House & Garden Is A World Of Domestic Bliss @ Stroll Garden In Los Angeles

Conceived as a singular installation, House & Garden welcomes viewers into a home of domestic items rendered in clay by Analuisa Corrigan and a garden of working ceramic fountains by Lily Clark, complimented by live plant vignettes created by Alice Lam of A.L. BASA. In recontextualizing the familiar, the artists invite a moment of pause to reengage our senses and reconsider our relationship to often overlooked elements of the everyday, both domestic and elemental. Corrigan creates organic, figurative forms that unite material exploration and personal expression. Corrigan’s pieces are deceptively labor intensive, taking up to a month to make. After sketching and prototyping, each is carefully built up through a coil technique, then dried and sanded to achieve the desired silhouette. The resulting work feels simultaneously robust and delicate.

Whereas Corrigan works intuitively, Clark’s process embraces precision, reflecting her interest in engineering. After drafting a design, she rolls slabs of clay and cuts using a template, then carefully joins the seams. The surface is left unglazed to contrast with the water’s luster. For her large-scale fountains, Clark incorporates stones that she spent six months sourcing from the Whitewater quarry just outside of Palm Springs, fine tuning the design to achieve her desired water flow and sound. Clark’s fountains are arranged within an “indoor garden” by Alice Lam, whose Los Angeles-based creative studio A.L. BASA specializes in sculptural floral installations. Lam’s site-specific design references Buddhist Zen gardens created around works by Isamu Noguchi, as well as plants that are representative of California’s biodiversity. Immersive and temporal, House & Garden contemplates notions of interior and exterior — both somatic and psychological, experienced and subjective.

House & Garden is on view through June 11 @ Stroll Garden 7380 Beverly Boulevard.

 
 

Katy Shayne Shoots Stephen Jones New Millinery Collection for H. Lorenzo

hat/ stephen jones "beaulieu" hat
top/ maryam nassir zadeh ss22
"faustina" top
bottoms/ simone rocha briefs
jewelry/ 23carat

hat/ stephen jones "hossegor" hat
top/ maryam nassir zadeh ss22
"faustina" top
bottoms/ simone rocha briefs
jewelry/ 23carat

stephen jones "trouville" hat
jewelry/ 23carat

hat/ stephen jones #agnes" hat
top/ bottoms simone rocha
bottoms/ simone rocha briefs
jewelry/23carat

hat/ stephen jones "renee" hat
bottoms/ simone rocha briefs
jewelry/ 23carat

model/ sara cath
direction_ photography/ katy shayne
assist/ alew m
tortoise/ grandpa special thanks jayme kavanaugh

DISCOVER MORE AT H. LORENZO

Read Our Interview Of Sintra Martins The Precocious Saint Of Parsons

A model in a beaded dress of primary colors lays on a bed with blue eyeshadow on and stares into the camera.

Sintra Martins may be from Los Angeles, but her designs are quintessentially New York and they are taking the city by storm. The recent Parsons graduate interned for Thom Browne and Wiederhoeft before launching Saint Sintra in 2020, presenting her first collection at NYFW in 2021, and her sophomore FW22 collection was just presented at NYFW earlier this year. In the last two years, her sculptural designs have walked the line between costume and ready-to-wear with S-curved horsehair filaments, sheer maxi skirts, colored feathers, English shetland tweeds, sparkles and bows, and so much more. Not only has she established herself as a master of disparate materials who takes inspiration from far and wide, but her designs have become instant favorites to everyone from Olivia Rodrigo, to Sydney Sweeney, Willow, Cali Uchis, and Kim Petras. We asked Martins to style model Memphis Murphy for a special editorial and sat down to ask the emerging designer a few questions about her process. Read more.

Burberry and Creative Director Riccardo Tisci Host An Event In Los Angeles to Celebrate The Lola Bag

Burberry and Chief Creative Officer, Riccardo Tisci hosted an event in Los Angeles to celebrate the Lola bag. The Lola bag is a staple for the house, a soft silhouette punctuated with the Thomas Burberry Monogram, a celebration of the house’s founder. At the heart of every Lola lies an attitude – strong, sexy, smart and present. A multifaceted energy that amplifies inherent confidence. photos courtesy of Burberry

Leigh Ledare Presents To you who make the springtime, I send my winter @ Michèle Didier In Paris

 
 

For the exhibition, Leigh Ledare wrote an intimate, first-person press release, included here in its entirety.

