Sunday 14 November 2010

Quick street style interview


Connor snapped along the Southbank wearing beige pants, a knitted scalf, vintage hand bag and army boots.

This look is classy chique mixed with sturdy street wear.

Connor's listening to...soul, rnb, Mariah Carey.
Going out to...Oxford Street
Eating...chicken fried rice

Friday 5 November 2010

NEW ERA 90th Birthday

Yesterday in the spacious Dray Walk Gallery (off Brick Lane), budding young artists paid homage to the 90th anniversary of the brand New Era. The now infamous cap company challenged emerging artists across Europe to design hats, styled as their artistry should dictate including a brief spiel about their work.

Ranging from hats with clocks to hats with faces to hats that were decorated with other hats the exhibition merged fashion and art in aesthetic harmony. The attention to detail in some of the finished products was incredible- one artist actually used miniature trees, model people and fake grass. Although not entirely wearable (unless Peacocking) the hats were inspired, and all great fashion grows from wacky extraverted seeds.

Particular favourites include a computer keyboard and screen cap, produced by twenty one year old Spanish artist Roser Moll Pascual. She said- “I wanted to base the design of the cap on a metaphor, making the cap become a computer. As well as a computer, ‘New era’ caps changed the market 90 years ago and they still do. Good inventions never end but evolve and improve.”

Despite there being tonnes of great entries, the winning hat was the weird and wonderful Craig Green’s ‘mask of masculinity’. He chose to explore the role of men in Western society using materials that referenced ideas of currency, masculinity and nature (copper having connotations to English currency and class, whilst the use of suede brings in the natural element, along with wood in reference to hunting and nature). The artist said he wanted to look “at the outdoorsman; hunter gatherer and the boyhood fantasy of adventure”. Creating a cap that is as much about culture as it is about escapism who would have thoughts hats could go so deep!

New Era is undecided as to whether few of the designs will be manufactured but their cap exhibition proves a lot of exciting art is happening at the moment and projects like this are a great way to get it recognised- hats off to hats! The exhibition is open to the public over the weekend.

Saturday 9 October 2010

The Pete Walter and Band interview


Describe your music in three words?
Melodic, catchy, pop
Who are your musical influences?
Burt Bacharach, Stevie Wonder, Prince, Billy Steinberg, Billy Preston, Huey Lewis and the News
How has your band come together? (who knows who and how?)
I advertised for everyone except Gav (the bass player) who I knew through a mutual friend.
Who writes your songs or is it a collaborative effort?
I write the songs but the band have a key input on their parts and arrangement. Sometimes the song ends up sounding radically different from the basic format I bring to rehearsal
What do you hope for the future of 'Pete Walter and Band'?
Near future is we want to play some festivals next year, long term is to become a self-sustaining touring and recording band. We're already getting fans from Asia, Europe and the US so hopefully we'll get to visit some of them in the not too distant future.
Where are your favourite places to go out in London?
The Arts Theatre Club on Frith St is always fun. Bloomsbury bowl is becoming a bit of a cliche but for a reason. We all love secret cinema as well.

Wednesday 6 October 2010

Pete Walter and Band

Pete Walter and Band, 5th October @ The Old Queen's Head

The Old Queen's Head is a good venue for music. It has comfortable with nice decor and just about the right size! The only con is that it lacks the grimy underground atmosphere that makes live music experiences great. It is a bit too 'civilised' (with no dance floor). Plus drink prices are astronomical!

At £5 a head the Pete Walter and Band gig, recommended on Time Out, is reasonably priced. The warm up bands were quite fun. The first band on, The Boy Icarus, had a violinist which produced interesting sounds. They sounded like a cross between Mumford and Sons (without a drummer) and Devendra Banhart. Their lyrics were really inventive and and they mixed mellow tunes with more up beat stuff.

The real highlight of the night was, however, definitely The Pete Walter Band. They instantly created a buzz and changed the atmosphere. Their music is a lot of fun and their lead singer is a great performer, as was the female vocalist. ' The Pete Walter Band', named after the lead singer have a pop-rocky sound and were incredibly entertaining.

The night was worth paying to get in for but a more eccelctic mix of music might have made it better. Pete Walter and Band certainly made the evening and I am hoping to get an interview with them to follow up. Watch....this....space.

Sunday 3 October 2010

...and a bit more from Supermundane

Art and the sublime


In ‘Andrea del Sarto’, one of Robert Browning’s many dramatic monologues, the poet and playwright writes: “Ah but man’s reach should exceed his grasp. Or what’s a heaven for”. Like any great maxim in English literature Browning’s words have challenged critics over the centuries, causing them to question the artists’ meaning and its relevance.

Browning seems to suggest that man should strive for ‘more’ than he can achieve and get lost in the belief that anything is possible. The process of ‘over-reaching’ is likened to the creation of heaven, a perhaps fictitious idyll at the forefront of the collective imagination of man. In trivial terms it would appear Robert Browning is saying “shoot for the stars”.

As an English graduate in the crux of the worst economic crisis since the 1930s it seems people are no longer willing to believe in such optimistic musings. Rather, man should be ‘realistic’ and take whatever job or opportunity may come his way. After all, we are in a ‘recession’ don’t you know!

But Robert Browning’s words re-iterate two main Romantic school’s of thought that should not be forgotten. He is referring to the creative imagination, expressing the typically artistic notion that man’s vision tends towards the beautiful and he should strive to exceed the banality of ordinary life through art. The image of reaching can be seen as the creative process, in which man’s mind transcends the material world. At a time when cuts are being made to the arts Browning’s statement seems to be one that has got lost in a climate of facts and statistics and limits. But this is dangerous.

