Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Naturally 7 beatboxes a whole band

One-of-a-kind R&B group Naturally 7 beatboxes an orchestra's worth of instruments to groove through their smooth single, "Fly Baby."



Sharela

The Tabloids’ Favorite Females Embroidered


Alicia Ross
Reappropriation of cross-stitching through a series of abstracted studies of female celebrities, among them Octomom, Miley Cyrus, and Lady Gaga.

Article:
http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2010/10/alicia_ross.html#

Sharela

Pilobolus perform "Symbiosis"


"Your beliefs in the nature of strength, endurance and gravity will not hold. In fact, they will be defied. And every time you think, 'Whoa, how the hell did they do that?' they will take it further."
Dance InsiderSharela Bonfield

FOOODDDYUMMY!

http://rackkandruin.blogspot.com/2010/11/before-there-was-gaga.html


<3 u all
.....jonathan

Free Fabric

Please note: We will meet Wednesday, Dec 1 at 1:00 in the Station Parking Lot for the fabric pick-up from Bowlings Upholstery. Unloading around 2:30.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Robyn - Swedish singer



The Making of Robyn's 'Indestructible' Music Video with EXTRA FOOTAGE from Lucy McRae on Vimeo.



This 'Making Of' video showcases a project that started over two years ago generating dynamic textiles made from liquid, air and vapor. 1.2 kilometres of transparent plumbing tubing was knitted with fishing wire to skin Robyn's body. 40 litres of glycerol pumps through over a kilometre of tube, powered by drill pumps that connect to valves releasing air intermittently between the liquid. Gradient colors pulse through the tubes at different speeds, the effect is a living, breathing dynamic skin that traverses the landscape of the body.

CHECK OUT her new song!! http://www.robyn.com/killingme/

Monday, November 22, 2010

Raise Your Glass by Pink



Pink is a hippie vegan lefty. Aside from that, I can't get over that scene where the women were hooked on tubes to feed the baby cow.

Skin Machine

Peristaltic Skin Machine from Lucy McRae on Vimeo.


February 2010 A collaboration with digital fabricator Mike Pelletier, Peristaltic Skin Machine is an automated machine that explores dynamic, liquid skins that traverse the body made with liquid and air. The machine is the first sample of an on-going exploration selected for Dutch exhibition TransNatural exploring nature and technology

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Iceland, Eyjafjallajökull - May 1st and 2nd, 2010

Iceland, Eyjafjallajökull - May 1st and 2nd, 2010 from Sean Stiegemeier on Vimeo.



This is so freaken BEAUTIFUL.. it's kind of exactly what I wanted for the preview video clip before my collection...

Here is what he used to make it happen: Motion Time Lapse Dolly. The beta experimental rig was used to shoot the bideo of the Volcano in Iceland.


-Nolla

Dark Age

I ran across this from Marie Claire Turkey. I've never known Marie Claire to be the most "fashion forward" but this images are quite beautiful and I thought they might pertain to Jacob's interests in particular. If I spoke Turkish I would translate the article for you but... no such luck so here's some pretty to look at:

http://www.mcdergi.com/haberler/detay/44503/Dark-Age

-Sarah

Asher Levine

Here's another example of fashion combined with video art. Asher Levine's spring/summer 2011 collection wasn't that interesting to me until I went to the "video" section of his website. This video creates an interesting narrative around his garments.


Asher Levine Spring/Summer 2011 from Asher Levine on Vimeo.

http://www.asherlevine.com/


-Rachel

Gareth Pugh S/S 2011

It may be old news, but I just saw this video by Ruth Hogben for Gareth Pugh's spring/summer 2011 collection. It's an interesting display of garments that shows movement and silhouette in more ways than a traditional runway show. Enjoy!

Gareth Pugh S/S 2011 Collection - Director: Ruth Hogben from SHOWstudio on Vimeo.


-Rachel

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Words

Words is an amazing visual poem by Everynone. It opens you to alternative ways of thinking and cognative justification and connections.


WORDS from Everynone on Vimeo.



-Jacob

Dia de los Muertos

LA Weekly has some amazing photos from Day of the Dead in Hollywood









more at LA Weekly
Via Cakehead Loves Evil

-Jacob

Olek

Olek is a Polish-born artist who is a crochet fiend. She crochets everything in reach and does costumes, installations and sculpture




-Jacob

Monday, November 15, 2010

Unisex, Transformable Fashion

I thought Kyle especially might find this designer interesting. Sorry about the caps, I took this off his website:

I STARTED IMAGINING CLOTHES THE SAME WAY I STARTED CREATING IMAGES: WITH A SENSE OF CURIOSITY AND INNOCENCE DRIVEN BY MY NO-BACKGROUND BACKGROUND. NO SCHOOL. NO TEACHERS. NO TELLY. NO BOUNDARIES. NO FORMATTING. I LIKE THE IDEA OF A WORLD THAT WE COULD LIVE AND SHAPE BY OURSELVES, ONLY BY OBSERVING. EACH OUR OWN. MY CLOTHES HAVE ERUPTED FROM THIS WORLD OF MINE. THEY ARE ASEXUAL, ASEASONAL, THEY COME FROM NO PLACE, NO TIME, NO TRADITION, YET THEY COULD BE HOME ANYWHERE, ANYTIME. THEY EXUDE A SENSE OF DISCREET CHIC, THE ESSENCE OF TIMELESS STYLE, DRAWN ON A MONOCHROMATIC AND GRAPHICAL CANVAS. PALETTE OF BLACKS, TOUCHES OF PURE WHITES AND INTENSE GRAYS. SOPHISTICATED UNISEX MODERN CLASSICS FOR ANTI-CONFORMIST INDIVIDUALS." - Rad Hourani

