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

The Ultimate Poster Art For Every Person Who Binge-Watched 'Stranger Things'

$
0
0

If you spent an entire weekend in this hot, sweltering month of July holed up in your apartment with a laptop and the chill-inducing horror of Netflix’s “Stranger Things,” this poster art is for you:



Netflix commissioned the sci-fi friendly creations, reminiscent of your favorite bygone poster art. The streaming service specifically asked artist Kyle Lambert to translate the story of a Demogorgon-haunted small town into work that celebrates the 1980s era of hand-painted movie posters.


And, boy, did he pull it off.



Lambert began the project by studying the classic poster art of legends like Drew Struzan (who drew iconic images of Indiana Jones and Hans Solo) and experimenting with different ways to recreate the beauty of paint with digital tools.


“I was given a loose composition by the studio and was asked to explore ideas for how best to communicate the story in a single image,” Lambert writes on his Behance page. “Netflix gave me rough cuts of the first few episodes and a library of still photography to work from.”



Lambert used the Procreate app on his iPad Pro to do the preliminary sketches and block the basic colors of the poster. He then exported these layers into Adobe Photoshop and began detailing the artwork at a much higher resolution for the final product. His resulting poster is featured across all of Netflix’s streaming platforms as the primary art for “Stranger Things.”


“While working on this project, the Duffer brothers, who directed the series, also commissioned me to produce paintings of the main characters in the same style,” Lambert added. “These paintings were printed onto canvas and given as wrap gifts to the actors, including Winona Ryder.”



If you haven’t dedicated nearly 400 minutes of your life to “Stranger Things,” a TV homage to all things spooky, nostalgic and supernatural, let this image of Chief Jim Hopper be the last thing you see before you embark on a Winona Ryder-fueled Netflix night.



Seriously, watch it. And you can see more of Lambert’s art here.


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


This Poem Is A Powerful Reminder Of What It Means To Be Latino American

$
0
0



When you grow up at the intersection of two vastly difference cultures, sometimes it can be easy to lose your sense of identity. But poet Xóchitl Morales wants to remind all Latino Americans why it’s important to never forget their heritage.


Morales breaks down her own life journey in a powerfully personal poem titled “Latino-Americanos: The Children Of An Oscuro Pasado,” in a video posted Tuesday on Pero Like’s Facebook page. Her verses detail everything from the loss of her Spanish language fluency as a young girl to the rejection of her Nahuatl name.  


“My first language was Spanish, learned from sweet stories told by my papi at bedtime,” she says in the video. “My tongue a formation of the stardust of my heritage, and intertwined galaxy of rolled R's and the pledge of allegiance. It was something I would soon forget after I was told it was wrong and taught a new way to introduce myself. ‘Mi nombre es’ turned to ‘my name is’ after the girl in my class told me she couldn’t understand me.” 


But her grandmother, with whom she could only nod or shake her head “because her native language sounds like a tongue twister I can’t seem to master," reminded her what it meant to carry the Latino identity in her veins. 


“She reminds me, that the colors in my soul and the rhythm in my bones are blessings and that I come from the Incas, the Mayas, the Aztecs, los Mexicas who built an empire nunca imaginado (never imagined),” Morales says. “That we are a children of an oscuro pasado (dark past), a mixture of pain, sadness and oppression. But we have inherited the strength. We have inherited the passion. She reminds me that my name holds the power of the most legendary Aztec princesses.”


Morales, then, dedicates her poem to those who maintain their culture and keep their heritage close to their hearts and lives.


“We wear their legacies on our shoulders with pride, and we do not lose ourselves to broken perceptions but rise above with the help of our powerful stories, our melodies, our galaxies porque somos Latino Americanos and we will not be forgotten.”


Watch the full poem above. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

100 Homeless Individuals Documented Their Lives With Disposable Cameras

$
0
0

“This man is homeless,” Ray Kelly said of the person in the photo above, which he took with a disposable Fujifilm camera. “He didn’t want his face in the picture. He was just hangin’ out because that’s what homeless people do. They hang out and wait for food or for a place to open. They wait for something to happen.”


Kelly has also struggled with homelessness. In fact, he is one of 100 individuals who participated in the social artwork “Through Their Eyes,” illuminating their experiences. The Spartanburg, South Carolina-based project distributed disposable cameras to members of the community, inviting them to document their lives and share their stories over the course of five days.


The initiative aims to bring visibility to the epidemic of homelessness through the eyes of those who live it, day in and day out. The selected artists archived the daily minutiae that constitute their being ― the food, the people, the struggles, the moments of beauty and love. 



