In 1972, David Bowie released his groundbreaking album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. With it landed Bowie’s Stardust alter-ego: A glitter-clad, mascara-eyed, sexually-ambiguous persona who kicked down the boundaries between male and female, straight and gay, fact and fiction into one shifting and sparkling phenomenon of ’70s self-expression. Together, Ziggy the album and Ziggy the stage spectacular propelled the softly spoken Londoner into one of the world’s biggest stars. A key passenger on this glam trip into the stratosphere was fellow Londoner and photographer Mick Rock. Rock bonded with Bowie artistically and personally, immersed himself in the singer’s inner circle, and, between 1972–1973, worked as Bowie’s official photographer. Last night, Taschen Gallery in Beverly Hills celebrated the launch of the book and an exhibition of selected photographs from the tome for an exhibition entitled David Bowie: Shooting For Stardust, which will be on view until October 11. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
In Our New Photographic Essay Mike Krim Captures The Wild Beauty and Caribbean Pride at the 2015 West Indian Day Parade In New York →
Click here to see the full photographic essay.
Anish Kapoor's Statement On His Sculpture "Dirty Corner" That Has Been Vandalized By Antisemitic Right-Wing Royalists
This is the second time a public sculpture by the British-Indian artist Anish Kapoor has been vandalized. This time, it's a lot more sensitive, especially in the light of European refugee crisis and a seemingly worldwide paranoia and xenophobia. The 230-foot sculpture, entitled Dirty Corner, caused a stir when it was erected in Versailles and the artist alluded that it "evoked the vagina of the queen." In this instance, Kapoor has decided to leave the anti-semitic, royalist text as a rebellion to the perpetrators.
Once again my work Dirty Corner has become a receptacle for the dirty politics of anti-Semitic vandals, racists and right-wing royalists. The vandalised sculpture now looks like a graveyard, the stones are now gravestones marking the ruinous politics of fundamentalist bigotry. Dirty Corner allows this dirty politics to expose itself fully, in full view for all to see. At this time, when we need to have compassion for the thousands of refugees on the road in Europe, the anti-Semitic, racist attack on Dirty Corner at Chateau de Versailles in Paris, brings to the forefront the intolerance and racism in our midst. Dirty Corner has become the vehicle for the expression of our anxiety of "the other" and emphasis that Art is a focus for our deepest longings and fears. It is urgent that we show our solidarity with the oppressed the downtrodden and those of our brothers and sisters in need. As the artist I have -for the second time- to ask myself what this act of violence means to my work. The sculpture will now carry the scars of this renewed attack. I will not allow this act of violence and intolerance to be erased. Dirty Corner will now be marked with hate and I will preserve these scars as a memory of this painful history. I am determined that Art will triumph. text by Anish Kapoor
Girls, Girls, Girls Group Photo Show Opening At Max Fish in New York
Max Fish, the Lower East Side bar known for its artsy congregations, was the host for GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS, an exhibition curated by photographer Brian Boulos. As the title suggests, the show features a photographs predominantly of woman by the likes of Richard Kern, Magdalena Wosinska, Alessandro Simonetti, Dan Martensen, and more. The women on the walls are a mix of personal inspirations and celebrity girl crushes, including Agyness Deyn, Sofia Coppola, a pregant Jemima Kirke eating ice cream by Kern, and an iconic portrait of Blondie. photographs by Adam Lehrer
Diana Dors' 1964 Maserati Mistral 3.7 Spyder Hits The Auction Block This Week
In 1964, the Maserati range was at its most diverse, with the Mistral and Quattroporte joining the Sebring, 3500 GT, and 3500 GT Spyder. Maserati was building upon the success of the 3500 GT and Sebring when it commissioned Pietro Frua to design a new body to be placed upon an updated Tipo 109 chassis. The new two-seat coupé was named “Mistral”, after the strong winds blowing from the Mediterranean coast in the south of France, at the suggestion of Colonel John Simone, the French Maserati importer.The Mistral was sold directly from the Motor Show stand to its first owner, Diana Dors, the English screen icon frequently known as the “English Marilyn Monroe”. She is said to have fallen in love with the car after seeing it first-hand at the motor show. Dors, one of the earliest English stars to court the press, and gain notoriety in the process, was famously the youngest person to own a Rolls-Royce, despite the fact that she was not even old enough to drive at the time. The car, fully restored, will be on the auction block – presented by RM Sotheby’s – this Monday, September 7, 2015 in London.
