24/11/2010

Happy Thanksgiving!


Happy Thanksgiving!

A long, long time ago in the faraway, new land of America – or so the story goes – archenemies made friends for a day. They feasted on fabulous fare so fattening and filling that they had to take long naps before waking up just to eat again. Over yams, cranberry and pumpkin, formerly irreconcilable differences were forgotten as polar opposites realised the bountiful insights each could gain from the other. Today we celebrate Thanksgiving in the hope of a fruitful tomorrow, reflection on our good fortune, forgiveness of our foes and for enjoyment of friends, family and food.

So whether you’re scarfing down turkey, tofurky or take-out Chinese with your closest companions, we wish you the happiest of Happy Thanksgivings!

Text Tag Christof, drawing Mrs. Betty Anne Pinetta.
Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
19/11/2010

Hurts – Pablo Arroyo


Hurts by Pablo Arroyo

2DM photographer Pablo Arroyo recently caught up with hot hot hot pop new kid on the block Hurts for a shoot for French mag Modzik. Fresh off the September debut of their much-anticipated first album, Happiness, the slick-haired, Manchester-bred duo of Theo Hutchcraft and Adam Anderson have been making rounds in discerning iPods the world over for some months. Their addictive synth sound is now on the brink of a jump onto the airwaves and into the bigtime.

Glam on, guys.

By Tag Christof, images Pablo Arroyo

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
18/11/2010

Scarlets – Splendid Chaos


Scarlets – Splendid Chaos

The Scarlets, a band that incorporates the good, the bad. The voice, the ideology. The essence, the vitality. This band has the potential to become the voice of today’s youth, being the leaders of a new movement within their transgressive nature. Their debut album Splendid Chaos is a reminiscence of what Britain bands were back in the eighties, with a twenty eleven twist to. With past performances at London’s Shoreditch Festival, Rocket Club Milano, and Tape Club Firenze, to name only a few, The Scarlets have now released their debut album that is truthfully splendid chaos.

Their roots lead back to Italy, and they’re performing here on Friday November 19th, 2010 at El Paso Occupato in Torino.

By Safia Brown, photo courtesy The Scarlets.

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
12/11/2010

Guest Interview nº18: Andrew Richardson


Guest Interview n° 18: Andrew Richardson

Andrew Richardson practically bears no introduction. The stylist extraordinaire has worked with some of the best photographers on earth, including Steven Meisel, and his work is well known for its lavishness and sensuality. From his roots in the production of Madonna’s Sex book on through to the most recent installment of the magazine that bears his name, Richardson, he has become one of the world’s foremost straddlers of the aberrant lines between fashion, fine art and sex. For this very special Guest Interview, we talk change, collaborators and end with a voyage to the land of id.

The eponymous, infamous magazine you started has its fourth issue out and your work in fashion is as rich and well-done as ever. How do you feel?
Good, Thank You.

You must be blindingly aware that the name “Richardson” itself evokes dirtiness. Yourself and Terry Richardson have mastered the glamorisation of salaciousness, and it’s been a beautiful and liberating thing. What do you have to say about working with him? 
It’s been emotional.

So, why Sasha Grey for the cover of Richardson A4? I mean, she’s been on the cover of Playboy! 
She was on our cover first. She is the Modern Porn Star Movie Star Rock Star the Poster Child for the emancipation of Porn, how could we not put her on the cover?

You’re no stranger to speculation about your own sexuality. It’s common currency that you’re bisexual, but some sources say you’re all about the girls. We don’t make inferences, so we’re dying to know once and for all where you’d fall on the Kinsey scale.
Dark Grey…

Now, onto the slightly less lewd. Issue A3 came out in 2002. Why such a long hiatus? Why restart now?
Sasha Grey is the first a real stand out porn star since Tera Patrick so it was time to get to the magazine together again.

Your inclusion of the American artist Carollee Schneemann in this issue is interesting, since she’s one of the few feminists who sees feminism through the scope of sexual expression as opposed to social oppression. Still, she’s dealt with erotic imagery in a very serious, sometimes somber way throughout her lengthy career. Do you feel that her work’s impetus is at all contrary to the sexually irreverent nature of the magazine?
“How many feminists does it take to screw in a light bulb?  …One , and it’s not a joke” As you say Carolee was very different for other feminists, she is a lover not a fighter. I was doing a pro sex feminist issue so no I don’t see her work in the issue as contrary to the ‘irreverent’ nature of the magazine.

So, exactly how do you go about curating the talent you choose to include?
It’s different now than it was when I did the first three magazines. The internet has made so much more available which is confusing for a generation analog editor like myself. Themes for each issue come up consequentially and I chose contributors instinctually, something to do with how they do or do not fit within the theme of the issue.

At the very least the ubiquity of virtual porn in the intervening years will at least take the edge off its shock factor. I can probably leave this issue on my coffee table when my parents come over. So, what are you going to do to continue to push the envelope?
I’m not really interested in pushing the envelope for the sake of shocking your parents or anyone. Shocking is not the point.