We want to encourage people by giving them a message of hope,” Jason Williamson, a pastor and leader of the project, explained. “We want to have an opportunity to share the gospel with them. To let them know that they are loved. Even though things in their life may be dark right now, there is a lot of hope for them. That the things they’ve experienced in the past don’t define who they are.”


“We want to give them the satisfaction and joy that comes with creating art,” he added.


The project hopes to communicate the reality of homelessness, not through sweeping generalizations and overarching messages, but through real people and genuine moments. As the project explains in a statement: “These photographers may be homeless, but they do not have to be hopeless, nameless or voiceless. This is their chance to tell the community: ‘These are our stories. These are our lives. See what we see. Through our eyes.’”


See some of the photographs, along with descriptions from the artists, below: 


“Cool Down” by Bobbie Nesbitt



”Beautiful Dresses” by Bobbie Nesbitt



”Hatred” by Ray Kelly



”The Light of my Daughter” by David Minch



”Trouble Free” by Donald Edwards



“Our Freedom to be Homeless Fell Upon These Shoulders” by Stephanie Farmer



 “Moving In” by Mildred Johnson



"Young Lady” by Darrell Hawkins



"Doug” by Rumchanh Prak



”Prayer Bear” by Leslie Broome



"Home” by Annette Barnett



 “Happy As I Can Be” by Robert Aldridge


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Thanks To Joe Biden's Speech, Searches For 'Malarkey' Are Up 17,400 Percent

$
0
0

America’s wacky uncle and current vice president, Joe Biden, inspired rafter-shaking enthusiasm with his Democratic National Convention speech on Wednesday. Biden offered a full-throated defense of the greatness of the United States today, hit Donald Trump for his lack of qualifications and fondness for saying “You’re fired,” and strongly endorsed Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.


It wouldn’t be a Biden speech, though, without a moment like this, when Biden labeled Trump’s campaign promises “malarkey”: 





According to an email statement from Meghan Lunghi of Merriam-Webster’s website, searches for “malarkey” on the site spiked more than 17,400 percent after Biden’s speech on Wednesday night.


In case you missed that: 17,400 percent.


Merriam-Webster’s blog post on the trend pointed out that our vice president wasn’t trying something new; “malarkey” is a favorite term in his bag of homespun verbiage. This will probably remain, however, the most high-profile usage of “malarkey,” at least in the post-MTV era. 


Twitter viewers definitely enjoyed Biden’s less-than-au-courant terminology, especially those who seemed to anticipate it:






























We’ll always have malarkey, Joe. 




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The 10 Most Controversial Art Projects Of The Last Century

$
0
0

This article originally appeared on artnet News.



The art world is no stranger to the gasp-inducing project or performance: in fact, it seems at times to thrive on it. In these dog days of summer, when the art world slows down and the tumbleweeds approach Chelsea, we’re excited to hear that provocative exhibitions are still taking place around the world.


In Tokyo, ASAKUSA gallery is showing “Radical Democracy,” which features the work of artists Thomas Hirschhorn and Santiago Sierra. Sierra, in particular, has gotten flack for recruiting menial laborers in his work, and paying them a small rate to tattoo them, dye their hair, or make them sit in cardboard boxes. It is the transparency of power that makes the audience uncomfortable. “Nothing has changed since the Middle Ages,” the Spanish artist told BOMB magazine in 2004. He continues, “Art is conceptual entertainment. Regardless of how radical it is, it has a great penetration on the market.”


Below are the last century’s 10 most controversial artworks to whet your scandal whistle, topped off with 15 honorable mentions. Has much changed since Marcel Duchamp’s “Fountain”?



1.Emma Sulkowicz, “Mattress Performance (Carry That Weight)” (2014–15)


Still making headlines today, Emma Sulkowicz’s enduring performance(begun in September 2014 as a thesis project) involved carrying a 50-pound mattress around with her wherever she went on New York City’s Columbia campus, where she was alleges she was raped by a fellow student in 2012. The artist promised the piece would end only if and when her supposed rapist was expelled from the university. He was not, so Sulkowicz carried the mattress onstage during her graduation ceremony to bring the performance to a close in May 2015 ― not before making a lasting impression on critics and the public alike.



