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Poet Monica McClure Boldly Confronts The Problem With How We Discuss Abortion

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"I was inconsolable when I missed prom and had to pay a woman to pretend to be my mother so I could gain parental consent," Monica McClure writes in her poem, "Dead Souls." The poem is about an abortion, and addresses the topic matter-of-factly, rather than in sentimental or political terms. The narrator simply shares her story -- that of an underage teen not yet ready to be a parent -- and draws blunt conclusions about the state of medical care for women in similar situations.

McClure, who grew up in rural Texas and received an abstinence-only sex education, said her upbringing was "scary," especially when the conversation around abortion was complicated by views of rape akin to those held by former former congressman Todd Akin (R-Mo.) -- a proponent of distinguishing between "legitimate" and "illegitimate" rape. "The horror of it all continues to our current moment," she says.

McClure is one of a bevy of young women writers working against the established notion that poetry is a stodgy, predominantly male pursuit. The tone of her work is conversational -- even confessional. She says she aims to describe her own views in a relatable way by sharing experiences she's had, or potentially could've had. "I study women very closely," she said. "We study ourselves very closely."

Above, McClure reads "Dead Souls," a poem from her latest collection, Tender Data. Below, she discusses her work, and the problem with how we talk about abortion.






What led you to write this poem?
I started writing poems with an intentionally flippant treatment of abortion around that scary time before Obama’s second election when Todd Akin was talking about legitimate rape. I was still working on them when Hobby Lobby denied its employees birth control coverage and when Texas Senator Wendy Davis heroically opposed a Republican attack on women’s health clinics.

You know. The horror of it all continues to our current moment. Everyone likes to compare this right wing faux religious extremist push to medieval times, but I wonder if Medieval times were not better for women. Even though the feudal system was terrible in that it reduced the life of the serf to mere survival, essentially unpaid labor by men and women serfs on their little plot of land was shared, and within the peasant family and community structure men and women were considered equal based on the value of their different but mutually valuable skills. I’m not a Medievalist, but this is generally what the scholarship describes.

Women kept gardens and grew herbs that helped with reproductive health, and sex education involved the belief that a child could only be conceived if both partners orgasmed. During the slow transition to capitalism, the Catholic Church helped the powerful landowners conduct witch hunts so these secrets went way underground and were eventually lost to medicine.



I think it’s important to de-sentimentalize the debate (on both sides) about abortion and by extension birth control, since it seems like conservatives are pushing to define birth control as murder as well. It’s a fundamental human good for a civilization that depends on women in the workforce and as managers of households (which are micro-economies) and agents of their own sexuality have access to safe, medical abortions. If we claim to be a sexually egalitarian society, then duh.

I’d just re-read Mark Greif’s “On Repressive Sentimentalism,” which laments that progressives must use the same sentimentalizing tactics as right-wing extremists, characterizing abortion as a “tragic” but necessary evil. I wanted the bratty persona in these poems to embody what I saw as a right-wing media fabrication of the type of woman who gets abortions -- a witch for our times -- who is hyper-sexual, irresponsible, secular, vain, single, and selfish.

I also just wanted to talk about how scary it was for me to grow up with an abstinence-only education co-existing with rape culture in rural Texas.

The tone of this poem, and other poems of yours, is confessional. Why is that, and what effect do you hope that will achieve?
Using “I” challenges readers to parse out the persona from the author’s autobiographical “I," which is always an interesting tension to create. I also think of this “I” as being collective, because it describes experiences I’ve had or, if not, could have easily had. I study women very closely. We study ourselves very closely. The effect I was going for was relatability, I suppose.

You write bluntly about women's issues -- topics poetry has been shy about in the past. Which other poets do you think do this well?
Ariana Reines, Jenny Zhang, Ana Carrette, Jennifer Tamayo, Lara Glenum, Chelsea Hodson, Niina Pollari and Dodie Bellamy employ bluntness to great effect.



In this poems and others in your collection, you undulate between tragic and funny. How do these two opposing moods work together in your poems?
Comedy and tragedy are co-dependant. For me, those moods have a sublime and absurd connection that I’ve never understood to be oppositional in the same way other people have. I have lots of early memories of my family having drunk and joyful times at funerals and in the midst of other tragedies, so at a young age understood some emotional responses to be socially affected (the appropriate emotion) and that more private emotional responses were weird and double-sided.

Think about how at the end of a Greek tragedy, the gods come down and just fix everything only to mess them up again in another narrative. I’ve always thought that was funny. I think there’s a therapeutic relationship, too. We process the realities that make us feel powerless (sexism, racism, economic disenfranchisement, mortality) through humor, and this collection is very focused on power dynamics.

You've mentioned that you like to "lightly art direct" your readings. What role do you think outward appearance plays in poetry performance? And why did you choose to dress as you did for this particular performance?
I think fashion is a narrative. I think of what expectations an audience might have for a certain kind of performance and play with that. For many years, I was accustomed to poetry readings being somber events in which personalities recede in an effort to forefront the work. Women, especially, seemed worried about not being taken seriously if they looked too dressed up. Well, I thought about it at least. But those kinds of readings felt incomplete.

The myth of the artist, the politicized body of the performer (especially if she’s a woman), and the ways in which art is made by a body are part of the conversation, whether we’re explicit about it or not. For this particular performance, I thought the expectation would be for me to appear youthful, urban, and ultra-feminine so I went with something softer and more generic. I was thinking of angels, which aren’t human but are as anthropomorphized euphemisms for gentle, beautiful women in our culture. The poem is harsh on patriarchal religions and the outfit is soft like an angel. I like the contrast.

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Yoko Ono On John Lennon's Forgotten First Love -- Drawing

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"He had a habit of just giving his art away to people," Yoko Ono softly explained, in a phone interview with The Huffington Post. "He was pretty generous about that."

Yes, that humble "he" refers to John Lennon, the legendary singer, songwriter, musician and artist who inspired the world to imagine peace. As such, it's not a huge shock that he enjoyed giving away his drawings. "We had a big lawyers meeting and the whole time they were talking he was just scribbling something," Ono said. "The lawyers would come to John and say, 'What are you doing?' And he was making this beautiful, beautiful artwork. And the lawyer said, 'Well, can I have it?' And he said, 'Sure, sure.' That's just how John was."

family of peace
Family Of Peace


Due to Lennon's aforementioned altruism, many of his works have wound their way into lucky hands throughout the world. Still, a precious supply resides with his artistic collaborator and great love, Yoko Ono. The 82-year-old multidisciplinary artist is presenting her treasure trove of sketches for the world to see, providing art lovers and Beatles-maniacs alike a rare glimpse into one of the most impactful minds of the 21st century.