Rad Hourani reinvents fashion by transcending its conventions, creating a unisex luxury that is changing women’s and men’s wardrobes since he launched his namesake label in 2007 in Paris. Like all truly great visionnaires, Hourani not only depicts fashion, he defines it, and gives it cultural resonance. Gender-agnosticism is the driving conceptual direction in Rad Hourani's work, and growing up and living in such different parts of the world has certainly contributed to Hourani’s rather holistic design approach: self-tought and driven by a passion for modernity, Hourani creates a luxurious yet affordable lifestyle that has rid itself of any conventional restrictions : no gender, no season, no rules, epitomising the values of freedom and unisex elegance.

see the clothes in context here

-Sarah

Great Costumes, Good storyline



-Sarah

Sandra Backlund



Sandra Backlund's new collection is really playing with form and construction. I think it would be interesting to many people in the class (especially Nolla!)

Check out her website for more: Sandra Backlund

-Rachel

Saturday, November 13, 2010

The Gilded Lily

At this point in the semester when everything is happening at once and sometimes nothing seems to go quite right I feel like poor Claudette Colbert in 'The Gilded Lily'. It's a great performance from 1935.


-Sarah

The Victoria's Secret Fashion Show

I know it's incredibly commercial and debatably mysoginistic but you have to admit that Victoria's Secret has the talent (in terms of employees) and budget to put on a pretty ridiculous and fabulous show. Unfortunately, I can't find who does the actual costume design and construction. Edit: At least one of the costumers is Martin Izquierdo. I'm sure there's a whole team though.

A little gay pride:
A little Hussein Chalayan reference:
A little cultural insensitivity:
Jacob, that head piece reminds me of someone:
Holy understructure:

You just guess who would make the lingerie post.
-Sarah

Friday, November 12, 2010

Hologram Superstar

Crypton Future Media in Japan (of course) has launched a (sure to be sold out) tour featuring Holographic singing sensation Hatsune Miku, backed by a live band. The singing isn't even prerecorded, they are using Yamaha's Vocaloid software which allows for synthesized singing. The lines between reality and the digital world are becoming further blurred and callopsing in upon itself.



There is a brief article Here
And you can see more of the concert and other hologram singers Here

-Jacob

Thursday, November 11, 2010

China Fashion Week

Tyre-Toy-Fashion Zhang Wei


NE-Tiger Haute Couture


Miidii Liu Xing


Dayiyan

Lots of interesting things happening at China Fashion Week.

Plant Growing Time Lapse

Some amazing plant growing time lapse videos












via - Boing Boing

-Jacob

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Rashaad Newsome

SHADE COMPOSITIONS 2009 from RASHAAD NEWSOME on Vimeo.


I saw this artist at school 33 in the spring and Peter refreshed my memory of him. In this piece Rashaad Newsome conducts an african american female acapella group which perform stereotypical roles of african american women in today's society.

here's his website: http://rashaadnewsome.com/



Sharela

Pseudomorphs


Artist Anouk Wipprecht is interested in creating garments which redesign themselves and considers her work a collaboration with technology. In this dress she has dress made out of felt and a neck piece which drips ink and leaves the resulting stains to chance.






More info here & here

-Jacob

The History of the Fashion Show

You recently finished reading Ginger Gregg Duggan's article "The Greatest Show on Earth" about the contemporary fashion show. tonight, we will look at some images and video clips related to the history and development of the fashion show over the course of the last century.


Early footage of a Charity Fashion Parade from 1923:


THE GRAND PARADE

The 'leg shows', revues and chorus girl stage productions from the early part of the century had a big impact on the format and look of the fashion show. 








Here we see the Ziegfield walk used by the models descending the stairway in this 1929 Fashion Show:



The collision of mechanical production, fantasy and wish fulfillment prevalent in films and stage productions of the time, and the 'leg girls' dance numbers of the 1920s and 30s are apparent here in this sequence from the film The Fashions of 1934, choreographed by Busby Berkeley: 


and this sequence from the Gold Diggers of 1935:



The mash-up of entertainment, dance and fashion was also evident in the runway shows of Mary Quant, that resemble parties.

MARY QUANT FASHIONS IN AUSTRALIA.


A similar format is evident in this London Fashion show from 1966:
ALL THE GEAR CARNABY STYLE



It is fascinating to think about what elements of the fashion show remain constant, and define it as a performance format distinct from other genres.



In the 1980s and 90s, music video and celebrity culture, including the rise of the "supermodel", affected the format of the fashion show, and the other way around.







