Quantcast
Channel: Culture & Arts
Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live

Debbie Harrie, Laurie Anderson, Patti Smith Lead A Women-Centric Tibet House Benefit

$
0
0
"I saw Laurie Anderson in Germany once, leaving a hotel with Lou Reed," Flaming Lips frontman Wayne Coyne recounted in a phone interview this week. "I've never seen her play though. So this is going to be nerve-racking."

He's referring to the fact that he and his band will be gracing the same stage as the famed musician and performance artist next month, during the 25th annual Tibet House Benefit Concert. Along with Anderson, he'll be breathing the same Carnegie Hall air as Debbie Harry and Patti Smith. Nervous seems an appropriate response.

The annual night of music has long belonged to classical music giant Philip Glass, the curator of the event. "Meeting him is like meeting Santa Claus," Coyne mused. "Philip is this crazy musician, and when you're around him, he gives it everything -- every bit of his talent and attention. It's thrilling to be around someone who is giving so much, because it means everything to him."

But there's no denying the power of the Anderson-Harrie-Smith triumvirate. In fact, if Annie Lennox's heavenly domination of the Grammy's is any indication, the crowds at the Tibet House show are set for a good reminder that the women veterans of the music industry still have control.

lips
The Flaming Lips


The concert, typically held on or around the start of the Tibetan New Year, is intended to raise awareness for the Tibet House US, a non-profit organization charged with preserving Tibetan culture at the behest of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Many of the artists involved in the show tend to have an intimate connection to Buddhism: Glass met the 14th Dalai Lama back in 1972. Smith has spoken of her "full-on romance" with Buddhism.

"The main thing that attracts me to Buddhism is probably what attracts every artist to being an artist," Anderson explained in an interview with Believer Magazine. "That it’s a godlike thing. You are the ultimate authority. There is no other ultimate authority."

"There's a kinship [surrounding Buddhism] that grows bigger all the time," Coyne added. "The philosophy of the Dali Lama has become more and more accepted as something that's just normal."

Rounding out the stacked bill are Tibetan musician Tenzin Choegyal, alt-country singer-songwriter Sturgill Simpson, fiddlers Ashley MacIsaac and Maybelle Chisholm McQueen, the Scorchio Quartet and a group of monks from the Drepung Gomang Monastery. (Smith will be performing with Her Band and Jesse Paris Smith.) For more on the Carnegie event, taking place March 5, check out the show site here.


Welcome To The World Of Rawerotica, Where Eroticism Climaxes With Creation (NSFW)

$
0
0
Note: This post contains sex, nudity and lots of it. You've been warned!

erotic
adj. of or pertaining to passionate love; arousing or designed to arouse feelings of sexual desire; amorous; amatory.

rawerotics
n: a singular theory or science of love constructed without recourse to cultural convention.


So begins Colin Rhodes' essay in the book "Raw Erotica," featuring rare outsider and folk artworks from a dizzying variety of artists, backgrounds, perspectives and media. For the uninitiated, outsider artwork is a prickly genre, categorizing artists working outside the mainstream, disconnected to and sometimes fully unaware of the so-called art world. Some are living with developmental disabilities, others in geographical isolation; the one thing tying the many artists and visions in "Raw Erotica" together is a shared interest in the erotic.

johann
Johann Korec


Prior to reading this article you, like us, may have understood eroticism as somewhat of a lead-in to sex, akin to the slow undressing before the touching begins. This is not always the case.

Eroticism does, sometimes, lead to sex, it's true. But often the energy and desire that constitute eroticism change shape and lead elsewhere, often when the object of affection is unattainable, or the conventional rituals of attraction and seduction do not apply. This is often the case for so-called "outsider artists," those operating outside the artistic institution as well as the societal mainstream, whether due to certain disabilities, incarceration or geographical isolation.

With such artists, eroticism often doesn't reach its peak with the act of copulation, but rather with the act of creation.

ota keiti
Ota Keiti


"Eroticism, unlike sexual activity, is a psychological quest independent of the natural goal: reproduction," said cultural theorist Georges Bataille.