2. Ryder Ripps, “ART WHORE” (2014)


After accepting the offer of a one-night artist’s residency at New York’s Ace Hotel, Ryder Ripps presented “ART WHORE,” a project in which he invited two escorts acquired through craigslist to join him in his hotel room. During their stay, Ripps documented Brooke and Jay after he instructed them to draw whatever they wished. Art F City writer Whitney Kimball described “ART WHORE” as being “in the running for the most offensive project of 2014.” Dazed’s  described it as “the same old story: a white dude co-opting someone else’s labor in his struggle to Make A Point. Nothing new about that.”



3. Guillermo Vargas, “Eres Lo Que Lees (You Are What You Read)” (2007)


Guillermo Vargas’ story is in a particularly sensitive vein, as it involves the supposedly-intentional starvation of an innocent animal. In an exhibition at Códice Gallery in Managua, Nicaragua, the artist bound a stray dog to the wall by a leash, leaving it without food or water. Spelled out above the animal were the words, “Eres Lo Que Lees,” Spanish for “You Are What You Read.” To add insult to injury, the phrase was made out of dog biscuits.


The gallery defended itself, claiming the dog was unchained and fed outside of exhibition hours, but that didn’t prevent international outrage or the death threats addressed to Vargas from streaming in. (Tom Otterness infamously shot a dog for art in 1977, but the incident did not become widely known until many years later, and the video footage has never been widely distributed.)



4. Chris Ofili, “The Holy Virgin Mary” (1996)


Though created in 1996, this now-infamous painting by Turner Prize winner Chris Ofili didn’t cause a stir until 1999, when it was scheduled to be shown in “Sensation,” a traveling group exhibition of YBA works bound for New York City’s Brooklyn Museum. The large painting depicts a black Virgin Mary and incorporates elephant dung as well as collaged pornographic images. Then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a devout Catholic, called the work “sick” and attempted to block the exhibition by cutting the museum’s funding. His request was denied by a federal judge, and the painting eventually went onto sell for $4.6 million at auction.



5. Tracey Emin, “Everyone I Have Ever Slept With” 1963-1995 (1995)


One can guess what might be controversial here based on the name of Tracey Emin’s work alone, but the title is actually misleading. Emin created a tent on which she appliquéd the 102 names of everyone she had slept with or beside, in either a sexual or platonic sense. Of the work, Emin said, “Some I’d had a shag with in bed or against a wall. Some I had just slept with, like my grandma. I used to lay in her bed and hold her hand. We used to listen to the radio together and nod off to sleep. You don’t do that with someone you don’t love and don’t care about.”


The work was later destroyed in an East London warehouse fire, along with over 100 other works owned by Charles Saatchi.



6. Guerrilla Girls, “Do Women Have to be Naked to get into the Met. Museum?” (1989)


Ever the art-world radicals, the Guerrilla Girls are an anonymous group of female artists that was formed in response to a 1984 painting and sculpture survey at New York’s Museum of Modern Art that included just 13 women out of a total of 169 artists. Thus began a poster campaign to raise awareness of the lack of women artists represented in major contemporary art establishments.


Though they pitched the above poster to the Public Art Fund for a New York billboard, the work was rejected, and in retaliation, the Guerrilla Girls rented space on New York City buses for the ad. In addition, they stealthily hung the posters around the city during the night, donning their signature gorilla masks to maintain anonymity.



7. Robert Mapplethorpe, “X Portfolio” (1989)


In June 1989 ― just a few months after his untimely death from AIDS ― a retrospective of over 150 of Robert Mapplethorpe’s works was due to open at the Corcoran Art Gallery in Washington, DC. However, the sexually explicit nature of the photographs, which featured sado-masochism and homosexuality, drew the wrath of Capitol Hill’s conservative lawmakers. In a misguided attempt to avoid controversy, the exhibition was canceled, adding fuel to the so-called “Culture Wars.”


In protest, Mapplethorpe supporters congregated outside the gallery on the evening of June 30, 1989, projecting giant images of his work onto the side of the building, creating a powerful and moving tribute to the late photographer.



8. Andres Serrano, “Piss Christ” (1987)


For more than two decades, Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ has been a polarizing work for its subject matter. The photograph of a plastic crucifix submerged in a cup of the artist’s urine has sparked controversy since its creation, but public anger came to a climax in 2011 in Avignon, France, when Catholic fundamentalists attempted to destroy the photograph with hammers.


“At the time I made Piss Christ, I wasn’t trying to get anything across,” Serrano told the Guardian in 2012. “In hindsight, I’d say ‘Piss Christ’ is a reflection of my work, not only as an artist, but as a Christian.” Oomph.