The drawings are simple -- some in black and white, others accented with splashes of color. They depict the mundane and magical moments of being alive, sitting under a tree with Yoko and sitting atop a cloud with Yoko. The stark line drawings, reminiscent of illustrators like Quentin Blake and Ronald Searle, render images buzzing with emotion and vitality with the most meager (and squiggly) of means.

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On Cloud 9


For Ono, Lennon's style echoed a faraway influence too. "The kind of thing that he did is something I recognized from Asian painting," she said. "They used to do things without going back and correcting what they did. They did it in one go. It was seen as sort of contrived to correct. You know, you have to be a very good artist if you can just do it in one go. And he was like that, he was like an Asian painter."

Lennon wasn't oblivious to the correlation. He often signed his works with what's called a chop, an individualized stamp popular in Asian brush paintings. Lennon's particular breed was red, and was designed to read "like a cloud" or "beautiful sound."

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Forever Love


Lennon began drawing far before he entered the realm of music. He attended the Liverpool Art Institute before working with his band -- you know the one -- full time. Even after his musical career took off, he continued drawing throughout his life, immortalizing everything from his romance with Yoko to his experiences signing autographs for super-fans in minimal black ink. His notorious works include a 1696 wedding gift for Yoko, which showcased a visual chronicling of their wedding and honeymoon, along with some erotic drawings.

Lennon's return to art in the later phase of his life may stem from Ono's status as a prolific figure of the artistic avant-garde. However, their styles were worlds apart. "We were very lucky that I was not a painter or something so we didn't have to fight," Ono explained. "I thought he was very unique."

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The City In My Heart


"In terms of time, [each drawing took] maybe three minutes," Ono added. "He was a very fast worker. He would create something and then say, 'Yoko, Yoko, do you want to see this?' And I'd say, 'Okay, oh this is great!' What am I going to say? It was great! But also, being an artist myself, I know how all artists are so insecure. So you don't want to say, 'No, this is not good!' But actually, what he did was really interesting."

Like the man who made them, Ono is big-hearted with Lennon's oeuvre, knowing the impact every mark he created will likely have on those who love him. From May 5 through May 7, 2015, the drawings will be on view and available for purchase at Chasen Galleries in Richmond, Virginia. And from May 29 through May 31, 2015, the works will travel to Ann Jackson Gallery in Atlanta, Georgia.

For millions of people around the world, the chance to view the original artworks of John Lennon, signed by Yoko Ono no less, is about as glorious an opportunity as they come. Ono is, not too surprisingly, a little more zen about it all. "These are things that I have," she said, "and if you feel like showing them, it's fine."








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Yoko Ono Gets Long Overdue Recognition On The Cover Of W Magazine

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Her majesty Yoko Ono is having quite the renaissance.

To date, she has over 4.74 million followers watching her every avant-garde remark on Twitter. In 2013, she released her latest album, "Take Me to the Land of Hell," wooing icons like Questlove, Lenny Kravitz, Ad-Rock and Mike D into collaborating on tracks. The next year, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao hosted her massive retrospective, "Yoko Ono. Half-A-Wind Show," featuring over 200 pieces of her creations. This year, the Museum of Modern Art will showcase the artist's first official solo show at the institution, "Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960–1971," giving New York audiences what they clearly want: more Yoko.

So it's not too surprising that W Magazine would choose to highlight the Japanese artist, singer, activist and second wife of John Lennon on the cover of its most recent art issue. "Cutting Edge," the title reads, with the following subhead: "Long overshadowed by her famous other half, Yoko Ono finally gets her due as a pioneering artist."

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The title of the piece, written by arts editor Diane Solway with photographs by Pari Dukovic, tips its hat to Ono's rather famous 1964, performance art piece, "Cut Piece," in which the artist allowed strangers to cut off her clothing, piece by piece on the stage of a Tokyo art center. From there, Solway goes on to carefully outline the many (many, many) achievements that make up Ono's storied CV, reflecting on the impact of a woman once dubbed -- by Lennon, no less -- "the world's most famous unknown artist."

"Many don’t realize that Yoko was a groundbreaking artist BEFORE she met John Lennon," Solway added to HuffPost. "She was a key member of the New York downtown scene. In fact Lennon met her when he visited her gallery show in London and fell in love with her work as an artist. She became famous after that of course, but her celebrity overshadowed her seminal contributions as a groundbreaking artist. With a show coming up at MoMA focusing on her early years, we wanted to give Yoko her due."

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Christophe Cherix, MoMA's chief curator of drawings and prints, best captures Ono's contemporary allure: "She gave us a new status to the artist," he explained to W. "She thought about the artist not just as someone who provides something for you to look at -- because she's not always the maker of things, or even the performer. She's an instigator of ideas."

For more, visit W Magazine.

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All photos courtesy of W Magazine.

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Colleges Hit With A Capella Fever

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PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Their musical performances pack college auditoriums, though they play no instruments.

While universities have long nurtured the niche community of a cappella singers, the TV show "Glee" and hit movie "Pitch Perfect" helped create a new generation of fans that propelled the soulful sound into mainstream culture. Now, they're unlikely rock stars on campuses across the U.S.

On Saturday, about 3,000 people will flock to New York to see eight groups compete in the Super Bowl of a cappella. The sold-out show at the Beacon Theatre is a far cry from the paltry crowd of 200 that watched the national finals more than a decade ago.

"Now the larger world is seeing that it's awesome," said Amanda Newman, executive director of Varsity Vocals, the event's organizer. "Everyone's just over the moon. It wasn't a secret that we wanted to keep."

This isn't your grandfather's barbershop quartet. Covering pop songs like Beyonce's "Crazy in Love" and Hozier's "Take Me to Church," the groups earn the adulation of cheering fans through their complex harmonies and choreography.

"People used to think of vocal music as boring choir stuff," said Isaac Hecker, a member of Amazin' Blue at the University of Michigan. "Once you figured out that you can do crazy beat-boxing, awesome bass lines (and) throw everything together, you just have really cool music."

off the beat
Members of Off the Beat a cappella group rehearse Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)


This weekend's contest is the 19th International Championship of Collegiate A cappella, or ICCA. In its early years, Newman said, only 35 groups competed in the rounds leading up to the finals. This year, about 320 groups in the U.S. and Britain vied for a spot.

The SoCal VoCals of the University of Southern California made the cut after out-singing their regional competition. They practice for hours every week "because we all really want it," junior Malia Civetz said.

"It is very difficult and we all know that, so when we nail it, it's just this incredible feeling," Civetz said.

Though Civetz is a popular music major, many students who sing are pursuing studies completely unrelated to the arts - which is why they make the most of their brief time in the spotlight.

"This is their first and last big chance to be a pop star," Newman said. "And they are when they're on their campus, they are when they're on our stage."

The a cappella craze showcases a tradition that dates back decades - or longer - at some schools: The Yale Whiffenpoofs were founded in 1909.

off the beat
Members of Off the Beat a cappella group rehearse Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)


Off the Beat started more than 25 years ago at the University of Pennsylvania with audiences of fewer than 100 people, said junior Jasmine Barksdale, the music director. Now the 15-member group performs in an auditorium that can hold about 1,000, she said.

"There are people I meet randomly who are like: `Oh my gosh, you're in Off the Beat? I've been to every Off the Beat show since I was a freshman,'" said Barksdale, an economics major at Wharton.

The success of "Pitch Perfect," based on a book about the small but robust a cappella community, has led to the planned May 15 release of "Pitch Perfect 2." Two days before that, the Pop cable network debuts "Sing It On," a documentary-style series on this year's ICCA competition. Grammy winner John Legend - a former a cappella singer at Penn - is the executive producer.

Brian Bateman of Morristown, New Jersey, has been a passionate a cappella follower since being introduced to it at Boston College more than 20 years ago. He later became a superfan of Off the Beat, traveling to dozens of shows, buying their annual albums and hiring them for private events.

"It's just something that I love," Bateman said. "I've taken off of work just to hear one song."

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Associated Press videographers Raquel Maria Dillon in Los Angeles and Mike Householder in Ann Arbor, Michigan, contributed to this report. Follow Kathy Matheson at http://www.twitter.com/kmatheson

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Online:

http://www.varsityvocals.com

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Time's Most Influential Celebrities Of 2015 Include Kanye West, Kim Kardashian And Laverne Cox

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Time magazine released its 12th annual list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World on Thursday, an expansive round-up that includes Kanye West, Emma Watson, Taylor Swift and Laverne Cox, who finally made the list after last year's snub. West is also featured on one of the five Time 100 covers and in a video where he talks about breaking the Internet.

Here's the full list of all the celebs named 2015's top influencers:

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New Play Tackles Infamous Gang Rape In India To Break The Silence About Sexual Violence

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Photo by Sinbad Phugra




When Poorna Jagannathan learned about the fatal gang rape that occurred on a bus in Delhi, India, in 2012, it hit far too close to home.

For one, she used to live next door to the bus stop where 23-year-old physiotherapy student Jyoti Singh Pandey was picked up before she was viciously raped and assaulted by six men. She died two weeks later.

"I understood -- having been a girl in Delhi, taking a bus from that stop -- that what happened to her was not an anomaly," Jagannathan said. "I could have been that girl."

But more than that, Jagannathan, who is an actress, felt an unnerving sense of responsibility about the tragic events of that night. She'd grown up experiencing sexual violence on public transportation "almost on a daily basis" but had never done anything to stop it. Furthermore, she was a survivor of sexual assault as a child, but had never spoken out about what happened. Her shame, she said, had kept her quiet.

"I felt it was partly my fault that something happened to her on the bus," Jagannathan said. "Because I didn't speak up. My silence was part of the fabric of this rape culture, part of the culture that creates unaccountability. I knew I wanted to break my silence."

Across the world in Montreal, Canada, internationally acclaimed playwright Yaël Farber was feeling similarly devastated by Pandey's death. On Facebook, she posted a picture that she believed was of Pandey, along with one powerful line: My daughter, my mother, myself.

"I felt like she had somehow touched this chord inside of us," she said. "This is personal. This is going to touch our lives."

Jagannathan spotted Farber's message and recognized an opportunity to collaborate. Ten years earlier, she had seen Farber's testimonial play "Amajuba," in which five South Africans tell their stories about growing up under apartheid. "It was the most powerful play I'd ever seen," she said. She wrote to Farber, urging her to come to India to create a work with women ready to speak about sexual violence.

"She told me that things are at a tipping point here," recalled Farber.

The rest, as they say, is history. Farber's newest testimonial play, "Nirbhaya," makes its North American debut in New York this week.

Written and directed by Farber and produced by Jagannathan, the play recounts the horrific 2012 tragedy and uses it as a catalyst for cast members -- who are all survivors of sexual violence -- to share their own testimonies.

Farber said the play aims to challenge apathy about rape and mobilize people to break their own silences. "In that transaction that is so essentially theater, the audience becomes accountable to their own truth," she said. "People leave the room changed by what they've witnessed."

The name "Nirbhaya," which means "fearless" in Hindi, was a pseudonym given to Pandey by the media. "The streets rose after Jyoti died," Farber said. "We want to keep those flames alive."

One of the actresses, Sneha Jawale, had never set foot on a stage before being cast in "Nirbhaya." Covered in scars after being doused with kerosene and burned by her husband, she serves as a striking visual reminder of the cost of sexual violence.

"It's more than a play," said Jawale. "It's a message for society."

nirbhaya
Photo by Sinbad Phugra


Japjit Kaur, who plays Pandey, said she has witnessed many audience members tell their stories on sexual assault for the first time after seeing the play.

"Every city we've been to so far, we've had an incredible response of people coming forward," she said. "In Edinburgh, this lady came up to me, 64 years old, and said she was made to marry the man who raped her, and that she had never spoken of it."

Actress Priyanka Bose said after Pandey was raped and killed, she felt an urgency to share her own experiences. "There was this outbreak inside of me," she said. "A flood. I shared my story with my partner for the first time."

Farber said she hopes the play will help shift the shame associated with rape from victims to where it belongs: with the perpetrators.

"The work we are doing is grounded in the belief that each individual facing their own truth creates the possibility for change, and that's what real revolution is," she said. "When you stay silent, that silence protects only one entity, and that's the perpetrator. The cost on the self is exorbitant, because that silence is corrosive."

CULTURE PROJECT NIRBHAYA TRAILER from Culture Project on Vimeo.



"Nirbhaya" opens April 26 at the Lynn Redgrave Theater in Manhattan.



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20 Black Poets You Should Know (And Love)

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In 1996 the Academy of American Poets dubbed April National Poetry Month to celebrate the richness of American poetry. In its honor, here are 20 black American poets who have shown brilliance in their art and service to the community.

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Leslie Jones Was The Star Of 'SNL' Doc 'Live From New York!' At The Tribeca Film Festival's Opening Night

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The "Saturday Night Live" front lines formed the cornerstone of the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival's opening night on Wednesday, with a number of current cast members on hand for the premiere of the documentary "Live From New York!" A delightful but rudimentary look at the show's legacy, Bao Nguyen's film screened at the near-capacity Beacon Theatre on New York City's Upper West Side, where Bill O'Reilly, Michelle Rodriguez, Tom Brokaw, Paula Pell, Mamie Gummer, Gabourey Sidibe, Julian Schnabel, Kelli Giddish, Rocco DiSpirito and Rudy Giuliani were among the audience members. (The movie features a slew of cast members, writers and affiliates, including Chevy Chase, Jimmy Fallon, Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Chris Rock, Dana Carvey, Jane Curtin and Julia Louis-Dreyfus.)

