Friday, August 29, 2008

iPhone Girl

"The iPhone Girl, a factory worker at Foxconn in Taiwan putting together Apple iPhones, had her photograph embedded on a new iPhone that was discovered by a UK-iPhone owner who upon loading up iTunes on the new phone, found the girl smiling back at him from the factory. She seems happy enough. Her identity remained a mystery for a week, after the UK user posted it on a MacForum list. Slowly interest in the cute Chinese girl spread across the net and has launched a new career for the mystery girl.
She has just signed a contract with Steven Spielberg for a feature-length film about her life making iPhones. In addition to the multi-million dollar contract, proposals for marriage have poured in to the Foxconn Factory, with suitors from as far as Sante Fe, New Mexico, have lined up with flowers and candy. While asked to be John McCain's running mate, iPhone Girl declined. Last week she was seen partying with Obama Girl in Denver, site of the DNC Convention.. AP story here.

Friday, August 22, 2008

OBAMA CAMPAIGN POSTER
























[CLICK TO ENLARGE & PRINT]
MORE ART CLICK: MATTHEW ROSE

This pretty much says it all, don't you think? Andrew Sullivan at The Atlantic also posted this poster.

Feel free to send it to a friend, blog it, post it, print out a few hundred copies at your local photocopy place (especially if you're in Denver or Minneapolis.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Guilty Pleasures: James Startt

"Je parle donc je suis," exposition de photographe James Startt, et livre publié par l'artiste et notre affilié, Polyflash/Paris, fait connaissance de la puissance de message et mode. Le livre, une edition limitée est offert for 20 euros. Contactez Startt direct pour une copie signée. [English readers, click here for a review in The Paris Voice.]

Le photographe, connu pour ses livres sur Le Tour de France et son dernier "Uniforms," explique sa demarche et l'historique de l'expo chez Agathe Gaillard:

Après plus de huit ans et demi, je me suis trouvé dans une impasse (comme le film d’un certain réalisateur italien). Après être resté tout ce temps focalisé sur un premier travail documentaire «Uniforme(s)» (les Editions du Seuil 2002 et l’expo photo de même année pendant le mois de la photo chez Agathe Gaillard) sans penser au lendemain, je me suis trouvé au bord d'un vide créatif effrayant, mais à la juste mesure, après tout, des efforts laissés derrière moi.

Que faire? Je n'en savais absolument rien, il ne me restait qu'un mot en perspective: recommencer. Regarder, viser (ou pas), déclencher, libre et sans but, en quelque sorte. Sans planning et sans cahier des charges. Plus encore: sans thème directeur.

Je photographiais alors tout ce que j'aimais de façon pulsionnelle et sans discrimination d'aucune sorte. Le matériel lui-même était, sinon indifférent, du moins improvisé - je prenais ce qui me tombait alors sous la main au gré des circonstances. Je dois dire que j'ai longtemps poursuivi la pureté des grands formats (spécialement du 6x6): j'ai donc mis un certain temps à accepter que ces formats n'était pas conciliables avec ma façon impromptue et flashée d’attaquer la photographie.

Pendant des mois j'ai expérimenté le montage d'un flash sur mon vieux Mamiya, avant de voir pousser les fruits de ce travail. C'était au soir d'un week-end londonien, où j'avais vu une fille "néo-gothique" superbement affublée d'un tee-shirt "Save the planet, Kill Yourself", que le déclic m'est venu. Visionnant le résultat de mes planches, j'était sur que j'avais trouvé mon prochain sujet.

J'avais beaucoup usé du format rectangulaire, en cherchant toujours à remplir le cadre, quitte à incliner le boîtier. Le format carré me semblait alors restrictif.

Ce projet m'a réconcilié avec le déconcertant équilibre du format carré, le plus apte à centrer l'attention sur les messages arborés par les porteurs de tee-shirts, à concentrer mon regard sur les leurs, sur leur messages ironiques, tour à tour hédoniste ou absent, mais toujours plein de sens, d'humeur au sens le plus physique et donc le plus littéral du terme.