In essence, eroticism is not limited to the realm of the physical. It exists everywhere, from the human body to an unattainable aesthetic to a transcendent plane, an almost otherworldly state. Some of us may recognize the feeling of leaving the physical body or the ideological self temporarily during the act of sex. In the world of rawerotics, such an experience may not be limited to the duration of sexual activity. Some artists grow to inhabit an entirely separate erotic territory, removed from the practices and conventions of everyday life, a separate plane of sexual energy. And they can access this space through art.

The book features a variety of highly unusual, sometimes gorgeous and often terrifying erotica -- which, Rhodes clarifies, is a different beast entirely than pornography. While in both art forms, the sexualized body takes center stage, pornography aims only to titillate or disgust. Erotica, however, is an aestheticized translation of desire itself. Instead of guiding one toward physical consummation, erotica is the aesthetic event, detached from physical human bodies. "Pornography is produced in a disinterested way, to be consumed by strangers, and without recourse to the sexual purposes to which images are put," Rhodes explains. "Erotica, on the contrary, is engaged and connected."

royla
Royal Robertson


And yet, many of the works included don't revolve around the sexualized human form at all. Some fetishize objects to symbolize the body -- perhaps stemming from a lack of knowledge of the naked form -- while others sublimate the obsessive desire into obsessive creative tendencies, from lists and charts to compulsive art making. For many outsider artists, the creative process itself becomes erotic.

The 200-page publication features sexual imagery that's at times surreal, naive, misogynist, violent, fantastical and just plain otherworldly. For example, Royal Robertson's "Horrors, Crazy Adell Sins" features an aggressive sexual encounter accented with disjointed textual outbursts like "HORRORS," "HUH," "OUCH," and "OH!"

Robertson, born in 1936, was a paranoid schizophrenic, experiencing his first vision (of a space ship with God as a driver) at the age of 14. When his marriage began to deteriorate, he began to believe his wife's unfaithfulness would lead to the destruction of humankind, perpetuating his belief in a global female conspiracy. Yet despite his attempt at domination in his visual representation, Robertson fails to wield power over his sexual partner even in drawn form. As Rhodes explains: "The stuttering, intemperate invocations of biblical texts and the threatening curses suggest impotency and emasculation, rather than power."

mose
Mose Tolliver, Moose Lady, c.1980. House paint on wood. Marcia Weber Art Objects, Alabama


On the other end of the spectrum is Mose Tolliver, an Alabama-born, African American artist born in 1920. Tolliver took to painting after an accident in a furniture factory crushed both his legs, and he took to art to pass the time. He was also dyslexic, leading him to experiment with turning his paintings upside-down and in other wayward directions. Tolliver's erotically inclined artworks, "nasty paintings" as he called them, aren't very graphic at all. The abstract depictions of smiley faces, splayed legs and gaping holes appeal to a childlike sensibility of what's raunchy, somewhat removed from actual human anatomy.

With every new artist comes a newly proliferated sexual possibility. Eugene Von Bruenchenhein turns his wife into his very own pin-up girl, photographing her in a variety of fantastical burlesque outfits and bizarre poses. Roy Ferdinand, who grew up amidst rampant sex, drugs and violence in New Orleans, channels the seedy underbelly of the city in his witty and grotesque caricatures of everyone from local prostitutes to Monica Lewinsky. And there's Ody Saban, the Istanbul-born artist whose sinuous depictions of lovemaking are teeming with waves, curves and curlicues -- her feminine renderings contain not a single straight line.

eugene
Eugene Von Bruenchenhein


As you're hopefully starting to digest, rawerotica thrives off sexual energy, but isn't always (or even often) aiming towards physical penetration. The book quotes "Memoirs of My Nervous Illness," in which German judge Daniel Paul Schreber describes the unorthodox texture of his personal desire. "When I speak of my duty to cultivate voluptuousness, I never mean any sexual desires toward other human beings (females) least of all sexual intercourse, but that I have to imagine myself as a man and a woman in one person having sex with myself, or somehow have to achieve with myself a certain sexual excitement."