How Many Virgins? Summer Sacrifice @ The Ace Hotel In Los Angeles
How Many Virgins? presented their Second Summer sacrifice, an intimate evening of visual, aural, and sensual stimulation, at the Ace Hotel in Los Angeles. Featuring A Post-Mentalpausal Mid-Career Survey by Amy Von Harrington & Mel Shimkovitz: short films spanning ten years of new age-old epiphanies and co-defendant disfunction. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
The Kids Are Alright: FYF Fest From the Perspective of Young Photographer Genevieve Nollinger
Most of what you'll see from big music festivals, like FYF Fest, are the bands and the badly dressed. Fortunately, young, up-and-coming photographer Genevieve Nollinger was on hand to capture FYF Fest from her own perspective, her friends, and the fans in raw youthful abandon. photographs by Genevieve Nollinger
Read Our Interview of Kristin Prim On Becoming the Youngest Print Magazine Editor In the World and Her New Art Book That Explores Feminism and Spirituality →
Kristin Prim is a freak of nature and she is so wise at her young age that it will astound you. When she started Prim magazine at only 14 years old, she became the youngest print magazine editor in the world. Indeed, Kristin Prim is not your average girl – now woman – but she’s always been powerful and individualistic, which is one of the things that makes her so fascinating. Her first loves were music and art, but when her parents moved to a more conservative town in New York, she turned towards fashion, and publishing, as an outlet to connect with people that were more like her. While many kids were plastering their walls with cut outs from Teen Vogue, Prim was publishing her own glossy mag and distributing it globally. Click here to read the full interview.
Balkan Pank Explores the Underground Punk Culture of Yugoslavia In The 1980s
Balkan Pank is an original view of ex-Yugoslavia counterculture during the 1979-89 decade, an underrepresented period of punk attitude without the uniform in a non-aligned Communist country, a group of people escaping a dictatorship through their own set of rules. Jože Suhadolnik started this project when he was 13 year old. He was an insider of the 80s punk and squat movement and also an extremely promising young photojournalist, drawn to counterculture, alternative ways of living and genuine rebellion, his curiosity lead us to the hidden corners of in underground labyrinthic squats and illegal gigs where he started documenting the vibrant energy of the nights when bands with names like The Bastards and VideoSex used to play. “We used to travel from what was then Yugoslavia twice a year to Trieste on the Italian border to buy jeans, Brooklyn chewing gum and 20 rolls of Tri-X (they were worth an absolute fortune and lasted at least a few months), and a Yugoslav custom officer stopped you at the border and humiliated you for the next hour. I’ve been to about 1,600 concerts on my count; at my first, Siouxsie and the Banshees in 1981, I was able to walk near Siouxsie on the stage! Can you imagine that today? On the other hand, people were arrested just for wearing a Sex Pistols badge” Click here to purchase the extremely limited first edition of Balkan Pank by Joze Suhadolnik.
Read Our Interview With Photographer, Artist and Social Activist Jessie Askinazi →
Jessie Askinazi is one of those rare connectors that seems to know or work with everybody - and not just in the art world. Art, fashion, politics, social justice – she’s there. Visit her Tumblr diary and you’ll see excerpts from fashion spreads she has featured on Autre, portraits of comedians, actors and musicians, and nightlife snapshots in black and white. Her photography is real, raw and it tells stories – it’s the opposite of vapid, which seems to sum up perfectly who Askinazi is as a person. She is also the founder, organizer and curator of the #YESALLWOMEN fundraiser, which is a hosting a silent auction and exhibition featuring some of the most exciting women championing women’s rights, like Kim Gordon, Barbara Kruger, Rose McGowan, Mira Dancy and many more. Click here to read our interview with Askinazi, who opens up about her bouts with depression and discusses the importance of standing up for people that need it.
Read Our Exclusive Interview With Alex Kazemi on the Creation of Mudditchgirl91 and the Social Experiment Gone Awry →
A few weeks ago, a mysterious series of short vignettes began arriving on Snapchat under the handle mudditchgirl91. Soon, the vignettes were edited together for a short film called Snapchat: Mudditchgirl91. In the film, mudditchgirl91 pines for a mudditchboy with a string of strange and shocking anecdotes, like wondering if mass murderer Elliot Rodger’s cum tastes like avocado oil. People freaked out. Who was mudditchgirl91? In another week, Marilyn Manson had tweeted a link to the video and the mudditchgirl91 phenomenon went viral. A day or two after that, one more film was released – it was mudditchgirl91’s suicide note. Just like that, she was dead. The real story, though, is that mudditchgirl91 was a character in an elaborate plot filmed in real time on the popular social media video sharing site, Snapchat, and directed by Vancouver based artist, novelist, and boy genius Alex Kazemi. Read our interview with the social provocateur on the true story of mudditchgirl91 - and see an exclusive behind the scenes video of Kazemi directing the actress, Bella McFadden.
