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11 months ago
Sunday, November 30, 2008 at 6:27 pm


SANDLER HUDSON GALLERY


Please Join us Friday, December 5th, 2008 from 7-9pm at Sandler Hudson Gallery for the opening reception of

Soft Light, an exhibition of new paintings by Alex Brewer

Exhibition Date: December 5th - January 10

 

ALEX BREWER: Soft Light
Sandler Hudson Gallery is pleased to announce Atlanta artist, Alex Brewer in an exhibition entitled Soft Light. Brewer is an emerging southern talent. Born and raised in Atlanta, GA he has spent over a decade as a very established and prolific graffiti artist. Brewer’s show will feature between 20-30 new works on paper, wood and canvas. Large mixed media paintings on wood as well as small mono-prints on paper.
Brewer has gained a strong reputation for his large-scale street work locally in Atlanta, and through out the U.S and abroad. He has painted and exhibited in many major national and international cities. In the past few years Brewer has begun pushing his paintings in a new more sophisticated direction. His works have ended up among private collections as well as many public collections. Brewer creates paintings that are abstract and graceful, with lines that are representative of early abstract expressionist pioneers. His new work consists of layers and layers of marks applied on a surface with spray paint, marker, graphite and "anything interesting", to create a final product.

11 months ago
Saturday, November 29, 2008 at 8:28 pm

TAGGED: EWOK, KRUSH, TYKE
11 months ago
Saturday, November 29, 2008 at 3:08 am

 



Mickey Mouse Gets Fashionable, Goes Street

by Andrew Asch, Retail Editor - November 28, 2008
source: http://www.apparelnews.net/news/details?article_id=8606

Mickey Mouse turned 80 on Nov. 18, the anniversary of the 1928 release of the pop-culture icon’s first cartoon, “Steamboat Willie,” and the octogenarian received a serious birthday gift from The Walt Disney Co.: another shot at youth.

The company, which rakes in $30 billion annually in sales of licensed products worldwide, has recently been strengthening its campaign to make Mickey and other classic Disney cartoon properties more relevant to young adults. While this coveted demographic might have consigned Disney products to their childhood memories, Disney hopes to find new ways to appeal to them. So the company best known for family entertainment has been venturing on new turf: contemporary fashions and streetwear. Recently, Disney has been gathering more corporate strength to give Mickey a new look.

Last month, Disney Consumer Products officially joined its separate fashion and home divisions into a new group called Global Fashion and Home Disney Consumer Products, also called Disney Fashion and Home. With 450 employees spread across the world, the Glendale, Calif.–based division hoped to harness the energies of its formerly disparate divisions to make Disney a contender in fashion and lifestyle products, said Pam Lifford, executive vice president of Disney’s Fashion and Home.

“If there is a trend we don’t have something for, we’ll be on the hunt for something to help us get there,” Lifford said
The division has been partnering with experienced fashion labels, including Los Angeles–based contemporary brand Charlotte Tarantola and bridal designer Kirstie Kelly.

Disney started a streetwear line this year called Bloc28, but it did not have experience in the field of graffiti art, a favorite subject of the burgeoning streetwear market. Disney commissioned several popular graffiti artists—including Chaz Bojorquez, Ewok and Mear One—to paint their interpretations of Mickey Mouse.

Results ranged from Bojorquez’s Mickey as fictional swordsman Zorro to Ewok’s surreal scene of a saber-tooth Mickey running through a prehistoric wilderness. Disney also worked with streetwear-savvy labels X-Large and New Era to make T-shirts and caps for Bloc28, which debuted Nov. 12 at The Continental Gallery in downtown Los Angeles. Retail price points include $75 for caps, which are currently sold at streetwear shops such as Span of Sunset in Los Angeles’ Hollywood section. T-shirt’s retail price points range from $60 to $65.

Streetwear does not stop with Bloc28. In mid-December, Los Angeles–based streetwear label The Hundreds is scheduled to debut a limited-edition T-shirt and cap line featuring street-savvy looks for the Lost Boys characters of the 1953 Disney film “Peter Pan.” It will be sold at The Hundreds boutiques in Los Angeles and San Francisco and in a few selected stores.

Disney allows street artists a lot of leeway, Lifford said. The artist’s creation is evaluated by Disney marketers to judge whether a piece would show Disney in an appropriate light. Bloc28 artist Bojorquez said he only accepted the Disney assignment because he could execute the art on his terms. However, he said, there were limits. He was told that he could not depict a dead Mickey or Mickey holding drug paraphernalia, for example.

In August, Los Angeles contemporary designer Charlotte Tarantola debuted a limited-edition Spring 2009 line inspired by the 1938 film “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” Charlotte Tarantola for Disney features 12 pieces, including retro-
looking cardigan sweaters, silk-chiffon blouses and T-shirts. Nary a dwarf or princess is depicted on the line’s prints; rather, the prints feature the detailed animation of cuckoo clocks, acorns, crowns and forest-animal silhouettes from the classic film.

“It’s ethereal and dreamy,” Tarantola said of the line. “Disney is not the first thing that you will see.” Retail price points for sweaters range from $140 to $152. The line’s detailed T-shirts range from $97 to $130.

Disney’s efforts to court the contemporary market started in 2002 after rock star Lenny Kravitz was pictured in Rolling Stone magazine wearing a vintage Mickey Mouse T-shirt. Disney put together a deal later that year to sell vintage Mickey Mouse T-shirts at the high-profile Fred Segal boutiques.

In 2004, the media company licensed iconic fashion houses Dolce & Gabbana and Paul Smith to design limited-edition Mickey T-shirts and homewares.

Dolce & Gabbana’s sequined T-shirts made way for wedding gowns. In 2006, bridal line Kirstie Kelly for Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings debuted. It is designed by Los Angeles’ Kirstie Kelly Couture and produces wedding gowns inspired by Disney princesses such as Ariel the mermaid. Price points can reach above $1,100. Also popular is the Disney Couture label. It recently worked with Santa Ana, Calif.–based company Harveys to produce Mickey bags made out of car seatbelts. For the past four years, Disney’s jewelry line Kidada Jones for Disney Couture has consistently sold well at Kitson, a high-profile boutique on Los Angeles’ Robertson Boulevard, according to Fraser Ross, Kitson’s owner.

“I did not understand its appeal until I looked at Dolce & Gabbana’s [Disney line],” Ross said. Then he bet that a pop-culture consumer would spend more than $150 for a Kidada Jones bracelet just to experience a familiar cartoon character with a novel, unexpected look. Ross also reported a splash selling cashmere sweaters emblazoned with Archie Comics’ Betty and Veronica cartoon characters and Warner Bros.’ Tweety Bird in 2005.

Disney is not the only Hollywood company looking for new opportunity in fashion. In November, fashion icon Diane von Furstenberg’s store in Paris held a party for the design house’s capsule collection of fashion, which is inspired by comic-book superhero Wonder Woman. For streetwear, Warner Bros. licensed Los Angeles label Dr. Romanelli in 2005 to make streetwear-style fashions featuring Bugs Bunny and Tweety in irreverent costumes such as surgical garb.

The main reason for Disney to prospect these new fashion markets is to foster growth. However, a consumer might not be entirely ready for Disney’s new looks, said Marlene Morris Towns, a marketing professor at the University of Southern California. “Disney might not carry the same weight as, say, a Vera Wang on fashion credibility. I can’t see it being the norm quite yet,” Morris Towns said. “A conservative way to go about it is to produce limited-edition lines which might build up the interest in that market. Then Disney might find a niche and grow.”

Yet Disney promises more unique, unexpected fashions to be designed for all age groups, according to Lifford. “You could bring Disney along with you, at any time during your lifecycle,” she said.

