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Posts from the “Art” Category

Pixy Liao: Your Gaze Belongs to Me

Posted on April 29, 2021

Bed Wrestling, from the “Experimental Relationship series”, 2019 © Pixy Liao

Through the history of Western art, the heterosexual dynamic has shaped the notions of artist and muse: the male as creator, sublimating his sexual prowess to make art; the female as muse, the passive object of inspiration. The notion of a muse comes from the ancient Greeks, who cast nine goddesses as the source of inspiration for men to pen poetry, hymns, music and song, dance, comedy, tragedy, history, and astronomy — decidedly more “feminine” disciplines, as opposed to science, math, and philosophy.

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Some 3.000 years later, the paradigm is as patriarchal as it is démodé — and now brilliantly challenged by Chinese photographer Pixy Liao in “Your Gaze Belongs to Me“, her first museum exhibition, curated by Holly Roussel. Hailing from Shanghai, Liao recalls being raised with traditional gender roles hailing from Confucian times that very much mirror that of ancient Greece.

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“As a woman brought up in China, I used to think I could only love someone who is older and more mature than me, who can be my protector and mentor,” Liao toldLenscratch. “Then I met my current boyfriend, Moro, who is 5 years younger than me, I felt that whole concept of relationships changed, all the way around. I became the person who has more authority and power. One of my male friends even questioned how I could choose a boyfriend the way a man would choose a girlfriend. And I thought, ‘Damn right. That’s exactly what I’m doing, and why not!’”

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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You don’t have to be a boy to be my boyfriend, from the “Experimental Relationship” series, 2010 © Pixy Liao
Categories: Art, Blind, Exhibitions

Tom of Finland: The Darkroom

Posted on April 29, 2021

Tom of Finland, Untitled (Gavin), 1987, Tom of Finland Permanent Collection ©1987-2021 Tom of Finland Foundation

Wars, for all their horrors, have been known to foster a sense of brotherhood among the men who fight in them. This was certainly the case with Tom of Finland – born Touko Laaksonen (1920–1991) – who was conscripted to serve in the Finnish Army during World War II and rose to become a lieutenant, beloved by his platoon for treating them with kindness and respect. The son of a country choral master, Tom seized the opportunity to strengthen the bond between his men and created the first men’s choir in the Finnish Army.

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“They had a lot of time sitting around waiting for the Russians to attack them so Tom taught all of the men in his platoon how to sing,” says Durk Dehner, president and co-founder of the Tom of Finland Foundation. “He could take on initiatives that came out of his own inspiration and yet he had this sensibility of not having to stand out and be noticed.”

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Flying under the radar, quite literally, Tom established a cottage industry selling drawings through his mail-order business, while also working a day job at an advertising firm. What few people know is the role photography played in Tom’s artistic process. Now, the new exhibition Tom of Finland: The Darkroom, opening April 30 at Fotografiska New York, brings together photographic portraits the artist used as reference images for his legendary and hugely influential drawings. Organised in conjunction with Tom’s 101st birthday on May 8, the exhibition explores this little-known aspect of the artist’s work, which was confined to his home studio and darkroom so as to protect him from persecution, prosecution, and imprisonment.

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Read the Full Story at AnOther

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Tom of Finland, Untitled, c.1986, Tom of Finland Permanent Collection © 1986-2021 Tom of Finland Foundation
Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, AnOther, Art, Exhibitions, Photography

Nydia Blas: Revival

Posted on April 25, 2021

Revival © Nydia Blas

We are born into bodies inscribed with histories that we do not control, a complex mix of truth and trauma, archetype and stereotype. As we walk the earth at a specific time and place, we are met with expectations and limitations based on the bodies we hold — but the force of our very nature empowers us to reimagine and create new paradigms writ large. This is the magic of Panamanian American artist Nydia Blas, who uses photography, collage, video, and books to render intimate scenes of Black girl bliss.

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In her first monograph, Revival (Kris Graves Projects, April 2021), Blas takes us inside her world, a space of exquisite sensitivity where she is free to explore, confront, and celebrate the very essence of body and soul. Using her lived experiences as a girl, woman, and mother, Blas carefully weaves allegorical images of the feminine into majestic tapestries of resilience, resistance, and reclamation through what she describes as a “Black feminine lens”.