But the real pleasure came in watching the documentary while seated next to several current "Saturday Night Live" cast members. A HuffPost colleague and I nabbed seats toward the front of the room, on the same row where Sasheer Zamata, Aidy Bryant, Leslie Jones, Bobby Moynihan and Beck Bennett sat -- and one row in front of Mr. "SNL" himself, creator Lorne Michaels. The audience found ample opportunities to break out in applause throughout the film, like when Alec Baldwin first appeared and, in particular, when Jones provided one of the doc's standout moments during a portion about the series' racial history. Assessing the limited number of black cast members throughout its 40-year history, Jones made a rousing case for why the slavery jokes she made during her May 2014 "SNL" debut came from the right headspace. Attacked in certain corners of the media after the "Weekend Update" segment aired, Jones was told not to pay attention to Twitter reactions. Thinking white folks would be the ones hurling stones, Jones was shocked to discover it was black people who were most irate. "I was like, 'Are you kidding?'" she said in the film. "First of all, there's not that many black women at the 'SNL' 'Update' desk, first of all. Second of all, not only did I take something of pain and make it funny, motherfucker, it was funny."

The audience -- a warm crowd that seemed to appreciate Nguyen's affectionate film -- erupted into the loudest cheers heard during the movie's 82-minute running time. Jones billowed with laughter while watching herself onscreen, rolling in her seat as the room filled with hoops and hollers. (It's a stark contrast to the slight gasps that rippled through the theater when suspended NBC News anchor Brian Williams first appeared.)

As quickly as the film ended, the screen rose, and standing behind it was Ludacris, ready to rip through about 40 minutes of hits like "Stand Up" and "Area Codes." The audience danced lethargically as the rapper -- whose connection to "SNL" is tenuous at best, having hosted once, in 2006 -- attempted to elicit (largely unsuccessful) callouts for native New Yorkers and audience members hailing from other parts of the country. The most enthusiastic spectator was Gabourey Sidibe, who sat in front of us and engaged in a full-on jam session during the performance.

At the after-party, held a few blocks away at Tavern on the Green, Lorne Michaels was huddled with Tribeca patriarch Robert De Niro over dinner, while Sidibe, Rudy Giuliani, Mamie Gummer, Lily Rabe, costume designer Ellen Mirojnick, Rachel Harris, André Holland, Michael Rapaport and Tribeca co-founder Jane Rosenthal canvassed the scene. The "SNL" group that attended the premiere was nowhere to be seen, so we'll assume Jones was off having the final laugh elsewhere.

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Coachella, Rape Culture And What You Can Do About It

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On Sunday, THUMP editor Jemayel Khawaja tweeted a photo of a smiling man wearing a shirt that read "Eat, Sleep, Rape, Repeat." The image quickly went viral, spawning a conversation about rape jokes, free speech and whether the whole thing was Photoshopped (unfortunately: no, it wasn't).

One awful t-shirt does not a rape culture make, but it is indicative of the kind of mindset that fosters slut-shaming, victim blaming and the high levels of sexual assault we see at concerts and music festivals. HuffPost spoke with sociologist, sexuality and gender expert Dr. Chauntelle Tibbals to get a clearer look at what social factors allow for rape culture and how we can work to fight it.




What kind of conclusions, if any, can be drawn about Coachella based on that awful t-shirt?
I think the foremost thing it shows, on a critical and thoughtful level, is that we need to speak up. The whole Internet is inundated with images of this shirt, but we don't have an answer for who that guy is or where the shirt comes from. How many people did it get vetted through? Whose idea was it to produce this message, replicate it on a t-shirt and then put it out in the marketplace? And then he purchased it or picked it up, wore it out in public and then walked around and was seen by how many people before someone happened to take a picture or say something, right?

A number of bloggers are saying the shirt indicative of rape culture. That term popped up in feminist literature in the '70s. What's the clearest definition for what it means in this case?
So, rape culture refers to how we as a society think about sexual assault. And sexual assault doesn't just include penetrative vaginal or anal sex, per se. There are all sorts of gradients to it. It also has to do with the way sexual assault is pervasive, unevenly distributed and normalized. Within that, there is variability in terms of gender, sexuality, race, social class, physical ability and age. So, rape culture is a troubling and difficult idea to pin down that is present everywhere. You can see it manifested in things like slut shaming and victim blaming, but also the trivializing and denial of assault.




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A view of the ferris wheel at the Coachella 2015 music festival.




How do examples of rape culture, like that Coachella t-shirt, intersect with the free speech?
It's an interesting balance. Does that person have the right to wear whatever they want to wear and say what they want to say? Of course. But the idea with rape culture is to have sort of a critical eye. So, there is this dimension of thinking of things in an artistic free speech way, but then there's also this wider ideology up against it, so that we sort of forget about the severity of the issue and forget about how we casually regard it.

Are you saying we are more casual about rape than other social issues?
Yes. Take racist ideology for example. If a person were to substitute "rape" with a racist statement, our reaction to it collectively as a culture would have been very different. It wouldn't have been about free speech ... I wonder how long he could have walked around [with a racist shirt]. That's the kind of freaky space with rape culture and free speech, all of these concepts work together. When we're talking about rape culture in the context of music or entertainment, it's not so much about limiting speech as it is about our critical assessment of messages.




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The crowd during a performance by David Guetta.




Isn't safety part of the discussion? Especially since instances of sexual assault are on the rise at concerts.
Should the festival be limiting people's outfits? I don't know about that, because then you start to get into other limitations and forms of civil rights. In many ways those more repressive ideologies can limit expression of speech. But should the festival perhaps have more security around? Maybe more people out spotting things -- looking for drunk people or people who look like they're in crisis? I guess they should.

Is there something about the music festival environment specifically that you think fosters a culture of sexual assault?
It's interesting, because you can look at any other public space, music or art display, and you can see some of the same things but also less instances of it. Is there more or less assault at a chamber music concert or jazz festival? I don't know. It might have to do with alcohol consumption. It might have to do with drug consumption. It might have to do with people hooking up and things going too far.




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A shot of the grounds.




Could part of it be the crowd mentality combined with those factors of drugs, drinking and hookup culture?
The idea that people get into crowds and behave in ways that they wouldn't necessarily behave when they're alone is an interesting one that people think about. I have an uneasy relationship with those explanations. I feel like it is taking the onus of responsibility away from the social actor. For example, there was a Keith Urban concert, where there were something like 20 or 30 people watching a young woman get assaulted. And they were like, "Oh, you know, we were in a crowd." That sort of view is very troubling, but at the same time people use that crowd behavior argument to explain lots of other behaviors. So, it's an interesting one to think about.