Are the thrust and vision of the magazine and your work the same as they were before? What’s changed in the meantime?
I am very happy to get back to publishing Richardson online and in print, it has made the fashion work more enjoyable too, everything is good now.  The Fashion work is less intense, more appropriate, the Magazine a little more grown up.

On that note, the magazine’s website has quite a bit of interactive content. Even QR barcodes! Is this an attempt to tap into the app-mad zeitgeist or an effort to re-imagine Richardson’s possibilities and scope? 
The latter mainly, the QR codes are an attempt to expand the experience of reading the magazine. The website is more about Fun and immediacy where as the magazine is a personal project made by my Office and Studio 191, more rigorous and permanent. And for sure the website is a great interactive portal that we will be expanding socially and economically in the future.

Insight into your future?
The future will be a subtle, slow burning frightening inward journey to the sexually utopian virtual world online where everything is permitted and the id rules supreme.

Richardson Magazine

Text and interview Tag Christof, all images courtesy Richardson Magazine

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
11/11/2010

Verger’s Piece of Green


Verger’s Piece of Green

Verger is a pioneer in the sometimes conservative business establishment of Milan. It is thoughtful individuals behind a very savvy brand that not only taps into, but clearly cares deeply about the best of today’s zeitgeist and emphasises quality, creativity, sustainability, craftsmanship, simplicity and change. Last year, they opened a shiny new space at the pinnacle of Via Varese and Via Volta that is, in their words “a place that embraces young creativity” and is one in a handful of bright spots in the ongoing renaissance of Milan as a creative capital in a century with radically altered priorities. The open and warm space, executed by Marco Bonelli of BAM Design, is modular and dynamic and includes an inventive restaurant, Verger Kitchen, as well as a boutique and exhibition spaces.

The core of Verger, in any case, lies in its highly regarded knitwear line that in turn finds its roots in cashmere purveyor Cristiano Fissore. Today, the collection is designed by the very talented Carolina Mazzolari, an alumnus of the University of Arts of London. Carolina describes herself as first and foremost a textile designer, and thus brings a rigorous expertise of fibre and construction. She impressively not only conceives each Verger piece, but also designs the knitted textiles they’re made from. With an almost Scandinavian sensibility, she sources raw materials from Italy when possible, and always with an equal eye towards sustainability and luxury. The designer’s lines are pure, use of colour is sober, and the resultant pieces are enduringly beautiful and classic. Over coffee Carolina hinted to The Blogazine of a possible future men’s line under the label. We’re already queuing.

This November 4th, the space played host to an exhibition in collaboration with AT Casa, billed “Meet A Piece of Green From Milan” and conceived by Daniele Belleri and Elena Comincioli. It is, quite intriguingly, an ongoing project dedicated to the valorisation and appreciation of the spontaneous, unplanted plants in an urban setting; a tribute, essentially, to the weed. The premise is elegant: green growing from a crack in a sidewalk may be a nuisance, a hazard, an allergen, but can when reconsidered become “an unexpected source of beauty, of fragrance, and of colour.”

Milan, with its dearth of green space and abundance of urban decay is in no position to continually destroy and chop down a potential source of free beauty within. With a panoramic eye on renewed collective space, and in response to a critical need for a rethinking of urban space around the world, the exhibition offers a fascinating perspective and an segue to a potentially very fruitful dialogue. The exhibition had been previously shown at this year’s London Design Festival, and this time around visitors were invited to adopt their own potted piece of found Milanese green to take home and love.

More info about the project and its creators can be found at Adopt A Piece of Green From Milan.

Text and photo by Tag Christof, Promotional material courtesy Verger

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
04/11/2010

Illustrative’s Night in Berlin


Illustrative’s Night in Berlin

Berlin is probably today’s definitive melting pot, the most raw and creative place on earth. Word on the street is that it uncannily resembles the unchained New York of 20 years ago. In Berlin people worship tradition and destroy convention; it is truly the city where the vintage of the future is being made. It therefore comes as no surprise that the German capital is playing host to the planet’s largest festival for contemporary illustration and graphic arts, which will take place for the sixth time in May 2011.

The illustrators night presented by Swatch and Illustrative e.V. will award a winning illustrator, animator or book artist with the world’s foremost prize for contemporary illustration on November 5th 2010 at Direktorenhaus, a space for contemporary applied arts and experimental design in Berlin developed by Illustrative’s initiators Pascal Johanssen and Katja Kleiss. The winning artist will gain (in addition to a €6000 prize in publications and contracts with agencies) the opportunity to showcase his or her work during next year’s event, and will additionally play part in the design process of a limited edition Swatch.

The blueprint for this event is a platform for the exchange of ideas between illustrators, animators, book artists, art directors, journalists. While enjoying a grand gala dinner including performances, the new exhibition, an after-party, this event most importantly allows creatives to discuss and celebrate illustration in the word’s purer sense, enlightenment through visualization. The Swatch Young Illustrators Award gives an alluring sample of what is sure to be an excellent showcase at Illustrative 2011.

