Miss Rosen
  • Home
  • About
  • Imprint
  • Writing
    • Books
    • Magazines
    • Websites
    • Interviews
  • Marketing
    • Publicity
    • Exhibitions & Events
    • Branding
  • Blog

Posts from the “Books” Category

Martha Cooper & Henry Chalfant: Subway Art

Posted on August 29, 2016

Photo: “Midg” with yellow school bus, 1982. © Martha Cooper

Photo: “Midg” with yellow school bus, 1982. © Martha Cooper

 

During the early 1970s, graffiti made it way to the trains of New York, spreading across the city like a virus and capturing the imagination of a new generation of artists in every borough. Sneaking into the yards and walking through the tunnels in the dead of night, graffiti writers were on a mission like no one had seen before—or has seen since. Fame. Recognition. Renown. In the city that never sleeps, Kings were crowned.

.

But as quick as it came, it disappeared. Were it not for the photographs, there would be nothing left. Fortunately writers and artists share that same compulsion to document and to collect. As fate would have it, Martha Cooper and Henry Chalfant had both been documenting the same scene at the same time from distinctive vantage points.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

.

Photo: Blade, 1980. © Henry Chalfant

Photo: Blade, 1980. © Henry Chalfant

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Books, Bronx, Brooklyn, Crave, Graffiti, Manhattan, Painting, Photography

Stephen Dupont: Generation AK

Posted on August 28, 2016

Photo: Kabul, 2005. A body building gym new Shah do Shamshira Mosque. © Stephen Dupont, courtesy of Steidl.

Photo: Kabul, 2005. A body building gym new Shah do Shamshira Mosque. © Stephen Dupont, courtesy of Steidl.

Stephen Dupont is a warrior. Ready for battle, on the field, armed with a camera and nerves of steel. For twenty years, he has braved the harsh and unforgiving landscape of Afghanistan, after being inspired by the Mujahideen rising to defend their nation from a Soviet invasion in the 1980s. The Afghani never say die, and they sent the Soviets home, just as they drove back the British during the height of the Empire.

.

In 1895, Rudyard Kipling famously penned a little ditty that goes: When you’re wounded and left on Afghanistan’s plains, And the women come out to cut up what remains, Just roll to your rifle and blow out your brains, And go to your God like a soldier.

.

A century later, ain’t a damn thing changed.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

 

Categories: 1990s, Art, Books, Crave, Photography

Joe Conzo & DJ Disco Wiz on “The Get Down”

Posted on August 27, 2016

Photo ©Joe Conzo

Photo ©Joe Conzo

Best known for a series of posh, over-the-top cinematic extravaganzas including Moulin Rouge!, Romeo + Juliet,  and The Great Gatsby, Australian film director, screenwriter, and producer Baz Luhrmann has turned his attention to the small screen with The Get Down, a twelve-episode Netflix series, which premiered on August 12, 2016. Originally budgeted at $7.5 million per episode, the show ended up costing at least $120 million, making it among the most expensive series in television history.

.

Set between 1977­–­79, The Get Down is a fictional account of life on the streets of the South Bronx as the twin stars of Hip Hop and disco crossed paths in ways no one could have ever imagined. Attracted to this pivotal moment in American culture, Luhrmann found himself an outsider with no firsthand knowledge of the scene so he brought Nas, Grandmaster Flash, Nelson George, and Kurtis Blow, among others, into the fold to produce and consult on the project. The production was troubled with a series of starts, stops, and stalls that lead to scripts being written, discarded, and revised to such an extent that, according to Variety, some writers had taken to calling the show “The Shut Down.” Variety went on to describe The Get Down as a cautionary tale for Hollywood, but Netflix indicated they had no regrets.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

.

DJ Disco Wiz, photo ©Jenny Risher.

DJ Disco Wiz, photo ©Jenny Risher.

Categories: 1970s, Books, Bronx, Crave, Music, Photography

Per-Anders Petterssen: African Catwalk

Posted on August 27, 2016

A model poses for photos at a test shoot with the Ivorian designer Barros Coulibaly in the Hôtel des Almadies during the Dakar Fashion Week, Senegal 2014. © Per-Anders Pettersson, courtesy of Kehrer Verlag.

A model poses for photos at a test shoot with the Ivorian designer Barros Coulibaly in the Hôtel des Almadies during the Dakar Fashion Week, Senegal 2014. © Per-Anders Pettersson, courtesy of Kehrer Verlag.

In 1994, Swedish photographer Per-Anders Pettersson (b. 1967) came to South Africa to cover the historic elections that saw Nelson Mandela become President—and he never left. Based in Cape Town, Pettersson has honed his talents on documenting stories across the continent, covering the stories the West knows so well: civil war, famine, disease. But Pettersson’s work shows not only the horrors of life, but its beauties as well—for the story of Africa is as vast, as rich, and as complex as the land itself.

