Fashion

Barney, Sally Mann, and Ryan Humphrey on the tele tonight

50s_tv It’s a great night to be a homebody: the lineup (all times ET):

  • At 7 pm: Watch Matthew Barney and Nancy Spector in conversation at the Hirshhorn. Their chat, mostly about the influence of Joseph Beuys on Barney’s work, will be broadcast live on the internets via this link. (It will also be archived after the event.)
  • At 7 pm: Steven Cantor’s documentary on Sally Mann, What Remains, will have its first US television presentation on Cinemax. I wrote about the film last year when it debuted at Sundance: Part one and part two.
  • At 11 pm: Artist Ryan Humphrey is part of the cast of Bravo reality show Top Design.
  • thanks MAN
  • The Obsession of Thought

    Arkheedogma "Thought has nowhere to go but its own isolated, endless fragmented repetition. Without the obsession of thought we are the recognition and the expression of the energy of consciousness and space in which we and others coexist in such profound contact that there is nothing that definitively divides us." – Steven Harrison

    via Whiskey river

    Live! Nude! Deerhoof

    Strange how things get tangled-up in this weird.www.2.0; We just added some new Deerhoof to the Hank’s Hi-Fi playlist, then just posted about some author’s affinity for nudiness, and here we have a collision of the two via Rolling Stone; quelle bizarre!

    Deerhoof

    If you’re a good little Rolling Stone reader, you’ll know all about Deerhoof by now. After all, we featured them as a “Breaking” band in the issue of the magazine on stands now. But just in case you need further reassurance of their awesomeness, take a look at this exclusive clip, which features the lovable indie-rockers performing “+80? live during their set at NYC’s Irving Plaza last Friday.

    “Knitting for a New Millennium,” a manifesto by Lisa Anne Auerbach

    Knitknit6covertouseThis is a call for a dynamic, new direction for knitting!

    Lay down that eyelash yarn and giant needles and pick up a project that’s thoughtful, elegant, and odd. Let each sweater be something completely new. Forego patterns in favor of making it up yourself.

    Go beyond.

    Go above.

    Figure it out for yourself.

    Do not by shy. The time is now; there will never be a better one. Use technology if you have to. Computers are your friends. Knitting machines are ungainly buy useful. Reclaim knitting! It is a noble craft; it is NOT the new yoga. Repetitive and unthinking motions will kill the soul. Knitting is creating. Custom sweaters are the new tattoos. Why make the same thing everyone else is making if you don’t have to? You have choices: make use of them.

    THEN: Knitters who have come before us are remembered for cabled guernseys, paper thin stockings, mittens and gloves adorned with sonnets or sobriquets, and undergarments fluttering with lace. Our forebears learned to knit at a young age. Small children were started on stockings, knitting in the round. Adolescents turned heels and decreased at the toes.
    Look back at the history of knitting and you will see tiny stitches, fancy flourishes, and complex shaping. Aesthetically speaking, the knitters of yore had it going on. Totally badass, persnickety, and adorable. And, as if incredibly good-looking and fashionable weren’t enough for these long ago knitters, old-time chicks with sticks transformed American culture, no joke. In the 1890’s, when a bicycle craze swept the nation, ladies were still wearing duds that might get stuck in the spokes, or worse. Knitting came to the rescue, providing the fashionable a new and sporty choice. Hemlines started to rise, and jaunty knitted stockings became all the rage. It wasn’t long before sweaters went from underwear to outerwear and the rest is history.

    Thank our feminist ancestors with yarn and vision for getting us out of the corset and into the sweater. The early part of the 20th century plugged along just fine, and many a garment was stitched for soldiers, grandchildren, schoolmarms, bachelors, fishermen, and whores. Those who wanted to knit for the war effort used patters published by the Red Cross for sweaters, vests, gloves, and socks. Fashioning garments was a talent taken for granted. Knitters, it seemed, knew how to knit. And then what happened?

    NOW: Like many other things, recent times saw the history of knitting take an unfortunate turn for the worse. Though the popularity of the craft has gone through the roof, we are now faced with an unprecedented epidemic of mediocrity characterized by ultra-bulky yarn and loosely knit skinny scarves. Yarn companies are laughing all the way to the bank as the introduce more yarns and patterns that will satisfy knitters with a “scarf in an hour” or a “sweater in a day.”

    If the current crop of madness does not cease, we in the here and now will be remembered by future knitters at the generation who collapsed the craft. We cannot and must not let this happen! Knitting is not supposed to be easy. Knitting takes time and thought and patience and attention. A well made sweater will last a lifetime or longer. There’s no point in wasting time and money on ugliness.

    Down with simple and boring!

    Up with thoughtful and complex!