There are obviously a lot of structural, institutionalized elements at play, but on an individual level, what can we do to fight rape culture?
Speaking up is important. Beyond that, speaking with your dollar. Rape culture is not the fault of Coachella, obviously. In general, whether you're talking artists, entertainers, advertisers or organizations who seem to participate in this kind of thing, choose not to participate yourself. There's definitely something that can happen with not engaging or actively disengaging ... Even in 2015, the way we talk about sexual assault is so backwards and regressive. It's almost reactionary or embedded in us. We have to acknowledge that this is a collective, social problem. We're talking about the way we as a population think about victimization. We're all culpable within that, and that's the thing that's difficult for us to wrap or minds around.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

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Jennifer Lawrence Immortalized In Peanuts By Ripley's Believe It Or Not!

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As a celebrity, Jennifer Lawrence has to deal with a lot of nuts -- but not like this!

Lawrence's face has been immortalized in 9,658 Planters peanuts, thanks to Ripley's Believe It Or Not!

The oddity empire has just received a peanut portrait of the Oscar-winning actress from Mateo Blanco, an artist based in Orlando, Florida.

The portrait measures 78 inches tall and 55 inches wide. It took him 400 hours to complete, including the painstaking task of gluing almost 10,000 shelled peanuts on a wooden board, nut by nut.

Ripley's didn't tell Blanco to use nuts. They just told him to go nuts.

Ripley's commissioned Blanco to make a portrait of a person from Kentucky using a medium associated with baseball for a show about the national pastime next year at the Louisville Slugger Museum in Louisville. Lawrence, the star of "Silver Linings Playbook" and "American Hustle," hails from Louisville. Peanuts are the ever-popular ballpark snack.

At times, finishing the artwork became a hunger game for Blanco.

"I love peanuts, so as soon as I began I ate like three or four peanuts for every one peanut I put in the portrait," Blanco said in a press release.

Blanco has done nine previous works for Ripley's, including portraits made from dog hair, sugar, glow-in-the-dark pasta and balls of wool.

Edward Meyer, Ripley's VP of Exhibits and Archives, said preserving the edible art until it goes on display required special effort.

"We of course had to get it framed to prevent people from chewing on Jennifer's ears," Meyer said in the release.

jennifer lawrence peanuts







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J.J. Abrams And 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Cast Spill Details At Celebration Panel

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Even if you couldn't make it to the "Star Wars" Celebration in Anaheim, California this week, you're still in luck. StarWars.com is live-streaming 30 hours of the event, which included Thursday morning's "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" panel with director J.J. Abrams, producer Kathleen Kennedy and Entertainment Weekly's Anthony Breznican.

The most exciting part of the panel was of course the debut of the latest teaser for "The Force Awakens." But during the panel we got to see a handful of behind-the-scenes photos, meet the new robot BB8 and also learned that the desert shown in the first “Force Awakens” teaser is not Tatooine, but a new planet called Jakku. Kennedy also promised there will be “really strong women” in all future "Star Wars" movies.

Abrams and Kennedy were joined by three members of the cast, including Daisy Ridley, Oscar Isaac and John Boyega who revealed new info about their characters. We leaned that Boyega's Finn is a character in incredible danger. The actor was hesitant to confirm whether or not Finn is a storm trooper, but he slightly nodded his head when asked. Ridley described Rey as a "self-sufficient scavenger" in Jakku, while Isaac said his Poe Dameron is "the best friggen pilot in the galaxy." In "The Force Awakens," Dameron is sent on a mission by a princess who comes across Boyega's Finn.

Later, Mark Hamill, Carrie Fischer, Peter Mayhew and Anthony Daniels reunited on stage to much fanfare.

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Watch the live-stream below.



The first teaser trailer for J.J. Abrams "Star Wars: Episode VII" debuted in November revealing new robots, characters, a crossguard lightsaber and the return of the Millennium Falcon. We also learned a few character names in December when Abrams and Lucasfilm released a series of collectible "Star Wars" trading cards.

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" is out on Dec. 18, 2015.

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The New 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Teaser Is Here & It's Amazing

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During the "Star Wars" Celebration panel on Thursday, J.J. Abrams introduced the new teaser trailer for the movie. There's more of Oscar Isaac's Poe Dameron, Daisy Ridley's Rey, John Boyega's Finn and the reunion of Harrison Ford's Han Solo and Chewie. Watch the teaser above.

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" is out on Dec. 18, 2015.

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Bangladesh Photographer Ismail Ferdous Is On A Quest To Capture The World's Stories

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Documentary photography was an unlikely career path for 26-year-old Bangladeshi Ismail Ferdous, who was studying business in college when he stumbled across the art.

"I realized that photography is a language... through which I can express what I am interested in, ask questions about others and share people’s stories," he told The WorldPost by email.

Ferdous is using this language to craft powerful stories from Bangladesh and around the world -- about topics ranging from violence against women in Guatemala to refugees on the Syria-Turkey border. His long-term project The Cost of Fashion documents the aftermath of the 2013 Rana Plaza factory collapse, which left over 1,100 people dead. Since covering the tragedy, he is passionate about raising awareness of the conditions in the garment industry.

Bangkok street market #iphoneonly #documentary #street #bangkok #thailand

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on






His work is not always easy. "Being a photographer from Bangladesh has always been hard for me," he said. There are limited resources for photographers in Bangladesh, where it's not always a respected profession, Ferdous said, noting that international visas can also be a challenge.

But it is his passion. "Photography is a great and challenging journey [and] I believe there is no end to this journey," he said. "I believe you should always be learning something new, discovering new ways to observe the world around you and facing new challenges. In that way, it’s a quest you will never be bored with."

See a selection of Ferdous' work from his Instagram account, and visit his website to find out more about his work.




Ah Dhaka again and its traffic elements! #iphoneonly #dhaka #bangladesh #dhakatraffic #gulshan #dhakastreet

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on







Portrait #iphoneonly #portrait #annoyed

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on




A big heart #iphoneonly #refugee #camp #turkey #syrian

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on




Back Home and it's Mom's Birthday #iphoneonly #happybirthday #Mother #Dhaka

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on




A lad in a refugee camp #iphoneonly #turkey #syrian #refugee

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on




Good morning Dhaka! #iphoneonly #street #documentary #dhakagraam #dhakagram #exoticdhaka

A photo posted by Ismail Ferdous (@ismailferdous) on







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House of Larréon's Larry Krone Gears Up For 'Look Book' Spotlighting Costumes And Couture

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New York comedian and cabaret star Bridget Everett has been praised for her "dark, savage humor" and "outsize attitude," but critical to her devil-may-care persona is a sassy, almost Grecian wardrobe that often leaves little to the imagination.