9. Richard Serra, “Tilted Arc” (1981)


Richard Serra’s 120-foot-long and 12-foot-high bend of Cor-Ten steel hardly seems like the description of a work that could induce the anger like that of medieval villagers with torches and pitchforks. But such was the case in 1981, when Serra erected his massive wall-like sculpture, bisecting New York City’s Federal Plaza.


Denounced for its placement in the middle of a busy pedestrian thoroughfare, it was seen as an annoying obstruction ― as a result, it was removed from the plaza in 1989, despite Serra’s intention that it would be permanent. “I don’t think it is the function of art to be pleasing,” he commented at the time. “Art is not democratic. It is not for the people.”



10. Marcel Duchamp, “Fountain” (1917)


Perhaps the most famous controversial work of all time, Marcel Duchamp’sFountain, arguably the first “readymade” in existence, wraps up our list. As a porcelain urinal turned upon its back, the piece was submitted under the pseudonym “R. Mutt” to the Society of Independent Artists, and was promptly excluded from the Society’s inaugural exhibition. Duchamp resigned from the board in protest.


In a 1964 interview, Duchamp—by then the known producer of the work—was quoted in the Paris-Express as saying, “I was drawing people’s attention to the fact that art is a mirage. A mirage, exactly like an oasis appears in the desert. It is very beautiful until, of course, you are dying of thirst. But you don’t die in the field of art. The mirage is solid.”


Honorable Mentions:


Laura Lima, “The Inverse” (2016)


Milo Moiré, “Mirror Box” (2016)


Paul McCarthy, “Tree” (2014)


Maurizio Cattelan, “All” (2012)


Martin Creed, “WORK NO. 227 THE LIGHTS GOING ON AND OFF” (2000)


Tracey Emin, “My Bed” (1998)


Marcus Harvey, “Myra” (1997)


Damien Hirst, “Mother & Child (Divided)” (1993)


Gran Fury, “Kissing Doesn’t Kill” (1990)


Dread Scott, “What is the Proper Way to Display a US Flag?” (1988)


David Hammons, “How Ya Like Me Now?” (1988)


David Wojnarowicz, “A Fire in My Belly” (1986–87)


Marina Abravomić, “Rhythm 0” (1974)


VALIE EXPORT, “TAP and TOUCH Cinema” (1968)


Diane Arbus, “Child with Toy Hand Grenade in Central Park” (1962)


Piero Manzoni, “Artist’s Shit” (1961)


Pablo Picasso, “Guernica” (1937)


Pablo Picasso, “Les Demoiselles d’avignon” (1907)

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Iranians And Afghan Refugees Work Together To Transform Hateful Graffiti Into Artwork

$
0
0

Once tarnished by walls covered in hateful graffiti and streets littered with garbage, the Saadi neighborhood of Shiraz, Iran, now boasts beautifully-painted murals and a newly fostered sense of community.


The United Nations Refugee Agency and the Iranian government spearheaded a collaborative initiative to clean up and beautify Shiraz while uniting its residents ― a diverse population of Iranians and Afghan refugees ― who have endured divisive social tensions and hostility.


While the UNHCR notes there are nearly 1 million Afghans currently living in Iran, the country’s interior ministry estimates the actual number is closer to 3 million. Large numbers of Afghans in Iran risk being deported, including many who are living there illegally.


“It had become custom for Afghans and Iranians to blame each other – verbally and through graffiti and hate slogans – for the problems they saw around them,” explained Alex Kishara, who heads UNHCR’s operations in Shiraz.


A team of more than 60 community volunteers and students from both groups worked together with local artists to paint over walls tagged with discriminatory messages, in addition to picking up trash. The new murals feature designs depicting Iranian and Afghan carpets, as well as other cultural symbols.


Check out UNHCR’s photographs of the inspirational transformation below:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Andrew Garfield Is A Damn Hero In The 'Hacksaw Ridge' Trailer

$
0
0

Andrew Garfield has shed his British accent in the past, playing Spider-Man and, in “99 Homes,” a father battling real-estate corruption. Now, he is portraying another American hero in “Hacksaw Ridge,” this time with a Southern drawl that is so earnest you’ll just want to squeeze his dainty, heroic little body. 


In Mel Gibson’s new movie, Garfield plays Desmond Doss, the religious conscientious objector who saved 75 comrades in a World War II battle without carrying a single gun. President Harry Truman awarded Doss a Medal of Freedom, and Robert Schenkkan (”All the Way”) and Randall Wallace (”Braveheart”) awarded him with a screenplay about his life. The movie, which also stars Vince Vaughn and Sam Worthington, opens Nov. 4, smack-dab in the war zone that is Oscar season. Watch the trailer below.