    Chart your message and wear it proudly. Mix yarns and colors. Spice it up. Try the materials of today: Kevlar, retro-reflective, stainless steel, dynamite, yak. Resist fashion. Manufacture your own brand. Embrace tradition. Learn from history. Shatter the present. Create the future. Stitch by stitch, we can and will change the world. The revolution is at hand and knitting needles are the only weapons you’ll need. Stop making scarves; start making trouble.

    Consume less.

    Create more.

    Knitting is political.

    BEGIN IMMEDIATELY.

    [from KNITKNIT #6]

    link http://www.knitknit.net/index.html


    Albert Camus on Beauty

    Jessicaselect_1Beauty is unbearable, drives us to despair, offering us for a minute the glimpse of an eternity that we should like to stretch out over the whole of time.

    -Albert Camus

    Sex appeal is the keystone of our civilization, Henri Bergson

    Fashionbarby

    Le sex-appeal est la clef de voute de notre civilisation. – Henri Bergson

    [Sex appeal is the keystone of our civilization.]

    photo Eolo Perfido

    ART BASEL MIAMI: AQUA ART SCENE

    So, last night I nearly coughed-up the 600 bucks to take the red-eye down to Miami for Art Basel et. al., but I got drunk instead. Got up this morning, actually, this afternnon, and was hoping I would find some evidence the whole thing was a bust, but of course, only evidence to the contrary:

    NYT article: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/09/arts/design/09fair.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

    Dennis Hollingsworth pics and movs:

    RubellCollection1small.jpgRubellCollection2small.jpgRubellCollection3small.jpgRubellCollection4small.jpg
    RubellCollection5small.jpgRubellCollection6small.jpgRubellCollection7small.jpgRubellCollection8small.jpgRubellCollection9small.jpgRubellCollection10small.jpgRubellCollection11small.jpgRubellCollection12small.jpg

    And Flickr search:

    312581416_15c556cf11_s_1 312581457_3123cd1666_s_1 312581521_9953ad41f5_s_1 314510515_6850db60a6_m 314510536_8bdf8615ff_m 314510595_82b60f3024_m 314510617_2dbcefb18a_m 314863976_4bc2d0e194_m 316604125_e82bd53145 316604194_14dc096f3f 316604233_253ebdb6a4 316604313_9d73ad4d15 316604358_b47d35ae79_s 316604366_4f1d0a7677 316604501_4a32c0fd31 316604548_93b97564d6 316604661_d84df45fd3 316604737_aa475e864a_s 316604775_7065167190 316695630_d52854ca72_m 316697662_74abc774d8_m 316697665_f4d82f6e51_m 316824203_3c9ca92558_m 316824206_3d783d14cb_m 316861129_ada31fa04f_m316861970_71412abca7_m_1 316862290_f9b1960428_m 317087176_a2aadc871a_m 317087182_47f3346a1a_m 317212139_3cfa988cb0_m 317212140_86f9aad611_m 317212142_2a68a6725e_m 317425787_5c2f4a3f24_m 317431382_1003d1511f_m 317431386_ca9b22f1e7_m 317431389_f034798094_m 317437513_ba90c94d40_m 317437602_f8714068cf_m 317437608_bc623fa368_m 317632726_e5a5875320_m 318056595_a21fbca47a_m 318056598_ae04bb5a03_m 318056600_60b30e3d67_m 318056604_212e164943_m 318056611_ac0a8fac42_m 

    LAST MINUTE HALLOWEEN COSTUMES

    Happy Halloween!

    281338141_71eef88a74 281337445_9419986e43

    T-POST

    Tpost Great idea, can’t wait for my first issue:

    From Cool Hunting: "The world’s first international news magazine on cotton, T-post is a subscription t-shirt service based in Sweden. Silkscreened onto American Apparel tees, subscribers get a new "issue" every six weeks with a design about a current news item on the outside and a short article on the topic printed inside. Many of the stories covered by T-post are outside the radar of the traditional news media—like conversations overheard on the subway or microchips implanted in butterflies—but that is precisely why the editors at T-Post think they’re important. Available worldwide, each edition costs €26 including shipping and back issues are not for sale—"you can’t go trying to buy one like ‘you was with it way back when.’"

    TAGS: Clothing, Fashion, Limited Edition, Sweden, T-Shirts,

    RECAP: “Wild Style” 1982

    Pretty dorky, yet strangely compelling little ditty here: http://ricksilva.net/recap/

    Recapimage_1 Makes me want to see the movie again though…

    “Wild Style” 1982: http://www.amazon.com/Wild-Style-Charlie-Ahearn/dp/B00006L938

    “From Mason’s review: Wild Style was created by independent New York filmmaker Charlie Ahearn with the help of Fred Braithwaite (aka Fab Five Freddy). The first movie to depict the elements of hip hop, it became an underground hit. It featured well-known graffiti writers Lee and Lady Pink as “Zoro” and “Ladybug”, and included performances by Grandmaster Flash (in his own kitchen!),”