer’s life and career from her first studio in Cairo in the late 1930s to her move to London in 1945, where she was introduced to the British art world through the family of Jacob Epstein and her husband Victor Musgrave. Her first solo exhibition in London, Forty Artists from London and Paris, at Musgrave’s Gallery One in 1954, included perceptive and sympathetic studies of the artists Stanley Spencer, Tsugouharu Foujita, Alberto Giacometti, Man Ray and Le Corbusier.

Material on display from the photographer’s archive (acquired by the National Portrait Gallery including over 800 of Kar’s vintage prints and 10, 000 negatives) includes letters, a sitters’ book and a portfolio book made in 1954 of her trip to the artists’ studios of Paris.

Her later work includes the leading artists of the St Ives modern art movement (Tatler, 26 July 1961), featuring Patrick Heron, Peter Lanyon, Barbara Hepworth and Terry Frost, and her documentary portraits of Soho bohemia in the 1950s and early 1960s includes The Farm Coffee Shop and artists associated with her husband’s Gallery One. Kar’s portrait of Fidel Castro, included as a contact sheet, taken in Cuba of 1964, demonstrates her political interests and her engagement in promoting her work abroad.





Helena Rubinstein by Ida Kar



London - Ida Kar, Unknown man Ronald Frederick Henry Duncan, 1951 - National Portrait Gallery



Bridget Riley by Ida Kar, 1963 - National Portrait Gallery

Friday, March 11, 2011

YOHJI YAMAMOTO EXHIBITION - V & A MUSEUM - 12 MARCH_10 JULY 2011 - LONDON





London's Victoria & Albert Museum is going full tilt with its celebration of avant-garde fashion designer Yohji Yamamoto -- staging a retrospective exhibit of the designer's work, opening March 12, and (for those of us who aren't able to jet to the U.K.) publishing a companion coffee-table book, "Yohji Yamamoto."

The deluxe tome, which features images from runway shows, advertisements and editorial photo shoots over the years, paints a compelling portrait of the reclusive designer, whose work is defined by his fascination with textiles. "Fabric is everything," he has said. "Often I tell my pattern makers, 'Just listen to the material. What is it going to say? Just wait. Probably the material will teach you something.' "

Yamamoto's billowing, sculptural designs, which have often flouted gender roles, have inspired a generation of designers. And the book strives to distill that influence through essays written by close collaborators and friends, including photographers Max Vadukul and Nick Knight; Irene Silvagni, creative director for the brand; and Ligaya Salazar, curator of contemporary programs at the V&A.

The back of the book even includes a (slightly unweildy) roundtable discussion with art director Marc Ascoli, Knight and graphic designer Peter Saville, chaired by curator Magdalene Keaney.

But, as with most fashion books, the images speak most succinctly when it comes to defining the designer's aesthetics, eras and obsessions. And as dramatic and voluminous as Yamamoto's clothes are, they were tailor made for fashion photography.

Memorable photographs include a young Stella Tennant in mid-dance, nearly enveloped in waves of black fabric; Guinevere van Seenus dolled up like a gent in a wool garbardine jacket (pictured); and Amber Valetta wearing a quilted floor-length piece that feels — as many of Yamamotos designs have over the years — as much cocoon as it does coat.



Guinevere van Seenus in a Yohji Yamamoto
















Yohji Yamamoto for the V&A White Floral Furoshiki Bag, $137

DIARY LYLYBYE - JACK KEROUAC AND THE BEAT GENERATION - 2011




NEW YORK CITY—Poetry and folk singing at McSorley's Saloon, 1959



Bowery Blues



The story of man

Makes me sick

Inside, outside,

I don't know why

Something so conditional

And all talk

Should hurt me so.



I am hurt

I am scared

I want to live

I want to die

I don't know

Where to turn

In the Void

And when

To cut

Out



For no Church told me

No Guru holds me

No advice

Just stone

Of New York

And on the cafeteria

We hear

The saxophone

O dead Ruby

Died of Shot

In Thirty Two,

Sounding like old times

And de bombed

Empty decapitated

Murder by the clock.



