See more of Zoe Crosher's work here.
Eric Mack "Never Had A Dream" At Moran Bondaroff in Los Angeles
Moran Bondaroff presents Never Had A Dream, Eric Mack’s first solo exhibition at the gallery, which presents collage works varying from sculpture and installation to wall pieces and work on paper. Mack’s aesthetic involves a particular type of tactility and usage of common items, primarily those related to clothing. References to the fashion industry and the figure impart a seductive quality to his work and connect to identity, or a material fiction of desire and intention. Erik Mack "Never Had a Dream" will be on view until November 10, 2015 at Moran Bondaroff, 937 N. La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA
Calvin Klein Jeans Celebrates Its 2015 Fall Campaign At The Lyric Theatre In Los Angeles
photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Noah's Arc: Read Our Conversation With Former Supreme Creative Director Brendon Babenzien On His New Flagship Store In NYC →
Click here to read our conversation with former Supreme creative director Brendon Babenzien on his new flagship store, Noah, in NYC.
For Autre's 8th Friday Playlist We Invite You To Get Amped With Amphetamine Reptile Records →
When Nirvana blew up, the door was wide open for loud rock bands to be signed to lucrative major label deals, and of course, many bands did just that. It's still a testament to how crazy a time the early '90s was for the music industry that a band as bizarre as Royal Trux was signed to Virgin Records. Even then, there were still plenty of rock bands that wanted to be as weird as possible and wanted nothing to do with the majors. For them, record labels like the Washington State-based Amphetamine Reptile were blessings. Click here to read all about the fascinating label and take a listen to few highlights from their catalogue.
Julie Schenkelberg "Embodied Energies" At Asya Geisberg Gallery In New York
Industrial demise and the decaying glamour of a gloried era are two of the main themes in Julie Schenkelberg’s site-specific installation Swan Song at Asya Geisberg Gallery in New York. The large-scale installation is made up of found industrial as well as domestic objects, collected over the course of five years and put together in ten weeks before transferring it into the gallery space. The installation is overwhelming and beautiful at the same time, traversing the entire gallery space from floor to ceiling. The seemingly randomly piled objects have been carefully arranged and are reminiscent of abandoned and destroyed family homes. Fully grounded in the space the precariously mounted chairs and stacked pieces of furniture give the installation an upward reach making it heavy and light at the same time. The mix of textures, fabrics, solid foam and powder, and colors, white, turquoise and brown further supports this juxtaposition. Julie Schenkelberg "Embodied Energies" will be on view until October 24, 2015 at Asya Geisberg Gallery in New York. text and images by Adriana Pauly
Bash To Celebrate Brad Elterman's Book "No Dogs On The Beach" At Milk Studios In Los Angeles
Bash to celebrate the release of Brad Elterman's new photo book No Dogs On Beach at Milk Studios in Los Angeles. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
A New Documentary Explores The Legendary Week Long Conversation Between Hitchcock and Truffaut
In 1962, Alfred Hitchcock and a 30-year-old François Truffaut sequestered themselves in a windowless Hollywood office for a weeklong conversation. The result: the seminal book “Hitchcock/Truffaut,” published a half century ago, dissecting every film Hitchcock had made until then, illuminating his masterful techniques, making the case for the popular director as an artist, and influencing generations of filmmakers. Kent Jones brings “the Bible of Cinema” to invigorating life. He interviews filmmakers whose work has been profoundly influenced by Hitchcock—Martin Scorsese, David Fincher, Richard Linklater, Olivier Assayas, and many others. The documentary will hit theaters this December.
Stefan Simchowitz's Frieze London 2015 Diary Part Three
photographs by Stefan Simchowitz
11 Things You Must See And Do During Frieze Week London 2015
1. Today at 5pm, Gosha Rubchinskiy will be signing copies of his incredible book Youth Hotel featuring the young and rebellious of Russia at Dover Street Market, in the Idea Books space 2. Luxembourg & Dayan creates a microsalon – a homage to the eccentric gallerist Iris Clert who championed the postwar avant-garde at Frieze Masters (Stand D7) 3. Visiting Frieze – Ken Kagami will sketch your genitals for free - just find the Misako & Rosen stand 4. Serpentine gallery presents an exhibition of work by artist, poet, essayist and activist Jimmie Durham, entitled Various Items and Complaints 5. Swiss artist Ugo Rondinone will be presenting his hyper-colored natural stone formations at Sadie Coles HQ 6. Jon Rafman has his first major solo in the UK at Zabludowicz Collection with his unique blend of virtual reality and video works 7. Artist Millie Brown, known for her work with multihued puke work, will be suspending herself aloft at the Gazelli Art House for a performance called Rainbow Body Performance 8. Spend your life savings by bidding on some of the most glorious examples of contemporary art at the Phillips Contemporary Art Day Sale 9. Check out artist, collector, and impresario Stefan Simchowitz's Frieze diary only on Autre - browse through the fair from a seasoned insider's perspective 10. American conceptual sculpture Tom Friedman creates a "cocktail party" for Stephen Friedman's gallery presentation at Frieze (Stand C6) 11. Check out the overshadowed Sunday Art Fair that showcases emerging and up-and-coming artists
Stefan Simchowitz's Frieze London 2015 Diary Part Two
photographs by Stefan Simchowitz
Stefan Simchowitz's Frieze London 2015 Diary Part One
photographs by Stefan Simchowitz
Designer Sean Knibb At the Unveiling of The Casa Canova Collection At Please Do Not Enter In Los Angeles