Sur l'exposition, critique d'art, Christophe Donner, a écrit:

Lorsque James Startt le rencontre, son sujet a fait la moitié du chemin qui mène à la photo. Il a jailli de la masse, il s’en est détaché pour se présenter à celui qui le guettait, mais avant ça, depuis ce matin il est là dans sa tête à se demander ce qu’il va mettre, ce qu’il va dire. La journée du manifestant sera perdue s’il ne rencontre pas le regard de l’autorité, celle qui a fait l’autre moitié du chemin vers l’instant photographique. Ce désir d’être pris, de s’offrir, là, dans la rue, il est cousin de l’excitation de dire, plus que de la nécessité. Dire est une affaire sensuelle, tactile, la parole n’est plus rien sans le support, le tissu a influencé la revendication qui ne tiendrait pas sur une pancarte et qui ne sera jamais crié, et surtout : jamais reprise par quelqu’un d’autre. En donnant à la phrase la possibilité de mouler d’énormes nichons, de dévoiler grossesses et grosseurs, le coton s’impose comme une stèle littéraire d’un genre nouveau.
Fashion writing, mais pas que ça. Body art, mais au soleil, car James Startt en appelle toujours à cette forme particulière de lumière qui vient frapper le sujet et l’objectif, un peu, plus ou moins selon la violence qu’il retient de l’instant. C’est toujours le reflet du soleil qui unit le photographe à ses modèles, il joue de son inopportunité comme avec un feu qui pourrait tout brûler. Il prend le risque et donne à voir ce risque comme l’essence du mouvement. Chez les cyclistes, ce qu’il attrape, c’est l’éclat solaire de la souffrance, et là, dans ce débraillé social, le long de la paresse urbaine des marcheurs endimanchés, c’est aussi l’éclat d’intelligence au milieu du désastre en liesse. Quand on pense aux modèles de William Klein, en voyant ceux de Startt, on est frappé par l’inconscience des premiers, et la sapience des autres : l’écriture a tout changé. Les premiers criaient, ceux-ci sont muets, comme si, entre temps, on avait abandonné au tissu, à la matière, à la manufacture et à l’actualité, abandonné l’oralité de nos plaintes. Reste cependant, chez nos anciens comme chez nous, le même bonheur d’être reconnu dans la foule.

Le livre, 80+ pages, en couleur, est disponible direct du photographe (et signé): Contactez Startt direct pour votre copie.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Friday, August 1, 2008

5000 Years of Chairs in 5 Minutes



Nick Currie, NY Times Berlin Design Correspondent on Chairs.

Ad Reinhardt : 1955




Ad Reinhardt in his New York studio in 1955.

The show, "Imageless," at the Guggenheim Museum starts with a story about a gift to the museum of one of Reinhardt’s “Black Paintings.” The black paintings are delicate: the mere touch of a finger leaves a permanent imprint. Their fragility contributed to them being perceived, and valued, as pure things in a corrupted world. From an article by Holland Cotter in the New York Times.

Photo: Photograph by Walter Rosenblum. Thomas Hess papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The Beatles Arrive in New York 1964


Hey hey it's The Beatles! John, Paul, George and Ringo arrive in JFK Airport in New York, in 1964, the first stop in their US tour. Photo: The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Mittwoch, Haushalten & Whirlaway - 3 New Prints By Matthew Rose For Keep Calm Gallery

Lalande Digital Press is happy to be working with Keep Calm Gallery, the hip-online gallery for fine art prints in the UK. The newest works from Matthew Rose are from his A KICK IN THE KUNST series, exhibited at Galerie Rossella Junck Berlin.

Mittwoch, 2007, is German for "Wednesday," (literally middle of the week) and artist Matthew Rose's puppet-master/puppet collage. First exhibited in Berlin at Galerie Rossella Junck, Mittwoch (Limited signed and numbered edition of 21) plays with both silhouette and shadow, each exhibiting a presence but Mittwoch is oddly absent an actual protagonist. The artist says this is something of a self-portrait, and he is somewhere in the gap of here and there.

Haushalten is German for "keeping house," and in this piece, the house is not what it seems to be: constructed of 1950s advertising, the woman of the house shows off her newest gadget, a giant thingamajig, or if you like, a...dohickey, gizmo, gismo, or a thingamabob – on an ancient Roman pedestal. The surreal qualities of this good housekeeping moment – the blue sky blows through the gadget – points to terribly sunny days ahead from America's recent past. Haushalten, was produced in an edition of 19, is signed and number; it is also part of the A Kick in the Kunst series exhibited in Berlin at Galerie Rossella Junck.