A video montage of iconic moments from Alexander McQueen shows certainly illustrates the evolution of the fashion show into an event that some might dismiss as the ultimate commercial spectacle, while others hail it as the medium's transcendence of the commercial to the realm of theater and performance.
Alexander McQueen: Iconic Moments from Jean Hürxkens on Vimeo.


We will also be dicsussing possible venues for the show tonight. Thinking about the format of various shows and their use of space will be part of this discussion. Here are a few videos to serve as fodder:
Alexander McQUeen's "Deliverance" (2004)
Alexander McQueen's "It's Only a Game" (2005)
Alexander McQueen's "Supercalifragilistic" (2002)
Alexander McQueen's "Please Sur" (2007)
Alexander McQueen's "Scanners" (2003)

Irenebriation

An excellent fashion/art blog worth visiting: http://irenebrination.typepad.com 


Mint Designs’ Hokuto Katsui and Nao Yagi denim-based collection.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Samuel Barsky, Sweater Artist

Chanukah (2001)

Sarah Konigsburg, a recent graduate of the MICA Fiber department organized an exhibition of the work of Samuel Barsky, a visionary knitter from Pikesville, a suburb of Baltimore. I had the great fortune to meet the artist at the opening last Thursday. I was deeply touched by his sincerity and enthusiasm and willingness to talk about his work. Photos of his sweaters, and the story of how he got started with knitting, are available on his website: http://colorknit.webs.com/aboutme.htm.  The sweaters are more amazing if you see them in person - good thing they are on display for the next month at Shapiro's cafe on Preston Street, right next to the OK Natural food store. I HIGHLY encourage you to visit!

Man on the Moon (2002)
London Bridge II (2002)

Bad Things that Could Happen

Watch it, its worth it. Shows how you can put on a show or tell a narrative with performers but without traditional costumes or garments, plus just a lot of fun.

Bad Things That Could Happen from This Is It on Vimeo.



-Jacob

Saturday, November 6, 2010

SCIENCE!

LIFE magazine has their photo archives online and this is from a collection of vintage laboratory photos dating back to the 50s. They are an amazing source of inspiration and relevant to a few people in class.










Rest of the photos and more here : LIFE in the Laboratory
-Jacob



Thursday, November 4, 2010

Hairy Masks

A 1978 catalogue page featuring hairy masks



By means of Boing Boing

-Jacob

The Cirrate Octopus

A moment of insperation:



-Jacob

Nike Self Lacing Shoes

Nike has filed a patent of self lacing shoes exactly like those from Back to the Future II




The Nike Patent


The Back to the Future Shoe, which incidently is on sale
-Jacob

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Funky Forest

Very much one of the oddest films ever made, Funky Forest is a serious of short stories which are connected and vaguely about aliens and as the movie progress the narrative and world begin to collapse in upon itself




-Jacob

Eco-Fashion at FIT

Hello folks!
I wanted to post a few websites and images based on the exhibitions we saw at FIT yesterday, since I found them to be very inspiring and relevant to our class. Ginny - since you were unable to join us, I hope these will be of interest and inspiration to you, too. 

Eco-Fashion

Alabama Chanin Natalie "Alabama" Chanin does good work(s). She compiles oral histories of Southern textile workers, salvages old quilts, and is striving to make her business zero-waste. All of the stitchers who create Chanin's (quite literally) homespun garments work from their own houses and live within an hour-and-a-half radius of her family and business base of Florence, Alabama. And they use organic materials grown and produced in the good ole U.S. of A.—a fact proudly announced on the Alabama Chanin label. (from Style Magazine website)






His American Gothic collection (2009) was inspired by the 1930 Grant Wood painting and is a modern interpretation of what he calls "Dust Cowl creativity". Presented at the Desmond Tutu Center in Chelsea, the ORGANIC collection for Spring/Summer 2009 was not only an homage to the iconic painting by Grant Wood, but a reverse-the-consumption-trend art happening with models that stood fast and stood still. The entire collection was presented in diorama-like setting with fresh-faced, freckled youth exuding both the “hope” and the promise of good clean organics. (www.inhabitent.com) ”People don’t think about the ‘30s as an optimistic time,” the designer acknowledged. “But it’s when the chips are down that you really see the American character. Hope is on our DNA. We beat the Dust Bowl, we beat back the Great Depression, and today, facing challenges that seem as vast, if not vaster, what I see all around me are people working to create something new. They’re rebooting the system,” he continued, “and it’s that kind of crazy resourcefulness I want to celebrate.”

A few quotes I came across in the show:
"I really don't want to  wear clothes made from someone else's despair." - Ali Hewson, founder of EDUN


People now "want things that are made well, that are made in a conscious way, that have long-term values, that are beautiful." - Julie Gilhart, fashion director for Barneys, NY.






Mountain Artisans


Very little information can be found on this group of women  of West Virginia who formed a quilting cooperative and caught the attention of the fashion and decorating world. (They won a prestigious fashion award in 1972 and sold their wares in NY boutiques.) In the photo below, Sharon Rockefeller, then the first lady of West Virginia and a supporter of the Mountain Artisans, wears the patchwork "hostess" skirt that she helped to popularize.