5 Must See Happenings At Doug Aitken's "Station to Station" Living Exhibition At the Barbican In London

Currently, the Barbican is presenting Doug Aitken’s living exhibition - entitled Station to Station: a 30 Day Happening – with hundreds of free multi arts events taking place over the course of a month with special ticketed events every Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening, bringing artists from the worlds of visual art, music, dance and design together. Here are Autre's selects for must see happenings at Station to Station. 1. J. Spaceman from the iconic shoegaze band Spiritualized performs a psychedelic score to William Eggleston’s iconic 1974 film Stranded in Canton, which documents his encounters with the characters of American’s deep south 2. Follow Nick Cave from morning until night, on his 20,000th day on earth and then stay tuned for a talk with the filmmakers 3. Portland-based musician and multimedia artist EMA takes over the Art Gallery with a fully immersive installation experience 4. Manchester's Julie Campbell AKA LoneLady presents an exclusive performance, featuring a new work created during her Barbican residency, combining wrap-around film-footage, brutalism-inspired beats and synth fragments 5. Alan Vega and Martin Rev, aka Suicide, performing classic material, new work, and collaborations with some famous fans

Release Party for Elliott Landy's "Opening Night" At the Jane Hotel In New York

Photographer Elliott Landy, who is perhaps best known for his portraits of some of the most towering gods of Rock n’ Roll like Van Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, and Jim Morrison, has a powerful way of capturing an ethereal glamour in his photos. He doesn’t focus on glitz or color. Instead, his photos, often in black and white, have the power to realize their subjects as something akin to mystical. The rock gods and mega-celebrities in Landy’s photos often resemble pseudo deities, but in no way does this extreme aura hinder upon the humanity of the subjects. Instead, it is the viewer’s projection that elevates the subjects into something extra-human, and the subjects then appear trapped by the viewer’s own elevated expectations of who and what the subject should be. This unique photographic dichotomy is captured beautifully in the black and white photographs found in Landy’s new Imperial Pictures published book Opening Night. The book exemplifies Landy’s best work in capturing the complexities attached to fame. The book doesn’t focus on rock stars, but instead captures celebrities like Lauren Bacall, Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Harris, and more as well as the crowds of people that idolized and mobbed them. The photos both glamorize celebrity while sharply criticizing our obsessions with it. The message of these photos is more relevant than ever,” writes Landy in the book’s opening, “That we, as a society, pay more attention to physical glamour and fame than to wisdom.” It was superbly fitting then that to celebrate the release of the book, Landy got his own star treatment as a courtesy of a party thrown in his honor at the Jane Hotel by Paperwork NYC. With modern dance and pop tunes spliced in with vintage soul courtesy of PJ Monte, Landy found himself surrounded by fans, downtown NYC mainstays like Cat Marnell, and his oldest and dearest friends to celebrate this beautiful collection of his work. Landy has very unique warmth. When I approached him, I tried to relate via my love of Van Morrison’s records Astral Weeks and Veedon Fleece that pulled me out of some heartbreak after I got dumped by a girlfriend in college. “Van’s music has that ability to lift up your spirits,” said Landy. He then signed my book, “Dear Adam, many moondances to you—Elliot Landy.” I was touched. Even people that just happened to be partying at the Jane picked up copies of the book and had them signed by Landy. Landy treated them all the same. It is that generosity and empathy that has allowed Landy to create such magnetic emotion in these pictures. Text and photographs by Adam Lehrer

Read Our Interview With the Legendary Genesis Breyer P'Orridge

After Genesis Breyer P’Orridge’s legendary “Prostitution” exhibition at the ICA in London – which included pornographic collages, bloody tampons, and prostitutes, transvestites, hustlers and punks intermingling with the audiences – P’Orridge was deemed a “wrecker of civilization” by House of Commons representative Nicholas Fairbairn. Coincidentally, at the same time that a debate was stirring in the Parliament and the House about the antics of P’Orridge and their neo-Dadaist art collective COUM Transmissions, they were in Kathmandu feeding and providing shelter for lepers, beggars and refugees at their own expense. Wrecker or healer – you decide. This weekend Genesis will be having a “Pandrogaragenous Avant-yard Sale” and blessing purchased items at the Jackie Klempay Gallery in Brooklyn. Autre was lucky enough to have a chat with Genesis before the opening to discuss rebellion, the importance of the subculture and more. Read the interview here

Daniel Arsham, Juliette Lewis, Waris Ahluwalia, and Mike Figgis at the IST Festival in Istanbul

Daniel Arsham, Juliette Lewis, Waris Ahluwalia, and Mike Figgis at the 5th edition of the IST Festival in Istanbul - curated and co-founded by Istanbul 74' - which explored realist in art and culture. Daniel Arsham premiered his film Future Relic 03 starring Juliette Lewis. photograph by Will Ragozzino 