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Growing up in the predominantly white college town of Ithaca, New York, Blas was introduced to folklore as a child when her Aunt Beverly gifted a copy of Virginia Hamilton’s book The People Could Fly: American Black Folktale. Blas came to understand what matters most is choice. We hold the power to choose our own thoughts and beliefs, and use them to heal the wounds we carry, passed on from one generation to the next.

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Revival © Nydia Blas
Categories: Art, Blind, Books, Photography, Women

Gulnara Samoilova: From Russia With Love

Posted on April 21, 2021

Untitled from the series “Lost Family”, 1987-2015 © Gulnara Samoilova

With the recent publication of Women Street Photographers (Prestel), photographerGulnara Samoilova has once again returned to the public eye — but in a very different way from when she won the World Press Photo for her photograph of September 11. After the trauma she endured that day, Samoilova left photojournalism, never to return. She established a successful wedding photography studio but eventually found herself depressed. Money and status simply were not enough — she needed to return to her love of making art.

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Encouraged by the words of American photographer Mary Ellen Mark, Samoilova decided to change careers in 2015. She dreamed of traveling the world and taking street photographs, a passion she enjoyed since she first picked up the camera as a teenager in her hometown of Ufa, the capital of the Republic of Bashkortostan in Russia.

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The answers became clear after the 2016 Presidential election in the United States. Triggered with memories of sexism experienced throughout her career, Samoilova decided to create Women Street Photographers, a now-highly popular Instagram feed, in 2017. With the success of the community, she could organically expand the platform to include a website, exhibition series, artist residency, inspirational films, and now the book, which brings together the work of 100 artists from around the world pushing the boundaries of street photography into new realms.

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Untitled from the series “Uda, Baskiria” © Gulnara Samoilova
Untitled from the series “Lost Family”, 1987-2015 © Gulnara Samoilova
Categories: Art, Blind, Books, Painting, Photography, Women

Adrienne Raquel: ONYX

Posted on April 19, 2021

Adrienne Raquel. Morena, 2020.

Growing up in the 1990s and early 2000s, photographer Adrienne Raquel remembers the era of the video vixen well. Hip Hop honeys like Melyssa Ford, Karrine Steffans, Buffie the Body, Bria Myles, Gloria Velez, Esther Baxter, and Rosa Acosta were like lyrics of Wu Tang Clan’s “Ice Cream” come to life. Transforming eye candy into a fine art, each vixen possessed her own innate style and physicality, and became icons of femininity and stars in their own right.

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Raquel came of age at a time when analogue and digital technology first converged. “I grew up in a Black household where at every moment we were tapped into the culture,” she says. “Both of my parents loved music, film, and TV. I grew up feeding into all of it. My dad used to bring home magazines like Jet, Ebony, Vibe, XXL, and The Source. I would look through those magazines, tear out these amazing ads for Rocawear and Baby Phat, and scan them into our computer to create my own graphic art.” 

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On the cusp of adolescence, Raquel watched music videos with older cousins, gazing upon the vixens in awe. “What drew me to them as a child and even now at 30, is that these women were crème de la crème, recognised as the celebrities in their own right,” she says, “I was an only child, super introverted, very shy, a late bloomer, and very sheltered. These women had confidence in their sensuality, a sense of power and allure that is something I always wanted to possess – whether growing up, as a teenager, or now as a young lady.”

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Although Raquel is a self-described “wallflower,” she’s readily in the mix photographing Travis Scott,Lil Nas X, Megan Thee Stallion, Selena Gomez, fashion, and beauty for T Magazine, Vanity Fair, CR Fashion Book, Dior, and Pat McGrath Labs. Recently featured in Antwaun Sargent’s landmark book inThe New Black Vanguard: Photography Between Art and Fashion (Aperture), Raquel now takes centre stage with ONYX, her first solo museum exhibition, on April 22 at Fotografiska New York.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Adrienne Raquel. Vixxen, 2020.
Adrienne Raquel. Where Dreams Lie, 2020.
Categories: Art, Dazed, Exhibitions, Photography, Women

Owen Harvey: Skinheads and Suedes

Posted on April 18, 2021

Owen Harvey

In 1969, skinhead culture emerged on the streets of London’s East End slums and within the newly constructed brutalist housing estates. Alienated from the bourgeois hippie scene that flourished during the ‘swinging ‘60s’, a new generation of working-class youth came of age searching for their roots. 

