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Posts by Miss Rosen

Edward S. Curtis: The North American Indian

Posted on July 11, 2017

Photo: Edward Sherriff Curtis. The North American Indian. Portfolio 8, Plate 256. Chief Joseph – Nez Perce, 1909, Photogravure.

American photographer Edward S. Curtis embodies the essence of heroism in a single word: sacrifice. He staked everything he had to create one of the most significant bodies of work, The North American Indian, ever made and died in obscurity for all that he gave. Now the Muskegon Museum of Art, Michigan, presents Curtis’s full oeuvre—723 portfolio prints—for what may be the first time ever.

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Recognized at the largest artistic collaboration and photographic achievement in the history of the medium, The North American Indian presents a body of work made between 1906 and 1930 documenting the indigenous peoples of the land at a time when they were being systematically wiped off the face of the earth by the United States government.

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The project, financed by J.P. Morgan, then the richest man in the world, was celebrated by The New York Herald as “The most gigantic undertaking since the making of the King James edition of the Bible.” In total, Curtis produced 20 volumes featuring a whopping 2,200 photogravures, that were sent to subscribers as they were published. Each portfolio contained 75 hand-pressed photogravures and 300 pages of text, which was accompanied by a corresponding portfolio containing at least 35 photogravures.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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Photo: Edward Sherriff Curtis. The North American Indian. Portfolio 9, Plate 320. Lummi Type, 1899, Photogravure.

Categories: Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Photography

Meet “Inspirobot,” the Madcap A.I. Mememaker

Posted on July 10, 2017

Artwork: Courtesy of Inspirobot.

Memes are the first virus of the Digital Age, constantly replicating, transforming, adapting, and enhancing themselves on the world stage. Perhaps there is nothing so intoxicating as the combination of pictures and words that can be refined to realize the zeitgeist in a single image. Think of how quickly they’ve evolved, becoming highly nuanced and complex, speaking to and for a niche group or to the general public. In short, memes are an addiction we are not soon to quit.

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Enter Inspirobot, an A.I. algorithm “dedicated to generating unlimited amounts of unique inspirational quotes for the endless enrichment of pointless human existence.”

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Truly tongue-in-cheek from the word “Go,” a trip to Inspirobot never fails to amuse. The choice of image paired with the strange turns of phrase evoke the meme’s ability to be simultaneously absurd and self-important, profound and shallow, poignant and rude—basically embodying every dichotomy of the human experience.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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Artwork: Courtesy of Inspirobot.

Artwork: Courtesy of Inspirobot.

Categories: Crave

Celebrate the 30th Anniversary of Eric B. & Rakim’s “Paid in Full”

Posted on July 7, 2017

On July 7, 1987, Eric B. & Rakim dropped Paid in Full, their debut album in 4th & B’way Records, and forever changed the game with a style of rhyme so fly Rakim still stands as Top 5 today.

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As was the tradition of Hip Hop acts back in the days, Eric B. (Eric Barrier) was the DJ, so he got top billing. A native of Queens, Eric B. was DJing on WBLS-FM, the inky black-owned radio station in New York City at the time. He started a search for “New York’s top MC” and hooked up with Rakim (William Griffin), who hailed from Suffolk County, Long Island.

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Rakim took his name after joining The Nation of Gods and Earths, bringing the Five-Percent nation to Hip Hop. The first cut they made was “Eric B. is President,” which was released as a single in 1986 with “My Melody” on the B side. The moment Rakim started rhyming, it was a wrap. Hip hop had never seen anything like it before—and it sure hasn’t since.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: 1980s

Legendary Authors and the Clothes They Wore

Posted on July 6, 2017

Photo: Djuna Barnes US novelist and illustrator 1892 to 1982. © Pictorial Press Ltd / Alamy.

“Where would fashion be without literature?” Diana Vreeland asked in D.V., her legendary memoir published in 1984. One to pay homage where it is due, Vreeland understood this it is not just the sartorial splendors of the characters that writers have graced us with over the years, but the very nature of the author’s personal style that has influenced the our tastes and sensibilities.

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Consider Mark Twain’s white suits versus those of Tom Wolfe, or the lavender ascots and fanciful hats of Quentin Crisp. Reflect on the penchant for men’s wear shared by Fran Lebowitz and Colette in contrast to the flamboyant Victorian get ups of Oscar Wilde. Contemplate the brunette bouffant of Jacqueline Susann, the glorious dreadlocks of Toni Morrison, and the crisp thatch of white hair on Susan Sontag versus the signature beard of Ernest Hemingway.