Whirlaway, 2007, is one of the more complex of Matthew Rose's collage works from the A Kick in the Kunst series. The name, a feature from a mid-century Oldsmobile, purports a strange and perhaps violent future as a man hacks away at a tree. In the panel opposite, a girl and her shadow climb in a nether-space, a plate of prunes and cereal functioning as her head. The artist, who grew up in the American suburbs, reiterates the hidden and bizarre drama of the American middle-class dream. Whirlaway is produced in a limited edition of 12, each signed and numbered on high quality cotton paper.

Interested in these prints? Get in contact with Haley and Lucas at Keep Calm Gallery. Interested in making your own prints? Get in touch with Burning Boy Press Paris. 

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Berlin Wall



Peter Leibing is a German photographer known for his 1961 photographs of escaping East German border guard, Conrad Schumann jumping a barbed wire fence during construction of the Berlin Wall.

On 15 August 1961 Leibing, working for the Hamburg picture agency Contiepress, had been tipped by police that an East German border guard might escape the Berlin Wall, then in its third day of construction.[1] At that stage of construction, the Berlin Wall was only a low barbed-wire fence. As people on the Western side shouted Komm rüber! ("come over"), Leibing captured a photograph of Schumann jumping a barbed wire fence and making his escape. The photo became a well-known image of the Cold War and won the Overseas Press Club Best Photograph award for 1961.[2]

The Berlin Wall




Matthew Rose, Installation View, A KICK IN THE KUNST, Galerie Rossella Junck, Augustrasse 28 Berlin. Through 5 September 2008.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

MISTER ROSE'S ABC: LIVE!



MISTER ROSE reads MISTER ROSE'S ABC BOOK: A LITTLE BOOK FOR LITTLE PEOPLE. Get your own copy, only 10 euros, plus postage. READ THE INSIDE STORY OF MISTER ROSE'S ABC BOOK.

TO PURCHASE A SIGNED COPY OF MISTER ROSE'S ABC, or heck, several copies, E-MAIL : MISTER ROSE'S ABC. [If mail link is not working, e-mail : mistahrose at yahoo dot com].

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

La Coupole Paris



An early photograph of LA COUPOLE at 102, Boulevard Montparnasse, Paris. Thanks to Trussel.com.

Anonyme Zeichner


Blütenweiss is an association headed by the wonderful Berlin artist, Anke Becker. Several times a year, Anke puts on one of the most popular and interesting exhibitions to be held anywhere in Europe, Anonyme Zeichner, or Anonymous Drawings. The concept is simple: Artists send in drawings that are roughly A3-sized, unsigned (except on the back) and then offered for sale for 150 euros. The Anonymous Drawings exhibitions have been wildly successful with nearly 1000 entries and thousands of visitors and sales.

The next Anonyme Zeichner exhibition takes place this weekend, 4 July - 6 July at Galerie in der Stadtscheune, Sackstrasse 4, 21762 Otterndorf in Germany. Opening: July 4th, 2008 / 7pm. Hours: Saturday & Sunday, 11am - 8pm. The works are from the archive and selected by Anke.

Further information about the show and previous exhibitions click here.

See the Otterndorf Hadler Haus site, here.

Lalande Digital Press Paris loves art...of all flavors, and we're happy to have Anke Becker and Blütenweiss as friends. Interested in hosting an Anonymous Drawing exhibition in your city? Paris? London? Barcelona? Get in touch.

Berlin: A KICK IN THE KUNST



Matthew Rose, Installation view, A KICK IN THE KUNST, Galerie Rossella Junck, Augustrasse 28 Berlin. Exhibition runs through the end of August 2008.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Paris By Night



Like Paris by night? Well, Paris by night looks much better in this astonishing 360 degree full screen panorama: PARIS BY NIGHT. See more of Arnaud Frich's amazing photography.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Where The Hell Is Matt? Dancing!



Quite amazing little round the world tour of Matt...dancing. If we could only dance our way out of this world like Matt, we'd find our way a little more a part of it. Bravo!