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

This Sweet Supercut Showcases The Many Film Homages In 'Stranger Things'

$
0
0

If you’ve watched “Stranger Things,” you know it is overflowing with homages to the popular culture of the 1970s and ‘80s. From “The Goonies” and “E.T.” to “Poltergeist” and “Alien,” the Netflix series is a treasure trove of nostalgia. (It’s also a damn good story on its own. Read our interview with the show’s creators here.)


A Vimeo user named Ulysse Thevenon has compiled a side-by-side supercut of the many film references featured throughout “Stranger Things.” It’s a sweet tribute to both the show and the classics that inspired it. Watch below.




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


The Art Of Texting Just Got Real Thanks To These Art History Emoji

$
0
0


The art nerds housed here at HuffPost Arts & Culture have spent many long hours dreaming of a world in which art history legends from Klimt’s kiss to Magritte’s (non-) pipe could, in emoji form, pop up in texts or slide into your DMs. 


Well, thanks to the beautiful minds over at Cantor Fine Art in Los Angeles, we’re one step closer to living in a world in which art history symbols flow through our digital exchanges like water ― or Kimoji. The gallery has recently uploaded a variety of art-centric emoji to Instagram, from Vincent van Gogh to Georgia O’Keeffe to Jean-Michel Basquiat.


Sadly, the emoji aren’t functional yet. You’ll have to wait to officially respond to a late-night “u up?” with a nonplussed Yayoi Kusama. In the meantime, enjoy the clever digital renderings below. And if anyone reading this happens to be in the emoji-manufacturing business, please make these beauties real.


































Check out our versions of art history emoji below:

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Now You Can Protest Donald Trump’s Wealth In This Luxury Art Hut

$
0
0

Hair today, gone tomorrow.


Thanks to a clever guerrilla art project created by Doug Cameron and Tommy Noonan, you can protest your least favorite combover-wearin’ 2016 presidential candidate by camping out in a hairy hut built to comment on his luxurious lifestyle


 “We aim to stand out from typical activism, such as holding protest placards, because that sort of activism tends to at best generate eye rolls from the people you are trying to sway, and at worst, polarizes them,” Cameron told The Huffington Post. “We prefer to go lowbrow than highbrow. We start by identifying a cultural tension and then we respond with absurdist humor.”



The point of the project is that it’s funny, relatable, and easy to joke about, allowing viewers to feel connected by their beliefs. The two took a similar approach when protesting the closing of their favorite deli in Brooklyn, where they live.


They hope their projects will unite and achieve, rather than merely comment and isolate. And with the “Trump Hut” they succeeded when they transported the installation to the Republication National Convention last week, where Republicans and Democrats alike wanted to take photos with the hut.


The portable work can also be set up in other Trumpian spots, like the Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue, where Cameron and Noonan originally envisioned the work. “We wanted the contrast between the two buildings, the hut and the tower, to not only emphasize the wealth divide but to get people empathizing with the hut,” Cameron said.



The “Trump Hut” gets its flowing locks from a material that’s central to its message: Mexican raffia, a straw used in grass skirts. It was constructed by Roxana Casillas, an artist who was born in Mexico.


“One of the things that we wanted to respond to is the ongoing criminalization of Mexican immigrants by politicians, and in particular by Donald Trump in his speeches,” Cameron said. “Our point of view is that America is a nation of immigrants, and greatly benefits from the skilled labor Mexican immigrants bring to our society. So when it came to making the hut, we decided to find a skilled Mexican immigrant who could make a tent of Donald Trump’s hair look so beautiful, that it would be hard for anybody to argue the value of this craftsmanship.”



Soon, you’ll be able to donate to the “Trump Hut” Kickstarter campaign, which will award the most generous donors a stay in the hut while it’s camped outside of Trump Tower, or Trump’s estate in Mar-a-Lago, Florida. The biggest prize available to contributors: the ability to purchase their very own “Trump Hut.” 


“We hope that we will do our own small part to keep the election somewhat focused on the wealth divide, which we think is an important issue to people who haven’t necessarily committed to one party or another,” Cameron said. “Our vision is that anybody can become a part of the Trump Hut real estate empire if he or she wants to.”



Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is aserial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims ― 1.6 billion members of an entire religion ― from entering the U.S.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

This 'Hands Of Stone' Clip Matches Roberto Durán With Sugar Ray Leonard For The First Time

$
0
0

The boxing movie du jour is “Hands of Stone,” the upcoming biopic about Panamanian star Roberto Durán. Seize your moment, “Hands of Stone,” because the Vinny Paz flick “Bleed for This” is ready to throw a counterpunch come November. 


The Huffington Post has an exclusive clip from “Stone.” The film opens Aug. 26 and stars Édgar Ramírez (”Zero Dark Thirty,” “Joy”) as Durán, who defeated Sugar Ray Leonard (played by Usher Raymond of “U Got It Bad” fame) to capture a world championship midway through his career. The scene below is from the match that launched Durán and Leonard’s long rivalry. 


“Hands of Stone” is written and directed by Jonathan Jakubowicz, who found acclaim with the 2005 Venezuelan crime film “Secuestro Express.” Robert De Niro plays Ray Arcel, Durán’s trainer. 




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

See The Trailer For Ron Howard's New Documentary About The Beatles

$
0
0

Fifty-three years after their first album, it’s hard to believe we haven’t exhausted the storied anthology of Beatles history. But Ron Howard will soon prove there is still more to reveal about the Fab Four. The trailer for Howard’s new documentary, “The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years,” juxtaposes present-day Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr interviews with vintage concert footage, press appearances and behind-the-scenes fodder from Beatlemania’s preppy origins and experimental progressions.


Watch the new trailer below. “The Beatles: Eight Days a Week” opens Sept. 15 in theaters and premieres Sept. 17 on Hulu.





Don’t know what to watch on Netflix? Message us on Facebook Messenger for TV and movie recommendations from our editors! 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

This Instagram Account Captures Public Transport Seats Around The World

$
0
0

Have you ever found yourself staring at the fabric in your subway car or marveling at the patterns on your bus seat? French film director Julien Potart, the man behind the Instagram account idontgiveaseat, certainly has. 


He launched idontgiveaseat about a year and a half ago to post pictures of patterned fabrics he discovers inside public buses, trains and subways in cities across the globe.


“The idea came while I was on various work trips, or when I was on vacation. I noticed that every bus and subway car had its own seat motif. I really liked getting lost in thought as I contemplated these patterns,” Potart told HuffPost France.



91 - Amami Oshima #seatart #readymade

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on




“So that’s why I decided to take photos and collect them. It’s a way for me to pay tribute to these ‘seat-artists.’”


To date, idontgiveaseat has featured public transport seats from such cities as Los Angeles, Tokyo, Palermo, Rome, Paris, and more. Kyoto, Japan, had one of Potart’s favorite motifs. Against a sand-colored background, there are images of women with children and figures with walking sticks, to signify priority seating. “I like them because, besides looking nice, they’re also informative,” he says.



63 - Kyoto #idontgiveaseat #kyoto #japan #travel #seat #pattern

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on




As long as he keeps traveling, Potart says, he will continue to photograph public transport interiors. “I have not yet taken all the trains, metros, buses, or trams in the world,” he said. He sees the project growing even without his involvement however. “At the beginning I only posted pictures that I personally took. Then my friends started to send me some when they were traveling.”


Today, he gets photographs from people he doesn’t even know. “That’s what I like about this: it’s a collaborative project. I can’t do it on my own, I can’t collect every seat pattern in the world. So I need help from everybody, all over the world.”


Scroll down for more photos from idontgiveaseat.



88 - Argelès

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





61 - Frankfurt #idontgiveaseat #frankfurtammain #germany #pattern #seat #pattern #travel #bus #coach

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





48 - Oxford #idontgiveaseat #Oxford #bus #seat #pattern #travel #busseatbeauty #patternporn

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





42 - Paris #idontgiveaseat #paris #bus #travel #seat #pattern

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





27 - London #idontgiveaseat #London #travel #pattern #seat #busseatbeauty #bus

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





85 - Palermo #idontgiveaseat #italy #sicily #seat #bus #pattern #design

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





20 - Athens #idontgiveaseat #athens #pattern

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





08 - Londres #idontgiveaseat

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





43 - Le Touquet #idontgiveaseat #france #letouquet #pattern #seat #train #travel #sncf

A photo posted by Have a seat! (@idontgiveaseat) on





This post originally appeared on HuffPost France and has been translated into English. 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Artist Imagines A Future In Which Pets Date, Have Sex, Fall In Love

$
0
0

Generally speaking, we think we know our pets. We read their behaviors and tend to their needs, all the while projecting onto them certain attributes and inclinations. Eventually we construct entire pet personalities, without them ever speaking a word.