“‘Mother died today. Or maybe it was yesterday, I don’t know.’
— Albert Camus, L’Etranger

My work was first introduced to the artworld through a series titled Pretend You’re Actually  Alive. A chronicle of my family, this project centered around my mother – a dancer who at age  thirteen began a career with the New York City Ballet only to find herself, at almost fifty, in  a relatively provincial city dancing at a strip club next door to her parents’ apartment. On the  surface this was a story of disappointment; however, not completely. She carried a humor  about herself and an appetite for the absurd. And while her performance of sexual desire  acted to address certain needs (financial, emotional and otherwise), her assertions toward  my camera also largely amounted to a refusal of expectations put upon her – namely, her  father’s opinions concerning how she should behave as a daughter, mother and woman of  her age.  

While my work has since shifted in unexpected directions, it remains recursive. Perambulating  around an ever-widening space, it circles back to themes that are intersubjective and often  symptomatic.  

As I contemplated what to include in this exhibition and began considering a title, I recalled  a phrase I came across a number of months ago: “To you who make the spring, I send my  winter.” Albert Camus had penned this inscription inside a personalized copy of his final  novel The Fall, a gift for the painter Balthus. Infamous for fetishizing the fleeting innocence  and nascent sexuality of the young girls who modeled for his paintings, Balthus continuously  reinvented himself, ultimately creating his own feudal paradise sequestered high in the  Swiss Alps where he could safely personify the values of Traditionalism and order he  believed had been ravaged by modernity. Of course, his views must be taken with a grain of  salt. In contrast, the anarchistic Camus, who was raised in a working class neighborhood in  Algiers by a mother who was unable to read, placed absurdity and chaos at the center of his  work, railing against forms of mechanized thought he deemed intellectual suicide. Loaded  with contradictions, and serving as an uncanny mirror onto our own times, Camus’ epigram  seemed an apt analogy for the works I will present here.  

Installed surrounding the periphery of the gallery’s two rooms ten poster-scale photographic  portraits of me address the viewer – through eyeline, posture and text.  

After finishing the work with my mother, I increasingly found her presence overbearing.  Compelled to return to an earlier moment, or possibly escape that current one, I sought out  surrogates to stand-in for her. I made a series that I called Personal Commissions by answering  “Women Seeking Men” listings that echoed the ads she herself had placed in the back pages  of weekly periodicals. Vowing to protect their users’ anonymity, these ads nonetheless  inscribed their subjects into a system of exchange – a space of compartmentalized intimacy  through which to solicit sexual encounters and circulate one’s self amongst strangers willing  to give small amounts of financial compensation and hopefully more. I contacted these  women and offered to pay each her asking fee, adding one caveat: rather than sleeping with  me, she would instead photograph me inside her apartment, positioning me in whatever way  she desired – standing, sitting or lying prone, clothed or unclothed, erect or not. Inverting  the camera by substituting myself for these subjects, I took up a promiscuity of positions –  reconfiguring the relations between mother and son; escort and john; and between artist,  model and viewer. Ultimately, these portraits of me function as ciphers. Contrasting the  women’s confessed ambitions against the circumstances of their actual lives, these works  point indirectly to structures of consumption, affirmation and judgement that determine  value. 

The revolving subjects of figuration; the painter’s muse; my mother, then and before;  the women from these listings and me; and even Balthus – while these represent false  equivalents, they are nonetheless strangely interchangeable. In each case, implicated by  their circumstances, what innocence they had has been chipped away by passing time.  

With Camus inscription in mind, my thoughts continued to return to his collaboration with Balthus, who designed the sets and costumes for the 1948 allegory State of Siege, a play by Camus that concerns the arrival of plague and an authoritarian regime’s manipulation of fear to amass power. In contrast to Balthus’ desire to transcend the present and withdraw into the innocent world of childhood, Camus’ work presents no sufficient escape. Contrasted with the fantasy of Balthus’ spring, Camus’ reality reduces us to witnessing our own submission under the crisis of history.

Vokzal and NA JA – a pair of films presented here back to back on the central wall dividing  the gallery’s two rooms – remain elusive in their simplicity. Shooting on 16mm in slight slow  motion, I used the sprawling public space surrounding two train station complexes – first  in Moscow and then New York, during the summers of 2015 and 2020 respectively – as a  rubric for mapping latent social dynamics. The effects of the two films are cumulative. As  a heterotopia, the station is not only a symbol of mobility but a threshold through which  the cultural peripheries and economic centers of these societies converge. These social  microcosms present a constellation of diverse actors passing through, working in, loitering  around or policing this public zone, inside of which the cohabitation of transgression, authority  and quotidian routine mirrors the fractures of social hierarchy. An entire ecology runs below  the surface of these images, a before and after and beyond the frame.  