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Terry Newman pulls it all together in the new book, Legendary Authors and The Clothes They Wore (Harper Design), a charming collection that reveals style is more than a way of dressing: it is a state of mind. The book includes chapters of icons from Patti Smith and William S. Burroughs to Marcel Proust and Zadie Smith, along side special sections on signature looks including glasses, suits, hair, and hats of everyone from Robert Crumb and Allen Ginsberg to Bret Easton Ellis and Edgar Allen Poe.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: Books, Crave, Fashion, Photography

Peter Cain at Matthew Marks Gallery, Los Angeles

Posted on July 5, 2017

Artwork: Peter Cain. Sean Number Two, 1996. Oil on linen, 60 x 84 inches, 152 x 213 cm. © Peter Cain, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery.

When painter Peter Cain died of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 37 at in 1997, he left the art world in a state of shock. His career, which he been on the rise for over a decade, had begun to transform into new realms. What remained was a body of work that comprised 63 paintings that reveal a life interrupted, full of promise and potency, an ability to transform the archetypes of the era into something equally compelling and curious.

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Matthew Marks, which represented him during his life, now presents Peter Cain, a new exhibition of works at their Los Angeles galleries, currently on view through September 1, 2017. Featuring paintings, drawings, and collages made between the late 1980s and 1997, this is Cain’s first solo show in LA since 1990.

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The breadth of the collection reveals Cain’s development and the directions he had been heading at the time of his death. His earlier works, which brought him to game, are sumptuous paintings of automobiles that combine aspects of Surrealism and Photorealism to stunning effect, luring us into a strange realm where nothing is quite what it seems, yet you’re apt to believe in its truth, just as you would in a dream.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Painting

Kirk Crippens & Gretchen LeMaistre: Live Burls

Posted on July 4, 2017

Photo: Semper Virens, © Kirk Crippens and Gretchen LeMaistre, courtesy of Schilt Publishing.

The redwood trees of Northern Pacific Coast are among the oldest living things on earth, with life spans that average 1,200 to 1,800 years. Also known as Sequoia sepmervirens, they include these evergreens include the tallest trees on the planet, reaching up to 379 feet (115.5 meters) in height and 29.2 feet (8.9 meters) in diameter. Simply put, they are majestic beings that have fallen victim to the greed of wo/man.

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The First Peoples of American lived in the forest for thousands of years, able to create a symbiotic relationship with the land without destroying it. Their spiritual beliefs, combined with knowledge of the natural world, allowed them to cultivate the resources of the forest and live in harmony with the earth.

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All of this changed with the arrival of an imperialist force that traveled across the Atlantic Ocean and took land that did not belong to them. As the descendants of Europe made this country their own, they ravaged the landscape without thought to the consequences of their actions. They began decimating the forests to build homes, tearing down trees with no effort to replace the forests they destroyed.

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The size of redwoods made them highly prized, for their could provide prized timber known for its durability and workability. By 1853, nine sawmills plowed through the glories of the earth, threatening the very existence of this ancient species of tree.

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Read the Full Story at Feature Shoot

Categories: Art, Books, Feature Shoot, Photography

Danny Lyon at Galerie Edwynn Houk

Posted on July 4, 2017

Photo: Danny Lyon. From Lindsey’s room, Louisville, 1966. ©Danny Lyon/Courtesy Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York.

Brooklyn native Danny Lyon came of age in the 1960s as the nation underwent radical upheavals that have defined the era in which we live. As the Civil Rights Movement came to the fore, Lyon headed south to join the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in 1962 at the age of 20. His time with SNCC put him on the frontlines of the movement, where he was able to document the horrific reality the fight against government-sanctioned apartheid.

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“It was my good fortune to stumble into the story early,” Lyon told The Guardian in 2012. “Being in SNCC politicized me. Having said that, I wasn’t black and I was free. My agenda was photography and books, and what is now called media.”

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Lyon is one of the first photographers to practice New Journalism, to embed himself within the cultures he was documenting in order to tell the story from the inside. At the same time, the camera defined his role: he was a journalist using photography to question the practices of the government, the media, and society as a whole.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: 1960s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Photography

Gregory Bojorquez: Frame Life

Posted on June 28, 2017

Photo: Beto and Bob’s Dog. © Gregory Bojorquez.

Hailing from East Los Angeles, Gregory Bojorquez (b. 1972) began photographing the cycles of life and death as it unfolded before his very eyes, documenting the glorious and the grim realities as only an insider can. His sensitivity to beauty and strength infuses his photographs with an intense sense of the moment itself, the fleeting nature of existence—here today, gone tomorrow.

