Showing posts with label awesome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awesome. Show all posts

Sunday, November 28, 2010



i heart TAVI so much!
Gosh, i wish I had a role model like her when i was young.
here she is creating 'moodboards'! Seriously, how freakin cool is this kid?!

gold dust woman
Lately I've taken to creating real life moodboards out of the random junk I have on this table in my room. It bums me out that today is Black Friday because I'm not ready to let go of witchy vibes for fall but my high tolerance for the cold will be taken advantage of when it's at 10 degrees and I just want to wear ghost coats all the time.

This one is supposed to be a little cosmic and explorer-y and dusty. As always, it makes sense in my head.


via her her cute as hell blog the style rookie


Sunday, March 14, 2010

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Orly Cogan





I went to Judy Chicago's retrospective in Calgary entitled "If Women Ruled the World," and found the lovely gem that is Orly Cogan's threadbare work featured in "She Will Always Be Younger." Her work bridged the aesthetic of the traditional with that of the transgressive and political and explicitly engaged with feminist politics through the use of textile, thread and fibre. Such an inspiration to the future crafty stitch and bitch feminist i aspire to be one day!

Saturday, November 21, 2009

"Highway" by Diemonds.



Remember Wayne's girlfriends band in "Waynes World" ? I think her name was Cassandra... One of the only reasons i use to re-watch that movie was for my major crush on her! Well that crush from long ago has re-surfaced onto the Diemonds front woman Priya Lee Roth. Seriously, though they are one of the best live shows I've seen in a long time. The Diemonds sound is so authentically rock and roll, its hard not to proclaim them "ROCK N ROLL AT ITS FINEST AND FILTHIEST"!

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

under the magic of the disco ball




I have known the lovely Stacey B ( co-founder of Airheart ) for sometime, but it wasn't until I gave her the keys to my old apartment that i actually got a chance to listen to her recordings, which I'm gonna call space-dusted disco tunes! Her song writing is filled with a trip-hop infused vibrancy of beats, grooves, luscious harmonies and fat dub bass lines. Airheart's Portishead meets Goldfrapp sound, creates a performance with a raw honesty of dance inducing melodies!

NXNE recently reviewed them:"Stacey Be’s jazzy smooth vocals remind me of a combination of Esthero and Reverie Sound Review. However, combined with Mason Bach’s groovy and laid back beats, Airheart are able to bring something a little different to the table. The EP’s title track, “Mr. Lonely”, is the strongest song on the EP, combining playful and flirtatious vocals with an insanely catchy and hooky beat"

You will love it, i promise!

They're playing the Ladyfest launch party You should be there!
Download/listen to their single Mr.Lonely
Airheart

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

New Zine!!




I just found this new awesome zine called Steel Bananas run by a smart lady and awesome collective trying to bridge academic theory and culture.

Check out this fun interview by the Torontoist:

Hatched by Steel Bananas, a collective dedicated to exploring critical theory in real-life art and culture, GULCH is themed around the idea of the rhizome. (For those Torontoist readers who have never suffered or savoured a romp through this field of critical theory, the rhizome is an image that Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guatarri borrow from biology to describe a way of thinking that values multiplicity, disjunction, and non-hierarchical development. Don’t be afraid to hit a little Wikipedia on this one.) And if you thought your second-year poststructuralist theory class would never take wing in the real world, GULCH aims to make you think again. Steel Bananas practises what amounts to a sort of guerrilla academia, mingling heady with hip.

To its credit, GULCH takes its rhizomatic stance through to its logical conclusion. This means inconstant page numbering, text atop water-marked text, and a layout that constantly shifts direction. Ok, we get it: multiple points of view, non-hierarchical, disjunctive. The dedication to the project is admirable, but the effect is dizzying, and it makes the content look, dare we say, a little like a zine.

Still, the folks behind Steel Bananas—and many of the contributors that they’ve selected for GULCH—are people to watch out for: these are some whip-smart people, and they can throw down both a rhizome and a rhyme.

To find out more, Torontoist caught up with Karen Correia Da Silva, one of the Co-Editors of GULCH and the mastermind behind Steel Bananas.

Torontoist: Where did the Steel Bananas Project originate?

Karen Correia Da Silva: I started up the zine about a year ago. I only had four writers and was coding it by hand and doing it all myself, and then it just ballooned from there. We’ve had a lot of great artists involved. It’s this collaborative effort: all of these artists in Toronto are throwing events together and supporting one another. That’s what it’s founded on. Being a young artist in Toronto you often don’t know exactly where to go or what kind of places can really cater to the art that you’re doing. You don’t know how to get yourself out there. It felt like it was a good thing to do to foster a sense of community in the Toronto art scene. There are so many pockets of the artistic community in Toronto that don’t really talk to one another.