For me, the second relevance Browning’s words have is in how they can be reflected in our everyday lives. The importance of attempting to achieve something that is maybe unrealistic is what makes man a creative animal. It is what inspires, and ultimately gives our lives purpose. Every time we dream and attempt to better ourselves we are endorsing Browning’s Romantic ideology.

For Browning’s contemporary, Keats, it was the ‘striving’ after what can never be attained that became the true poetic task. In his sonnet ‘Bright Star’ Keats said he wanted to be “Awake for ever in a sweet unrest, Still, still to hear” his lover’s “tender-taken breath”. For Keats the breath must be forever ‘taken’ and not released because he longed for the moment just before completion, a moment full of ‘potential’. Whether the goal is achievable or not it seems that it is the reaching or striving that really matters because it is creative vision itself that makes life beautiful and gives it meaning.

So, let’s make sure that we nurture potential and do not forget what the Romantic’s taught us about the sublime and hope and flight of imagination. It is easy to get bogged down by the increasing ‘realism’ that seems to define the 21st century, an age of technology and science and factoids.

In the words of the great Percy Byshhe Shelley, “Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar”. I am not suggesting everyone should become a poet but the basic principle stands. Let us embrace concerns with love and beauty and ‘over reach’ in our daily lives because life is nothing, if not full of possibilities.


Monday 27 September 2010

Supermundane!


A few weeks ago I lucked out in getting an internship at the art agency Skinnydip and one of their clients is illustrator and graphic designer Supermundane. His work is, to put it bluntly, a lot like a doodle...a very good doodle. He has a simplistic style but his work is vibrant, busy and all in all incredible design.

Some of his recent projects include work designing the flyer for the Big Chill festival. He has also does some pretty funky animations, and his blog is worth following!

Here are some examples of his work. His next show is in LA if you happen to be about...
LCD Soundsystem make a video...WITH A ROBOT!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=53yEyj0mjfo


(decent song too)

Sunday 26 September 2010

Andrew Hem.

This picture above is called "This Womans Work" and was done in 2010.

Check out the work of Andrew Hem ( http://www.andrewhem.com/). He was born in Cambodia but fled with his family as a child to live in L.A. His work mixes both South East Asian and American cultures to produce powerful, colourful, urban and rural dream-like pieces.

His work is diverse, some pieces are tight but others are lose. Andrew also shows the influence of his graffiti background as he sprawls graphic text through some of his canvases. His sketches are also pretty powerful! His website has his full portfolio and is well worth a look.

Tuesday 20 July 2010

Brighton Illustration Degree Show

I went to the Brighton graduate illustration degree show last week at the Rochelle school in east london (shoreditch of course!). The show finished on the 12th of July and I was really impressed by the work displayed. There was a particular artist I wanted to blog about, a girl called Daphne Christoforou.
Apparently her boyfriend is a programmer and she did some illustrations that he then made into an animated programme. You clicked on her work and different clips were played out with soundtracks. Most of them were pretty hillarious. She did one piece about political figures and showed hitler dancing with barney.

(The above picture is of her animated interactive piece. If you click on the people they open up animations that played for a few minutes with different sound tracks. Although this is a bad analogy it reminded me of the casper game I used to play when I was a lot younger- you clicked on casper or other things and they spoke or opened up little, entertaining skits!)

I heard she got quite a good response for her work and was even offered 600£ for one animation but she declined because she could probably get more sold elsewhere.

It's nice to see work that is funny, political and also well drawn. If you type that artists name into youtube you can see some of the artwork she entered into an animation comp in 2009.

So I have been doing very little since I finished Uni. I think being there has taught me bad, lazy habits!

I found some really cheap clogs in primark they are 20££ but incredibly painful. I've been out in them a few nights in a row and by the end of the evening I was staggering or walking bare foooted.

However, saying that, I am not the best at wearing heals anyway and another friend who borrowed them said they were comfy. The quality is a lot better than what Primark usually has to offer! So I would recommend them if you want to buy some...

Apparently lace is where its at now in fashion! I also recently bought the most amazing nail polish from barry m. It is lilac and super cute for the summer!

Tuesday 29 June 2010

Creators Project Party 17th July

Hello!

As a graduate I have just moved back to London and am keen to hear about any arty events/ goings on in the city (Exhibitions, fairs, job offers or anything else worth checking out). I'm also interested in hearing about fashion on a budget, and would love to share with you all the cheap things I have found lately roaming the high street shops of Central London.

I wanted to blog about an event I found out about through the VICE Uk facebook page called 'The Creators Project'. It is a New York based event brining together artists, musicians, film makers, designers and more importantly food and drink.

The London event, held on the 17th of July, will feature music from Mark Ronson and Hudson Mohawke as well as many more artists! To get tickets for free register here and you could be going:


www.creatorsproject.com/en-uk/london or join the facebook page for more information.

It will be taking place at Victoria House, London, and attending would be a good way to meet other prospective artists and artists as well as being an amazingly entertaining evening.

I will be posting some updates soon about Clogs as they have been in a lot of fashion magazines and high street shops lately. I am not quite sure what to make of them and get the feeling they will only be in fashion briefly so I don't want to buy a crazily expensive pair! They are trying to flog them for 60 or 70 pounds in Urban Outfitters and other shops...so I have been scouting out the best cheap clogs.