Designer and artist Sean Knibb, of Knibb Design, unveiling his unique series of Carrara marble tables with intricately and meticulously carved t-shirts and jean shorts, at the Please Do Not Enter concept shop in downtown LA. photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
An Exhibition of Photographs and Videos by Gary Indiana at 356 Mission Road Gallery
photographs by Sara Clarken
Oscar Murillo "Binary Function" at David Zwirner in London
David Zwirner presents Oscar Murillo’s first exhibition at the gallery in London, which includes new paintings and drawings as well as sculptural, sound, and film elements. The exhibition’s title, binary function, refers to the pairings that permeate Murillo’s multifaceted practice. For the artist, the notion of the binary is not oppositional; instead, these pairings work and play against one another to create a dialogue that exceeds individual works. Oscar Murillo "Binary Function" will be on view until November 20, 2015 at David Zwirner, 24 Grafton Street London. photographs by Flo Kohl
A Supermasochistic Love Story: Read Our Intimate, Touching and Fascinating Convo With The Grande Dame of Domination Sheree Rose →
Sheree Rose is the kinky grandmother I never had but always wanted. Featured in the seminal and groundbreaking 1997 documentary SICK alongside her late partner, supermasochist Bob Flanagan, Sheree was the woman behind the curtain acting as Bob’s Domme and a massive force in helping him achieve greatness through performance, poetry, and promiscuity. All smiles and as candid as it gets, she gleefully divulged the breadth of her sexual awakening and the hardships in getting there. She is a punk, a pervert, and a pioneer — a true libertine — warm hearted yet strict and opinionated, which is why I was initially drawn to her. She is most written about in the context of Bob (“an exotic endangered species,” as she calls him), and while that relationship was undoubtedly important to her and performance history, Sheree stands alone as a remarkable and fascinating woman who waxes poetic on the state of femdom, feminist practice, and sex in the contemporary time — “out of the bedroom and into real life — explicit not just implicit.” On September 11th, we met at the ONE Archives at USC to discuss her role in the BDSM and D/s scene in Los Angeles during the 70s and 80s, the importance of choice, questions about male sexuality, and our shared love for guiding slave boys into the matriarchy. Click here to read the full interview.
Highlights From The Greater New York Survey @ MoMA PS1
On Sunday MoMA PS1 opened the doors to its awaited exhibition Greater New York and let anxious New Yorkers roam through the galleries. The exhibition has been co-curated by Peter Eleey, Douglas Crimp, Thomas J. Laz, and Mia Locks and encompasses the works of 150 New York based artists. Stepping away from the traditional focus on youth the fourth iteration of MoMA PS1’s landmark exhibition aims to balance our desire for the new and nostalgia for the past. Greater New York will be on view until March 16, 2016 at MoMA PS1, 22-25 Jackson Ave, Long Island City, NY. photographs and text by Adriana Pauly. Click here to read the full review.
Jesse Edwards "Let's Watch TV All Day" @ 6817 Gallery in Los Angeles
6817 gallery presents Let's Watch TV All Day, an exhibition of recent paintings and ceramics by Jesse Edwards. This is the artist's first solo show in Los Angeles. Let's Watch TV All Day will feature a series of ceramic televisions in which Edwards uses familiar imagery: Disney characters, Super Mario, the Simpsons, Bob Ross, and porn stars. Edwards comments on contemporary society's obsession with visual stimulation by portraying subject matter that is universally recognizable, images that the American public spends much of their time looking at. Edwards' ceramic cell phones with pornographic images further this idea; many of these are "selfies," cell phone photos often sent via text. In his still life paintings, Edwards portrays drug paraphernalia, soda cans, junk food, flowers, and similar every day objects. Edwards historicizes American counterculture by representing these items in a traditional still life format. Later this month, a monograph of Jesse Edwards' work will be published by Vito Schnabel. Let's Watch TV All Day will be on view until November 21 at 6817 Gallery in Los Angeles. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Read Our Round-Up Review of Paris Fashion Week 2015 →
Again, I will have to touch upon what makes this particular round unique to the industry and important for fashion. But honesty, do I actually need to make an argument concerning Paris and its total domination of conceptual fashion? OK, here’s an argument for you: Raf Simons, Rick Owens, Rei Kawakubo, Yohji Yammamoto, Dries Van Noten, Martin Margiela, Junya Wattanabe, Olivier Rousteing, and need I continue? A lot happens at Paris: some bad, some good, and some utterly transcendent. It’s too much to write about really. It’s the longest of the fashion weeks and it can be easy to forget about incredible shows mere days after they happened. Today as I am baffled yet excited over the announcement of Demna Gvasalia of Vetements being named creative director to Balenciaga while former Balenciaga godhead Nicolas Ghesquiere continues to alter the fabric of what we know to be Louis Vuitton, I almost forgot that Rick Owens put on the funniest and most conceptual collection of the week. So another season is over, and the buying begins. See you at the menswear shows. Click here to read the full review. Text by Adam Lehrer.
Opening Night Of Marc Horowitz's "Interior, Day (A Door Opens)" at Depart Foundation In Los Angeles
The Depart Foundation in Los Angeles is hosting Marc Horowitz's first ever solo show. The exhibition includes sculptures and paintings that reimagine the old as new. In his own words, "the thesis of the show is conflating personal history with art history." Click here to read our interview with the artist. "Interior, Day (A Door Opens)" will be on view until December 19th at Depart Foundation, 9105 West Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles.