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After Dark: Meet Ladyfag, Party Curator And Nightlife Icon

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This is the twenty-ninth installment in HuffPost Gay Voices Associate Editor James Nichols' ongoing series "After Dark: NYC Nightlife Today And Days Past" that examines the state of New York nightlife in the modern day, as well as the development and production of nightlife over the past several decades. Each featured individual in this series currently serves as a prominent person in the New York nightlife community or has made important contributions in the past that have sustained long-lasting impacts.

HuffPost Gay Voices believes that it is important and valuable to elevate the work, both today and in the past, of those engaged in the New York nightlife community, especially in an age where queer history seems to be increasingly forgotten. Nightlife not only creates spaces for queers and other marginalized groups to be artistically and authentically celebrated, but the work of those involved in nightlife creates and shapes the future of our culture as a whole. Visit Gay Voices regularly to learn not only about individuals currently making an impact in nightlife, but those whose legacy has previously contributed to the ways we understand queerness, art, identity and human experience today.


Over the past several years you and your parties have become iconic in the NYC nightlife scene. What did your journey to becoming such a fixture in nightlife entail?
Ladyfag: I came to New York from Canada over eight years ago. Previously, I sold vintage clothing and antiques for nearly a decade and was about to open my own store so I came here for three months as my last hurrah... and never left! I didn't know anyone in the city, so I used to go by myself to all of the parties of the moment: Hiro, APT, Happy Valley. I started doing an impromptu show in the middle of the dance floor at one of these parties and Kenny Kenny came up and asked me to dance for him at Happy Valley. When I got out of the cage he said, "You're hired! Now come downstairs everyone wants to meet you!" It snowballed from there and I started hosting parties four or five nights a week... and it's been an ever-changing journey since.

You came up right after nightlife began to experience a resurgence following years of policing and regulation in New York City. How have you seen it grow, evolve and change over the past eight years?
Nightlife always goes in waves. I had just arrived and I remember thinking Happy Valley was so incredible -- I was new to the city and just mesmerized by all of these amazing characters dressed up week after week. The club itself was designed by Jeremy Scott and it was so over the top... now, sadly, it's condos. There's been so many moments where suddenly a new party really takes off and it creates a ripple effect because it gets people excited, and then they want to go out even more, and then new parties start to pop up and suddenly New York is having a moment again... and again... and again...

lf group

Many have claimed that you are reviving the "golden days" of nightlife through your massive parties SHADE and Holy Mountain. What does your vision for these events entail?
There will always be "golden days" of nightlife. I didn't invent the wheel, and promoters who talk about themselves as though they're some type of gods make me laugh. Bringing people together to share an experience is what I love to do. For me it's about throwing parties that I would want to go to myself. New York apartments are generally small by nature and people need a space to connect and hang out. My weekly 11:11 party is very much that -- my home where everyone is invited.

Holy Mountain is my new monthly [event], and truly is mountain of a party! It's a huge labyrinth where there are so many different rooms with different vibes you can explore. The venue is the old Mr. Black space that I used to work at. They only used two rooms, and I thought how amazing would it be to have four different styles of music and energies -- pretty much like having four parties under one roof. We were inspired by Holy Mountain, visually, but it turned out that even putting the visual themes in motion set it off in people's imaginations -- and the energy that fuels the party is pretty magical.

I throw SHADE with my partner Seva Granik. We basically convert raw warehouse spaces into full-blown nightclubs for just one night, so it's sort of a beast that takes a few months to plan out and build. There were lots of DIY warehouse parties, but there was never the mix of a full-blown club experiences with amazing sound systems and over the top light shows. They're highly produced but still have a raw, anything-goes feel. Every SHADE has a visual and musical theme, usually tied to club culture. We did an homage to Detroit called Detropia, which was a dystopian vision of Detroit complete with smashed car sculptures and Detroit techno. We've done a coast to coast and brought in DJs from our L.A. nightlife family. There aren't really any people in our scene doing warehouse parties on this scale, and it's probably because if you even tried to do it once you wouldn't do it again [laughs]. We max out our credit cards and we have a team of about a dozen people who work around the clock. My production manager actually moves in with me the week before because we take turns sleeping!

shade

I couldn't do it without my partner Seva. He comes from a production background and he's been doing DIY shows in Brooklyn for over a decade. We both play our roles; we split things up and divide and conquer the beast to make it happen. But they say if you build it they will come... and thousands of kids come out. It's kind of crazy because we change the location almost every time, and people have no idea where it will be until the day of. We feel a certain responsibility at this point to live up to the SHADE reputation, so we're always trying to outdo the last one. If these kids are going to come out to the middle of industrial nowhere because it's SHADE, then we sure as hell better give them an experience!

Several people featured in "After Dark" have discussed how they wish nightlife would become more mixed and less segregated. Your parties seem to embody this philosophy by bringing together different scenes to create one massive fantasy. Why is this important to you?
It's a common complaint, and understandably so. It's actually quite hard to find the right balance and, unfortunately, there is no exact formula to make it happen. Obviously the best parties are mixed and have a variety of people, but there has to be enough of every sub-group so that everyone can comfortably call it their own. My parties generally tend to be quite mixed -- not only in terms of gender and sexuality, but in age, professions, size, colors -- it's a serious melting pot. In a way, that's a reflection of my life and my friends. I believe in the "everyone is welcome" philosophy. Well, maybe not everyone... young squealing girls need not apply [laughs]. But in my defense, if that seems rude, those girls usually end up puking in the club.

ladyfag

You're involved in the fashion world. I'd like to hear your perspective surrounding nightlife as an intersection of fashion, music, art -- how does it operate as a source of cultural production for these communities?
Nightlife is a breeding ground for creativity, and a source for so much inspiration to designers. When you think of some of the most esteemed designers like Galliano, Mugler, Riccardo Tisci and McQueen -- they were all "club kids." That's where it all starts!

As far as fashion, a nightclub is the real runway. It's like this big stage where kids can express themselves through fashion. I mean, when was the last time you got inspired walking around Bloomingdale's? [laughs]

A number of young creatives coming up through nightlife referenced you as someone who recognized their potential and helped shape their place in the scene, including gage of the boone, La'Fem Ladosha and Domonique Echeverria. Why is it important to you to elevate the work of up-and-coming artists through your parties?
That's really sweet to hear. I'd love to take credit for my parties, but the truth is I can't do it alone. It really is a collective of people I work with that make the parties what they are.

I have so much love for Domonique, gage and La'fem Ladosha. I'm a big fan of theirs and so many of these young kids that are such creative creatures. They bring so much to New York already and have only just started. After awhile you fall into patterns, but I remember how everything was so exciting when I first started and these kids have so much energy and fresh desires and ambitions to bring their passions to the city. The city can be welcoming, but it's still tough when you start out. They don't need my help to shine -- they were already stars waiting to be discovered.

They just need people to believe in them and create platforms for them to shine on.



What are your current parties and gigs? What does the future hold for Ladyfag?
This past weekend was pretty special for 11:11 as it was our two year anniversary! Which is longer then a lot of people's relationships in NYC [laughs]. The next Holy Mountain is Dec. 20 so we're going to get into the holiday spirit.

Then I guess I'll announce it here first... SHADE is back for New Years Eve! Except we're not celebrating 2015 -- we're celebrating 2084... you asked me what the futures hold for me, but we're about to bring the future to nightlife right now.

As an iconic nightlife figure who brings people together and curates other-worldly experiences for the public -- at it's foundation, what is nightlife for you? What makes it so special and worthwhile?
People are always hoping that one day they'll die peacefully in their sleep... I'd be pretty happy dying of old age while still up in a nightclub. I live for nightlife; there are so many times where things go wrong and sometimes the city puts so many obstacles in your way and you ask yourself, "why the hell am I doing this?! I could make my life so much easier by doing something else." But there are those moments where you look out at the dance floor and everything is just right. There's this inexplicable wave of energy and joy going through the room and you look out and all the problems disappear... it's those magic moments that keep you going. Sometimes I look through all of the old photos from my parties and see so many friends and New York characters having the time of their lives and think: I make people happy for a living. What more could I possibly want to be doing in life?

Missed the previous installments in this series? Check out the slideshow below.

'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Trailer Has Arisen

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"There's been an awakening. Have you felt it?" A billion years in the making, here's the first trailer for "Star Wars: The Force Awakens."



The J.J. Abrams film stars John Boyega, Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver, Lupita Nyong'o, Oscar Isaac, Domhnall Gleeson, Max von Sydow, Andy Serkis, Gwendoline Christie and original trilogy cast members Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill and Carrie Fisher. Boyega (in full Stormtrooper armor!) and Ridley are glimpsed for the first time in the "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" trailer, which utilizes John Williams' signature "Star Wars" theme to great effect. The Millennium Falcon is there too.

Abrams and Lucasfilm made waves last week when it was revealed that the first trailer would debut in select theaters around the country on Nov. 28. On Wednesday, Team "Star Wars" announced that the trailer would also be available online for those who didn't want to make a trek out to their local multiplex. The Force is strong with this marketing campaign. "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" is out on Dec. 18, 2015.

RELATED: 6 Big Takeaways From The 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Trailer

10 (More) Art Therapy Techniques To Help You De-Stress This Holiday Season

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The holidays are just around the corner which means family, food and, for many of us, stress on stress. Whether you're dreading those endless conversations with your great aunt Judith or getting anxious over the prospect of this year's New Year's resolutions, may we humbly suggest you let your creative side serve as a sort of internal massage.

Art therapy is a form of therapy predicated on the belief that artistic expression has the power to help us in healing, in self-esteem or simply in chilling out. It's unique in that most other forms of therapy rely on language as the foremost mode of communication, whereas art requires something different, something harder to define.

We're not art therapists, and the techniques below are only suggestions based on practices familiar to the art therapy community. But for those hungry for a creative outlet to relieve the tension that tends to build up this time of year, the practices below may help. They require few materials and no artistic background -- in fact, the less art you make, the better. The following suggestions are less about the final product, and more about the transformation that occurs along the way.

Behold, 10 art therapy techniques to help you relax this season.

1. Create a color collage

collage

Color has the ability to affect our moods. Sometimes, however, instead of using color to transform our current state of mind, it's helpful to take a moment to delve deep into the color you're currently experiencing. Feeling hot-tempered and uninhibited? Cut and paste orange images that fit your mood. Working within your current emotional state can help you make sense of why you're feeling the way you're feeling and realize that, perhaps, it's not such a bad place to be.


2. Make a power mask

diy mask

Most often we think of wearing a mask as a way to hide something about ourselves, but sometimes this layer of protection and anonymity makes us feel liberated and actually aids in expressing something true, difficult and real. Create a power mask, filled with symbols that make you feel strong (think of an actor's costume or athlete's helmet). You can put it on when preparing for a rough situation -- whether it's dinner with the extended family or giving a speech at work -- and prove to yourself you can accomplish the task at hand with or without the mask.


3. Construct a holiday "anti-calendar"

diy calendar

All too often calendars are jam-packed with chores, obligations and responsibilities, making the coming days a point of stress more than solace. Try making a DIY advent calendar, which we've dubbed an anti-calendar. Instead of giving yourself a chocolate each day, treat yourself to a compliment, a doodle, an inspiring quote or an encouraging mandate such as "eat breakfast in bed today." If all goes according to plan, you could find yourself bouncing out of bed each morning like a kid on Christmas.


4. Start a doodle chain

doodle

Fact: It's impossible for a doodle to look bad. Once you give in to the endless possibilities that occur when wiggly line meets unidentified shape, you'll find it dangerously hard to stop drawing. Start a doodle-centric take on exquisite corpse with a friend or loved one to loosen your attachment to your creation. It's pretty magical to watch your lone squiggle blossom into a spindly beast before your eyes. You can also try this with a pen-pal for a more productive spin on chain mail.


5. Draft a portrait of a past self

chil

We're not talking about past lives here, but versions of yourself you feel like you've either lost touch with or outgrown. Whether you're revisiting a phase of innocence, ignorance or just plain difference, using the space between memory and imagination as your subject helps illuminate how malleable your self really is. It feels almost like reading your old diary for the first time in years.


6. Build a wishing tree

yoko ono wish tree

Take a cue from her majesty Yoko Ono and build a physical object to hold your wildest dreams. Use either a real plant or a tree-like object you create yourself, write your wishes down on paper and hang them, one by one. You can invite others to do the same. Writing your hopes and dreams on paper brings you a small step closer to making them real. Not to mention, the little white papers resemble blossoming flowers from far away.


7. Paint your own personal set of Russian dolls

russian dolls

Though we're built a little differently -- mainly, not out of wood -- we too have different layers nestled inside us at all times. What is the self you portray to others? What about to your most trusted loved ones? What remains hidden underneath? You can either purchase a set of dolls and paint over them or paint atop a set of cardboard gift boxes or other stackable objects. Feel free to use images and words to recreate the layers you envision when you think of yourself.


8. Add on to a masterpiece

mona lisa moustache

Intimidated by a glaring sheet of blank paper? Yeah, us too. Instead of starting from scratch, try adding onto a canvas you already know and love to boost your confidence and lower the risk. Whether you're applying makeup to the Mona Lisa or filling in the blanks of a Paul Klee paintings with your own brand of alien creatures, we're sure the original artists would be honored by your tribute. Who knows? You could become a famed appropriation artist in the process.


9. Assemble a safe space

blanket fort

This is for the architects among us. Remember building a pillow fort as a kid? That cozy, secret space for you and only you? Take inspiration from the five-year-old inside and build yourself a grown-up fort -- ahem, an art installation. You can create a full-blown tent if you wish or simply arrange meaningful items in a closet or under the bed. Incorporate nostalgic objects, old toys or blankets, twinkly lights -- anything that makes you feel removed from the world around you. Put on a soothing song and let the good feelings wash over you.


10. Use crayons

crayon drawing

Yup, it's that simple. There's something about the crayon's blunt tip and uneven method of coloring that is at once frustrating and liberating. Yes, it's hard to draw a straight line. Yes, it's nearly impossible to color in a space without it looking patchy. But that's exactly the point. Allow your artistic imperfections to float to the surface and learn to cherish every human error in your creation. Whatever work you create will be distinctly yours, even if it's not quite museum-worthy.

For more suggestions, check out our earlier post "10 Easy Art Therapy Techniques To Help You De-Stress."

Street Artists Around The Country Celebrate Small Business Saturday

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Thursday is Thanksgiving (everyone knows that). Friday is Black Friday (most people know that). Saturday is Small Business Saturday (did you know THAT?) It's a celebration in its 5th year, encouraging consumers to "shop small," as in local, independent retailers that can help jumpstart regional economies.

To raise awareness for Small Business Saturday, Chicago-based street artist Hebru Brantley has enlisted 12 established and emerging street artists from around the country to create murals promoting the "shop small" message. Cities including Dallas, Portland, Miami and Atlanta just got a little more colorful as today's up-and-coming artists took to the streets to spread awareness of local communities and small businesses. With the help of some paint and a heavy helping of creativity, store windows are transformed into vivid stories for all the public to admire. We'd prefer shopping the small, vibrant shops below to the massive lines at Best Buy any day.

Get lost in the colors of small city streets below.



American Express OPEN launched the street art program in 2013 as a new, unique way to bring communities together through art, which it believes can be a catalyst for conversation.

Feed The Nostalgic Beast Inside With These Shrines To Your Favorite 90s Idols

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Michelle Guintu's upcoming exhibition is titled "Obsession" and it's not hard to see why. The artists craft sharp-edged, multimedia shrines to classic hip hop artists, pop stars and cult film characters. For Guintu, nostalgia isn't an ironic throwback but an intense fervor, and her artworks don't just namedrop, they deify.

"I choose subjects that I'm super familiar with and have a lot to do with my childhood," Guintu explained to The Huffington Post. "I guess I'm attracted to those things because I love those feelings I had growing up. Like when I listen to or watch something I get that deep heart-wrenching feeling sometimes; the kind of feeling where your eyes are blank because your eyeballs are nesting in that specific memory. Not to sound weird but sometimes it makes me wanna cry. I mean who doesn't like that nostalgic feeling? I just feel it more than the average person."

missy

Lucky for us, Guintu has good taste. Her subjects include '90s royalty like Aaliyah, Missy Elliott, TLC and Lil Kim. There are also some '80s divas in the mix like Madonna and Cyndi Lauper. Her neon-tinged, pop-influenced style has been described as "kindercore" -- yes, that's part kindergarden, part hardcore for the uninitiated. We suppose if a badass art prodigy had a soft spot for N.W.A. this is what she'd create during craft time.

While a lot of Guintu's works are painted on canvas, some are composed of a motley jumble of media, from fabric to paper mache, effectively blurring the line between art and craft. "I hope that people can see I'm not just a painter but I can work 2D and 3D and still receive that same nostalgic feeling," said Guintu. "Also, that art doesn't have to be large-scale or look expensive to be rad and legit."

Get it girl.

Guintu's upcoming exhibition "Obsession" runs from December 13th, 2014 until January 11th, 2015 at New Image Art Gallery in Los Angeles.

Surreal Photos Explore Why Women Often Wrap Up Their Identity In Their Hair

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There is a very complex relationship between a woman and her hair. The protein filaments that sprout from our scalps somehow become emblematic of a woman's identity, as if vital secrets were wrapped in every strand. We spend valuable time and money primping our coiffures as if they had the uncanny ability to transmit messages to strangers. And yet hairs on legs, tummies, pits and toes are often deemed grotesque and removed immediately.

Why is there such a strange code of conduct around a lady's mane? That's exactly what photographer Rebecca Drolen chose to explore in her surreal black-and-white series aptly dubbed "Hair Parts."

parted

"For many years, I have been a person who is recognizable by my long and somewhat wild hair," Drolen explained to The Huffington Post. "My series, 'Hair Pieces,' began with some self-reflection and essentially laughing at myself as I wondered why or how I wrap up so much of my sense of identity in my looks, specifically my hair."

"The first image was made when I found a braided ponytail that I had cut off years earlier with intention of donating. For whatever reason, I thought…I can use this! I fashioned the braid into a necktie, put on a short wig, and made the first image of the series, 'Hair Tie.' The image is one part liberating and two parts manic. I loved the notion of telling an ambiguous story with only the figure and their interaction with hair as the contents of the frame."

tie

Drolen's photos provide an otherworldly glimpse at the peculiar role hair plays in our daily lives. Some photos examine what hair is acceptable (eyelashes), desirable (ponytail) and deplorable (armpits). Some resemble wonky fashion editorials while others feel like Cousin Itt's head shots. The minimalist images capture the paradoxical nature of these peculiar fibers -- at once attractive and repulsive, part of our bodies and yet not.

"I entered making this work with a sense of fascination that hair is both beautiful and repulsive in our culture. The fragile influence of context is its only distinction. We see long hair on a woman as a symbol of beauty and femininity, but as soon as the hair is cut or removed the body, we think of it as unsanitary and strange. Likewise, we seem to never have enough hair in the places we want it, and too much hair in the places that we don’t want it to be!"

The dreamlike images -- at once playful and critical -- capture the strange and contradictory roles hair plays in our lives. Think about them next time you whip out your razor.

What It's Like To Raise A Daughter With Down Syndrome

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This article was originally on Slate.
By David Rosenberg

o

Sian Davey, a mother of four, was pregnant with her youngest child when she was told that there was a good chance her daughter would be born with Down syndrome. While the decision to go through with the pregnancy was an easy one for Davey, it didn’t prepare her for what it would be like.

In addition to a fear that her daughter Alice would be treated unfairly in a society that she feels gives little or no value to people with Down syndrome, Davey had concerns about how her family would handle things and even her own expectations for Alice. “When you have children with Down syndrome, it becomes about them having Down syndrome,” she said. “They have a condition, it’s almost as if they don’t have a personality and she wasn’t Alice, she was Alice with Down syndrome.”

Davey explored various narratives about her relationship with her daughter, as well as her ideas of what her daughter might be experiencing, in the series “Looking for Alice,” shot on film with a medium-format camera. It is one of many projects in which she has immersed herself since deciding to follow a career as a photographer. (She is currently closing down her 15-year psychotherapy practice.)

“When we have a child who doesn’t have learning difficulties or Down syndrome, we all project on them that my child is going to be this or that, we immediately have expectations, but I wasn’t allowed any here, I was dealing with very different territory,” she said. “It’s a great exercise in looking at oneself and seeing what we do to our children and these expectations we have for them. As a psychotherapist I deal with the fallout of that all the time and it just illuminated and amplified my relationship with my other children.”

“What I found fascinating was once I got my thinking mind out of the way was the perception of photography as a medium of communication,” she said. “When the images came back it was extraordinary what was being shown to me and just by putting that intention out there, things were just showing themselves to me without me thinking.”

Davey said nearly all of the photos have been taken either inside their home or no more than a 10 minute drive away. Apart from watching the light, staying in the moment is her only parameter when shooting.

“I sit back and watch and I can kind of hear and see so I’m combining all my senses to what’s going on around me.”

See more images on Slate.

Photographer Amy Goalen Introduces Us To The 'Masculine Side Of Yoga'

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They downward dog. They warrior pose. They most certainly chaturanga. These are the zenned-out men of yoga, brought to you by photographer Amy Goalen.

Goalen started a steady yoga practice in Los Angeles a few years ago, which subsequently inspired the Los Angeles-based artist to create a yoga photography series. While researching for the project, she came upon a realization: while there were plentiful images of women engaging in the practice, men were actually quite unrepresented. Hence "Inside the Warrior -- the Masculine Side of Yoga" was born.

men

Goalen soon teamed up with writer and devoted yogi Julian DeVoe for the project; she took photos, he interviewed the subjects on their relationship to the ancient art. "I tell everyone 'You don't have to be 25 and ripped to be photographed by me,'" Goalen said to The Huffington Post. "I want to photograph men with a dedicated practice. Period."

Working in both black-and-white and color, Goalen captures a variety of male subjects striking a (yoga) pose, their minds, bodies and spirits immortalized in a single moment of peaceful athleticism. You can watch the body assume shapes that border on surreal, stretching and bending like a work of human origami. Yet beyond the men's bodies, Goalen captures something deeper, what she calls the "soul of a yogi," the "depth of heart, sensitivity, courage, integrity, and a self-awareness that comes through." Take a look for yourself in the photos below.


6 Big Takeaways From The 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Trailer

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Both the dark side and the light got its fill of "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" on Friday, as the film's first trailer pinged around the internet with speed comparable to hyperdrive. Much was revealed in the first 88-seconds of footage from J.J. Abrams' film, including first looks at new cast members John Boyega, Daisy Ridley, Oscar Isaac and, maybe, Adam Driver. Ahead, the six most important GIFs from "The Force Awakens" trailer.

John Boyega as a Stormtrooper

Star Wars
GIF: YouTube

It has been rumored since July that Boyega plays a Stormtrooper who winds up abandoning his post in "The Force Awakens." Boyega's first appearance in the trailer all but confirms his employment status -- unless he's just dressed up like a Stormtrooper to fool the Empire, a la Luke and Han in "Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope."

This robot



It's just cute.

Daisy Ridley as Leia on Endor Han & Leia's daughter?



It hasn't been confirmed that newcomer Daisy Ridley plays the daughter of Han Solo and Princess Leia in "The Force Awakens," but her first appearance in the new trailer certainly gives off a Leia vibe.

Oscar Isaac doing things inside an X-Wing

Star Wars
GIF: YouTube

Why is this relevant? Because according to Latino Review, Isaac's unnamed character was supposedly the new owner of the Millennium Falcon.

Is this Adam Driver with the evil-looking lightsaber?



Driver has long been rumored to play the villain in "The Force Awakens," and this kind of looks like his back? Maybe? Regardless, whoever it is has a strong lightsaber game.

The Millennium Falcon is back for the first time in 31 years

Star Wars
GIF: YouTube

Great shot kid, that was one in a million.

Vogue And Bloomingdale's Hired This Austrian Photographer To Create Sassy Balloon Creatures

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These certainly aren't your average balloon animals.

Austrian-born photographer Bela Borsodi kicked off his still life career in 1999, seven years after his move to New York City, and has been creating, accessorizing and photographing balloon creatures ever since.

Borsodi's clients have ranged from The New York Times Magazine and Vogue Russia to Bloomingdale's and H&M. This week, Borsodi shared two projects with The Huffington Post. One of them, "Inflated Egos," is among his earliest projects, and was shot for City magazine in 2005.

"The editor of the magazine just asked me if I would like to shoot different accessories for them and told me I would have total freedom to do whatever I like," Borsodi told HuffPost in an email. "I had worked with balloons for a while before that, and thought it could be fun to create balloon figures and then to dress them up. The magazine loved the idea and all was a go ahead and lots of fun.”

The second project, titled "The Expandables," was shot in 2011 for the Russian magazine Tatler.

"Tatler Russia successfully talked me into making a repeat of the [City magazine] story. This is absolutely against my rules because I never repeat anything unless I can drastically improve it or find a very different angle to it," said Borsodi. "But the magazine was so very enthusiastic about doing balloon figures that I made an exception. I thought it would be funny to over-accessorize them and make them quite sexy."

Take a look at both projects below.


After Dark: Meet Susanne Bartsch, Party Curator And Nightlife Legend

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This is the thirtieth installment in HuffPost Gay Voices Associate Editor James Nichols' ongoing series "After Dark: NYC Nightlife Today And Days Past" that examines the state of New York nightlife in the modern day, as well as the development and production of nightlife over the past several decades. Each featured individual in this series currently serves as a prominent person in the New York nightlife community or has made important contributions in the past that have sustained long-lasting impacts.

HuffPost Gay Voices believes that it is important and valuable to elevate the work, both today and in the past, of those engaged in the New York nightlife community, especially in an age where queer history seems to be increasingly forgotten. Nightlife not only creates spaces for queers and other marginalized groups to be artistically and authentically celebrated, but the work of those involved in nightlife creates and shapes the future of our culture as a whole. Visit Gay Voices regularly to learn not only about individuals currently making an impact in nightlife, but those whose legacy has previously contributed to the ways we understand queerness, art, identity and human experience today.

Next week will be the final installment in "After Dark" and will revisit each artist, performer, promoter and personality involved in this series.


The Huffington Post: You're a legend both within the New York and international nightlife communities. What has your journey to becoming such a prominent cultural fixture entailed?
Susanne Bartsch: I came to New York for a love affair. I came for Valentine's Day and fell in love with New York -- out of love with the guy and into love with the city.

Prior to that I first came to New York City in the mid-'70s around when Studio 54 was opening. I wasn’t really that into it. But I came back on Feb. 14, 1981 and just didn’t want to leave. I ended up being bicoastal for a while -- I had an antique and clothing business in England and I would miss the incredible looks that were happening there more and more. Every week there everyone had a completely new look. I missed that; nobody was dressing up here -- it was like if you had a flower in your hair you were dressing up [laughs]. It was very chic and cool, there was nothing wrong with it -- I just missed the constant change of every week where you didn’t know what people were going to be doing. So I had this thought: why not import what I missed?

I decided to open a store and the area to do it seemed to be SoHo. It was still a very rundown area with a lot of warehouse spaces and I found a little store owned by a very sweet man who gave me a good deal to open a shop. I didn’t have a lot financing so I went back to England and asked a number of people to engage in a sell and return arrangement -- give me some stuff and I’ll sell it in New York and give you the money. I was going to London to get clothes from English designers that weren’t necessarily established; a lot of them were in college or behind-the-scenes. I went behind the designers and dealt with people like John Galliano and Marc Jacobs while they were still very young. Essentially I came to New York and I was in the fashion business.

susanne

So I was there and it was going really well but all of the sudden everyone and their mother was moving to London because there was such as explosion of London fashion. London had been dead! And suddenly everyone was going to Sacs, Bloomingdales, Pat Field's and I freaked out. After a lot of thought I decided to create this thing called the "New London In New York" fashion show for fashion week. That was in April 1983 and I’d never done a show in my entire life and got all of these designers to come over like Leigh Bowery, Rachel Auburn, Stephen Jones, Galliano –- they all came and I said, “I’m going to do this show, put your stuff in it.”

The show was amazing -- it was complete chaos and a complete madhouse… but the chaos was what was the success of the show, actually, because people were used to very polished, on time and well-done productions. It kind of was the drama of the show and people loved it. It was extremely successful and I sold a ton of stuff to all of the stores. So that’s how I got my first start.

It went really well and the second show was the same year in November at fashion week again at The Limelight. But the problem I was finding slowly but surely was the delivery with all of these designers. These kids just didn’t have money to produce. So in ’84 I started thinking about how I needed to focus on myself and I found a place on West Broadway and turned it into this space with Goude-inspired monuments from around the world. I started to do my own designs and that was going well -- the shop opened with a big bang, it was a big tourist attraction and very special.

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After the backing went south and I left the store I decided to start with the concept of weekly parties, which was something that I knew about from growing up in Switzerland and was used to as a kid. I wanted to create an event where you could show off your clothing: high energy, bright lights, disco music and people could come and be seen and dress up. That’s really how it all started. For my first party I put Kenny Kenny on the door, who was a jewelry maker at the time… and it was instant madness. We had 1,000 people the first night -- Michael Musto and everyone came. That was the beginning of the party and events business that I’ve now ended up doing a lot.

I want to grow. I don’t mind sitting still with myself, but at the same time I don’t want to stand still. I like to evolve. I don’t want something to kill me, I like to kill it [laughs]. I was loving everything; dressing up and having fun and bringing people together from all walks of life.

While I had my parties, I also started to travel and take things on the road. I went to Japan and we did a tour -- I brought the voguers before anyone knew about voguing. But this was also at a time where more and more people were dying of AIDS. I mean, half of my address book was crossed out and I became very depressed. So I came up with the idea of the Love Ball.

In those days I was going to the Harlem House Balls. The House Ball community was very heavily hit by the epidemic anyways, so I thought, why not use that community to create an event, give them exposure and raise a massive amount of money for AIDS research? The Love Ball made Houses out of stores, like Barneys, by teaming them up with the voguing community -- they could be a House for a night and pay to be on stage with three minutes to do whatever they wanted to do. We had a celebrity panel of judges and the winners got trophies created by big artists like Keith Harring. Businesses had to pay to be on stage and we also had high-end tables going for $10,000. The servers were all drag queens -- I freaked them all out [laughs].

So we were all going mainstream but everybody loved it. And it raised a lot of money, like half a million dollars. This was actually the first AIDS benefit that the fashion community came together for.



We did it again in 1991 and in 1992 we did it in Paris. I also had a benefit at the Playboy Mansion -- in all we threw four events to raise money for AIDS research and raised about $2.5 million dollars.

Then in 1994 I had my own “Love Ball” -- my son. So I decided to just continue my monthly night at The Copacabana and not do the nights at the club anymore. I’d gotten bored with it; not because it was boring but I’d done it as well as I could. What more could I do in this business? I couldn’t grow anymore. I had Bailey, my son. I got married and decided that I didn’t want to be in a club anymore. And I really didn’t think I was ever going to again… until Happy Valley in 2006.

I wasn’t looking but at the same time I was maybe a little restless. In 2006 Jeremy Scott built this club and called it Happy Valley. Kenny Kenny was doing something there and called me up saying that if I was interested in coming out he’d introduce me to the owner. So I went over there and I loved it. Kenny brought me back out, really.

The party was really special. Things got depressing after 9/11 and it seemed to be the first thing since 9/11 that I was really interested in doing. The party initially wasn’t working and I came out that first night, bringing hundreds of people, and it worked. They were excited that I was coming back out.

Happy Valley eventually closed with no notice and Kenny and I bounced around for a bit... then Vandam opened. They told us that we could have a Sunday and I was really worried because I didn’t think Sundays worked. But then through Vandam, Sundays started to become the night to go out. It was just so successful and we were there for almost six years. We were forced out not because it wasn’t working but the police kept coming there -- they wanted to shut the club down. And the fight that happened there with Chris Brown was like the nail in the coffin. As a whole Vandam was fabulous and Kenny and I had a great time. I miss it.

susanne3

Then Kenny and I separated. This past year and the year before I decided I wanted to expand. As I said, I like to grow and I’d been in the club; I’d done the Sunday and it did well. I had all of my special events but at the same time I also wanted to do different markets as well. Towards the end of Vadam I ended up doing several parties a week: I had Vandam on Sundays, the SoHo Grand on Tuesdays with Joey Arias and Amanda Lepore, which was more of a salon feel, and the Marquee on Thursdays, which was more of a focus on the art community.

What’s happened between the ‘80s and now -- Friday and Saturday used to be bridge and tunnel. And now we don’t have bridge and tunnel. We have a tunnel but we don’t have a bridge anymore! There ain’t no more bridge [laughs]. Sundays are the hardest night to do these days and Friday and Saturday are the big nights to go out now. Between the economy and having to worry about being to work on time, people don’t want to go out on Sunday. And the gays who do go out prefer little bars; more intimate spaces.

So I did everything there for a year and a half: all of the different markets. Now I want to focus on some really special things and I want to start a weekend monthly at the end of January. And, as you know, I braved the bridge at the beginning of this year and finally went to Brooklyn to start Kunst. I love it.

Most of your parties are supported by and staffed by a group of emerging artists and designers like gage of the boone, Ryan Burke and Domonique Echeverria. What role do they play in what you’re doing now in nightlife?
I just really like them all a lot. gage is great and I’d like him to be more involved than just as a host, like he’s been with Kunst. Domonique is really fun and stylish -- she cares and she gives and she looks great. I love that she’s voluptuous and sexy; she’s just special. I mean, if she’s naked without anything on she’s special [laughs]. She looks amazing and I like her looks and she’s there to care -- you can’t ask for more. Ryan is incredibly talented; I love his looks. They’re just so good. For my Chelsea art show "bARTsch" with Ryan, gage, Erickatoure, one-half NelSon and Muffinhead -- what I like about these artists is it’s all something that you haven’t seen before. It’s not like, “Oh, I’ve seen this done in a different way.” NelSon and Ryan will without fail show up in things that they’ve invented. They inspire me so much.

susanne4

We previously talked about this initiative you’re pushing to take art out of the nightclubs and showcase it in a gallery context. Why is this important to you?
First of all, I think nightlife is so blah now. I just don’t see anything new happening; everyone seems to be rehashing everything. Also, I think people are going out less because people don’t need to go to gay bars to hook up anymore. People also aren’t going out because you can have a life at home on the computer. It’s extremely depressing. I find it very uninspiring... but this is where it’s at.

So these people are looking so incredible and also have all of these pieces they’ve produced. I just want to give them a platform where they can get noticed. The work is undervalued and people go to the clubs to get laid, have a drink or be social. People will see this incredible art without really taking it in. So I’m inspired by the idea that I can get people to look at that as art, which means it has to come out of the environment that it’s in.



Do you feel like nightlife used to have more of an art-centric focus? What’s the main difference now?
I think definitely yes. And I think the main difference is that legally it’s a nightmare to do anything. Also there’s no impulse -- it’s almost like the social media makes everything seem planned. You decide what’s seen... it’s not just seen. I’m not saying that’s bad but at the same time everything is so controlled. It’s a weird time and nightlife has definitely moved to Brooklyn. I go to Brooklyn and I see more people in one hour then I see all week in Manhattan [laughs]. But I don’t know how long that is going to last; everyone and their mother is going over there.

The reality is that these people need to be out of this environment and be seen and that’s the whole point of bringing the art out of the clubs and into the galleries.

What do you have coming up?
I’m bringing Kunst to L.A. this month. I’m also teaching a MAC master class and doing a lot of stuff together with MAC. I’m working with FIT on a massive project and also have more projects in the works with MOMA. FIT, MOMA and MAC -- that’s where I want to be. I want to do things with people that are creative and that get it.

As a legendary figure who brings people together and curates other-worldly experiences for the public -- at it's foundation, what is nightlife for you? Why have you stuck with it for all of these years? What makes it so special and worthwhile?
At the end of the day it’s self-involved behavior [laughs]. When it works, it’s magic. When things gel, there’s nothing better. It’s like a high... maybe it’s like a drug, but it just feels so good.

But when it doesn’t gel, which is often the case, it’s still good. I love bringing people together. I’m a Virgo and I love people. I really enjoy seeing people smiling, talking to each other -- it’s just a magical thing, really. People united is the best thing in life, there’s nothing better -- it’s called love. They love who they are, they love what they’re doing, they’re united in that feeling. That is what I love about nightlife.

Next week will be the final installment in "After Dark" and revisit each artist, performer, promoter and personality involved in this series. Missed the previous installments in this series? Check out the slideshow below.

'Wanderers' Short Film Paints A Brighter Future Through Breathtaking Visuals & Carl Sagan

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"I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas, and land on barbarous coasts."

It was these two sentences from Herman Melville's "Moby Dick" that captured the heart of the great Carl Sagan. It is this romance with the unknown that triggered and emboldened mankind's exploration into space, and it is the heart of Swedish animator and digital artist Erik Wernquist's new short film, "Wanderers."

Combining breathtaking visuals of realistic depictions of a variety of places in our solar system -- kindly detailed by Wernquist here -- with the ever-mind-expanding words of Carl Sagan, pulled from an audio recording of his book "Pale Blue Dot," Wernquist tempts readers to wonder what lies beyond our atmosphere and visualizes what it would be like if humanity happened to make that journey in the future. Take four minutes out of your day and be inspired by the exceptional creation above.

Poetic Photographs Of Plastic Bags Shed Light On Our Consumer Society

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"There are some 500 billion plastic bags every year in the world," photographer Alain Delorme exclaimed to The Huffington Post. "Made in a few seconds, used in a few dozen minutes and [they take] a few hundreds years to disappear from our Earth."

If you live in an urban environment you're no doubt familiar with the sensation of encountering a lone plastic bag zipping through the breeze without origin or explanation. Though of course the image is upsetting, in terms of the waste and pollution contained within, there's something viscerally compelling about it as well.

murmr

"There is something poetic to it –- as beautifully featured in the iconic sequence of the movie "American Beauty" -– a plastic bag flying like a dancer. Just like a swarm of birds finding their way to their nest at sunset. But the plastic bag is more often frightening –- the very symbol of our consumer society is also the one of pollution, now a continent of its own... but invisible, hidden deep in the ocean."

In his striking series "Murmurations -- Ephemeral Plastic Sculptures," Delorme poses a visual question that's impossible to look away from. "What if [that continent] all of a sudden boldly appeared in the sky? Borrowing the beauty of the swarm of birds gracefully flying at sunset, but also their frightening aspect –- as in "The Birds" movie by Hitchcock. It remains stunningly beautiful but also perversely invasive, clearly highlighting the plastification of the world."

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While many environmentally driven artworks set out to communicate a specific perspective or unseen reality, Delorme prefers to leave his images shrouded in mystery. His digitally manipulated plastic hives swoop and whirl through the open sky for all to see, their translucent bodies resembling jellyfish against the sunset. The resulting photographic works evoke the effects of land art, merging the artificial and natural worlds in a virtual space.

"I am here to question –- people then make their own interpretation. Some people will think about consumer society due to the accumulation effect and the signs of human presence, others to land art or to environment questions due to the natural context…" In this respect, Delorme bears a likeness to artists like Barry Underwood and Chris Jordan, who present pressing environmental issues in surprising ways.

If nothing else, Delorme's plasticized visions will make you pause for a moment to appreciate the uncertainty a single image can hold. "Today things go so fast, people often do not take the time for in-depth analysis and miss lots of information. I like the idea that curiosity here pays off: if you’re curious enough to get closer, you realize that the swarm of birds is actually made of plastic bags and you get the idea."

"Murmurations" offers a portrait of contemporary culture at once dark and mystifying, mythical and very real. The toxic swarms bring to the surface what's long been boiling underneath; the image is both horrifying and oddly transfixing. Take a look below.

Art Basel Miami Beach 2014: The 25 Events You Simply Can't Miss

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Going to Art Basel Miami Beach? Now's the time to strategize for the art onslaught to come. Trust us, once you step foot in that humid Miami heat it's hard to huddle over your laptop. Luckily, we've compiled a handy itinerary sure to meet all your art viewing and late night partying needs.

The following list of 25 happenings doesn't include the Art Basel Miami Beach fair itself, nor any of the many satellite fairs, but rather the exhibitions, performances and parties sprinkled along the way. It's a sparkly selection, containing everything from Marina to Miley. Stay safe out there and check back for more Miami coverage throughout the fair.

Wednesday, December 3

1. Pedro Reyes' "Sanatorium"
Reyes' unusual installation takes the shape of a pop-up "clinic," in which "therapists" help viewers in whichever capacities they desire, offering everything from hypnosis to trust building games.
Opens Wednesday, December 3. Miami's Institute of Contemporary Art, 4040 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami.

pedro

2. MoMA PS1's Zero Tolerance
Named after the 1990s policy under which New York City took a tough stance against vice and crime, "Zero Tolerance: Miami" features an array of international artists whose works reflect the relationship between freedom and control, namely in relation to political dissidence, urban redevelopment, social policy and gay rights. Artists include Doug Aitken, Joseph Beuys, Yoko Ono and Pussy Riot. Curated by Klaus Biesenbach and Margaret Aldredge.
Wednesday, December 3 until Sunday, December 7. 9AM-6PM. YoungArts Gallery (1st and 2nd floors).

3. MEƎM 4 Miami
Contemporary artist Ryan McNamara's "MEƎM 4 Miami: A Story Ballet About the Internet" is a multi-layered investigation into the internet as a space for communication, self-creation and infinite information. "A fully immersive experience that questions the very possibility of a singular, individual 'experience', the performance plays with abrupt changes in pacing, music, and choreographic styles –- from classical to contemporary –- mirroring the close proximity different modes of spectacle now have to one another."
The performance will take place at 8pm and 10.30pm on Wednesday, December 3 and Thursday, December 4, with a by-invitation performance on Tuesday, December 2, at the Miami Grand Theater at Castle Beach Resort, 5445 Collins Avenue.

ryan mcnamara

4. Solange curates SELECT
Solange is slated to curate a series of nightly performances, one featuring herself, for the SELECT Fair. Many artists from her label, Saint Heron, are rumored to be involved though details have yet to be released.
Wednesday, December 3 until Saturday, December 6. 7PM. SELECT Fair 7200 Collins Ave.

solange

5. Miley Cyrus and Jeffrey Deitch
Tommy Hilfiger, Jeffrey Deitch and V Magazine are hosting an Art Basel opening night party. Miley Cyrus is performing.
Wednesday, December 3. 10PM - 12:00 AM at the Raleigh Hotel, 1775 Collins Avenue.

6. EDITION Opening Party
Celebrating the opening of The Miami Beach EDITION with music by Horse Meat Disco. The invite-only party is hosted by the hotel's designers George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg of design firm Yabu Pushelberg.
Wednesday, December 3. 11PM. Basement at The Miami Beach EDITION, 2901 Collins Avenue.

7. Artsy Dance Party
Carter Cleveland, Wendi Murdoch, Peter Thiel, and Dasha Zhukova are hosting an Artsy Dance Party in the Miami Design District, featuring artist Shen Wei and a DJ set by Theophilus London.
Wednesday, December 3. 10:30PM to 1:00AM at The Moore Building, 4040 NE 2nd Avenue.

theophilus london

8. Queen of the Night


The 2014 Celebration of Women in Art combines dance, cuisine, fashion, circus, theater and nightlife in an immersive, lady-centric experience. Millie Brown, known for her vomit art, Natalie White, known for her topless art and Sophia Wallace of the CLITERACY project are all slated to participate. The event will benefit Brooklyn Museum’s Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art and School of Doodle.

Wednesday, December 3. 10 PM. Paramount Hotel. Purchase tickets here.


queen
Photo by Matteo Prandoni


Thursday, December 4

9. Lynda Benglis Artist Talk
The ever-influential Lynda Benglis will kick of Art Basel's Conversations series. The artist will discuss her notorious advertisement in the Artforum November issue of 1974, and how the (art) world has changed (or not) in the 40 years since.
Thursday, December 4. 10AM-11AM. Miami Convention Center, Hall C auditorium, entrance through Lobby C, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

lynda benglis

10. Marina Abramovic on Materials for Immateriality
The performance art goddess will join Patrizia Moroso, Creative Director of Italian design brand Moroso, Udine and Patricia Urquiola, a Milan-based designer, in a conversation moderated by Sam Keller.
Thursday, December 4. 3PM-4PM. Miami Convention Center, Hall C auditorium, entrance through Lobby C, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

marina abramovic

11. Instagram as an Artistic Medium
ForYourArt founder Bettina Korek moderates a conversation between Klaus Biesenbach, Simon de Pury, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Kevin Systrom and Amalia Ulman, who will discuss the creative possibilities of the art world's favorite social media vessel.
Thursday, December 4. 5PM-6PM. Miami Convention Center, Hall C auditorium, entrance through Lobby C, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

woke up still wearing my woody allen glasses

A photo posted by Klaus Biesenbach (@klausbiesenbach) on






12. PAMM's One Year Anniversary
DJ collective Future Brown will perform for the first time in the U.S. featuring R&B star Kelala at the Pérez Art Museum Miami to celebrate the museum's one year anniversary.
Thursday, December 4. 8PM-12AM. Pérez Art Museum Miami.

13. Daniel Arsham's "Welcome to the Future"
Ohio-based artist Daniel Arsham brings his site-specific installation to Locust Projects, transforming the gallery into an excavation site by digging a trench in the gallery floor and filling it with the muted debris of 20th century media.
Opening reception Thursday, December 4. 7PM-10PM. Locust Projects, 3852 North Miami Avenue.

daniel arsham

14. Stevie Nicks' Selfies
Angel of our dreams Stevie Nicks will grace the aptly named Dream South Beach with her bewitching self-portrait collection taken between l975 and 1987.
Exhibition runs from Thursday, December 4 until Friday, December 5. Dream South Beach, 1111 Collins Ave.

nicks

15. Slow Motion Walk
As part of Marina Abramovic Institute’s (MAI) programming, YoungArts presents a Slow Motion Walk, in which the public is invited to join performance artist Brittany Bailey in walking as slowly as possible to truly consider each and every step as a deliberate motion.
Thursday, December 4 through December 7. 12PM-6PM. YoungArts Jewel Box.

16. FKA Twigs Performance
The alien dreamsicle known as FKA Twigs is performing with hip-hop producer Clams Casino on the YoungArts Campus. Tickets are available here.
Thursday, December 4 on the YoungArts Campus. Doors open at 7PM.

fka twigs


Friday, December 5

17. Zaha Hadid IRL
Zaha Hadid will be the guest of honor at One Thousand Museum’s groundbreaking ceremony, which will mark the start of work on the 709-foot tower, built by Zaha Hadid Architects.
Friday, December 5. 11:30AM-1:30PM at One Thousand Museum, 1000 Biscayne Blvd.

zaha hadid

18. Shen Wei's "In Black, White & Grey"
Chinese-born artist Shen Wei, the MacArthur and Guggenheim Fellow who choreographed the Beijing Olympics' opening ceremony, is holding a site-specific performance along with his exhibition "In Black, White & Grey" at Miami's Freedom Tower. Tickets are free but must be reserved here.
Friday, December 5, 1PM and 8PM. Saturday, December 6, 1PM and 8PM. Sunday, December 7, 1PM. The Freedom Tower, 600 Biscayne Blvd.

19. Theo Jansen talks Strandbeest
A Strandbeest is a kinetic creature that lives on the beach, eating wind to survive. Listen to its creator, Theo Jansen, discuss his work with Lena Herzog and Trevor Smith.
Friday, December 5. 3PM-4PM. Miami Convention Center, Hall C auditorium, entrance through Lobby C, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

strandbeest

20. "Big Eyes" Screening
See Tim Burton's upcoming film about one of the most epic art frauds of all time, starring Christoph Waltz as Walter Keane and Amy Adams as Margaret Keane. Admission is free but seating is limited.
Friday, December 5. 8:30PM. Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road.

21. VH1 + SCOPE Party
Ring in the weekend with VH1 and SCOPE at their annual party, with interactive works by artist and calligrapher Aerosyn-Lex Mestrovic, who will hand-paint hundreds of feet of Japanese synthetic paper. Danish singer-songwriter Nabiha will perform and Swizz Beatz will DJ.
Friday, December 5. 8PM-11PM. 1235 Washington Ave.

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22. James Blake Performance
English electronic producer and singer makes his Miami debut at YoungArts Campus.
Friday, December 5 at YoungArts Campus. Doors open at 8PM, performance runs 10PM-12PM. 1235 Washington Ave.


Saturday, December 6

23. Pedro Reyes Artist Talk
Mexico City-based artist Pedro Reyes joins Alex Gartenfeld, Deputy Director and Chief Curator of ICA, Miami, in conversation.
Saturday, December 6. 2PM-3PM. Miami Convention Center, Hall C auditorium, entrance through Lobby C, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

24. "Pose and Propaganda"
This ongoing exhibition at the Wolfsonian-FIU explores political posters from the contemporary Middle East and Afghanistan, analyzing how certain poses and expressions are used to communicate meaning.
Ongoing. The Wolfsonian-FIU Museum, 1001 Washington Avenue.

25. Julian Schnabel Artist Talk
American artist and filmmaker Julian Schnabel joins Bonnie Clearwater in conversation. The two will host a brunch at the NSU Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale earlier in the day from 11AM to 2PM, for VIP cardholders only.
Saturday, December 6. 4PM-5PM. Miami Convention Center, Hall C auditorium, entrance through Lobby C, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

11 Instagram Accounts Worth Following This Art Basel Miami Beach Season

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Art Basel Miami Beach is fast approaching and so is the accompanying onslaught of contemporary art, jaded socialites, scary price tags and free champagne (that's not for you.) Though the fair doesn't officially begin until December 4, festivities will be taking over the city of Miami beginning early this week.

Whether you're mapping out your itinerary for an ABMB IRL experience or planning to live vicariously through your social media feeds, we're here to help. Instagram's Jaimen Sfetko helped us out with a curated list of art world players with the all-access pass to this year's festivities. Comprised of artists, curators, gallerists and everything in between, the following social media gurus are your ticket to all of the jaw-dropping artworks and over-the-top parties to come.

1. Hans Ulrich Obrist
Co-director of the Serpentine Galleries

James Franco. ART WITH FRIENDS @jamesfrancotv @andreassiegfried #ArtWithFriends @klausbiesenbach

Una foto publicada por Hans Ulrich Obrist (@hansulrichobrist) el






2. Klaus Biesenbach
Chief Curator At Large at MoMA and Director of MoMA PS1

woke up still wearing my woody allen glasses

A photo posted by Klaus Biesenbach (@klausbiesenbach) on






3. Simon de Pury
Auctioneer, curator, collector

Oliver Laric #oliverlaric #phillips #undertheinfluence

A photo posted by Simon de Pury (@simondepury) on






4. Shantell Martin
Illustrator, currently at the MIT Media Lab as a visiting scholar

My dream #drawingmydreams

A photo posted by Shantell Martin (@shantell_martin) on






5. Daniel Arsham
Artist

Sleep Tight.