And I see Shadows

Dancing into Doom

In love, holding

TIght the lovely asses

Of the little girls

In love with sex

Showing themselves

In white undergarments

At elevated windows

Hoping for the Worst.



I can't take it

Anymore

If I can't hold

My little behind

To me in my room



Then it's goodbye

Sangsara

For me

Besides

Girls aren't as good

As they look

And Samadhi

Is better

Than you think

When it starts in

Hitting your head

In with Buzz

Of glittergold

Heaven's Angels

Wailing



Saying



We've been waiting for you

Since Morning, Jack

Why were you so long

Dallying in the sooty room?

This transcendental Brilliance

Is the better part

(of Nothingness

I sing)



Okay.

Quit.

Mad.

Stop.



Kerouac Jack







NEW YORK CITY—A poetry reading, 1959







NEW YORK CITY—Allen Ginsberg, Kerouac, and Gregory Corso in Greenwich Village, 1957







American writer William Burroughs, living at the Hotel Du Vieux Paris, Rue Git, 1970







LIVERPOOL, England—At the Blue Angel Beat club, 1964







Jack Kerouac





BOOK 'NOT IN FASHION' - PHOTOGRAPHY & FASHION IN THE 90'S - MMK MUSEUM FÜR MODERNE KUNST - FRANKFURT - 2011



MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt/Main is showing how fashion changes our view of the world. In the 1990s, the fashion scene fundamentally reinvented specifically the medium of photography. That decade gave rise to a new generation for whom personal identity, individualism and a self-defined style were of crucial importance. Back then, the joie de vivre of the generation of 20-30 year-old creative minds thrived on music, subculture, intimacy and fashion. A new notion of corporeality was being celebrated in the major capitals of the world, such as London, New York, Tokyo, Berlin and Paris. The protagonists of this era sought to distinguish themselves from the established art and fashion scenes, and develop an alternative, lived counter-culture. They felt that the overly artificial images of prêt-à-porter, haute couture and glossy fashion magazines needed to be overcome and replaced with “real life” pictures instead Youth-Culture. They thus collectively dismissed the notion of the beautiful, and tried to elide gender differences and other social conventions.

The exhibition at MMK demonstrates just how radical and innovative this new generation was and highlights the strong impact it has had on the visual arts to this very day. The complex show will present some 200 works of photography, original documents along with an extensive program of live events, illustrating the cross-fertilization and mutual influence of fashion design, photography and art. This is expressed first and foremost in magazines such as i-D Magazine, The Face, Six, Visionaire, and Purple. Ten photographers, all of whom are trailblazers of that decade, will showcase selected works and series in the rooms of MMK, with artists such Wolfgang Tillmans, Mark Borthwick, Corinne Day, Anders Edström and Jüergen Teller... choosing specific works from that era and presenting them in a new, contemporary context.

The comprehensive historical documentation of the 1990s fashion scene, and it gives a striking impression of creative practices of the day, forms a pivotal element of the exhibition. Reproductions of influential photo stories and innovative ad campaigns by the likes of Helmut Lang, Jürgen Teller or Yohji Yamamoto will be on show as will a large selection of original fashion magazines. Graphic designers M/M (Paris), who since the beginning of the 1990s have done pioneering work in fashion, advertising and magazine design, will compile this documentary overview for the exhibition.

























MATHIAS AUGUSTYNIAK - DRAWING - M/M PARIS - 2011




The amazing drawing that Mathias Augustyniak did for Olympia Le-Tan’s Housewive’s Choice collection.


http://olympialetan.tumblr.com

DIARY LYLYBYE - KAREN KILIMNIK - ARTIST - 2011








Karen Kilimnik



Keira Knightley - The Duchess



Karen Kilimnik



Karen Kilimnik_Two Dancers on a stage, Paris 2004



Karen Kilimnik



Karen Kilimnik, Two Dancers on a stage, Paris, 2004