Art/Design Travis Louie’s Family Portraits

July 8, 2010 - 1:15 pm

Toad Prince

When one looks at Travis Louie’s portraits, one feels as if they’re spying on the Ellis Island of another planet.  Toad boys and rabbit girls proudly pose in their Sunday best.  His subjects may have three eyes, but they also have dignity.  It’s a surrealist take on the immigrant experience

Travis’s latest show, Curious Myths, opens at Joshua Liner Gallery on Saturday.  In it, viewers can expect the typical Louie knockout cocktail- the uber fine hairs, the sensuously blended grey. His technical virtuosity is so extreme that his paintings were once held at Italian customs by officials who refused to beleive they weren’t done by a 19th century master.

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Art/Design The New Wave of “Public Arts”

July 8, 2010 - 1:03 pm

joshua allen harris

I remember driving around the valley as a kid, staring tiredly out the window of my mom’s Mazda Protegé, disgusted by the graffiti that littered Rosco Blvd.  The three letter gang tags haphazardly sprayed upon the walls often crossed out and covered over by a rival gang.  I remember thinking it to be like dogs marking their territory, and I always thought it looked ugly.

20 years later, and for some reason unknown to me,  I don’t see nearly as much of that junk graffiti.  What I do see is a movement of artists using the urban landscape as their canvas, blessing cities with a sense of wonder and awe.  I’ve just recently entered this rabbit hole and I am enamored by the beauty and baffled by the vision of these clever zealots.  If you are already privy, forgive me and carry on, but for the rest of you, take a second to revel at the imagination and vision of these captivating urban artists.  Let the yarn bombing and graffiti animation begin… Oh and don’t forget about the inflatables division.  You’ve got to see this.

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Music MoodyMann is Bringing Back the Dead

July 8, 2010 - 12:25 pm

MoodyMann

Disco seems to be experiencing a resurgence these days, which might please the virgin ears of newbies or boggle the minds of others who managed to live through it all. The brilliance of it all is: most of these artists never mad it quite as far as Andy Gibb or Donna Summer, but now they are being played by MoodyMann and sound infinitely better than it did originally, even when Travolta put on his leisure suit and struck a pose in Saturday Night Fever. You mean all that work obscure disco artists went to was basically for naught, and they struggled through obscurity for years, only to have to wait nearly 4 decades to really be heard?! If you were to hear MoodyMann, you’d probably believe it too. But it’s not all disco for dee mann, it’s actually a lot of the jazz and Motown that made his Michigan hometown famous. He’s developed a reputation for interaction with his crowds, as well as some more humorous samples from old Blaxploitation gems. Get a listen on Red Bull Music Academy Radio.

Art/Design The Amsterdam Urban Art Festival

July 8, 2010 - 11:44 am

Amsterdam Urban Art Festival - 07

On June 26th, girlthings and art monkeys were let lose over Amsterdam.  They climbed trees, jumped from buildings.  The little bastards even bit.

Amsterdam Urban Art Festival

Unleashing evil art imps was my part in the Urban Art Festival.  Produced by the sprawling American Book Center and sponsored by Red Bull, the UAF is a celebration of craft, street, DIY and underground art.  Creators gathered from as far afield as Greece and the US to transform the Spui into a guerilla art playground.  The Ladies Fancywork Society crocheted elaborate cozies for bikes.  Autobahn carved tweets in stone.  The stunning Lotta from Utrecht rocked a pirate hat at a free, sun-drenched Dr. Sketchy’s.

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Art/Design Featured Artstars: Teetering Bulb

July 7, 2010 - 12:07 pm

Teetering Bulb

Teetering Bulb (1/2 Kurt Huggins, 1/2 Zelda Devon) is a super powered illustration team decamped in a tiny Brooklyn apartment.  With an razor-disciplined yet lushly evocative style and a client list from Vertigo to Random House, they’re poised for Art Stardom.  I got to chat with them on design. teamwork, and the mechanics of drawing a boob.

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Music Panda Bear Wants to Give You a Hug

July 7, 2010 - 12:03 pm

Panda Bear

Panda Bear seems a bit of a confused lad. Not that it isn’t working for him, as he’s already gained a huge following with that other band he’s in, East Coast electronic/beatmaking giants Animal Collective. And with the advent of new technology, and one-man bands being more prevalent in today’s day and age, it perhaps isn’t that uncommon to see a guy on stage with both a guitar and a workstation thrown out in front of him. But his music is a neurotic hybrid of heaven and hell; a sprawling out somewhere between the euphoric, the shoegaze-freindly, the lovely side of life — and what could perhaps be best described as a series of rather insipid underlying pulses and bursts. On tracks like “Comfy in Nautica”,  and “Bros”, it almost sounds like he’s channeling Brian Wilson and the days of the The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds, only with some clearly computer-edited blips and bleeps as opposed to that classic Stratocaster sound. Then on tracks like “I’m Not”, he’s lost in the soothing, blissful sounds of arpeggiated vocal layers and resonating chirps and bells and whistles. If most electronic music is cut with WAVE or ProTools or something else, then his seems severed into disjointed bits by the dulled blade of a hatchet. But that’s not to negate the beauty of his wandering mind and schizoid soul: just listen to any of the tracks off Young Prayer, which while perhaps minimalist and threadbare, are still no less lacking in emotion. Feel the love now on Red Bull Music Academy Radio.