But do we ever really know what they want, or what they need? 


Artist Kuang-Yi Ku has no pets of his own, but he’s observed his friend’s cat with interest. One day, he noticed the feline was in heat and acting rather strangely. “I was not sure what feeling the cat experienced but I just thought that I could feel it want to have sex,” Kuang-Yi explained in an email to The Huffington Post. “However, I am not a cat, so of course I could not understand what cats want.”



This limitation intrigued Kuang-Yi, who doubts it’s possible to ever truly understand another person’s feelings, let alone another animal’s. Despite the lack of hope, he began his latest project by interviewing pet owners and veterinarians to find out more about the feelings of pets ― particularly, pets’ feelings about sex. Is sex just about reproduction for pets? Is pleasure a guiding factor? What about attraction? 


The first thing Kuang-Yi learned was how ubiquitous a practice castration is, along with the resounding opinion that it makes pets healthier, tamer, and more suitable for domestic living. The artist was shocked at the popularity of the response. “I just asked myself: ‘Do we (humans) really have the right to cut off another creature’s sex organ and even claim that it is for their own good?’” he explained. “However, if we don’t do that, how could we solve the sexual problem of pets?”


Kuang-Yi devised two potential solutions to this “sexual problem.” First, in lieu of castration, he’s opting for contraception. The artist is developing design propositions for spray-on condoms, as well as oral contraceptive pills ― of course, for pets. And second, to help pets find potential partners, Kuang-Yi conceived of a dating app specifically for pets. How else does anyone meet someone nowadays? 



The dating app “PatPet,” currently in progress, is a collaboration between Kuang-Yi and Yi-Ling Wu (an engineer), Tzu-Yen Chen (an architect). and Wen-Yu Tsai (a filmmaker). The design vaguely resembles Tinder, Grindr and the like, with photo streams accompanied by users’ age, gender and personal preferences. Of course, all the images are of cats and dogs, but this much is obvious. 


Oftentimes, as Kuang-Yi work reminds us, pet owners and lovers imagine the animals in their lives as innocent companions, almost eternally infantile in their cuteness. But perhaps we’re forgetting something. Specifically, pets’ sexual needs and desires. Save for the occasional awkward chortle that results from witnessing a pup humping a pillow, do we ever appreciate the possibility that pets are sexual beings too? In an interview with Dazed Digital, Kuang-Yi compared the widespread denial of animals’ needs to the way we treat people with disabilities, often assumed to be “angels without lust or desire.”


The contraception and app projects are part of Kuang-Yi’s ongoing artist residency at Liverpool’s FACT, called “Pet’s Petting.” There, the artist is re-imagining the way humans will interact with their pets in the future ― the main difference being that pet owners will acknowledge and encourage their pets’ sexual needs decades from now.


“Maybe in the future, it will be a new practice of animal welfare,” Kuang-Yi said. 



Kuang-Yi considers himself a multidisciplinary researcher, at once a biomaterial scientist, a visual artist, and a gender study theorist with a masters degree in dental science. His work often takes a hybridized art-meets-science approach to unpacking the invisible structures that govern the way we live.


As a queer man, Kuang-Yi often works to destabilize the norms that govern our bodies and desires. “For me, in my future imagination, medical technology is no longer controlled by the doctors and some experts,” Kuang-Yi said. “The knowledge is shared to every individual. So people in the future can choose their own body structure. In the queer utopia, every individual might look different, but sometimes there will be a group of people with similar appearance to share one identity.”



Kuang-Yi’s work with pets, which he described as “fictional design,” has raised even more questions than he started with. Assuming in some distant future “Pets Petting” comes to fruition, what role would owners play in the facilitation of their pets’ sexual exploits? How would human architecture shift to address the newly adopted need to cater to their beloved animals’ urges?  


The artists imagine a brave new world with brave new animal sex hubs in it. Such centers of activity include, prospectively, a Love Hotel for Dogs in Taiwan, and a Dog’s Sex Park in France. Furthermore, Kuang-Yi hints at a universe in which owners relocate to live closer to their pets’ longterm partners, completely restructuring the way we live. The project, founded upon scientific research, straddles design and science fiction with a little bit of furry, erotic fanfic thrown in.



In the end, Kuang-Yi embraces the silliness of his proposition while acknowledging the serious undercurrents beneath the surface ― the importance of sexual freedom for all, no matter how “other” they may be. According to Kuang-Yi’s forecasting, pet-centric architecture will be coming to a world near you in 2046.