It makes perfect sense, then, that the man behind Everett's slinky looks is very much a visual artist and a performer in his own right. Larry Krone, a 45-year-old native Midwesterner who's been dubbed an "alt-couturier," has been styling singers and dancers for some time, including Adrienne Truscott, Kathleen Hanna and Neal Medlyn (also known as Champagne Jerry). Everett, however, has been a critical muse when it came to establishing the House of Larréon, Krone's line of custom gowns and stage costumes, in 2010.

Even though he began creating Western-inspired costumes for his own performances through Larry Krone BRAND in 1997, Krone shrugs off the traditional "fashion designer" label when it comes to his own work. Noting that a House of Larréon ensemble involves "poor taste, at least to some degree," Krone said, "Labels creep me out and trends seem so silly. So much of the time I see clothes by designers that look so silly that I figure they must be in on the joke, but then I realize it's completely [not] ironic."

On April 14, Joe's Pub at New York's Public Theater hosted a benefit concert that will subsidize the production of Look Book, Krone's forthcoming art book which features photography by Todd Oldham. The event included a fashion show as well as live performances by Everett, Champagne Jerry and others.

The Huffington Post chatted with Krone over email about his design work, the Manhattan nightlife scene and his hopes for the new book.

Why did the timing feel right for a book now?
I feel like there is a moment happening right now. A lot of it has to do with Bridget Everett and Joe's Pub. I was making costumes for a long time, but joining forces with Bridget and starting House of Larréon is what has brought me all this attention and encouraged so much cross-pollination among my different performing friends and me. The clothes and the photos in the book tell a story about this exciting creative time and place that is my world right now.

Larry Krone, Neal Medlyn, Becca Blackwell and Jim Andralis in various "Underwear of Many Colors."

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How would you describe the signature House of Larréon look to someone who wasn't familiar with your work?
I started it as a joke on fashion with many of the earliest pieces, teaching myself rudimentary Grecian draping using see-through, glittery spandex. I love imagining that the person wearing them is convinced that they are wearing the most sophisticated, elegant gown even though you could basically wear it to go swimming in. But the joke is often on me, because when Bridget puts on a Larréon and the lights hit her, and her beautiful voice comes out, it does create something legitimately glamorous if I do say so myself.

What do you think separates your work apart from others in the fashion industry?

It’s funny to call it an industry, for one thing. I don't think any of us downtown costume guys approach it that way at all, though I would love for this to start to make me more money! Maybe one thing that separates what I do from others is that I sincerely have no interest in the fashion industry.

"Maybe one thing that separates what I do from others is that I sincerely have no interest in the fashion industry."

I always joke with Bridget that we at House of Larréon love to latch onto a trend exactly at the moment when it has gasped its last breath. Even with all the silliness, though, I must say that the bottom line is that the person wearing it should look and feel gorgeous and confident. I bet this is the same with most of the other designers. One of my favorites is Machine Dazzle and what he does for Taylor Mac and the Dazzle Dancers.

Bridget Everett in "Zebra Mama," with baby Olivia in "Zebra Baby."

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How have you seen New York's downtown scene shift since you first introduced the Larry Krone BRAND in 1997?
It has shifted a lot! I used to design clothes just for me and my family act which started as a conceptual art project disguised as a country-western music review. My only audience was the art world: galleries, museums, fairs, etc. When I wanted to branch out and test the waters outside of that world, I imagined getting booked in a burlesque show as one of the straight musical acts between the fan dances or whatever. That didn't really make sense for me, but I thought it was my only option because burlesque seemed to be dominating the scene.

Everyone is pretty much supportive of each other in the big scene, but my actual “scene” is just a tight group of real actual friends who hang out together and are always looking for ways to do stuff together.

Your work really represents the intersection of fashion and nightlife. Is there still a space for this in New York's rapidly changing downtown scene?
When I think of New York nightlife, the images that comes to mind are those black-and-white photos from the '70s of Studio 54. Everything is flash-lit and overexposed, and everyone is either wearing Halston or some homemade ensemble thrown together to show off their tits or whatever other body part. This is where I'm coming from. That nightlife hasn't existed for ages, but if you can feel it in what you're wearing, then maybe you can bring it to wherever you go in the clothes.

This will sound cliché, but my own personal nightlife consists of seeing my friends’ shows when I can, and otherwise sitting around my house drinking and eating with my husband Jim and our friends. So that Studio 54 thing is an admitted total fantasy from beginning to end!

Molly Pope in "Black Titty"

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Which current artist or performer, in New York or otherwise, would you most like to create a look for?
Nobody could be more perfect for me than Bridget. So many of the clothes come from my reaction to and interpretation of what she does onstage combined with my love for her as a person. But I wouldn't turn Dolly Parton away. Or Gloria Steinem. Or NY 1’s Donna Karger. Or Tonya Pinkins.

I'm really dying to make something for Lauren Tewes. I've been watching reruns of the "Love Boat" recently, and I have become a born-again fan. It would be fun to bring some of that Julie McCoy sass and glamour to Ms. Tewes today.

What do you hope readers and viewers take away most from your book?
I think the desire of most artists is to be seen. This is a chance for people to step back from the fun and craziness of experiencing these clothes in the moment when they are onstage and really see what I do. Plus how it all fits together. And how it might fit in with the rest of my practice as a visual artist, musician, and performer myself.

"I think the desire of most artists is to be seen."

I also hope that it creates a little romance about New York and the artistic community that I'm giving a little peek of here. I like to imagine seeing this book as a teenager in St. Louis where I grew up and being completely overwhelmed with the desire to move to New York and be a part of something like this.

What's next for Larry Krone?
I'm hoping that this benefit at Joe's will raise the money I need to print the book! Once it is in the can, I'm looking forward to devoting a lot more time to being creative again in the artist’s studio as well as in the House of Larréon atélier and songwriting den, which are all actually the same place -- my East Village apartment. I'll also be doing the Afterglow Festival in Provincetown this September.

Erin Markey in "This is What a Feminist Looks Like" T-shirt of Many Colors

look book

For more on Larry Krone, head here.

Hair and makeup in the above photos is by Frances Sorensen

This interview has been edited for content, style and length.





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Felix R. Cid's 'X' Captures The Individuals In The Crowds At EDM Festivals

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If you're still coming down from a transcendent Ultra experience last month, or counting the days until Electric Daisy Carnival comes to New York, no one needs to sell you on the power of electronic dance music festivals.

If you're less impressed by the raucous vibe of EDM gatherings, photographer Felix R. Cid might be able to convince you. "It is very alive, uncontrollable and unexpected," he told The Huffington Post. "Anything is possible."

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Untitled (Sydney, Zurich, Catalonia). 2014


Cid took advantage of this atmosphere of vibrant possibility in creating his project "X," a series of photos from EDM festivals around the world, which was exhibited this spring at A+E Studios in New York. In addition to displaying single shots taken at concerts, he pieced together hundreds of these photos to build stunning crowd panoramas from countless snapshots.