If in 2015, Vokzal’s stark scenes of Putin’s Russia served as a premonition for the rise of  authoritarianism in America – a force that has come to create irreparable tears in the fabric  of society – by the plague summer of 2020 this crisis had reached its apex. NA JA confronts  us with an iteration of our world where assumptions about mobility have been retracted, a  city where those with the privilege to leave have left, and those who have been left behind  are reduced to a state of complete immobility. Already depicting advertisements for the  arrival of a new station complex, these scenes are destined to be replaced. The new station  will cater to the consumer, will be sanitized and policed, chaos having conjured control.  In the interim, the city appears as a stage, the removal of commuters throwing into relief  what remains – a theater populated by ungovernable parts of ourselves, aspects which, as a  collective social body, we almost can’t bare to see.  

Bodies circling from station to station within the station. Bodies standing, lying, clothed or  unclothed. Bodies which, relegated from the center to the periphery, and from the public to  the private, are either desired or desperately avoided. Bodies which, forced to live out their  private experience in public, implicate us. Despite our desires to freeze time, one only has to  look into the mirror to understand how absolutely futile that is.”  

— Leigh Ledare (March 24, 2022)

To you who make the springtime, I send my winter is on view through May 21 @ Michèle Didier 66 rue Notre-Dame de Nazareth, 75003 Paris 

Watch PLAYSCAPE: Woolmark Finalists' Collection Reveal Film Directed By FKA Twigs

FKA twigs’ collective ‘Avant Garden’ launches its new era in film for the 2022 International Woolmark Prize in special partnership with the Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum. Inspired by the famed landscape artist and architect’s vision of play as a creative catalyst, PLAYSCAPE merges influence from fashion, art, dance, and music. 

Choreographed by classically trained dancer Juliano Nunes, the film opens with an empty gallery of Noguchi’s play sculptures, which becomes populated by a diverse ensemble cast of characters. In the second part, the cast enters an imaginary landscape, where a ballet sensibility is combined with elements drawn from hip hop, modernism, contemporary dance and punk aesthetics. With creative direction by Zak Group, the short film showcases the merino wool looks from the International Woolmark Prize finalists Ahluwalia, EGONLAB, Jordan Dalah, MMUSOMAXWELL, Peter Do, RUI, and Saul Nash.

Director: FKA twigs
Creative Direction: Zak Group
Choreographer: Juliano Nunes
Production Company: Object & Animal
Producer: Jen Gelin
DOP: Rina Yang
Stylist: Matthew Josephs
Still Photographer: Jules Moskovtchenko
Edit: Dave Davis & Trim Editing
Colourist: Luke Morrison
Post: Electric Theatre Collective
Casting: HUXLEY
Featuring: kiddysmile, Princess Julia, Kai Isaiah Jamal, Alex Thirkle, Dmitri Gruzdev, Ève-Marie Dalcourt, Hannah Raynor, Meschach Henry, Salomé Pressac, Tania Dimbelolo, and maycie


The Finalists


Ahluwalia

EGONLAB

Jordan Dalah

MMUSOMAXWELL

Peter Do

RUI

Saul Nash

Kate MccGwire Mines Tension Between Nature & the Manmade World In Undertow @ galerie Les filles du Calvaire in Paris

Known for her muscular, writhing forms made with feathers, and reminiscent of Classical sculpture and creatures from mythology, Kate MccGwire’s works explore dualities of aesthetics, being simultaneously seductive and repulsive; form, being both organic and abstract; and movement, appearing fluid yet being static. As she has noted, “I am interested in the interplay of opposites which runs like a leitmotif through everything I do. It is as if the work needs that tension to create its own internal equilibrium; it is an expression for me of the duality I see all around me and the materials I choose need to be able to physically embody this.”

Influenced by the cycles, patterns and currents of water, these works explore conflicting relationship between nature and the manmade world. Observing the dichotomies of nature on her daily wild swims and walks, MccGwire makes work inspired by visual rhythms and sequencing observed in flowing water, but also its rupture, control and diversion through human interference with dams and weirs.

The artist’s process of creation begins with the intense and repetitive method of collecting and preparing the feathers, each of them carefully examined and classified according to its size, shape and natural color. In a compelling and meditative process, MccGwire arranges the feathers to mimic the overall form and patterning of the pieces informed and inspired by the anatomy of birds’ wings. Discarded, impermanent and overlooked materials have always fascinated the artist. In her piece TAINT she contrasted lead sheet with intricately arranged feathers, creating an anaemic, skin-like surface. In the visceral forms of UNDERTOW, the artist is seduced by the beauty, flow, power and turbulence of flowing water and ultimately drawn to the danger that lies beneath the surface.

