Archive for the ‘OAKAZINE EXCLUSIVES’ Category

OHAD MAIMAN

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

The search, and hunger, for a “wonderland” drives us to forever press on for beauty — to build grander worlds and create alternate realities that will allow us to transcend the bounds of our humanity. Wonderland is a thing forever eschewing graspability, but always riding ahead of us – keeping us moving forward in hopes of reaching ultimate bliss. Indeed, it is this search for wonderland that powers New York-via-Israel artist Ohad Maiman’s newest body of work quixotically entitled “2 Klicks South of Wonderland/Snow White and the Teddy Bear Killers.” Depicting a romantic and hazy liminal world where teddy bears, cartoon characters, and fairy tale humans coexist in the same frame, the work materializes the tensions (and all-out wars) between the real and the chimerical in our imaginations. The photographic prints, which are mounted on wooden boxes and covered with epoxy resin, are vivid and imaginative in their juxtapositions — giving philosophical weightiness to childlike visions.  OAKAZINE visited Maiman in his Soho studio — a mystical magician’s lair meets British gentleman’s parlor — and watched as he worked on some of his pieces. “2 Klicks South of Wonderland/Snow White and the Teddy Bear Killers” is currently  showing at Stephen Webster in LA and will later be showing at Richard Young Gallery  in London and Clic Gallery in New York. Interview after the jump.

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LEE GREENE

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

A joint production between Platform Media and EP films

Lee@Wilhelmina from Elizabeth Perrin on Vimeo.

CHRISTOPHER WETMORE

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

A joint production between Platform Media and EP films

Christopher from Re:Quest from Elizabeth Perrin on Vimeo.

JEM GOULDING

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Recently I left a poetry reading feeling agitated. Anxious and overeducated, the poets reading that night had tried in vain to resurrect the spirits of great dead poets instead of creating something of their own. It wasn’t the first time since moving to New York that I left a poetry reading feeling deflated– romanticizing about times past when poets were the outlaw prophets and Rimbaudian punk rockers who ran around downtown New York fizzing over with verse, transfixing everyone in their paths. A time when poetry was composed around the wild, meandering rhythms of the counterculture: stanzas found in impetuous road trips and meter heard as whispers through the walls of darkened motel rooms. When I happened upon the work of Jem Goulding (whose poetry also finds form as experimental cinepoems and photographs) I was thrilled to discover a poet canonizing the spirit of the young, unbridled, and passionate so rawly. “I want to do poetry for the now, make it hot again” Goulding recently divulged over dinner in Williamsburg, her fiery green eyes widened for emphasis. “If this level of intimacy is what it’s going to take to break through the stereotype, then fuck it.” It struck me there and then that not only was I perched opposite a poetry pioneer but, more importantly, I had just discovered poetry’s new sex symbol.

A world-traveller with a free, Laurel Canyon spirit despite her British roots, Goulding’s work is a celebration of post-digital bohemian life, love, and art. In the tradition of female artists like Lenore Kandel, Barbara Rubin, Bette Gordon, Nan Goldin, and Patti Smith, Goulding counterbalances the traditional spectatorial male gaze with an equally powerful feminine one. But feminine agency is just a small piece of Goulding’s ammo,  her true originality laying in her brazen analog meditations on male beauty and sexuality that do not set out to emasculate or dissect. Her photographs and poems about paramours in paradise and surfer boys with angel faces and Mick Jagger haircuts celebrate her subjects as equals. While Goulding’s devotion to analog and warm 60s light resurrects the spirit of a time when poetry flowed more freely, her perspective — powered by an unwavering sense of sexuality parity – is clearly one of the 2010s