"The final photograph is comprised of multiple points of view from different times," Cid explained. "I don't see the work as a collage but just another photograph."

Working in what might traditionally be referred to as collage, however, allows him to play with the assumptions of the photographic form. Rather than capturing a single moment in time, each work contains an accretion of impressions blended into a harmonious whole. "These pieces involve the idea of time in a similar way that painting or drawings does," he said.

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Untitled (New York, Monegros Desert). 2014


The photographs in "X" also move away from the documentary aspect of unedited photography. "I have no intention to make images that directly relate with the events to describe any kind of documentation on what they are," he notes. Instead, "I like to believe that I let the photograph create itself."

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Untitled (Paris). 2014


The final images, which show hypnotic masses and swirls of event-goers as if from afar, juxtapose the overwhelming force of a crowd and the vitality of each person. Look closely and you can see the individual faces and figures popping out in great detail. What better way to capture an EDM concert? As Cid argued, "Electronic music venues have a less rooted core to the admiration of one single individual... electronic music venues are more about the experiences of the public within themselves." These crowds come together not to worship a celebrity, but to create an experience, together.

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Untitled (Paris). detail


Perhaps most importantly, EDM festivals are transformative, said Cid: "Electronic music venues create some kind of alternative reality." Much like his mind-bending photographs, they're of reality, but make you see the world in a whole different way.

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Untitled (Portugal, Rumania, London,Formentera). 2014


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Untitled (Ibiza, Madrid Goa). 2014


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Untitled (Detroit). 2014


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Untitled (Sun) 2014


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Untitled (Fly) 2014


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Untitled (Vomit) 2014

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'Feeling Van Gogh' Helps Visitors Who Are Visually Impaired Experience The Artist's Work

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Lay your eyes on a Vincent van Gogh masterpiece like his radiant "Sunflowers" and you'll notice the way paint is so generously layered onto the canvas, thick and spiraling, like an amply frosted cake that's remarkably true to life -- maybe more so than we can even understand.

A special program at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam is helping visitors who are blind or visually impaired experience the singular sensation that is encountering the artist's work. The interactive guided tour is called "Feeling Van Gogh," and, basically, it's exactly what it sounds like.

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Four times a year, guides will tour visitors through the museum, explaining the history of the works on view, and their relationship to the artist's life, as they go. Then the group will participate in a workshop, in which they'll be permitted to touch remarkably accurate 3D reproductions of van Gogh’s paintings, referred to as the Van Gogh Museum Relievos.

The replicas, which were previously developed by the Van Gogh Museum, translate the painter's iconic impasto style from one sense into another, thus expanding the ways we think about processing art. Visitors will also be able to explore a model of van Gogh's "The Bedroom" and enjoy a whiff of lavender transported from the South of France.

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The Louvre, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and London's National Gallery are among the other institutions that provide touch-friendly programming for people who are visually impaired. The Van Gogh Museum joins Madrid's Prado Museum in utilizing 3D-printed technology for their programming.

"It’s an unbelievable sensation," Prado visitor Pedro González, who has been blind for over 40 years, told The New York Times after touching an El Greco. "I’m feeling this painting down to the detail of each fingernail."

Feeling Van Gogh has been developed with financial support from the Oogfonds (the Eye Fund). Visit the Van Gogh Museum website to learn more.

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These Haunting Paintings Show What Hawaii's Volcanoes Looked Like Before Color Photography

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jules tavernier an eruption
Jules Tavernier, "An Eruption," late 1880s





We've all heard of the Hudson River School and the Barbizon School, but how about the Volcano School?

In the 1880s and 1890s, Mauna Loa -- Hawaii's biggest volcano -- kicked off an eruption that brought lava closer to the town of Hilo than ever before.

Hawaii residents and tourists alike flocked to the Big Island for a chance to see the eerie orange glow over the city of Hilo, and -- in the days before color photography -- painters were among the most eager to witness and recreate the explosive lava plumes and vibrant flows.

Painters such as Jules Tavernier, Charles Furneaux and Joseph D. Strong -- buoyed by a growing commercial interest in landscape paintings -- traveled to Hawaii and trekked across the rugged terrain on multi-day journeys. The sulfuric gases and intense heat of the volcanic vents made it impossible to set up an easel and canvas on site, but the artists sketched and took mental photographs that they then recreated in their studios.

Known today as the Volcano School, their work is Hawaii's version of plein air painting, and it brought the ghostly and wondrous images of Hawaii's volcanic eruptions to the masses 135 years ago. According to Encounters with Paradise: Views of Hawaii and its People, by David Forbes, island printmaker Huc-Mazelet Luquiens considered this period "a well-marked awakening... a little Hawaiian renaissance."

ambrose patterson mount kilauea
Ambrose Patterson, "Mount Kilauea, The House of Everlasting Fire," 1917


Of all the "old masters" of Hawaii painting, Tavernier is considered the most famous. A renowned and accomplished painter of landscapes of the American West (he could paint with both hands at the same time), the Frenchman was a tempestuous drinker and an adventurer. He was described as volatile, explosive and peppery -- much like the volcanoes he painted -- and fled to Hawaii to escape his debts.

He was "the spark that set off the Volcano School," according to Don Severson, Michael Horikawa and Jennifer Saville, authors of Finding Paradise: Island Art in Private Collections. By the mid 1880s, his depictions of Kilauea crater "created the movement that endures as Hawaii's unique contribution to American regional art."

Tavernier was able to bring out the volcanoes' demons -- and paint them on large scales. In 1886, he painted a cyclorama of Kilauea's erupting crater, an immersive 360 degree canvas meant to be viewed from the inside. It was 11 feet high and 90 feet long. According to Joseph Theroux, who wrote about Tavernier for the Hawaiian Journal of History, the piece was described as "wonderful, beautiful [and] grand... Hawaii's Wonder."

After touring Maui and Honolulu, the cyclorama was scheduled to be sent to Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston and London, but it was claimed by a creditor and stored in an attic somewhere in Maine, and has never been seen since.

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Jules Tavernier, "Kilauea Caldera," c. 1885-1886


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Jules Tavernier, "Sunrise Over Diamond Head," 1888


Today, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Bishop Museum, and the Lyman Museum -- all in Hawaii -- proudly display Volcano School paintings in their collections.

"Volcano School painters celebrated what they perceived to be natural wonders of the world," Healoha Johnston told The Huffington Post. She's the assistant curator of Arts of Hawaii at the Honolulu Museum of Art, where eight of these paintings are currently on view. "Work by the Volcano School painters exemplifies a fusion between European Sublime aesthetics, Romantic landscape, and the American landscape traditions, characterized by scenic depictions of the natural world -- in turbulence or grandeur -- and human beings’ relationship to nature in a time of expedition."