Undertow is on view through May 7 @ galerie Les filles du calvaire 17 rue des Filles-du-Calvaire, 75003 Paris

 
The Artist holding a feather in her hand and sitting over an art piece.

Kate MccGwire
Making of SASSE/SLUICE, 2018
Photo : Jo Scott

 

Linda Stojak Paints Memories Like Ghosts In It's ok to do nothing @ Lowell Ryan Projects In Los Angeles

 
 

Linda Stojak’s It’s ok to do nothing is a series of solitary female figures painted in an ambiguous space between identity and anonymity. While personal in nature, these works allow for a range of interpretation and emotional response. Stojak’s works conjure a feeling of remembrance and the uncertainty that can come when time has passed—layers of memory that shift with a perspective that only age and time can bring. They are enigmatic renderings of women, lushly executed and textured by the build up of paint—methodical applications with the palette knife, layers of washes, and considered brushstrokes. A kind of burnishing effect emerges that creates a luminous glow in the surfaces. Each painting provides a journey for the viewer, but within the realm of this expressionist figurative painter there is also the emergence of a portrait—unfinished, evolving and transforming. Stojak’s figures are often incomplete in nature. The eyes, or often the whole face, smudged or blurred creating a feeling of recalling the memory of a loved one, while the shape of the hair, the color of lipstick or gesture of the body remain—a floating image or “stillness” as Stojak says. “These paintings deal with moments in time where you cannot move forward and you cannot move backward.” The figures read less as individuals, but instead as timeless memories that hover on the canvas like ghosts.

It’s ok to do nothing is on view through May 7 @ Lowell Ryan Projects 4619 W. Washington Boulevard.

Transmundane Economies: Queerness, Spirituality & Heritage Overlap in the Work of Theodoulos Polyviou

 
 

Theodoulos Polyviou is an artist whose practice explores the multilayered spaces where queerness, spirituality, and cultural heritage overlap across physical and digital worlds. Often utilizing virtual reality (VR) technology, Theo’s work also features architectural and sculptural elements, text, and sound, resulting in installations that are at once intellectually deep and sensuous to experience. He has participated in numerous exhibitions and residencies throughout Europe, and has a forthcoming project in Lecce, Italy, later this year. I met Theo on the occasion of his recent exhibition Transmundane Economies at Künstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin, where he has pursued a long-term artist residency. As an art critic, I’m usually hesitant and skeptical regarding the experience of art in virtual reality. But I found how Theo uses VR in Transmundane Economies to construct a “ritual space” that conjoins queerness, religion, and Cypriot cultural heritage to be profound and compelling. So I’ve met with him again to find out more. Read more.

Barbara Kruger Survey Decodes The Powers That Be @ Sprüth Magers In Los Angeles

The work of Barbara Kruger—bold, trenchant and unmistakable—has made an indelible mark not only on contemporary art of the last four decades, but also more broadly on everyday visual culture. She developed her concise, forthright aesthetic in the early 1980s, and since then has deployed it across myriad forms, from small-scale tactile objects to monumental public facades. Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers present this exhibition of new and historical works by Kruger at the Los Angeles gallery timed with her major exhibition, Thinking of You. I Mean Me. I Mean You., on view across Wilshire Boulevard at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (March 20–July 17, 2022).

As visitors enter the gallery, they first encounter Kruger's large-scale triptych, Untitled (Never Perfect Enough) (2020). The format of the appropriated image, in tandem with the added text, recalls the practice of phrenology, a nineteenth-century pseudoscience in which the shape and size of people's heads was thought to determine their character and mental abilities—and often used historically to argue for white supremacy and class distinctions. Kruger's triptych updates this urge to divide, categorize and control, situating these long-standing human pursuits squarely in the present while simultaneously picturing the connections between "beauty" and the punishing regimens that accompany it.

A group of twenty collages from the 1980s, related to some of Kruger's early and best-known works, completes the exhibition. The artist refers to these objects as "paste-ups," the term for cut-and-paste mockups used in the field of graphic design, which reflects Kruger's time as an editorial designer for Mademoiselle magazine and her work designing book jackets and picture editing in the late 1960s and 1970s.

Displayed together, Untitled (Never Perfect Enough) and Kruger's collages span the artist's career both temporally and conceptually. They offer compelling insights into her process and practice, and they illustrate the many ways in which her work has infiltrated our understanding of mass media and the power structures that control and manipulate contemporary culture.

Barbara Kruger is on view now through July 16 at Sprüth Magers, 5900 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles.

