Sunday, January 27, 2013

Kimbra


Directed by Guy Franklin. 

Kimbra's debut album VOWS is out now in the US, CA, Australia, and New Zealand. 

An oldie but a goodie.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Egoïste No.15


 Paolo Roversi photographed Russian model Natalia Vodianova for a spread in the magazine: Egoïste No.15.  After looking through his other works I've decided that this photographer is one of the classiest, most talented photographers I've seen yet.  His photos tell a story and have a mood to them that most photographs nowadays do not.  His Italian origins probably help this fact quite a bit.  
Check out his website -- http://www.paoloroversi.com/














Thursday, December 20, 2012

Piercing Blue


"The Blue Pond is located in the left bank of the River Bieigawa, southeast of the town of Biei in Hokkaido, Japan, about 2.5 km northwest from the Platinum hot springs at the foot of Mt. Tokachi. The pond gets its name from the unnaturally bright blue hue of its water. With tree stumps protruding from the surface of the water, not unlike Lake Kaindy, the Blue Pond has an ethereal and enchanting appearance."




Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Frozen Still


 

Shinichi Maruyama is a Japanese artist who was born in Nagano.  After studying in Chiba he moved to New York where he continued his "Water Sculpting" career.  These sets of photos I've decided to display come from two of his lines -- Water Sculpture and Kusho.  
 
Enjoy these unbelievably perfectly timed photographs of water being alternated and captured in mid-air.  Maruyama describes his work in the following passages which can be found on his website in their entirety.  PLEASE watch the video at the end -- it's truly phenomenal.                                                 
 
 
Water Sculpture (The clear water photos)

I am fascinated by the fragility and incompleteness thatexists with all things beautiful.
I throw water into the air, and in mid-flight it changesshape constantly, being pulled by gravity and burstingwith surface tension.In each moment, the water becomes a beautiful figure which
can be defined as a “part man-made and part natural” sculpture.

Kusho (The black and white water photos)

As a young student, I often wrote Chinese characters in sumi ink. I loved the nervous, precarious feeling of sitting before an empty white page, the moment just before my brush touched the paper.
Once your brush touches paper, you must finish the character, you have one chance. You must commit your full attention and being to each stroke. Liquids, like ink, are elusive by nature. As sumi ink finds its own path through the paper grain, liquid finds its unique path as it moves through air.
Remembering those childhood moments, of ink and empty page, I fashioned a large “brush” and bucket of ink. Each stroke is unique, ephemeral. I can never copy or recreate them. 
“a decisive moment”, [that] I can’t fully understand... until I look at 
these captured afterimages, these paintings in the sky.







Monday, December 17, 2012

David Anjelo


                  I just stumbled onto these beautiful acrylic paintings by David Agenjo (via ModernMet where I get most of my blog-post ideas from!!!) who is a self-taught artist born in Madrid but living and working in London. He has a number of prints and several original works available over on Saatchi Online.  How gorgeous are these?  The color scheme, the movement, the flow, the way the paint is piled on top of each other rather than being completely blended.