Other major collectors include both legacy Hawaii residents like Samuel Cooke, whose great-grandmother Anna Rice Cooke founded the Honolulu Academy of Arts (now known as the Honolulu Museum of Art) in 1922, and newer residents from the mainland.

Explaining the Volcano School's popularity, Cooke explained to the Wall Street Journal that “Hawaiian art took off when a lot of wealthy people started coming here from the mainland, these guys from Silicon Valley. What is the best way to be an instant Kama'aina, or longtime resident? Put one of those Volcano School paintings on your wall.”

If only we could.




furneaux mauna loa
Charles Furneaux, "Eruption of Mauna Loa, November 5, 1889, as Seen from Kawaihae," date unknown


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D. Howard Hitchcock, "Halemaumau, Lake of Fire," 1888


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Jules Tavernier, "Mokuaweoweo at Top of Mauna Loa," 1896


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Ogura Yonesuke Itoh, "Kilauea," 1908


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Charles Furneaux, "Eruption From Hilo Bay," 1881


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Eduardo Lefebvre Scovell, "Kilauea," 1890


tavernier at night
Jules Tavernier, "Volcano at Night," c. 1880s




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11 Images From The New 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Trailer That Floated Through Our Dreams Last Night

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When the last "Star Wars" trilogy debuted its first trailer, people bought tickets to movies like "Meet Joe Black" and "The Waterboy" simply to see the "Phantom Menace" promo. This time, people watched a live-stream of a convention that looked remarkably similar to one of the Scientology gatherings showcased in "Going Clear." In truth, though, we can get behind a bit of intense "Star Wars" fandom -- we'll be lining up for "The Force Awakens" with the best of 'em come Dec. 18, especially after its second teaser-trailer debuted at Thursday's "Star Wars" Celebration event in Anaheim, California. We went to bed dreaming of the remarkable images in J.J. Abrams' latest clip, which seems to emphasize the non-CGI effects the director has been boasting and generally gives even a casual "Star Wars" supporter a case of nerd goosebumps. Here is a ranking of 11 screenshots from the trailer that floated through our sleep last night:

11. BB-8 playing hide-and-seek.
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10. See, we don't even have to wait that long.
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9. One time, a "Star Wars" villain tried to extend a hand after chopping off Luke Skywalker's with his lightsaber. He did not receive any affection in return. In other words, hello there, Sith lord.
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8. John Boyega's Finn is already the coolest character in this movie. Whenever he's not decked out in his suit, he has all kinds of chill with his street clothes. (And look at little BB-8 scurrying for his -- or her -- life!)
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7. THIS GUY.
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6. Whose arm is that? It could be Luke's, but something about this looks worrisome. Did R2-D2 turn to the dark side?
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5. Stormtroopers aplenty. "The Force Awakens" is a total dystopia flick.
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4. Meet the new Boba Fett? Vulture has a very interesting spoiler about this menacing figure.
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3. This Star Destroyer does not have it together, and neither does that thing that appears to be an X-Wing. And apparently this isn't even Tatooine!
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2. We'll take any Darth Vader spottings we can get. But wait. Could he be alive?
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1. "Chewie, we're home." Us too, Han. Us too.
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Watch the full teaser:

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Ansel Elgort, Laura Benanti And More Sound Off On LGBT Rights At Broadway's 'Finding Neverland' Premiere

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Ansel Elgort, Laura Benanti and Bryan Cranston were among the many celebrities who spoke out in defense of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community on the red carpet at the premiere at the new Broadway musical, "Finding Neverland."

"I don't understand why every person shouldn't have the rights of any other person," Cranston, who appeared on Broadway last season in "All The Way," told GLAAD's Claire Pires. "All the way down the line, I've been a big supporter of gay rights forever, and I think it's absurd that there's still an issue about marriage."

Elgort, who has also been an outspoken LGBT rights advocate, echoed those sentiments.

"I don't see any reason people shouldn't be allowed to be who they want to be," Elgort said. "I almost find now, if you aren't accepting, it's a big problem ... I really hope in my heart that the world can accept, truly and deeply, so that way there can be a true change in the way the world is."

Benanti, who noted that her uncle was gay, added, "He taught me from a very young age that love is love, and whoever you love is who you love, and that's that."

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This Year's Activist Awards Showcase Some Of The World's Most Impactful Photography

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"The photograph itself doesn't interest me," famed photojournalist Henri Cartier-Bresson famously proclaimed. "I want only to capture a minute part of reality."

Such an ethos might help to explain the spirit of San Francisco-based Catchlight's Activist Awards, an annual photography contest that honors both professional and emerging individuals whose visual work focuses on the issues -- underrepresented as they might be -- of our time. The 2014 winners certainly uphold the promise: Swedish professional Åsa Sjöström's "The Secret Camps" documents life in a secluded refuge for women and children, emerging Tamil photographer Amirtharaj Stephen's "Koodankulam: A Nuclear Plant In My Backyard" chronicles community protesters in opposition of the Indian and Russian Government's Koodankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP).

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Amid the sea of awards recognizing outstanding efforts in the field of photography today, the Activist Awards manage to set itself apart. The competition doesn't just celebrate innovation and beauty in art, it shines a spotlight on the photographers raising awareness of social agency around the globe, while creating new technologies along the way.

The Activist Awards began in 2009 under the former PhotoPhilanthropy banner, and has since seen submissions from over 600 photographers collaborating with 450 nonprofit organizations in 90 different countries. “These photographers are the eyes on the ground for the rest of us," Catchlight managing director Shoka Javadiangilani explained in a statement. "We want to find and connect devoted and trustworthy visual storytellers, and support them any way possible, to continue helping them do what they are best at. Without seeing, we have little chance to understand how things work and to improve ourselves and the world around us."

Stephen's images are bathed in shadows, the monochromatic photos giving a glimpse into the life of villagers in the Tirunelveli district of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Protesters flock in front of churches and beaches, rallying against the construction of a nuclear power plant they deemed unsafe for their village. Ultimately, the plant was built, but as Stephen's project illustrates, officials form Russia and India who commissioned the structure did little to successfully assuage the very real, post-Cold War fears of the fisherman-heavy community.

In contrast, Sjöström's series features the obscured faces of women and children living in "secret" Swedish camps meant to function as havens for victims of domestic and honor violence. The pastel-heavy snapshots show bits of leisure, as the young women and their families spend time in the open air. While the images are a far cry from the typical photojournalistic documentation, the unique vision resulted in what the Activist Awards judges like Time magazine photo editor Alice Gabriner and Stephen Mayes, executive director of the Tim Hetherington Trust, deemed an "imaginative, creative, and well-edited series."

Out of the 256 entries in the 2014 Activist Awards, from 54 separate countries, Sjöström and Stephen collected $15,000 and $5,000 respectively after the announcement of their wins this week. Check out their work, with captions provided:

Professional:





Emerging:

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