Kour Pour Disrupts Notions of Cultural Hybridity In New Homes, New Places @ Gallery 1957 in London

 
 

Based in Los Angeles, artist Kour Pour's creative processes, source material, and painting techniques stem from a wide range of cultures and histories. His experience as an immigrant and biography are the foundation of his work, reflecting his transitory heritage; Pour is of British and Iranian descent and grew up in a mixed-race household - but the artist is also newly American, having been granted citizenship during the pandemic. As a child, Pour spent considerable time in his father's carpet shop, memories of which have become a central component of his practice. These cultural threads inform his work and add to a wide range of visual languages; the interplay of form and content becomes a way for Pour to convey meaning in his art. He draws inspiration from visual traditions that include Persian carpets, medieval Islamic manuscripts, Chinese paintings, and ukiyo-e prints, among others.

Pour's creative point of view disrupts simplistic notions of cultural hybridity, appropriation, and originality. New works on view at Gallery 1957 see the artist creating silkscreen prints based on imagery from illustrated texts of the Persian epic Shahnameh [The Book of Kings] by the poet Ferdowsi (977-1010 CE). Presenting the works with the text boxes redacted - a comment on the artist's inability to speak his mother tongue and the universal limitations of language - the shape of the canvases eschew the art-historical square. Called 'extractions', the series expands on the artist's ongoing interest in mixing visual culture across boundaries and borders, with the 'redacted' pieces reminiscent of the shaped canvases of American Minimalists such as Frank Stella and Ellsworth Kelly. In other works, Pour explores the cultural exchange of tiger imagery across China, Korea, and Japan, creating and recreating works inspired by different contexts across bright canvases reminiscent of Western Pop art.

Kour Pour: New Homes, New Places is on view now through April 30 at Gallery 1957 1 Hyde Park Gate London SW7 5EW.

 
A Studio with 3 paintings against a wall, 2 of them with gold tiger designs and the middle is a sprawl of animals.

Kour Pour in Studio. Image courtesy the artist and Gallery 1957.

 

Lydia Maria Pfeffer Takes Us to Queer, Jungian Worlds In Lily of the Valley @ Ochi Projects In Los Angeles

 
 

Lydia Maria Pfeffer presents new paintings that depict a queer cast of characters as well as their seductive and strange worlds. Drawing inspiration from mythology, shamanism, and anthropomorphism, Pfeffer playfully revels in art historical motifs and religious iconography. Set against earthly and other-worldly backdrops, the occult-like figures in this series dwell in both familiar and celestial landscapes. Pfeffer’s fantastical worlds are inhabited by bold figures who embody queer sensuality, femme kinship, and gender fluidity, through the expressive language of painterly symbolism.

With a cheeky nod to the sexualized female figures of Austrian Expressionism, like those of Egon Schiele and Oskar Kokoschka, Pfeffer similarly charges her subjects with a raw femme sexuality that verges on the grotesque. However, unlike these historical representations of the sexed femme body—so often fraught with the confines of modernity and the male gaze—Pfeffer’s specters are fully self-realized. They refuse the bounds of their own frames. Connecting familiarity with fantasy, and femininity with ferocity, Pfeffer’s works hover above the axis of desire itself. Lily of the Valley rejects painting’s inherited traditions of the patriarchal gaze and boldly asserts the power of a self-actualized queer eroticism.

Lydia Maria Pfeffer is in conversation with Trulee Hall in our forthcoming Body Issue. The following is an excerpt from the full interview:

LYDIA MARIA PFEFFER: I do believe there's a spirit world out there, and I do believe that everything is alive, and I mean that down to the soil. When I make these paintings, they are almost a weird channeling. Of course, it’s my subconscious that creates these images. But, I start painting with some washes or lines, then the figure develops, who then invites the other figure, and they're all grabbing each other and taking each other to the party. It's almost like I’m asking, “Alright, who else do you want? What else do you want? Oh, you want a little thing there? Okay, cool. Who else is coming to the party? Okay. There she is.” I'm almost being told what to do. It takes an openness, and a willingness to trust yourself, and trust the process. You go in and give yourself entirely over to the painting. Often, I paint the entire thing, and I have no idea what's happening. There's a lot of Jung’s idea of collective unconscious in there, which says that your fears and your desires are predetermined. These archetypes that we all embody determine what we fear, or revere, or need, or want in order to develop.   

TRULEE HALL: I totally relate. I also use the channeling. I get the mood right. I have a canvas, I got my music going, and the rest just unfolds. I don't think it through ahead of time. Sometimes I'll start with one idea or an inspiration, but it's a relationship with the work. In your case, you're very brave, and you're also unapologetic. Your work comes from a very authentic place and it really jumps off the canvas. I don't even think of them as paintings because they just seem to exist. It feels like it flew out of you; like it's supposed to exist.   