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With his images, Bojorquez freezes time yet somehow you forget the picture isn’t moving. The impact is so immediate, so urgent, so intense that it becomes cinematic. You perceive a sense of before and after, of three dimensions collapsed into two. You smell the air and feel the sun on your face as a breeze sweeps you away. To put it bluntly, you caught the vapors, as Biz Markie would say.

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“I don’t ever want to be called a street artist,” Bojorquez told LA Weekly in 2012. “I’m not a street person. I’m not bad. I take pictures. I feel more like the Ferris Bueller of the Eastside.”

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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Categories: Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Photography

Dandy Lion: The Black Dandy and Street Style

Posted on June 27, 2017

Photo: Photo: Arteh Odjidja, Red Square Moscow, Russia, 2012, from the series Stranger in Moscow; from Dandy Lion (Aperture, 2017). © Arteh Odjidja/Arteh Creative.

The dandy first appeared on the scene in late eighteenth century Britain just as the bourgeoisie was coming into vogue and a new leisure class was becoming a la mode. They aspired to the aristocratic aesthetic and lifestyle, seeing themselves as a cut above the working class in all manner of things. But it was in sartorial pleasures that they distinguished themselves, drawing attention to their status through garb.

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For many, clothes make the man—but the dandy makes the clothes, so seamless is his style that he embodies the timeless spirit of chic. The bourgeoisie grew in power and influence at the same time European imperialism conquered the globe. With political and economic oppression and exploitation came an unexpected twist: the transmutation of dandy culture into new realms.

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In black culture across the globe, the dandy was more than a symbol of middle class yearnings—it was a radical act of self-expression and independence. The black dandy takes from the traditions of European fashion and subverts the aesthetic by infusing it with elements of the African diaspora. Where the European aesthetic has come to embrace subdued tones, clean cuts, and understated effects, the African sensibility embraces color, pattern, and contrast. The result is visually daring and dedicated to distinction.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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Photo: Omar Victor Diop, Alt + Shift + Ego, 2013; from Dandy Lion (Aperture, 2017). © Omar Victor Diop, Courtesy Galerie MAGNIN-A, Paris.

 

Categories: Africa, Art, Books, Crave, Fashion, Photography

The Best Animal Photography of the Last 20 Years

Posted on June 25, 2017

Photo: Self-Portrait of a female Celebes crested macaque in North Sulawesi, Indonesia, 2011. David Slater via Wikimedia Commons.

There is nothing quite like animal photographs to change the way we see the world. No longer are we, the human being, the center of attention—which can be quite a relief. There’s something very relaxing about getting outside of yourself. Animal photography has powers unlike any other genre that exists: it reminds us of the profundity of existence itself. It makes us aware that no matter how you slice it: life is hard. But it’s also charming, endearing, inspiring, and humbling.

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In celebration of all the creatures that exist on our green Earth, Crave has put together a collection of some of the best animal photography of the past 20 years.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: Art, Crave, Photography

David Gwinnutt: Before We Were Men

Posted on June 21, 2017

Photo: Duggie Fields b.1945. © David Gwinnutt

When Swinging London collapsed, the Pop-optics faded away. The bright cheerful colors of promise became muted, grubby, and grey as the city fell into created desperate times. The rising tide of unemployment, set against an on-going recession, brought the conservatives to fore, and through them a new leader was.

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In 1979, Margaret Thatcher became the first woman to assume the mantle and she went hard: deregulating the financial sector, privatizing state-owned companies, and reducing the power of trade unions. She spoke for the elite and was largely unpopular until victory in the 1982 Falklands War.

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During those intervening years, a new generation was coming of age, embracing the D.I.Y. ethos of punk and taking it far beyond the reaches of the known. The scene, which came to be known as the New Romantics, was centered at the Blitz, a nightclub in the Covent Garden section of London.

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If ever there was a fitting name, it was this. At the Blitz, a fantastical coterie of artists, musicians, designers, filmmakers, and performers came dressed to kill, wearing handmade pieces that could best be described as Ziggy Stardust on acid. The Blitz Kids, as they were known, took that art of the poseur to the next level. The donned costumes and makeup that blurred gender lines, sometimes going so far as to erase the human element in the search for an identity that spoke to the moment.

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Read the Full Story at Feature Shoot

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Photo: Alison Owen c. 1984 © David GwinnuttDavid Gwinnutt: Before We Were Men

Categories: 1980s, Art, Exhibitions, Feature Shoot, Photography

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