Seven Artists Management Five Year Anniversary Party At Hotel Figueroa in Los Angeles
photographs by Charlie Oldman and Oliver Maxwell Kupper
The political and social landscape of 2015 inspired need for both self-reflection and a call to action. This year, we saw the release of beautiful new memoirs by feminist icons of the past few decadesโPatti Smith, Gloria Steinem, Janet Mock, and moreโtackling issues of womenโs rights, self-empowerment, and art itself. Here are some of Lucia Ribisi's favorite feminist memoirs from the past year, along with some additional must-read memoirs. Click here to read.
Ezra Woods and Alia Razaโs alchemical romance started about ten years ago with a mutual love of flowers. It should be noted that Ezra and Alia are not a romantic couple, but they are bound by some other fateful and supernatural force of nature that allows for their close collaborative efforts. After ten years as close friends, the pair decided to start Regime Des Fleurs, a โpostmodern lifestyle art-practiceโ disguised as a luxury perfume brand. Before starting the brand, Alia was a video artist in New York City and Ezra was a stylist in Los Angeles, but they werenโt exactly satisfied with where their careers were going. A few weeks ago, we met with the pair at Ezraโs grandfatherโs estate on a bluff in Malibu overlooking the Pacific Ocean. His grandfather is a lover of flowers โ greenhouses and pastures of rare flowers and flora overtake the property โ with a few chickens and roosters thrown in for good measure. It is understandable where Ezraโs love of organic fragrances comes from. Alia is just as infatuated, and in the following interview recalls being enraptured by the perfumes on her motherโs vanity. Read the rest here.
click here to read the prose poem.
You can purchase Terry Richardson's new book featuring portraits and fashion photography here. photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
You can purchase Ryan McGinley's book Way Far here. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
1. Toby Mott's incredibly covetable and controversial book, Skin Head: An Archive, has been released in a much more monetarily accessible reprint, dubbed "the street edition" โ get it signed by Mott at Offprint Paris this Saturday 2. Eye shadow and glitter on paper, tear it up with Brigitte Zieger's solo show at Galerie Odile Ouizeman's booth at Paris Photo 3. Ed Templeton's book Teenage Smokers was beautiful, disconcerting and heartbreaking all at the same time - with Teenage Smokers 2, Templeton amps up the rebellion, get the book signed at Offprint Paris this Saturday 4. Go check out Jeremy Kost's erotically charged and paint splashed polaroids at Galerie Nuke โ A Single Man opens on November 12 in Paris 5. The ultimate documentarian of UK underground culture, Derek Ridgers, will be signing copies of his book The Others at the Comme des Garรงons Trading Museum Paris
Foxes is a magazine that blends fashion and rock n roll - read the first issue here. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Alex Kazemi is one of our favorite โvoices of a generationโ โ a voice that has risen angelic and rebellious above the Tweeting and Snapchatting hordes. In a recent podcast, Bret Easton Ellis called Kazemi a โmillennial friendโ and โa contrarian 20 year old with a brilliant grasp of the contradictions that exist within his generation.โ In the following review, if it can be called that, Kazemi shares his views on Grimesโ new album and wonders: โIf Grimes can have a career in pop music, why canโt reality TV stars Scheana Marie and Heidi Montag?" Click here to read the review.
photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Visit Waris Ahluwalia's Crowd Wise page to read more about the race and jewelry designer, actor and activists efforts to save endangered elephants. You can also donate here.
Happy Purim is a new monograph by paris-based photographer Estelle Hanania. Happy Purim gathers 42 images documenting 3 years of photographs taken between 2011 and 2014 during the Purim holiday in the neighborhood of Stamford Hill, London. Kids wearing home made costumes incarnating a wide range of human vernacular history and reality (from the pizza to the clown). Standing in the street they are revealing some cultural fantasies as well as the familiar invisible backgrounds of their neighborhood: a simple tree, a part of a brick wall, a locked door or a pavement. You can purchase the book here.
Jake Hoffman and cinematographer David J. Myrick outside of the Sundance Sunset Cinema after the Los Angeles premier of Asthma, Hoffman's first film. Read our review and interview with the film's star Benedict Samuel here. photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Hip hop artist Thed Jewel performing at 12345, which opened its new doors in Downtown Los Angeles this week. photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division) presented an All Souls Eve Fรชte, an "immersive, macabre evening of dinner, cocktails, dancing and live performance," at the historic Ebell of Los Angeles. A live auction, with works by the likes of Aaron Young, Eve Fowler, and Jay Stuckey, was presented by Artsy. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
2015 is when the zine went mainstream. Some of our fave artists dabbled in the fine craftsmanship of the stapled chapbook that many people think dates back to the early days of punk, but it actually can be dated all the way back to 1776 when Thomas Paine published his famous pamphlet, Common Sense, which rifled enough feathers for thirteen colonies to declare war and independence from the British. Fancy that. However, the modern zine, which is shorthand for fanzine โ not magazine as many believe โ was a photocopied, hastily stapled together collection of appropriated imagery and art school angst. In 2015, the zine has held true to its DIY Xerox aesthetic, with a few surprising contributions โ and of course some obvious contributors from the likes of one of our favorite photographers working today, Sandy Kim, and from one of our favorite new Los Angeles queer-cult collective, Gurt. Click here to check out ten of our favorite zines that came out in 2015, so far.
An exhibition of unseen photographs by Smiler (aka Mark Cawson) of London squats from the late 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s is currently on view at the ICA in London. The content of the exhibition focuses on a body of work that Smiler mainly shot between West London and Kings Cross. The exhibition consists of black and white images taken on an analogue camera. โI used the camera like a storm anchor helping me to navigate and freeze a spinning world of change and flux.โ Smiler Against the backdrop of social and political upheaval, young people across the city were drawn to squats by the prospect of a place to live, but also by an identity and a sense of community. Smilerโs photographs document the people who lived in squats across the city, at a time when salvage culture was the norm. Smiler: Photographs of London by Mark Cawson will be on view at the ICA until November 29, 2015, 12 Carlton House Terrace London