.

With the new millennium, global industry has become a phenomenon, bringing the four corners of the earth together as one. In doing so, emerging markets are formed, stages where local talents can shine their light to the world. Since 2010, Pettersson has been privy to a nascent scene, an industry on the come up beyond your wildest dreams.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

 

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

Bruno Ceschel: Self Publish, Be Happy

Posted on August 25, 2016

Photo: Nicolas Haeni and Thomas Rousset, untitled, from Self Publish, Be Happy (Aperture/Self Publish, Be Happy, 2015). © Nicolas Haeni and Thomas Rousset

Photo: Nicolas Haeni and Thomas Rousset, untitled, from Self Publish, Be Happy (Aperture/Self Publish, Be Happy, 2015). © Nicolas Haeni and Thomas Rousset

 

Rumi said, “Be the change you want to see in this world.” This is where it all begins. The power to create the world in which we want to live, to exact a future that is happening now, today, using all that exists at our fingertips. The Universe conspires to remind us of this: D.I.Y. Do It Yourself. With the major advancements in digital technology, self-publishing has returned to the forefront of our cultural consciousness. Over the past decade, self publishing has changed the landscape of the art book, introducing a new and vital means to produce and distribute work independent of the industry and its attendant challenges.

.

British writer, publisher, and academic Bruno Ceschel understands the need that has emerged, a need for young artists to join the conversation and become a part of the community. He founded Self Publish, Be Happy in 2010 after inadvertently discovering a tremendous demand for new outlets for publishing—though the idea came to him by way of happenstance. Ceschel had curated an exhibition of self-published artist books for A The Photographer’s Gallery, London, and in doing so, generated a response that was large enough to propel the website he had created to share the work into a platform to showcase the latest releases of self-published authors.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: Art, Books, Crave, Photography

Leah Sobsey: Collections

Posted on August 24, 2016

Photo: Agehana maraho, Broad-tailed Swallowtail, North Carolina State University Insect Museum, 2012

Photo: Agehana maraho, Broad-tailed Swallowtail, North Carolina State University Insect Museum, 2012

 

It all began with a thud against the kitchen window one day. A Tufted Titmouse gave up the ghost on photographer Leah Sobsey’s porch. Her instinct to take pictures was triggered, as were childhood memories of wooden drawers of Chicago Field’s Museum collection filled with thousands of dead birds. The birds had been collected and given the full works as taxidermy experts made them ready for viewing in their new life after death as part of one of the Museum’s many compelling natural history exhibits.

.

The human urge to college, to catalogue, to organize and preserve—from where does this compulsion come? Perhaps it is purely empirical, a belief that we can only study what we possess, and that as stewards of the earth, the material realm is at our fingertips. Like many before her, Sobsey was drawn to this, and in May 2008, she was awarded a residency at the Grand Canyon.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: Art, Books, Crave, Photography

Richard Misrach: Destroy This Memory

Posted on August 23, 2016

Photo: © Richard Misrach, courtesy of Aperture.

Photo: © Richard Misrach, courtesy of Aperture.

“The sadness will last forever.”

.

The last words of Vincent Van Gogh float through my mind as I crack the spine of Destroy This Memory (Aperture). It’s entirely too much, and yet, not nearly enough, but if photographs may be an elegy, Richard Misrach has produced one of the most haunting poems for the dead and gone, the victims of Hurricane Katrina.

.

Eleven years ago today, Katrina began as an interaction between a tropical wave and a tropical cyclone in the Bahamas. It quickly intensified into a Tropical Storm and made its way westward, gaining strength over the Gulf of Mexico. On August 29, it touched down in southeast Louisiana, becoming the most destructive natural disaster in United States history. Ranked one of the five most deadly hurricanes in the nation, with more than 1,800 dead, Katrina decimated the city of New Orleans.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: Art, Books, Crave, Photography

Mapplethorpe Flora: The Complete Flowers

Posted on August 9, 2016

Photo: Robert Mapplethorpe, Orchid, 1982, Dye Transfer. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Mapplethorpe Flora: The Complete Flowers, Phaidon.

Photo: Robert Mapplethorpe, Orchid, 1982, Dye Transfer. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Mapplethorpe Flora: The Complete Flowers, Phaidon.

“Sell the public flowers… things that they can hang on their walls without being uptight,” Robert Mapplethorpe determined. His astute business sense was rivaled only by the subversive delight he took in imbuing the glory of nature with the darker side of life. It was in his pictures of flora that Mapplethorpe found a place contrast showcase the forces of beauty, sex, and death without leaving a trace.

.

Unlike his nudes and BDSM scenes, the only flesh exposed here are the tendrils cut off from their source of life, consigned to a slow death inside a vase. But for that moment the flowers are fresh and full of life, for that moment that contain all the promise of presence in the here and now, as their petals burst open and perfume fills the air, that is the moment Mapplethorpe captured for eternity.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

.