11 months ago
Sunday, November 23, 2008 at 3:50 pm

SOURCE: http://wearesupervision.blogspot.com/

11 months ago
Thursday, November 20, 2008 at 10:53 pm

11 months ago
Thursday, November 20, 2008 at 10:48 pm

11 months ago
Thursday, November 20, 2008 at 10:44 pm

TAGGED: GCS, POMONA, REVOK
11 months ago
Tuesday, November 18, 2008 at 1:39 pm









 






11 months ago
Tuesday, November 18, 2008 at 12:29 pm

SABER writes about his trip to Queretaro, Mexico:

I recently visited Mexico for the event “Estilo Libre”. The event begins in Santiago de Queretaro, continues in Mexico City, and ends in Monterrey. Unfortunately I could only attend Queretaro.

We flew into Mexico City and then drove 3 hours north to Santiago de Queretaro.

Downtown Queretaro is a beautiful old, well-preserved, Spanish colonial town. With cobble stone streets, beautifully hand-carved large wood doors, court yards in almost every building, and interesting street vendors on every corner. We stayed in a two hundred year old hotel called the Hotel Hidalgo that was a history professor’s dream with all the notable people that had stayed there.

Queretaro was a very important city during the Mexican Independence movement and has many statues, monuments, and historically preserved buildings commemorating that. Today it is becoming the international business capitol of the country.

But obviously I was there to paint and meet other like minds. I spent four days straight painting two different pieces in two different locations. I decided to use buff paint primarily, instead of all spray to show people to some new techniques.

Everywhere we went there seemed to be some sort of painting project in process. All over the city there are new community centers being built, from small neighborhood spaces to huge community centers that can accommodate the entire city. It was very impressive, and you can sense there is more importance placed on introducing and including youth into art projects like murals.

Throughout the years I’ve visited Mexico many times and these kids are getting better and better. There is endless wall space and the writers are very focused. I would say that in the near future Mexico will become an important painting destination for the rest of the world.

I met some genuine people and some strong writers in Mexico. Queretaro is a mellow place and I love how important the history is to citizens. Most of my experiences on this trip were positive, (minus the five-animal meattorta).

Thank you to No Limit, SF Crew. Mibe, Humo, Baht, Seta, Borra, Chino, Aliaz, and anyone else I forgot.

SOURCE: http://saberone.com/blog/2008/11/17/trip-to-queretaro-mexico-estilo-libre/

11 months ago
Friday, November 14, 2008 at 10:53 pm

 

Opening Reception

November 15th

Featuring Works by

Guy Aitchison, Hannah Aitchison, Daniel Albrigo, Shawn Barber, Steve Boltz, Matthew Bone, Paul Booth, Jason D'Aquino, Mike Davis, Adam Forman, Dave Fox, Travis Franklin, Alex Garcia, Jeff Gogue, Regino Gonzales, Timothy Hoyer, Nikko Hurtado, Bert Krak, Erick Lynch, Corey Miller, Norm, Eli Quinters, Kim Saigh, Mike Shea, Dirk Spece, Amanda Wachob, Michelle Wortman

Canvas Los Angeles
441 North Fairfax Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90036

www.canvasla.com

 

11 months ago
Friday, November 14, 2008 at 8:48 pm
TAGGED: AMAZING, OBAMA, VIDEO
11 months ago
Friday, November 14, 2008 at 3:53 pm

LINK: http://photosynth.net/view.aspx?cid=4f7be463-1ade-420c-a46f-e4dbc634ef31&i=0:0:83&z=402.64824165740754&g=0&p=1.98954e-007:-1.82686e-008&m=false&c=1.72359:-0.410601:-0.00987071&d=0.143341:-2.09447:-2.47557

11 months ago
Friday, November 14, 2008 at 9:33 am
Here are pictures from Stormie's new show "Loss+Endings=Fish" at LK Galleries in Perth West Australia.

 

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