By Safia Brown

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
04/11/2010

Germ Free Adolescents / RADIO


Germ Free Adolescents / RADIO

One way to experience genuine punk is to associate with such a person, which might create an intense series of reactions from one’s friends, co-workers, the police and concerned citizens. Another way, easier yet nonetheless interesting, is to catch what Germ Free Adolescents exposition is laying out for the world: the long-standing link between pornography and punk. Just as black and the white complement one other, nothing is quite as obvious as the formula of teens + rebellion = the need to transform, acombination that has driven the culture we have lived in, generation after generation.

The mix couldn’t be more intriguing: young Ukrainians artists who have photographed punk adolescents in a porn mood. Although this may seem disturbing for some, but for many, pornography and punk together is a blast-off topic for new ideas, rule breaking points and meaningful thoughts. More than an apogee of the 60s idea of sexual freedom, the exposition, brought together by friends who want to share their personal shows and shoots, represents a raw vision of what it was like to be an adolescent – and punk – with all its essence, doubt, desire… and mistakes in the former Soviet block.

Exalted opening this Thursday, November 4th from 7pm to 11pm at RADIO Gallery, Via Pestalozzi 4 in Milano.

By Rafaella Carvalho

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
25/10/2010

Secret by Dossier Magazine


Secret by Dossier Magazine

“Another secret: this is what photographs do. They whisper in your ear, saying, ‘You were there.’ This is no lullaby, no sleepy remembering. Instead, it is a jolt of recognition. ‘I was there,’ you think to yourself, amazed. ‘I was there, and so were you.’” – Emma Straub

It comes as no surprise that 2DM photographer Skye Parrot in collaboration with Alec Friedman, co-founders of Dossier Journal, curate a photographic exhibition around the brainchild secrets from October 29 to November 14, at Space 15 Twenty in Los Angeles,CA.

Just as the inception of Dossier Journal in May 2008, which was born around the theme of having no theme, using images that evoke raw emotions and playing around the method of filing interesting ideas that are usually left in the dark, this exhibition is portraying the one thing that we all have the urge to do in the end of the day: tell secrets.

So why not ask 39 photographers to give a visual response when asked to tell a secret, which evokes the essence of the photographic medium, capturing ones most personal and hidden thoughts and turning it into something visually creative yet showcasing it to the rest of the world as dark, delightful, or occasionally both, as is the case with Friedman’s bittersweet portrait of a sunburned back.

It was about time that we get to take photography back to its original essence. Giving photographers the freedom of capturing something solely personal, leaving constrictions, perfection, and consciousness in the background, Secrets evokes rawness, intimacy, and most importantly emotions. In the end of the day when telling a secret it’ s less about throwing dust in somebody’s eyes but about telling the blank truth.

By Safia Brown

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
01/06/2010

Heaven Can Wait / Gainsbourg Ft. Beck


Heaven Can Wait / Gainsbourg Ft. Beck

Stop Making Sense. If you are the kind of fella who’s always trying to figure out what the hell is goig on in a video, we kindly suggest you to lose yourself in this one.

“Heaven Can Wait” is first single from “IRM”, the brend new record from lovely french singer Charlotte Gainsbourg – and features Balenciaga icon – Serge’s daughter and her mate Beck, both stranded in a weird world expressly created for them by LA director Keith Schofield.

Be prepared for everything: from Charlotte Gainsbourg holding a baby in a hot dog costume to Beck playing Super Nintendo with a dude in a horse mask.

And of course, don’t forget the Giant Bomb with the world “Nachos” on it. Hear Keith about this:“We were trying to think of a funny, nonsensical thing. What would be something that wouldn’t be interpreted as having meaning or making a statement. Because writing a word on a bomb can get pretty pretentious. Unless that word is nachos.” Sounds perfectly clear, Keith.

[vodpod id=ExternalVideo.945284&w=630&h=496&fv=%26rel%3D0%26border%3D0%26]

By Alexio Biacchi

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
26/05/2010

Radio / Immagini Spezzate


Radio / Immagini Spezzate

Exploring the places of manufactures and handicrafts’s recovery from Lebanon – Beirut – to United Arab Emirates – Dubai -, Tommaso Garner and Giorgio Di Salvo are two travelers called by RADIO to tell what they saw in that lands, collect images and elaborate them as they were kind of foreign correspondents. Next step is juxstaposing the pictures afterwards to provoke and highlight the override of the dialectic between production and committent.
RADIO is a project conceived by 2DM illustrator Marco Klefisch, an exhibition area selecting audio and video publications from “guest owners” every two months. Don’t miss “Immagini Spezzate” from May 27th at RADIO, via Pestalozzi 4, Milan from 6pm.

By Elisa Lusso – image courtesy of Radio

Share: Facebook,  Twitter