Lily of The Valley is on view through April 30 at Ochi Projects 3301 W Washington Blvd, Los Angeles

Xinyi Cheng Gives Us All The Uncanny Feels In Seen Through Others @ Lafayette Anticipations in Paris

The constellation of subjects and scenes captured in Xinyi Cheng’s evocative paintings are drawn from her encounters. From a tiny dog called Monroe staring at a bone on a red carpet to a man in leopard-print boxer shorts on a sofa speaking on the phone, her works unravel complex emotions, desires, and dynamics that permeate contemporary life. Cheng’s expressive use of light and colour help conjure feelings, reveries, and impulses that reside within our everyday experiences of being in the world. Beyond a false softness, these new works represent her reflection not only on what it means for us to coexist, but on what it means to be human. In an often enigmatic atmosphere of dreams and solitude, the characters depicted by the artist sound like unexpected tributes to the moderns such as Picasso, Toulouse-Lautrec, Degas or Caillebotte.

For Cheng’s first major institutional exhibition in France, the presentation brings together over thirty existing works from 2016 to 2021 spread across the whole building. Shown in unfamiliar groupings, they open up novel correlations and understandings within her oeuvre.

Seen Through Others is on view now through May 28 at Lafayette Anticipations – Fondation Galeries Lafayette, 9 rue du Plâtre, Paris

Herrensauna x Carhartt WIP SS22 Launch Party in Berlin with Taboo

Created in 2016 by Cem Dukkha (CEM) and Nicolas Endlicher (MCMLXXX), Herrensauna has quickly become a Berlin institution and famed queer safe space known for its boundary-pushing techno nights and playfully sybaritic community morality. For their spring/summer 2022 collection, Carhartt WIP collaborated with Herrensauna to produce a limited capsule of five items. This capsule see staple Carhartt WIP particulars blessed with artwork by Berlin-based artist and longtime Herrensauna collaborator Mau Ventura.

The launch party took place at Humbolthain Club on April 3 with DJ sets by DJ Saliva b2b Salome, MDSM, Gabrielle Kwarteng b2b Kikelomo, LYZZA b2b Yha Yha, and CEM b2b MCMLXXXVI.

“This collaboration was extra special as it allowed a popular streetwear brand to tap into its shared audience with such an iconic underground collective. The partnership is subtle, allowing the focus to be on the community and celebrating its presence in the city of Berlin and Beyond.” Kenny Eshinlokun, founder of Taboo.

With releases on the 4th and 11th of April, the collection is available now at Carhartt WIP Store Berlin Mitte, Highsnobiety Shop, Voo Store, and wearetaboo.co. photographs by Sera Akyazici

What Will I Become By Gabriella Rowland & Nicolas Robin Hobbs

coat: RICHERT BEIL
shirt: Prada (stylist’s archive)
tie: Emporio Armani
bag: Celine


photography by Nicolas Robin Hobbs
photo assistance by Leo Köhler & Mengyu Zhou  
styling by Gabriella Rowland 
styling assistance by Bastian Hagn 
casting by Nicolas Robin & Gabriella Rowland 
hair by Bronwyn Stewart
makeup by Naomzz 
talent by MARIAM D @ MIRRRS, KARINA & JOANNA @ Tomorrow Is Another Day
Special thanks to Effi at TIAD



coat: RICHERT BEIL
shirt: Prada (stylist’s archive)
tie: Emporio Armani

LEFT
top: vintage (solastseason Archive) 
skirt: Gucci (solastseason Archive) 
shoes: Celine 
ring: JOHANNA GAUDER

RIGHT
top: Blumarine (solastseason Archive) 
skirt & bag: Diesel 
shoes: CAMPER

LEFT
jacket: Cottonade Paris (solastseason Archive) 
tights: Diesel
bag: Diesel
shoes: Balenciaga (solastseason Archive)

RIGHT
coat: RICHERT BEIL
shirt: Prada (stylist’s archive)
tie: Emporio Armani
tights: Falke
shoes: Bottega Veneta (NIGHTBOUTIQUE Archive)
bag: Celine

suit: Miu Miu
knitwear: Miu Miu
shoes: Diesel
rings: INA BEISSNER



Watch Barbara Kruger's "In Violence" (2011) On The Occasion Of Her Survey @ LACMA & Solo Exhibition @ Sprüth Magers In Los Angeles

In Violence (2011) was presented in Commercial Break, a group exhibition curated by Neville Wakefield at Garage Museum of Contemporary Art during the opening week of the 54th Venice Biennial. Eleven years later, in the midst of a continuing war in Ukraine and numerous global humanitarian crises, Kruger’s use of novelist, critic and political activist, Mary McCarthy’s quote: “In violence we forget who we are” is an increasingly potent reminder.