Black Lives Matter: See Our Photographic Essay of the Freddie Gray Protests in New York City

After news emerged that Freddie Gray, Jr. had broken his spine and died while in the custody of police officers – a literal straw that broke the camel's back after countless public deaths of unarmed black men and women at the hands of authorities – riots and protests erupted in Baltimore; it soon spread to New York City. Mike Krim of subversive, cult publishing imprint Paperwork NYC and model Alex Papa grabbed their cameras and found themselves in the center of the action. "Alex Papa and I decided to grab some film and join in. Not knowing what to expect, we jumped in the crowd and started taking photos. That lasted roughly twenty minutes until we found ourselves chanting "No Justice No Peace Fuck The Police" and fully engaged in the protest, which took over city blocks and highways. As voices echoed loudly, we ran to fill in gaps, walking interlinked to shut down intersections, and marched forward. At times losing people to small pockets of raw emotion that took place. I'm not sure what the exact term of "peaceful assembly" is but I feel it was accomplished last night. Was anything achieved besides screwing up all the traffic in NYC? I'm not sure. I will tell you one thing, though, it felt fucking awesome approaching Times Square with that many people and taking over what some call the center of the universe." Click here to see the full photographic essay

Harper Levine of Harper's Books At His Anti-Fair Pop-Up At the Carlyle Hotel In New York

Harper Levine of Harper's Books at his Anti-Fair Pop-Up, which takes up a double room suite at the Carlyle Hotel. Get your hands on beautiful rare art books, art by the likes of Eric Brown and Brad Phillips, and other ephemera. On view until Friday, May 15 at the Carlyle Hotel in New York. photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper

Part Two: VIP Opening of Paris Photo Los Angeles 2015

Paris Photo Los Angeles returns this year to Paramount Pictures Studios' famous sound stages and New York City backlots. Paris Photo presents a true exploration of classic and contemporary photography and moving images - and everything in between. The fair opens today and runs until Sunday, May 3rd. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper

Part One: VIP Opening of Paris Photo Los Angeles 2015

Paris Photo Los Angeles returns this year to Paramount Pictures Studios' famous sound stages and New York City backlots. Paris Photo presents a true exploration of classic and contemporary photography and moving images - and everything in between. The fair opens today and runs until Sunday, May 3rd. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper

Bruce LaBruce Celebrates MoMA Retrospective @ Nowhere Bar

Transgressive queercore director  Bruce LaBruce is flying high right now; his first MoMA exhibition opened up last night and Bruce went out to party. The exhibition itself is a monumental achievement; LaBruce may be one of the more extreme artists to ever have work shown at MoMA. Depicting scenes of sexual fetish and paraphillia, BDSM, gang rape, racially-motivated violence, amputee fetishism and more, LaBruce has managed to turn controversy into his own brand of queer celebrating and sex positive art. MoMA itself has compared LaBruce favorably to Robert Altman and Federico Fellini as a true auteur when discussing the choice for the exhibition. So where did LaBruce go out to celebrate his achievement? Nowhere Bar, of course. The infamous gay bar proved to be a perfect setting for LaBruce to party and dance with friends and muses like performance artist Kembra Phahler and writer and nightlife personality Ladyfag , as well as many more adoring friends and fans.  One half expects extreme things to be surrounding Bruce at all times, but tonight was actually a mellow night where Bruce drank, hugged friends, danced and basked in the glory. Text and photographs by Adam Lehrer

A Coachella Diary on Film by Ethan DeLorenzo

Ethan DeLorenzo gets strange and weird with Father John Misty, Travis Scott, Chris Brown and more during Coachella 2015. photographs by Ethan DeLorenzo

Read Our Interview with Cozette McCreery of Sibling

Read BJ Panda Bear's interview with Cozette MCCreery, one third of the design collective and London-based fashion brand Sibling. MCCreery, who was once a muse to the late artist Lucian Freud, talks designer clothes, raves, and 80’s era Madonna. Read the interview here. And keep up to date with everything arts and culture by following Autre on instagram: @AUTREMAGAZINE

Paul McCarthy Designs Limited Edition Skatedecks

Paul McCarthy borrows from his series PROPO to design a series of skatedecks. Through this collection, The Skateroom and Paul McCarthy aim to entirely finance the building of Skateistan’s first skate school on the African continent, in central Johannesburg. The innovative facility will use “the hook” of skateboarding to connect vulnerable youth to educational and leadership opportunities. The vision is for Skateistan, South Africa’s skate school to serve as a regional training hub for skateboard-based, youth-development projects. Each deck is hand-numbered, signed and limited to 250 units. Click here to get pick up your own deck and support this amazing project. photograph by Damon McCarthy