This Valentine's Day, instead of honoring the many romantic artworks out there in the ether, we're going a more unorthodox route. We're paying tribute to rawerotica in all its infinite permutations, be they weird, raunchy, nasty or sweet. Because sometimes, it's not about the sex in your life -- it's about the sex in your fantasies, on your canvas, or wherever else your dirty mind desires. See more outsider erotica below and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

10 Famous Paintings That Will Make You Feel Happy You DON'T Have A Valentine

$
0
0
In honor of this most divisive of holidays, we're revisiting an old post honoring those of us who will not be receiving Hallmark cards. And wouldn't want one anyway.

For some, Valentine's Day is a holiday of chocolates, red roses and endless cuddling. For others... not so much. On this day, we wanted to celebrate our readers who are looking to avoid stock card images at all costs.

In honor of those who loathe the ubiquitous reminders of love today, we've compiled 10 works of art to make you happy you don't have a date tonight. Whether you're celebrating Valentine's Day, prepping for Singles Awareness Day, surviving a Galentine's Day hangover or spending just another Saturday alone, we have a cure for what ails ye. Behold, 10 painted reasons why you're better off spending the evening alone.

Texas 'Draw the Prophet' Contest is Shameless Muslim-Baiting

$
0
0
This article originally appeared on artnet News.
by Sarah Cascone

draw

The poster advertising Draw the Prophet.
Photo: American Freedom Defense Initiative



In the wake of the terrorist attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, targeted for its irreverent depictions of the prophet Muhammad, Breitbart Texas reports that a "Draw the Prophet" event, accompanied by the First Annual Muhammad Art Exhibit and Contest, is scheduled for May 3 in Garland, Texas. The winner takes home $10,000.

The contest is the brainchild of Pamela Geller, president of the American Freedom Defense Initiative (AFDI). She has been denounced as an extremist by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which categorizes the AFDI as a hate group. According to the Center, Geller is the "anti-Muslim movement's most visible and flamboyant figurehead. She's relentlessly shrill and coarse in her broad-based denunciations of Islam."

The contest echoes Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten's publication in 2005 of editorial cartoons satirizing the Prophet. The move was meant to comment on self-censorship and resulted in protests throughout the Middle East. There are differing schools of thought in Islam about whether depictions of Muhammad are forbidden (see The Secret Islamic Devotional Art That Depicts Muhammad and Are Cartoons More Powerful Than Art?).

According to the 2010 U.S. Religious Census, cited in the Texas Almanac, the Lone Star State leads American states in the size of its Muslim population, with about 422,000 in 2010.

An image announcing the contest riffs on Norman Rockwell's most famous self-portrait, showing Muhammad painting a self-portrait and thus aiming to highlight the contrast between traditional American values and the beliefs of Islamist extremists. By enlisting Rockwell's saccharine vision to her cause, Geller only underlines her simplistic version of America.

Draw the Prophet is just the latest of Geller's anti-Muslim demonstrations, which include a rally protesting the Council on American-Islamic Relations' (CAIR) Stand by the Prophet conference, held in Garland last month in response to the Charlie Hebdo attack (see 12 Killed at Magazine Previously Attacked for Satirical Cartoons). In 2010, Geller organized a march on the site of the planned Lower Manhattan "Ground Zero Mosque" (see Proposed Mosque Near World Trade Center Reborn as a Muslim Museum).

"The beacon of freedom, the shining light on a hill, is running scared," Geller told Breitbart Texas of the Western media's reluctance to publish controversial images like the Charlie Hebdo cartoons (see Accused of Charlie Hebdo Censorship, AP Removes Piss Christ Image, Belgian Museum Cancels Charlie Hebdo Exhibition, Security Threats Force London's V&A to Remove Prophet Muhammad Artwork, and Why Self-Censorship of Controversial Artwork is Wrong). "We're holding this exhibit and cartoon contest to show how insane the world has become—with people in the free world tiptoeing in terror around supremacist thugs who actually commit murder over cartoons. If we can't stand up for the freedom of speech, we will lose it—and with it, free society."