A photo posted by Daniel Arsham (@danielarsham) on






6. Stephen Shore
Artist

#charlesbridge Prague

A photo posted by Stephen Shore (@stephen.shore) on






7. KAWS
Artist





8. Fabienne Stephan
Curator at Salon 94

#perfectlovers my favorite.

A photo posted by Ludwig von Truffle (@ludwigvontruffle) on






9. Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn
Founder of Salon 94

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye's man in a red bikini! @jackshainmanny #lynetteyiadomboakye

A photo posted by Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn (@jeannegr) on






10. Kimberly Drew
Founder of Black Contemporary Art

via @jamillahjames

A photo posted by kim drew (@museummammy) on






11. JiaJia Fei
Guggenheim Digital Marketing Manager

selfie with my homegirl @laurawasss @wxyzjewelry as seen on @beyonce #fresherthanyou #711

A photo posted by JiaJia Fei ✌️ (@vajiajia) on






Dave Grohl Revives 'Hooker On The Street,' Nirvana-Era Solo Demo

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In the most recent episode of Foo Fighters' album tie-in HBO series, "Sonic Highways," Dave Grohl and company took us to Seattle. Focusing mostly on Grohl's time in Nirvana and how he eventually began Foo Fighters, the episode featured a previously unheard solo demo by Grohl, titled "Hooker on the Street." Revealed by producer Barrett Jones, who said that Grohl had recorded at least 40 songs during Nirvana's last days. The track combines Grohl's signature gruff vocals with some Red Hot Chili Peppers' funk-rock and even a touch of James Brown. Listen to the track above.

Grohl also took some time in the episode to share his former bandmate Kurt Cobain's first reaction when he showed him the songs he had been working on. Grohl explained that Cobain "kissed [him] on the face" while taking a bath when he heard the first demo, and that he was initially "too afraid to be in the same room as he listened to it.”

H/T Consequence of Sound

11-Year-Old Dance Sensation Drops Mind-Blowing Routine To 'Shake It Off'

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Here's something to help shake off those post-Thanksgiving blues.

11-year-old Taylor Hatala, famous for her viral videos dancing to "All About That Bass," "Anaconda" and "Rude," just took on Taylor Swift in a big way.

The preteen teamed up with choreographer Matt Steffanina for an impressive routine to a remix of "Shake It Off." Steffanina, who danced with Swift in her 2014 American Music Awards performance of "Blank Space," also choreographed Hatala's moves for "All About That Bass" and "Rude."

"It's been amazing watching [Hatala] grow this year," Steffanina wrote when her "All About That Bass" routine was posted to Youtube in October. "So proud of her."

The feeling is mutual, apparently: Hatala has taken to calling Steffanina her "Big Bro."




Here's hoping Swift recruits Hatala to be her next backup dancer.

New York Film Critics Circle Honors J.K. Simmons, Patricia Arquette, 'Boyhood'

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The New York Film Critics Circle announced its annual awards on Monday, the year's first critics' prizes and something of a reliable indicator of Oscar odds. Nine of the past 10 Best Film winners went on to earn Best Picture nods, and three also won. Still, the NYFCC isn't married to the unofficial rules that govern which movies are considered Oscar caliber -- last year, "American Hustle" won the top award but left the Oscars empty-handed, while Robert Redford nabbed Best Actor for "All is Lost," but became an unexpected snub when the Academy Award nominations were announced.

This year's awards are a hodgepodge of Oscar hopefuls. "Boyhood" (Best Film), Patricia Arquette (Best Supporting Actress, "Boyhood"), J.K. Simmons (Best Supporting Actor, "Whisplash"), Richard Linklater (Best Director, "Boyhood), Wes Anderson (Best Screenplay, "The Grand Budapest Hotel) and "CITIZENFOUR" (Best Documentary) are all but guaranteed to earn Academy Award nominations. Middle-tier contenders like Timothy Spall ("Mr. Turner") and Marion Cotillard (recognized for both "The Immigrant" and "Two Days, One Night") are likely to be snubbed when the Oscar nods arrive on Jan. 15, but their good fortune with New York critics will buoy their odds nonetheless.

Here are this year's recipients:

Best Film
"Boyhood"

Best Actor
Timothy Spall, "Mr. Turner"

Best Actress
Marion Cotillard, "The Immigrant" & "Two Days, One Night"

Best Director
Richard Linklater, "Boyhood"

Best Supporting Actor
J.K. Simmons, "Whiplash"

Best Supporting Actress
Patricia Arquette, "Boyhood"

Best Foreign Language Film
"Ida"

Best Animated Film
"The Lego Movie"

Best Screenplay
Wes Anderson, "The Grand Budapest Hotel"

Special Award
Adrienne Mencia

Best Cinematography
Darius Khondji, "The Immigrant"

Best First Film
Jennifer Kent, "The Babadook"

Best Non-Fiction Film (Documentary)
"CITIZENFOUR"

Matthew Barney at Mona: the artist at the edge of the world

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It’s midday on Sunday and I’m sitting in the “art installation suite” of a Hobart hotel opposite American artist Matthew Barney. He wears a moss-coloured trucker hat perched high on his head, not quite shading his piercing blue eyes, and a black T-shirt emblazoned with the words Pig Destroyer. They’re a grindcore band from Virginia, he tells me, but it could be a piece of his own merchandise. If Barney did merchandise. Which he doesn’t.

On Friday night at the city’s full-house Federation concert hall, I watched the body of a suckling pig (and much else besides) decompose over the five-and-a-quarter hours of Barney and Jonathan Bepler’s latest film, River of Fundament. And that pig’s skeleton is now contained within a vitrine in Barney’s exhibition of the same name at Hobart’s Museum of Old and New Art (Mona).

Meet Residual Kid, The Badass Teen Band That Might Just Take Over Rock Music

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If you saw the members of Austin band Residual Kid in passing, you might think they were heading to school or a skate park, and you definitely wouldn't suspect that they're some of rock music's youngest shining stars. Even though the teen musicians look young, they sound like bonafide, experienced rockers, as reported by Vice's Noisey blog.

Hailing from Austin, Texas, Residual Kid is made up of 16-year-old singer and guitarist Deven Ivy, and two brothers, 14-year-old bassist Max and 16-year-old drummer Ben Redman. In an interview with the Denver Westword, Max said that he and his bandmates take inspiration from grunge legends: "We started playing Nirvana when I was younger and then on into Sonic Youth and other cool bands."

Max told the Westword that the bandmates started out humbly, playing at rock camp performances. But it didn't take long for them to start landing gigs at major Austin music events like 2013's South by Southwest. As the young musicians performed, they began earning attention from and collaborating with alternative rock legends like Dinosaur Jr's J Mascis.

The band's manager, Bart Dahl, recalls seeing them play for the first time in 2013 and thinking, "I can't believe how good this is. They played with incredible ease that was hard to wrap my head around." Vice writer John Paul Titlow says that anyone watching the band play for the first time might think, "OK, what's the deal? Is this some kind of child beauty pageant scenario for cool teenage boys?"

But Residual Kid seems to be the real deal. Indeed, the band recently caught the eye of 72-year-old Sire Records founder and Warner Bros. exec Seymour Stein, who discovered rock legends like The Ramones and The Talking Heads. Recently, Residual Kid signed with Sire Records. To say that bodes well for their future is a major understatement.

The band will be releasing their first album next year. Until then, rock out to their music video shown above, directed by Tony Stout back in 2012.

H/T Vice Media's Noisey

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