Barbara Kruger: Thinking of You. I Mean Me. I Mean You is on view through July 17 @ LACMA 5905 Wilshire Blvd. Her solo exhibition, Barbara Kruger, is on view across the street through July 16 @ Sprüth Magers 5900 Wilshire Blvd.

Keith Rivers Curates A Chameleonic Group Show In Courage Before Expectation @ FLAG Art Foundation In New York

Courage Before Expectation is a group exhibition curated by former NFL linebacker turned art patron Keith Rivers. Inspired by quotes that intersect Rivers’s life in sports and his love of contemporary art, the exhibition explores the pursuit of dreams and unlikely trajectories. In these works we see artists taking perilous leaps of faith like they were Mikhail Baryshnikov—born to soar with grace and land with a quiet sense of control. All of them masters of varied media, what connects these artists is not so much material as it is mutable. We see sculptures from Sonia Gomes who left her career as a lawyer to become an artist, and from Thaddeus Mosley who was formerly a postman. There are paintings by Etel Adnan whose practice didn’t start until the age of thirty-four due to early admonishment from her mother. Known primarily for his representational paintings that challenge centuries of Black erasure within the canon, here we see rare photographs by Kerry James Marshall that possess his signature conundrum wherein the the figure is ever so slightly lit, creating an abjection that exemplifies a common African American experience while opening our eyes to a world of nuance. We bear witness to Philip Guston’s infamous transition into figuration, a perilous career risk at the time, which is so easily forgotten given the eventual triumph of its outcome—such that his previous abstractions are hardly remembered. This is a curation of artists who manage to clear the channel, so to speak, allowing any residual negative self-talk to recede dutifully into the background, leaving space for their most authentic expressions in the foreground. Rivers feels a kinship with these artists who show us how to be chameleonic without pretense or artifice. They change form at will with aplomb because it is their nature to do so.

Courage Before Expectation is on view through June 4 @ FLAG Art Foundation 545 West 25th Street, 9th Floor New York

 
 

Read A Conversation Between Artists Torkwase Dyson & Derek Fordjour From Our FW20 Sitting Issue

TORKWASE DYSON In your work, there are so many different movements. I’ll say acrobatics. To quote Brand Nubian a little bit, “acrobatics over beats.” 

DEREK FORDJOUR I really like the notion of the acrobatic. As you talk about the dexterity of bodies and being pushed, I think about the presence and absence of bodies in your work. This is really a big part of my attraction to your thinking and your work as it relates to mine, is the absence of the depiction of the body, but your keen awareness of bodies in space. I wanted to know from you: where is the body centered in your thinking absent from depiction of the body? Read more.

Derek Fordjour's Magic, Mystery & Legerdemain @ David Kordansky Gallery In Los Angeles

To enter Derek Fordjour’s deeply visceral first solo exhibition at David Kordansky Gallery is to suspend disbelief. Behind mysterious curtains, old-fashioned turnstiles, and gallery corridors, the past, present and future merge into a fantastical tableau of interstitiality and multimedia, from painting to sculpture to a live magic show. Magic is the theme and in these works we feel the power of illusions, the power of disappearance and the ultimate power of reappearance. The title of the show, Magic, Mystery & Legerdemain, is taken from the semi-fictionalized autobiography of turn-of-the-20th-century illusionist Black Herman. Herman’s act included Asrah levitation where a participant, usually an assistant, is levitated under a cloth and then rendered invisible, only to materialize later somewhere in the audience. His routine covered the standard canon of tricks, like making rabbits appear from hats. But one of his signature acts was having himself buried alive in an outdoor area called "Black Herman's Private Graveyard,” and then exhumed three days later to finish his show. Black Herman’s magic and Fordjour’s artwork are metaphysical, or perhaps psychological, analogies to the Middle Passage, the Bermuda Triangle of the Black Diaspora, and the disappearance and reappearance of Black bodies across the globe. The legerdemain, or sleight of hand, of the Black experience. In a new suite of paintings, Fordjour wows us with his brilliant and exuberant use of artifactual materials like newspaper and cardboard that force us into current cultural realities as if to say, “Tada!” with a wave of his magic paintbrush. There is Earvin ‘Magic’ Johnson in his Lakers jersey, reaching for an orange in the land of plenty, standing next to a Rolls Royce, the Spirit of Ecstasy hood ornament nearly middle-frame. There are also devotions to other Black magicians, like the Armstrong family, which consisted of J. Hartford Armstrong, known as the “King of the Colored Conjurers” and his daughter Ellen, who was one of the first female Black magicians. Or Goldfinger and Dove, a husband and wife duo who performed at Los Angeles’ Magic Castle. And, of course, Henry Box Brown, a magician and former slave who sent himself via USPS in a wooden crate to abolitionists in Philadelphia. The works are rife with breadcrumbs, easter eggs, and not-so-secret ciphers that celebrate Black cultural output through the lens of magic, both figuratively and literally. Fordjour’s largest painting to date, Meu Povo, which spans across eight panels, explores a carnival procession in real time, including rituals and dance inspired by Afro-Brazilian folklore, as part of a new series mapping Black migration. Magic, Mystery & Legerdemain is a thunderclap of an exhibition, proving that Fordjour is one of the most important voices and painters of our current surreality.