No word on exactly how free speech is under threat, an especially untenable claim in view of the widespread publication of Charlie Hebdo cartoons (see #JeSuisCharlie: A Digest of Responses to the Killings at Charlie Hebdo).


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

artnet News is the world’s first global, 24-hour art newswire, dedicated to informing, engaging, and connecting the most avid members of the art community with daily news and expert commentary.

Read More artnet News / Facebook / Twitter / Pinterest / Tumblr

Examining The Often Overlooked Wonder Of Bridges, Overpasses And Viaducts

$
0
0
Dangling high above the rest of us, they forge connections from here to there, and sometimes, from then to now. Bridges aren't just architectural structures but symbolic frameworks, imparting visions of interconnectedness, unity and opportunity in their very anatomy.

bridge
johnrincon17/Instagram


As such, it's no great surprise that artists have repeatedly returned to the bridge as a source of inspiration and possibility. Leo Villareal turned San Francisco's Bay Bridge into an unlikely canvas with his living light installation "The Bay Lights", while street artist Judith Supine climbed a New York City bridge atop the East River to install a glowing neon babe enjoying a cocktail while overlooking traffic.

Today we're ogling the many bridges of the world, from the giddily intricate to the starkly minimalist. We asked some of our readers to send their best shots of the oh-so photogenic architectural bonds and the results are below. Enjoy the weekend with this collection of bridge-centric beauty.

Broadway's 10 Hottest Chorus Boys Of 2015

$
0
0
Broadway musicals kick into high gear every spring, powered by the gifted dancers and singers of their ensemble casts. And each year, we give you a sneak peek at some of the chorus performers who may grab your eye onstage.

'People Loved Freaks, And They Still Do': A Bizarre Trip Through Time At Morbid Anatomy Museum

$
0
0
Would the body of a taxidermy two-faced kitten make you smile or shudder?

Your answer may have been different if you lived in Victorian England.

"People loved freaks, and they still do," Joanna Ebenstein, Creative Director at The Morbid Anatomy Museum in Brooklyn, New York, told The Huffington Post. But in past eras, she said, society deemed it “more appropriate to delight in them."

The two-faced kitten corpse on display as part of the museum’s ongoing “Collector’s Cabinet” exhibit is the creation of Englishman Walter Potter, a Victorian taxidermist best known for elaborate, anthropomorphic tableaux like the Rabbits' Village School and the Kitten Tea Party.

cat

“They didn’t spay or neuter animals back then,” Ebenstein, who also co-authored "Walter Potter's Curious World Of Taxidermy," said. Surplus animals were drowned or killed in other ways, and many people had no problem sending the bodies along to someone like Potter. That's part of the reason why your average Victorian probably wouldn't feel too harsh a pang of sadness while staring into the (four) eyes of a dead two-faced kitten.

Another object on display, a small wax figure from the 17th or 18th century, shows intestines spilling out of a bony, decaying corpse. It's hard to imagine your average person wanting to keep something like this on their shelves, but Ebenstein told HuffPost folks in Europe kept objects known as "memento mori" - Latin for "remember that you must die" -- around in order to encourage themselves to reflect on their own mortality. Highly detailed, gory figures like this one were frequently crafted by nuns, Evan Michaels, who is lending the figure to the museum, wrote in the exhibition catalog.

"People didn't always have the kinds of hang-ups we do about death," Ebenstein told HuffPost.

memento

Not everything at the exhibit is gruesome. The show offers plenty of less-macabre glimpses into the past, including a scrapbook of human hair, a 19th-century album of "paper dolls" cut from magazines, and pages from a 1901 manual some believe was a guide for fraudulent psychics.

“This is a bit of history that’s almost completely lost," Ebenstein said.

The Collector's Cabinet exhibit is on display at Brooklyn's Morbid Anatomy Museum through March 29.



Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter |
Contact The Author

7 Valentine's Day Charts To Help You Break Down The Holiday

$
0
0
Whether you love it, hate it, or just find yourself totally over Valentine's Day, we've got the chart for you.

It's no secret that V-Day or Singles Awareness Day (S.A.D.) is often one of the most disappointing holidays of the year, with grand romantic expectations being met with lackluster gestures and dates all too often.

Let these 7 charts help you get real about Cupid's day of obligatory courtship, whether you're celebrating or not.


Psychic Snow, Coming-Of-Consciousness Queer Party, To Hit Brooklyn Tonight

$
0
0
It's that time of the year again. Tonight one of our favorite queer parties will return to transport us away from the icy terrain of New York City to a higher spiritual plane: Psychic Snow.

What initially started as a one-off party event has turned into a Brooklyn queer art and performance institution for promoters David Sokolowski and Paul Leopold. The seasonal Psychic party series has evolved into a unique fusion of art, performance, music and spiritual/physical release for queers to come together four times a year in a new practice in queer community culture.

For tonight's Psychic Snow, Sokolowski and Leopold are bringing in Mark Dommu of The Culture Whore in order to add further nuance to the visual, performance and installation art aspects of the Psychic party series.

psychic2

"Psychic parties are visceral adventures into the power of community," Leopold told The Huffington Post. "The warmth we create when we gather close together on a winter’s night fuels the spiritual fire that inspires our dreams. Party goers can expect a symphony of house music, tarot readers, masseurs, video projections and a theatrical ritual that will shower the audience in love."

In conjunction with further emphasis on the visual aspects of the Psychic Snow party, organizers plan on sending attendees into sensory overload with on-site masseurs and tarot card reading. At a time of year where life in the metropolis can feel bleak, trying and depressing, the importance of healing, community-focused events such as the Psychic party series cannot be overremphasized.

"It’s hard not to feel bleak this time of year, it’s part of the cycle -- these are the dead months," Dommu elaborated. "Thankfully, we have all these living, breathing, beautiful queers who love to come together and create these temporary sacred spaces where we can be together, warm our bodies and hearts, and dance until Spring comes."

psychic3

The Psychic party series just completed it's first full cycle, having successfully sold out 2014's Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall installations -- an impressive feat in an industry where nightlife events can have a short lifespan.

"Since 2013, Psychic has been used as a platform for varying queer art and party scenes to converge, with a strong focus on music," Sokolowski told The Huffington Post. "In part, the success of Psychic is owed to accommodating our crowd's wide-range of music preference, while pushing their boundaries at the same time; we generally start with a light, poppy vibe, go into a fun, bassy, bounce scenario, then deeper into an eclectic blend of music from movements spanning decades from across the US."

In this age of gay marriage where mainstream understandings of queerness are increasingly normalized, parties like the Psychic series serve a valuable purpose: they not only create a safe space for identity exploration and expression, but they also preserve those parts of our queerness that, historically, the world at large tries to erase. We hope the Psychic series continues to evolve and extend it's influence as a source of cultural production and experiment in queer community culture throughout 2015.

Psychic Snow will take place at 1332 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. Head here for tickets and more information and check out the slideshow below of previous Psychic parties.


The Stacks: Billie Holiday: Jazz's Aching Songbird

$
0
0
Dizzy Gillespie's big band, at Birdland in New York. Coming down the stairs I heard a crackling, stunning trumpet cadenza, brilliant in content as well as in its reckless virtuosity. And yet it wasn't Dizzy. I looked at the stand and there was a teenager from Philadelphia, Lee Morgan, for whom Dizzy had just opened the door to the Big Apple.

Björk's 'Black Lake' Teaser Is Perfectly Dark And Beautiful

$
0
0
Björk just took her "Earth Intruder" status to the next level.

The musician has actually become part of nature in the teaser for "Black Lake," the new sound and video installation commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art. The retrospective will reportedly feature more than 20 years of Björk film, visuals and performance.

