recent works from Noa Azoulay-Sclater

I have, like, the most talented friends. That’s right- bragging rights mandatory- I’m lucky.

One of these pirate treasures is Miss Noa Azoulay-Sclater of Feather Love Photography. If you’ve been tuned into my collective ramblings for some time you’ve probably heard me praise her drop-dead-gorgeous photo works and in turn are probably nauseated by my public infatuation.

I just had to post some of her most recent buzz-worthy imagery, including promotional photos for the amazing Psychedelic band Astra (Um, how sexy are those cobalt blue tones and light beams? Be-still, my heart!)

Aside from her photography, which she’s predominately known for, she has successfully continued to make my brains explode in an 80′s horror fashion with her VIDEO projects. During the course of our long-distance sisterly love, she’s told me the stressful woes about ripping out her hair and kicking her own ass while assembling a short film she’s worked on for years. I’d be like, “Shut up and finish the thing already!” (Albeit for purely selfish reasons because I wanted to watch it, but also because I knew her cinematic eye would create something so special that would bring more opportunities her way.) I just about exploded into confetti pieces when she had THE NERVE to ask me if I wanted to watch the video because she finally completed it and posted it online. It’s kind of a delicate thing when your friends ask you to experience their creations; it’s sensitive. SURPRISE-SUR-FUCKIN’-PRISE, her film The Alchemical Poisoning of Magus Sherwood is a big lit-bomb of euphoria and I was obsessed from the first moment on.

She also made a video of musicians Tim and Nicki Bluhm (whom I’d never heard before and am now also drooling after) which has been getting a ton of hits and hype: I LOVE THE SONG!

Anyway blahblahblah, looksie looksie!





The Alchemical Poisoning Of Magus Sherwood from Noa Azoulay-Sclater on Vimeo.

brice bischoff: bronson caves

Artist Statement:

“The Bronson Caves are located in Los Angeles’ Griffith Park and are famous as a stage set to countless motion pictures and television shows. The caves are actually man made and were originally a rock quarry during the early 1900s used to lay streets for an expanding Los Angeles. A hundred years of filmmaking has occurred at the caves imaging events from explosions and gun fights to the discovery of cave paintings. Reflecting on this history, the caves are documented on various formats and film stocks over time as an unchanging landscape amidst a chaotic specter of fictional realities.

In the series of photographs titled Bronson Caves, the caves served as a stage set yet again. I performed actions for the camera with massive sheets of colored paper. Since a long-exposure photograph was produced rather than a motion picture, the papers were recorded as voluminous, glowing colors. The materiality of the rainbowed forms, emerging from the mouth of the cave, dancing about the canyon, and bubbling up from the ground, are based solely in the photographic process, and can only be experienced when viewing the final photographic prints. If a visitor to the caves were to accidently stumble upon my performance they would only see a mass of crumbled colored paper draped awkwardly over a man moving/dancing to a camera positioned on a tripod. The goal of these performances was to create sculptural, photographic objects that interacted with the history and architecture of the caves.

The colored paper used during the production of the cave photographs was transformed, weathered, stained, and torn after months of constant use. Deciding to isolate the medium, the props of the action, a studio setting with a pedestal was used to photograph the various scraps of paper. The format of these photographs mimics the traditional way of documenting art objects. However, a photographic technique similar to that explored at the caves was used, exposing the paper into a blurred mass, a pure photographic object. The final phase of the series involved setting the paper ablaze, letting the objects pass in transience but allowing them to persist in photographs.”

Brice Bischoff Photography

recent thieves of the heart

This beautiful photo of my dog taken by my roommate Robert

Jen Stark

An important reminder for artists

Pictured with my friend Jacqui (right) at her engagement party held at the swanky loft space Home Studios in New York City

2 albums: Beach House “Bloom” and Chelsea Wolfe “Apokalypsis”

Sci-fi must: Logan’s Run

don draper’s 40th bday bash

Obviously, martinis and scotch whiskey all around

Bold print dresses by Marni

Joan Holloway inspired

60′s glam

Put on your dancing shoes!

And in case you don’t have a hot French-Canadian wife to seduce you by singing “Zou Bisou Bisou” to you in front of everyone you know…

Francoise Hardy “The Yeh-Yeh Girl From Paris” will do just fine as the soundtrack!

perfume of the lady in black 1973

“Giallo” films are characterized by extended murder sequences featuring excessive bloodletting, stylish camerawork and unusual musical arrangements. The literary whodunit element is retained, but combined with modern slasher horror, while being filtered through Italy’s longstanding tradition of opera and staged grand guignol drama. They also generally include liberal amounts of nudity and sex.

Gialli typically introduce strong psychological themes of madness, alienation, and paranoia. For example, Sergio Martino’s Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key (also known as Eye of the Black Cat) was explicitly based on Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Black Cat.”

They remain notable in part for their expressive use of music, most notably by Dario Argento’s collaborations with Ennio Morricone and his musical director Bruno Nicolai, and later with the band Goblin.

A lot of people question my deep love for this genre of film, but my interest isn’t so much in the fear and horror elements as it is in the execution of artistry. I’m not a groupie for all subgenres of horror movies (not particularly interested in zombie or slasher unless for the camp factor). The combination of cinematography, technicolor, suspense, set design and exquisite camera work is what attracts me to Italian giallo films of the 60′s and 70′s. I think they are visual masterpieces.

central saint martins fw2012 associations pt. 2

A couple of days ago I made my first post about the students of Central Saint Martins’ collections during LFW because they simply blew me away. I wanted to add the second batch of my favorite designs from this presentation, and also what the conceptualizations remind me of; my personal associations.These are a bunch of the connections I made while examining their magic stream-of-consciousness style!

Estefania Cortes Harker

Givenchy Spring 2011 Couture +

glitter stickers from skating rink sticker machines +

Chinese paper cutting art

Helen Lawrence

Egon Schiele + Mugler + clear purses from the 90′s +

Graphic art in the Björk “Pagan Poetry” music video

Malene List Thomsen

Another Björk reminder! Specifically the song “Crystalline” from “Biophilia”

And obviously, The Jetsons.

Kenji Kawasumi

splatter paint + a corn field

Helen van Rees

traditional Chanel Tweed + building blocks from childhood

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