Photo: Robert Mapplethorpe, African Daisy, 1982, Dye Transfer. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Mapplethorpe Flora: The Complete Flowers,

Photo: Robert Mapplethorpe, African Daisy, 1982, Dye Transfer. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Mapplethorpe Flora: The Complete Flowers,

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Books, Crave, Photography

Golden Days Before They End

Posted on August 7, 2016

Photo: © Klaus Pichler, Clemens Marschall, "Golden days before they end", Edition Patrick Frey, 2016.

Photo: © Klaus Pichler, Clemens Marschall, “Golden days before they end”, Edition Patrick Frey, 2016.

Have you ever had a night out that you never wanted to end, so you hopped from place to place hoping they’d stay open ‘til you ran out of steam? Have you ever had a day that turned into a weekend? Or maybe even a week? What is the day became a lifestyle? Then where would you go? These are important questions, people.

.

Vienna knows this. They know it well. Well enough to give a name to it: Branntweiner. It’s a dive bar, and it’s ready to go. Some spots open at 5 in the morning for their clientele. Othersopen  at 9, and still others that don’t get going until later on, but what they all have in common is their willingness to provide 24-hour service to the folks who love themselves some alcohol. Because at a certain point, there comes a turn, and that’s when the liquor takes first place and it won’t ever come down. And that when things take on a grim cast, but, still, the party continues on.

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

 

Categories: Art, Books, Crave, Photography

Books | Ridinghouse Presents Linder

Posted on July 30, 2016

Linder Against Interpretation, 2012 Duratrans on lightbox 168.8 x 125.8 cm | 66 1/2 x 49 1/2 ins Edition of 3 plus 1 AP

Linder Against Interpretation, 2012 Duratrans on lightbox 168.8 x 125.8 cm | 66 1/2 x 49 1/2 ins Edition of 3 plus 1 AP

Linder Sterling makes some of the most extraordinary photomontages the world has ever seen, creating a delectable body of work exploring representations of female sexuality. Equal parts cheeky and chic, Linder puts the sexy back in soft focus centerfolds, while giggling all the way to the bank. By taking pre-existing soft-focus pornography and combining it with flora, fauna, food items (really anything of the sort that conveys the desire to acquire, to have and to hold), Linder reminds us that the image of women is very much a construction for consumption itself. What’s endlessly charming is the simple fact that Linder simultaneously indulges our consumption of this construction while simultaneously deconstructing it. In celebration of a career that spans four decades, the artist has released a sumptuous monograph with 270 pages of pure pleasure. Linder (Ridinghouse) features numerous series made throughout her career, along with a series of interviews that gives insight into mind behind the work.
.
Read the Full Story at Crave Online
Categories: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Exhibitions

Jason DeMarte: Second Nature

Posted on July 22, 2016

Photo: Blue Mourning, 2016, archival inkjet print, sizes and editions vary, ©Jason DeMarte, Courtesy of RULE Gallery.

Photo: Blue Mourning, 2016, archival inkjet print, sizes and editions vary, ©Jason DeMarte, Courtesy of RULE Gallery.

American artist Jason DeMarte (b. 1973) skillfully embraces, then subverts, the passion for artifice that is ever-present in his native land, calling into question the national obsession with recasting the natural world as a dystopian fantasy of perfection achieved through plasticity and alteration. His work explores fixation with making things prettier than they actually are, of erasing “flaws” and character almost violently in a quest for a flawlessness that becomes grotesquely surreal. And yet, ever so enticing in its corn syrup sweetness, so much so that its appeal is that you know that there’s something sick about it, yet you long to throw caution to the wind.

.

DeMarte’s work is alluring, like a siren’s call, igniting a powerful tension between reality and illusion, reminding us how much we want to believe in our fantasies above all. The artist explains, “I am interested in the American modes of representing the natural world through events and objects that have been fabricated or taken out of context. This unnatural experience of the so-called ‘natural’ world is reflected in the way we, as modern consumers, ingest products.  What becomes clear is that the closer we come to mimicking the natural world, the further away we separate ourselves from it.”

.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

 

Categories: Books, Crave, Exhibitions, Photography

« Older entries    Newer entries »

Categories

Archives

Top Posts

  • Home
  • About
  • Marketing
  • Blog
  • Azucar! The Life of Celia Cruz Comes to Netflix in an Epic Series
  • Eli Reed: The Formative Years
  • Bill Ray: Watts 1966
  • Jonas Mekas: I Seem to Live: The New York Diaries 1950-1969, Volume 1
  • Mark Rothko: The Color Field Paintings
  • Imprint

Return to top

© Copyright 2004–2025

Duet Theme by The Theme Foundry