News of the exhibit was announced last June. According to MoMA, the installation will "present a narrative, both biographical and imaginatively fictitious."

The song "Black Lake" also appears on Björk’s new album, "Vulnicura."

"Black Lake" will be on display from March 8 to June 7.

'Kingsman' Director Says Film's Shocking Ending Doesn't Depict Barack Obama

$
0
0
This piece contains spoilers about the ending of "Kingsman: The Secret Service."

Controversy didn't hamper the release of 20th Century Fox's "Kingsman: The Secret Service" in the same way it did Sony's "The Interview," but Matthew Vaughn's spy spoof shares one significant lightning-rod moment with the Seth Rogen-James Franco comedy. Both movies kill off a world leader in a spectacular explosion: Kim Jong Un in "The Interview" and the president of the United States in "Kingsman." The character, shown only from behind, bears a striking resemblance to Barack Obama.

"First of all, it's not Obama. I just want to be clear. This is not an attack on Obama at all," Vaughn told Entertainment Weekly in a recent interview. But the director said he needed someone "reminiscent" of Obama to drive home the point that the film's supervillain, played by Samuel L. Jackson, had significant power on a global scale.

In "Kingsman: The Secret Service," Jackson plays Richmond Valentine, the billionaire head of a tech corporation, who decides the only way to save the human race from extinction brought on by climate change is to start mass genocide. Using his company's cellular devices as conduits, Valentine sends out a subliminal signal that turns people into homicidal killers. Meanwhile, the chosen elite -- the presidents, queens, prime ministers and celebrities who helped Valentine enact his plan -- watch from the safety of their bunkers. A neck implant given to them by Valentine keeps the leaders free from harm and under his control: the embedded mechanism both blocks the signal and acts as a deterrent from trying to stop the global chaos. If activated, it explodes.

What happens next isn't the biggest surprise: Thanks to the smarts of the film's lead character, Eggsy (Taron Egerton) -- a new member of the film's title group of spies -- the implants are activated, killing scores of establishment rulers, including the president of the United States and other prominent dignitaries.

Speaking to IGN last year, Vaughn said his goal in turning the president into one of Valentine's accomplices was born out of a desire to see an American villain for once. "The White House and Obama-ish president -- there's no other symbol about a global power than the White House," Vaughn said. "If I used 10 Downing Street, most people would go, 'What's that little black door? Where is that? Who is that?'"

And while the scene has been singled out for being controversial, Vaughn and his cast felt it was just part of the film's fun.

"I just think we're going more for the mischievous hint that it's [Obama]," star Colin Firth said in an interview with Vulture. "It's such an entertaining scene, because it feels like we're making mischief wherever we can find it."

"Something tells me that if Obama does watch the movie, it will make him laugh," Vaughn said to EW. "I know he's a big comic book fan, so I think he'll go with it. It's not an attack on Obama. I think Obama is a good man. This whole movie is meant to be fun. We're all having a tough time in the world right now, and it's meant to be two hours of letting you forget about everything."

For more from Vaughn, head to EW.com.

Watch Furbacca, A Furby Chewbacca, Sing The 'Star Wars' Theme

$
0
0
The Hasbro showroom at this year's Toy Fair includes products tied to "Avengers: Age of Ultron," "Ant-Man," "Spider-Man," "Jurassic World" and "Transformers," but it's the tiny Furbacca that was the biggest draw. The Furby version of Chewbacca from "Star Wars" has already been profiled by Mashable, Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, io9, The Dissolve and Nerdist, and isn't even out in stores until this fall. To see what all the fuss is about, HuffPost Entertainment took a tour of the Hasbro showroom on Sunday with the hopes of interacting with the little fuzzball. We succeeded: Watch below to see Furbacca sing the "Star Wars" theme (and then switch over to the "Imperial March" when it gets annoyed).