Goulding has already made waves in London with her experimental 16 mm cinepoem( based on a written poem of the same name) entitled“The Bone Echo.” Starring British super-muses Alice Dellal, Eliza Cummings, and Josh Beech, “The Bone Echo” features an original soundtrack by The Disappears and Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth, recorded live in Sonic Youth’s Echo Canyon studio.“The Bone Echo” is a visually stunning paean to  animalistic love; an eroticly charged, darkly magical statement that effectively gives poetry back to the wild-hearted. Goulding’s sentiments — unlike many contemporary poets – aren’t couched in esoteric language or pardoxical allusion in order to remain inaccessable. Instead Goulding treats poetry as a glass vessel in which to pour  truth; as an art form that everyone can and should understand and appreciate once again. After the jump Goulding tells OAKAZINE just who she is and what she’s about. — Text by Marlo Kronberg.

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JAMIE COCKERILL

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

A Derbyshire boy doing good, Jamie Cockerill is one of the most exciting young womenswear designers to keep a sartorial eye on at the moment. At 24-years-old, the ex-Central Saint Martins student showed at autumn/winter 2011 fashion week alongside other top alum, including close pal Phoebe English. Taking his inspiration from his surrounds, he isn’t one to boast of whimsical muses or far-flung aspirations of greatness. Indeed, he prefers to describe himself in terms of his scent (L’Ombre Dame L’Eau) and has an entirely logical approach to design. Working with a nude and black palette for his graduate collection, he focused on layering and draping to create bold new, elegant shapes, including a series of must-have winter coats.  Interview after the jump.– Text by Becky Cope. Photo by Josh Shinner.

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ALEXIS PENNEY

Saturday, July 9th, 2011

Self-described “jackee of all trades” Alexis Blair Penney has a voice like an angel, makes music like Crystal Waters, and has a wicked sense of style that’s a mix of Eurythmics-era Annie Lennox, louche ‘n loafered 80s California prep, and 1997 Gwen Stefani. A San Francisco local celebrity known for his weekly anything-goes “High Fantasy” party at drag bar Aunt Charlie’s Lounge, Penney has recently been garnering buzz outside of SF city limits for insanely catchy house tracks culled directly from the CeCe Peniston/Crystal Waters/Kathy Dennis school of dance floor sassitude. Although Penney is more than au fait with the art of debauchery (just follow his Twitter), it’s clear that underneath that Patrick Nagel girl makeup is a softer, more contemplative side; to wit, Penney cites simple pleasures, yoga, and plants as inspirations.  OAKAZINE caught up with Penney when he played PS1 with SSION in New York — getting so attached that we followed him all the way back to San Francisco where he gave us a tour of his hood. After the jump we discuss a typical day in the life, 90s house, and showbiz. — Photos by Ken Baldwin

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ICON: DEBORAH TURBEVILLE

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

 

The marriage of fashion and photography seems ubiquitous in our era of street style blogs, personal style websites and digital fashion publications. What had existed as two separate spheres of society has now become an essential component of both industries. When Deborah Turbeville began shooting images after working as a fashion editor at Harper’s Bazaar and Mademoiselle, neither journalism nor art nor fashion knew just quite what to do with her. At age twenty she was working for designer Claire McCardell, quickly advancing to the mastheads of the best publications of her time. It was only after seminars with Richard Avedon and Marvin Israel that she leapt into the world of photography that encompassed everything she knew– fashion, people and the transformative power of light.

Deborah Turbeville continues to produce work even as the genre she pioneered has become profoundly saturated. In 2002, she traveled to the Baltic School of Photography to fulfill a Fulbright grant teaching a seminar on her craft. She later taught at St. Petersburg’s Smolney institute and completed her book, Past Imperfect. A reflection on  her body of work from 1974 to the late 1990′s, Turbeville gave the world a brief look into her inspiration and rich history. Unknown models peer out from fashion shoot outtakes, strangers in European cities look out and past the camera, and vignettes show clearly that light and intensity are the soul of her work. Even as fashion photographers become a dime a dozen and anyone with a point-and-shoot can throw together a photo spread, Turbeville remains an important figure in the craft she pioneered. She now divides her time between New York, St. Petersburg and Mexico; showing in galleries and being published often in L’uomo Vogue, Casa Vogue and Italian Vogue. — Text by Kelsey Kreiling