Adarsha Benjamin, Ryan Heffington and Joe McKee At Future LA
Adarsha Benjamin, Ryan Heffington and Joe McKee At Future LA - a one night performance at The Sweat Spot. photograph by Sara Clarken
Chinese Artist and Dissident Ai Weiwei Gets His Passport Back After Four Years
photograph by Ai Weiei.
In Our Very First Text Interview, We Chat With Instagram Lolita and Exhibitionist Sarah Machan →
Instagram has its fair share of weirdoes, but there also a lot of wonderfully creative people who are discovering that the platform is a great way to express themselves. Sarah Machan (@Sentient_Meat) fits in the latter category – she may be a weirdo, but there is distinct intention behind her machinations on the social media photo-sharing site. She is young and may not know that she is creating a form of digital performance art, but with her blonde hair, seductive glances and strangely literary captions, she comes off as a tempting Lolita that may or may not murder you in her Toronto apartment. The following is a transcript of our text interview with Sarah who was kind enough to offer us a little insight into her beautifully creepy world. Click here to read the interview and see highlights from her Instagram account.
The Mirror Cube Launch of "The Vision Series" in Hollywood
The Mirror Cube, a site that offers a curation of events by artists, celebrates the launch of The Vision Series, a monthly get-together that features original video collaborations between artists hosted by The Mirror Cube. The premiere party featured screenings of films by Natalie Neal & Soko, Rodrigo Amarante, and Amanda Charchian. There was also live music by Rodrigo Amarante, Kaneholler, and a DJ set by Kilo Kesh. photographs by Sandy Kim
See Incredible Exclusive Behind The Scenes Photographs from Korean Pop Band Big Bang’s Concert Trailer for Their Current World Tour →
Back in April, Korean pop fivesome Big Bang were in Los Angeles filming a trailer for their “Made” tour, which is currently sweeping the world. Starring the likes of blonde bombshell Gia Genevieve, Brianna Michele, Stephanie Shiu, Sara Mohr, Marina Zappia, a cameo by Seungri from Big Bang (in drag), and an appearance by mysterious billionaire and basketball aficionado James Goldstein, the trailer is a delectable and decadent visual feast that borrows references from the Rat Pack, the film “Reservoir Dogs,” and high octane car chase films. Dikayl Rimmasch and Ed Burke directed the short concert trailer – they are also behind the amazing video trilogy for Beyonce and Jay Z's "On the Run" tour. The teaser was shot by Nino Pansini of "Fast and Furious" fame. Fortunately, photographer Pola Esther was on the set at Hollywood studios, the California desert and the incredible Lautner designed Sheats-Goldstein residence to capture some incredible behind the scenes photographs, which she shares exclusively with Autre. Click here to see all the photos.
[BOOKS] Mujercitos Compiles Tears Sheets From a Notorious Mexican Tabloid Featuring Transvestites
The results of detailed research from Susana Vargas and art critic Cuauhtémoc Medina, Mujercitos gathers photographs of men dressed as women featured in the periodical Alarma!, known as a nota roja or "red page" newspaper for its bloody content, from the 1960s to the 1980s. This volume collects a selection of key Mexican newsprint tearsheets, with the original layout and typography, each of which represents a mujercito, or "effeminate man," in a highly sexualized, objectified way. Vargas' contextualizing research explores the ways in which these photographs, printed in sensationalistic "true-crime" newspapers, participate in the larger national imaginary of non-normative sexualities in Mexico. In studying these representations of mujercitos, Vargas further traces Anglo-North American theories of gender/sex performativity onto Mexican society, only to discover the multitude of ways in which the relation between gender, sex, sexual orientation and desire is permeated with concerns of race and class in Mexican culture. Click here to buy.
Autre Talks With Sexual Mystic, Nature Slut and Artist Bunny Michael About Coming Out And Finding Your Spiritual Twin →
Back in 2007, she was Bunny Rabbit – it was the era of scenesters, top eight, Internet party photos, seemingly blind vapidness and a generation of millennials desperately seeking a discernible identity. She sang about taking cocaine anally and smoking marijuana vaginally – with backing beats from trans MC and Coco Rosie beat boxer Black Cracker. Her album “Lovers and Crypts” garnered a lot of attention – Sasha Frere-Jones in a New Yorker article dubbed her “the original art rapper.” Today, she is Bunny Michael – after four years of self-realization and a recent sexual revolution she has found a deeper, more meaningful side to herself as an artist and a person. Her recent series of photographs, which are on view now at Alt Space in Brooklyn, are a testament to her evolution and elevation. The exhibition – entitled “The Etheric Double – is the artist’s first solo show and features portraits of the artist and her “spiritual twin” who is manifest as a higher consciousness and a conduit for “kindness, love and acceptance.” In the following interview, Bunny talks about coming out, sexual revolution and the importance of finding your own spiritual twin. Click here to read the interview.
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