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They found inspiration in a uniform look that paired shaved heads and Ben Sherman polo shirts with bleached jeans, Ma-1 flight jackets, and Doc Marten boots. The skinheads – and their ladies known as suedes – revelled in classic English fare: football games, pubs, and concerts. But they also embrace the style and sound of the Windrush Generation of the time, enjoying dub, reggae, rocksteady, and ska music.

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But in the 1970s and ‘80s, as a second wave of skins and suedes came of age, the far right-wing organisation the National Front attempted to infiltrate the scene, appropriating their powerful aesthetics while embarking on a series of anti-immigration initiatives. Corporate media, ever ready to vilify the working class, turned skinheads into the boogeyman.

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Owen Harvey
Categories: Art, Fashion, Huck, Photography

Hassan Hajjaj: My Rockstars and VOGUE: The Arab Issue

Posted on April 13, 2021

Arfoud Brother 2017/1438 From the series My Rock Stars © Hassan Hajjaj

Hailing from the fishing town of Larache on the northwest coast of Morocco, photographerHassan Hajjaj was born in 1961 — just five years after the country achieved independence. Throughout the ‘60s, the African Independence Movement swept the continent, restoring a feeling of pride to the peoples whose lives and land had been unjustly usurped by foreign imperialists. A new generation of photographers including Malick Sidibé, Samuel Fosso, and Sanle Sory chronicled the spirit of celebration that filled the air, creating portraits that captured the first flush of freedom as it spread far and wide. 

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Long before digital technology democratized photography, Hajjaj recalled his youth as, “There were hardly any cameras around then. In my town when I was growing up there were three types of photographers. The first was the studio photographer where people would have their family portraits made. I remember going with my Mum and my sisters, wearing our very best. Dad was living in England from the ‘60s, so every couple of years we would go out, do a picture and send it to him. I remember that studio very well with the lighting, the backdrop, the seat. This was a big influence on me.”

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The other photographers worked the streets and the beach, making portraits of people who wanted to preserve these fleeting moments of joy and fun in casual settings. “They would give you a piece of paper, and a few days later you’d get a small print,” Hajjaj says of the itinerant photographers who provided the community with lasting scenes of happiness. These encounters left a memorable impression on Hajjaj that stayed with him throughout his life. 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Acrobat 2012/1433 From the series My Rock Stars © Hassan Hajjaj
MissMe 2018/1440 © Hassan Hajjaj
Categories: 1990s, Africa, Art, Blind, Exhibitions, Fashion, Photography

June Newton, Portrait Photographer Also Known as Alice Springs, Dies at 97

Posted on April 13, 2021

June as Hedda Gabler, Melbourne 1960 © Helmut Newton / Helmut Newton Foundation

June Newton (1923-2021), the Australian born photographer and actress also known as Alice Springs, died on Saturday, April 9, at the age of 97 in her Monte Carlo home. The wife of late photographer Helmut Newton worked with her husband on the design and publication of his many monographs, and adopted a pseudonym when photographing art, fashion, and entertainment luminaries such as Yves Saint Laurent, Audrey Hepburn, Grace Jones, and Diana Vreeland.

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Born June Browne in Melbourne in 1923, Newton trained as an actor, performing under the name June Brunell. In 1947, she met Helmut Newton, the son of a wealthy German-Jewish industrialist who had fled his homeland at the age of 18 to escape the Nazis. He worked in Singapore as a high-class gigolo before being sent to Australia as an enemy alien. Helmut had became a British subject, anglicized his name, and opened a fashionable Flinders Lane photography studio in Melbourne, where he met June, who was hoping to make some extra money as a model. 

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“I looked at the pictures on the wall and I fell in love with them,” June told The Guardian in 2006. Helmut told June, “Photography will always be my first love, but you will be my second.” They wed the following year, in 1948, and remained married until Helmut’s 2004 death following a car accident in Los Angeles at the age of 83.

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Yves Saint Laurent and Hazel, Paris 1978 © Alice Springs / Helmut Newton Foundation

Categories: Art, Blind, Photography

Peter van Agtmael: Sorry for the War

Posted on April 8, 2021

Administrators survey the ruins of Mosul University in East Mosul as the battle continues to rage on the west side of the Tigris River. Mosul. Iraq. 2017. © Peter van Agtmael / Magnum Photos

This year, the United States will mourn the twentieth anniversary of the September 11 attacks, a historic event that precipitated U.S.-led invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, both of which barely register in the American public’s consciousness. No longer the cause célèbre driven by a desire to destroy Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, few may be aware that a May 21 deadline for complete U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan will symbolically mark the end of the nation’s longest war. All but discarded as yesterday’s news, these wars have become an afterthought to the American mind, their consequences on foreign and domestic policy largely ignored. 