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CHRISTIAN L’ENFANT ROI

Saturday, June 18th, 2011

Filled with the youthful exuberance of a child king and the austerity of a man born to lead, Christian Deslauriers has become a bright star in the world of menswear design. This Montreal native has built a reputation on dark variations of menswear staples- evoking the idea of both a young man in grown man’s clothes and an older man reaching for youth. As a designer, he values wit and eloquence above all which perfectly explains his knitwear, his graphic prints, his jumpsuits and his undersized hats. His path to Christian L’enfant Roi was swift- after completing his fashion design degree at College LaSalle, he joined the Andy the Ahn team. He eventually became the second in command to one of Canada’s foremost womenswear designers and, after refining his skills, launched his own collection in October 2010. We spoke to Deslauriers about his future travels, his best advice and just what it was like being born on the first star to the left.

Read our full interview with Christian Deslauriers after the jump. -Kelsey Kreiling

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NICHOLAS GOTTLUND

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

To say that Nicholas Gottlund’s work is multifaceted is a bit of an understatement. From one angle we see a publisher of artist books and limited-edition multiples; from another we see a photographer of beautiful, quiet images of nature and still objects; and from yet another vantage point we see a talented printmaker and dextrous bookbinder. He writes too. His upcoming exhibitions include a group show in Amsterdam and a solo of his photography at the Baltimore Contemporary Museum. Many of his photographs capture images of nature, or of objects and moments that usually go by unnoticed. A close up of yellow flowers becomes almost abstract, and his nature images in particular possess a serene, meditative quality that is difficult to ignore. His black and white images also have a distinct aesthetic that draws our attention to the photograph itself; one of his first books, Wild Prayer, presents an investigation of the bleaching effects of light on photographs over time, and was printed on newsprint paper.

Located in rural Pennsylvania, Gottlund’s publishing house, Gottlund Verlag, was founded in 2007, and specializes in artbooks by contemporary artists who work in the medium of photography. Gottlund Verlag‘s publications rely on very traditional methods of by-hand bookbinding, which comes as little surprise given his family history in publishing (six generations – no big deal), but the content and collaborative nature of each book places it in the vanguard of progressive publishing. Indeed, Gottlund’s work – in all of its manifestations – reflects an innovative and contemporary dialogue that recognizes the plurality of art today. His is an art form that combines many mediums and artistic practices that are both traditional and progressive, one-of-a-kind and democratic – a Gottlund Verlag publication is both a collection of photographs as well as a work of art unto itself.

In the short documentary The Library, author Duncan Fallowell explains the importance of the physical book in an age dominated by digital texts: “…one does need grounding in the physical world … a book is a physical object too, and writing to me is a physical act. It’s a sculptural act as well as an intellectual act – the two come together.” The two come together in Gottlund’s publishing work as well. Here we find an artist whose craft combines the sculptural and the intellectual into something physical, and beautiful. — Text by Eugenie Dalland. Interview after the jump.

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SCOTT LEWIS

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

With the exception of a stray photograph or a touches of beige within a painted landscape, Vancouver-based artist Scott Lewis rarely dabbles in color. That’s not to say that his work lacks vitality in any sense - Lewis’ ink drawings are moody, dizzyingly elaborate representations of mountaintop vistas, while his photography captures an uneasy yet striking relationship between nature and urban spaces. Each piece demands more than just a passing glance, lest you miss the grotesque visage lurking behind a wire fence or the buffalo that seems to grow out of an idyllic hilltop scene. Oakazine took a moment to talk to the man behind these stark odes to nature about his influences, abbreviated color palette, and his former career as a record company exec. Interview after the jump.– Text by Roxanne Fequiere.

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