Magic, Mystery & Legerdemain is on view through May 7 @ David Kordansky Gallery 5130 W. Edgewood Place Los Angeles. Click here to read a conversation between Derek Fordjour & Torkwase Dyson from our FW2020 Sitting Issue.

 
 

Arts Aid Fundraiser, Artists Donating Artworks To Support Ukrainians People

 
A buff model flexing his upper body while holding a shell and silver chains. The background appears to be a farm, with a garden and a container in the back.

Dmytro Zubytskyi
Bodybuilder Series with Sally von Rosen, (2020)
Pigment Print
40 x 60 cm
250 €
Artwork location: Berlin
(Ukrainian artists receive 100% of their sales)

 

The living conditions of Ukrainian society have become dire given the Russian military invasion. Thousands of people of all ages have lost their lives or are being injured by the continuous shelling of residential areas, schools, hospitals, and all types of civilian buildings. Millions of people are evacuating to border towns to cross as war refugees searching for asylum in neighboring countries. Other Ukrainians have decided to help resist by generating local communities and reinforcing the defense of the military corps. The situation is devastating for Ukrainians and the whole world.

Arts Aid was born as a community of international artists to create a support network for Ukrainian people who are trying to resist the invasion, seek refuge outside the country, or are vulnerable due to the war. The artworks donated by artists are posted on Instagram. Interested people can acquire the works once they have donated the same amount in the fundraiser on GoFundMe. This funding is sent based on the donations collected to carefully selected projects with the guidance of Ukrainian cultural workers to meet three main themes: advocacy, protection of vulnerable groups, and fleeing, with Ukrainian artists receiving 100% of their sale. These projects include the Ukrainian Emergency Arts Fund established by (MOCA) Museum of Contemporary Art NGO in partnership with Zaborona, The Naked Room and Mystetskyi Arsenal; Bridges Over Borders, a community-based collective aiming to support BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, and other marginalized individuals fleeing Ukraine; and UNICEF, which has been working tirelessly to keep children safe since this conflict began eight years ago, and is determined to remain in Ukraine to reach the most vulnerable children and families.

If you would like to collect artworks, simple follow these instructions:

  • Choose an artwork you would like to acquire on Arts Aid and check the price on the post.

  • Donate the amount at the GoFundMe campaign and specify the artwork you chose (Artwork’s location is written in their respective post; transport costs run on the acquirer side).

  • Contact Arts Aid to arrange the delivery of your new artwork.

Participating artists include: Ana JikiaAndy MedinaArto, Aaron SchneerAdam VarabAndrew RutherdaleAlyona GrekovaArchive Of Forms (Anna Maria Kucherenko), Billie Clarken, Céline Struder, Crosslucid, Constance Tenvik, Constantin HartensteinCrosslucidDanielle Magee, David RankDmytro Zubytskyi, Don ElektroEefje StenfertEetu Sihvonen, Emma Pidré, Euthanasia Sport, Evelyn BencicovaIsabel CaveneciaJanne Schimmel, Jeronim Horvat, Jakub KubicaJulie Maurin,  Katya Quel, Love Curly, Luiz Enrique Zela Koort, Kotz, Lisa Jäger, Lucas HadjamLukas LieseMagda FrauenbergManuel Resch & Maximilian Maria WilleitMarianita RomaMary Audrey RamirezMasha SilchenkoMaya Hottarek, Norbert Stefan, Nadiia Rohozhyna, Nik KosmasPaul FerensPetja Ivanova, Ryo KoikeSally Von Rosen, Sara Blosseville & Johanna Blank, Spaceheadtr & DawshSofia StepanovaȘtefan TănaseTissue HunterTom EsamTom PutmanTudor CiurescuUrban ZellwegerVictor PayaresVictoria PidusVolo BevzaHannah Rose StewardKris BekkerZwyrtek DominikVictor Manuel PayaresLukas Stoever and Georg Nordmark.

This initiative is organized by artist Emmanuel Pidré with support from artists Sally Von Rosen and Don Elektro.