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Yet their impact continues to resonate and inform the world in ways in a myriad of ways deeply and inextricably intertwined, a hallucinatory labyrinth of events and implications Magnum Photos member Peter van Agtmael seeks to explore in his latest book, Sorry for the War (Mass Books). “Sorry for the War is dedicated to the anonymous lives caught in the middle of America’s wars. Twenty years later, we hardly know a face or a name,” van Agtmael writes in the acknowledgments, a poignant reminder of the incalculable cost of war. 

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Since 2006, van Agtmael has documented America at war at home and abroad, creating a hallucinatory picture of a nation willfully giving itself over to the numbing powers of cognitive dissonance. In Sorry for the War, van Agtmael takes us inside the belly of the beast, drawing damning parallels between the horrors of war and the fetid bliss of ignorance. Combing documentary photographs with images of mainstream media, van Agtmael explores the vertigo-inducing disconnect between reality and spectacle through a series of surreal images accompanied by annotated captions that provide at times deeply disconcerting context. 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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The border had closed at midnight after Hungarian officials hastily erected a barbed-wire fence, blocking thousands of Syrian, Iraqi, and Afghan refugees from entering. Horgos, Serbia. 2015. © Peter van Agtmael / Magnum Photos
Categories: Art, Blind, Books, Photography

Matt Stuart: Think Like a Street Photographer

Posted on April 8, 2021

Matt Stuart. Trafalgar Square, London, 2018.

enjoy the wonderful and bizarre things that reveal themselves in public places, what I learn from them, and how I adapt to different situations. Street photography is a constant life education and that’s why I keep coming back to it,” says British photographer Matt Stuart, author of the new book Think Like a Street Photographer (Laurence King).

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After giving up skateboarding in his early 20s, Stuart found a new love in street photography, which offered some of the same thrills. “Both are about trying to make a ‘trick,’ but with street photography, you can make the tricks tangible in the form of a print and they can last forever,” Stuart says.

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Inspired by Joel Meyerowitz’s groundbreaking colour work, Stuart embraced the photographer’s approach to decentering the illustrious “decisive moment” in the act of picture-making. He also admires Trent Parke’s anarchic approach and Alex Webb’s work ethic, describing the latter as a “photographic athlete.”

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Matt Stuart. Brussels, 2016.
Matt Stuart. Regent Street, London, 2014.
Categories: Art, Books, Huck, Photography

Donna Ferrato: Holy

Posted on April 7, 2021

Donna Ferrato

American photographer Donna Ferrato is possessed with a candor you rarely find, a willingness to traverse the most delicate, vulnerable parts of life and do so with extraordinary courage and sensitivity. Long before the mainstream media was paying attention to the issues facing women’s lives, Ferrato was fully attuned to the extraordinary importance of bearing witness.

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In her new book Holy (powerHouse Books), Ferrato traverses a lifetime behind the lens documenting the lives of women from all walks of life. Fearlessly confronting once taboo issues like sexual assault, domestic violence, and sex work, Ferrato recognizes photography as a tool to speak truth to power and testify to not only the tragedies and traumas befalling women but the victories that achieve against the odds.

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Holy began in 2017 after the U.S. Presidential election left Ferrato feeling enraged. “I was a bear whose paw was caught in a steel trap. I was howling, I was angry, I was furious that that man had been voted in. I knew what was going to happen because we all knew [what he would do]: shutting down Planned Parenthood, women’s health clinics, telling trans people they could not serve in the military and get the health care they needed, taking children away from families at the border — just taking away all of our rights,” she says.

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“I couldn’t tolerate it anymore. I was responding like a desperate animal when I first started this book. If you could see he first iteration where I was in a white-hot rage you would understand that I didn’t know where I was going. I’m so flawed. I make so many mistakes. I am driven by my emotions and my impulses, and I’m changing my mind all the time. I’d look at the book and it wasn’t good enough.”

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When COVID hit, Ferrato found herself alone. Without distraction, she delved into her past, asking herself, “Where were the cracks in your upbringing that lead you to be such a firebrand?” Here, Ferrato shares a few stories from her extraordinary path.

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Read the Full Story at Feature Shoot

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Donna Ferrato
Donna Ferrato
Categories: 1990s, Art, Books, Feature Shoot, Photography, Women

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