Steel Bananas brings academic ideas to a non-academic setting. How do you negotiate the tension between those two worlds?

The academic aspect of the zine is that we keep things critical at all times. We’re not just going out and partying; we have things to say, we believe that the art we make is meaningful, that it’s something that should be talked about in an academic way. We want to talk as artists and as people who understand art, and we want to talk about it on a critical plane without having to necessarily align ourselves in any way or affiliate ourselves with certain institutions.

continue reading this on the Torontoist

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Melinda Josie





Something is happening with contemporary art and its mix within the surreal world of anthropomorphism. Are we reverting our realities back to our childhood dreams?
I love it.... (!!)

Her whimsical work is at magic pony!

Monday, November 9, 2009

Absract Random

http://www.myspace.com/abstractrandom3



These Womyn are amazing! I stumbled upon their patio performances in Parkdale earlier this summer, and then had the fabulous pleasure to see them play last thursday! Their live shows are truly a melding pot of magical-lyrical resistance!

They self identify themselves as: "a two human animal, some call electro experimental dub hop, exploring word, sound and image to create an intergenre multimedia art experience"

check out their blog! > http://abstractrandom3.wordpress.com/

Their playing this Friday Nov 13 at the Concorde in conjunction with this fabulous collective working to create solidarity within their movement > Flyer for their Show
http://www.r3collective.org/

Friday, November 6, 2009

Who wants to make a movie with me?


Joanie 4 Jackie from Miranda July on Vimeo.

Oh Ms July! your riot girl bleach blonde fro and DIY ambition really makes me happy, warm and fuzzy! So when i found out that Miranda July and a group of NY college students were reviving Joanie 4 Jackie I almost pooped myself!

What its all about:

YOU ALWAYS SUSPECTED IT, AND NOW YOU KNOW IT'S TRUE:

Girls and women are making movies every day.

EVERY woman who sends her movie to Joanie 4 Jackie receives a Chainletter tape. Each tape is an unpredictable compilation of 10 lady-made movies including her own. These video Chainletters and their companion Viewer's Digests are part of a continual correspondence between women moviemakers and with you.

The first 7 Chainletters are available for you to own.


MOVIE MAKING

There's two variables on the video camera. There's the lens: The eye. This is the same eye that's watching you all the time anyways if you're a woman. Especially in public, but even when you're alone in your room. The eye is programmed into your brain. When you are making a movie you stop pretending that you aren't aware of the eye. THEY ARE LOOKING AT YOUR ASS NO MATTER WHAT YOU WEAR.
THE DAD IN YOUR HEAD WATCHED YOU MASTURBATE.
YOU BRUSH YOUR HAIR INTO THE THE SHAPE OF THE HOLE IN HIS HEART. You stop pretending that you are innocent and unaffected by the eye. You turn and face it: the camera. You look into its eye and see yourself and you say: "I see you watching me." I know you are there and I'm not embarrassed to admit it. I admit the role I play everyday in this movie made not by me. I'm not embarrassed because just surviving being watched everyday has trained me to be an expert on the eye. Every woman is an expert on the eye. An expert actress, and an expert at controlling situations while being watched. THIS IS MOVIE MAKING. And making movies means that you are a watcher. Of course you are. You have to be self-conscious all the time just to take care of yourself. So there's the eye and there's one other variable: the on/off button, which is about control. Because this is the one time that you can turn the eye off. You can keep secrets or you can tell lies or you can tell the real truth thru manipulation of the eye-on / eye-off. I'm talking about editing. Editing equals gorgeous control. DEAR DR. WILKINS, I AM MAKING A MOVIE. IT IS ABOUT OUR APPOINTMENTS. I JUST THOUGH I WOULD WARN YOU. DEAR DAD, I AM MAKING A MOVIE. IT IS ABOUT YOU. I PLAY THE PART OF YOU.

DEAR CARRIE, I AM MAKING A MOVIE. IT IS ABOUT THAT GAME WE USED TO PLAY CALLED EVERLASTING LOVE IN THE SHADOW OF THE BLANKET. I WANT YOU TO BE THE LEADING LADY.

the website

Friday, April 3, 2009

Its up!

I gotta love this big tampon hanging between another street artists work - right between the two Bill's!! ha!