Pretty Much Everyone Who's Famous Was On The 'SNL 40' Red Carpet

$
0
0
If you're looking for a famous person on Sunday night, they're probably on the "SNL 40" red carpet. From Billy Crystal and Donald Trump to Jim Carrey and Sarah Palin to Kerry Washington and Eddie Murphy, celebrities from all over came to New York to celebrate 40 years of "Saturday Night Live." Check out many of the stars' red carpet arrivals below.

Jim Carrey Makes Brian Williams Joke On 'SNL 40' Red Carpet

$
0
0
During an interview with NBC's Matt Lauer on the "SNL 40" red carpet, Jim Carrey joked about Brian Williams.

"Can I ask you a question, you guys? Where are you hiding Brian Williams? Where is he?" Carrey asked as Lauer, Tina Fey and Savannah Guthrie looked slightly uncomfortable. "I just want to say something in his defense," Carrey continued. "If the helicopter in front of me gets hit, I'm taking the story."

Williams was suspended for six months by NBC after embellishing a story about his time covering the war in Iraq. Watch the interaction below.


Watch Steve Martin, Tom Hanks, Miley Cyrus, Chris Rock And Many Others On The 'SNL 40' Monologue

$
0
0
Steven Martin didn't host "SNL 40," but he did start the monologue. Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Chris Rock, Miley Cyrus, Melissa McCarthy, Peyton Manning, Billy Crystal, Paul Simon and Paul McCartney also joined Martin on the "SNL" stage. It was pretty great. Watch below, via Vulture.

Bradley Cooper & Betty White Made Out During 'SNL 40'

$
0
0
Taylor Swift, Kerry Washington, Kristen Wiig, Bill Hader, Laraine Newman, Kenan Thompson and Vanessa Bayer all appeared during the all-star "Californians" sketch on "SNL 40," but it was this moment where Bradley Cooper made out with Betty White that stole the entire thing. Watch forever below.



Kanye Performs New Song 'Wolves,' With Sia & Vic Mensa, During Awesome 'SNL 40' Appearance

$
0
0
Kanye West performed a medley of songs on the "Saturday Night Live" 40th anniversary special. West started with "Jesus Walks," transitioned to "Only One" and closed out his appearance with "Wolves," a new song featuring Sia and Vic Mensa. West had previously played "Wolves" during his New York fashion show last week. Watch the whole thing below.




Later, West took part in a "Wayne's World" sketch with Mike Myers and Dana Carvey. West's wife, Kim Kardashian West, was there to commemorate the appearance:


Inside A Beautiful Connecticut Beach House That Has Us Dreaming Of Summer

$
0
0
Beaches aren't likely to be the first thing that come to mind when you think of Connecticut. Beach houses, on the other hand, might. Or at least they will once you have a look inside this stunning waterside home that designer Olga Adler says she found in just one day.

Saugatuck Island, which is tucked between the mouth of the Saugatuck River and the Long Island Sound, was once dubbed an "immigrant haven and sailor's delight," by The New York Times, "something of an ethnic aberration in wealthy, cosmopolitan, suburban Westport."

Indeed, it was the island's history that drew Adler to Saugatuck. "We didn’t really know much about this particular house, but we were taken by the history of the island, which used to be part of the small village of Saugatuck," she told HuffPost Home.

Adler took us inside the 2,800-square-foot space that she says was once outdated and lacked a cohesive style. Key words here: "once was."



Check out more photos of Olga's dream home in the slideshow below.

Have something to say? Check out HuffPost Home on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

**

Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line "Project submission." (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

Miley Cyrus Covers Paul Simon's '50 Ways To Leave Your Lover' During 'SNL 40'

$
0
0
Miley Cyrus whipped out her impressive vocal range during her performance at "SNL 40" on Sunday night.

The 22-year-old paid tribute to Paul Simon with a sultry rendition of "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover," captivating the star-studded audience as she belted out the song's soulful notes. It was a far departure from Cyrus' usual onstage antics as she covered up in a white pantsuit and had Fred Armisen back her on the tambourine.

Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images