A Few of My Favorite Things A Few Of My Favorite Things: Jen Lasher

July 7, 2010 - 11:48 am

Jen Lasher

Baltimore’s Jen Lasher has a unique reach within electronic music. With a background that touches on everything from industrial to rock and yes, Bmore, her musical point of view is part electronic and part grit, leading the east coast spitfire to work alongside everyone from Shiny Toy Guns to Tommie Sunshine and Oh Snap! Boasting not only a prestigious DJ resume, but production and vocalist accolades to boot, Lasher shows that girls wanna have fun…and kick ass at the same time. Following Reid Speed’s tour of LA, Lasher now takes the reins, giving the low down on Baltimore/DC Tri-State Area hotspots from local swimming holes to the area’s best nightclub.

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Music Tuesday Newsday: New Releases From Big Boi, Rolling Stones, Bret Michaels, Kylie Minogue, Cheap Trick, and Enrique Iglesias,

July 6, 2010 - 8:32 pm

Yeah boi

Today a plethora of ancient bones was unearthed, and several dinosaurs are presently in the process of being reconstructed — proving that some things never die. First, the re-release of the quintessential classic rock album (if you like Cheap Trick) Cheap Trick –  Budokan. Bret Michaels is back from the dead with Custom Built, the Stones have a big-ass trunk of sh*t to sell you called The Touring Party Fan Pack (complete with posters, old show ticket stubs, t-shirt, old backstage passes, and Exile on Main Street with 10 unreleased tracks). Also, a double-header from Kylie Minogue, John Phillips (I thought he was in jail!) and Enrique Iglesias.

Enrique Iglesias - Euphoria
Kylie Minogue – Aphrodite
Kylie Minogue - Aphrodite [CD + DVD]
Big Boi – Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty
Big Boi – Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty [CD + DVD]
Bret Michaels – Custom Built
Juvenile – Beast Mode
Kelis – Flesh Tone
How To Destroy Angels – How To Destroy Angels
Ed Kowalczyk – Alive
Jimmie Vaughan – Plays Blues, Ballads and Favorites
Texas Hippie Coalition – Rollin’
Trailer Choir - Tailgate
The Rescues - Let Loose The Horses
No Justice – 2nd Avenue
The Cat Empire – Cinema
Aztec Two-Step – Time It Was: The Simon and Garfunkel Songbook
Walter Trout – Common Ground
John Phillips - Many Mamas Many Papas
Various Artists – NPR Discovers Songs: Soul Revival
The Rolling Stones - Stones Touring Party Fan Pack [Box Set]
Cheap Trick - Budokan! [CD/DVD]

Film Bouncing Cats: B-Boy’s Bring Hope to Uganda

July 6, 2010 - 12:16 pm

Bouncing Cats

Uganda has been called one of the worst places on earth to be a child. In the South, children face the threat of poverty and disease. In the North, these threats are enflamed by a brutal, mindless war inflicted by the Lord’s Resistance Army (L.R.A.) that has divided families, displaced millions, and led to the abduction and mutilation of tens of thousands of children resulting in the deterioration of identity and culture.

Bouncing Cats is the inspiring story of one man’s attempt to create a better life for the children of Uganda using the unlikely tool of hip-hop with a focus on b-boy culture and breakdance. In 2006, Abraham “Abramz” Tekya, a Ugandan b-boy and A.I.D.S. orphan created Breakdance Project Uganda (B.P.U.). The dream was to establish a free workshop that would empower, rehabilitate and heal the community by teaching youth about b-boy culture. Based in Kampala, Uganda, B.P.U. has recently expanded to include permanent classes in Gulu, Northern Uganda. Abramz teaches classes three times a week to more than 300 kids from all parts of the country. Many of the children are homeless, victims of war and poverty, and few can afford proper schooling yet they walk from miles away to attend the B.P.U. classes. As Abramz says, “This is where many people’s pride is. It’s a skill that no one can take away from us.”

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Art/Design Confessions of a Yarn Bomber

July 6, 2010 - 10:45 am

Yarn Bombing 101

Imagine a city after it snows.  Imagine the white blanket softening all the sharp edges, hiding the filth.  Now, imagine that blanket is real.

This is something of what yarn bombing strives to do.  Yarn bombers do knitting as street art- creating cozies for chain link fence – throwing lace and flowers over the harsh contours of urban life.  Yarn bombers mix the illegal daring of graffiti writers with a traditionally female craft-form, making something both joyous and subversive.

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