Until then, humping pillows will have to do. 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

After 15 Years, This 'Princess Diaries' Heartthrob Can Still Make Your Foot Pop

$
0
0


Hit Backspace for a regular dose of pop culture nostalgia.


Wanna feel old? Fifteen years ago today, on July 29, 2001, “The Princess Diaries” was released in theaters. And that means one thing: Our huge crush on Michael Moscovitz is now, itself, a high school sophomore.


Michael, played by Rooney frontman Robert Schwartzman, was the good-guy love interest to misfit princess Mia Thermopolis (Anne Hathaway). Ever since the moment that mop-topped, doe-eyed dude in a slightly oversized school blazer skated onto movie screens, the nerd queens of middle schools throughout America never fully owned their hearts again.


For a lot of self-identified awkward girls like myself at the time ― aspiring alt kids, maybe ― Michael was the heartthrob we’d been waiting for. He was smart, quiet but capable, a mechanic, and the keyboardist in a garage band called Flypaper. He had everything.


He gave us moments like this: 





What misfit tween girl wouldn’t like to hear that “weirder” could be a good thing?


Plus, he totally saw Mia when she was invisible. 





HuffPost sat down with Robert Schwartzman this spring, when he was touring to promote a new album with Rooney. “It’s funny,” he said. “I did live that life that the character lived, in a way, as a musician.”


Michael didn’t appear in the second movie; the explanation given was that Mia’s first love was busy touring with his band, and Schwartzman says he actually was touring with Rooney at the time.


That musical authenticity wasn’t the only part of himself that he brought to the role ― actually, the character’s most memorable quirk came out of the actor’s brain, as well. “I had this idea to eat M&Ms in the audition with Anne Hathaway,” he told HuffPost, “and then they liked that and wanted his character to eat M&Ms. Then they made the pizza with M&Ms.”


“Most people don’t know, but that came because of my own use of them on set.”





Our youthful infatuation with Michael Moscovitz, frankly, isn’t letting up anytime soon with Robert Schwartzman giving us so much reason to believe that he actually is, sort of, Michael Moscovitz. 


Except with a really adorable rescue pup:



#Chillaxing with Trixie

A photo posted by Robert Schwartzman (@robertschwartzman) on




Now that “The Princess Diaries” is old enough to have a learner’s permit in many states in the U.S., the man who was Michael Moscovitz says he looks back fondly on the role. “I love that that movie has such a long life, and people love it, and people want to talk about it today,” he told HuffPost. “I feel like, it’s cool to have played a role that people really connected with.” 


Whether you’ve papered your bedroom with film stills of Michael Moscovitz (hopefully not) or forgotten completely how dreamy he was, take a moment today to remember the truth of these words:








Maybe those fangirls weren’t talking about Michael ― but we sure are. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


This Hillary Clinton Coloring Book Is Jam-Packed With Girl Power

$
0
0

This coloring book might be the most creative way to celebrate Hillary Clinton’s historic milestone.


Earlier this week, Hillary Clinton became the first woman to become the presidential nominee for a major political party. On Thursday, she formally accepted her nomination at the Democratic National Convention. In honor of these groundbreaking events, SheKnows Media has released a coloring book featuring Clinton in some kickass scenarios.



The 12 coloring pages are packed with girl power as Clinton soars through the air like a superhero, strikes her best Rosie the Riveter pose and rides a dragon over the White House (because why not?). 


Color us excited!


See more of the coloring pages below and check out the entire SheKnows Media coloring book here




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Eric Carle, Your Favorite Children's Book Illustrator, Is 87 And Still Making Art

$
0
0


Hit Backspace for a regular dose of pop culture nostalgia.


Consider these nostalgia-inducing book titles of your youth: Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? The Hungry, Hungry CaterpillarThe Grouchy Ladybug. Are you seeing blue horses, butterflies and aphids yet? If so, you have Eric Carle ― the master illustrator behind the 1960s and ‘70s’ best children’s books ― to thank.


Carle is the collage artist who made layered illustrations of famished bugs and observant mammals to accompany the most unforgettable stories of your childhood. Brown Bear debuted in 1967, Caterpillar in ‘69, and Ladybug in ‘77, rounding out just the beginning of one of the most well-known picture book producers’ careers. Even if you were a ‘90s kid, these books likely made their way into your library checkout history.



Today, Carle is 87 years old and still producing art. (Just last year, he published The Nonsense Showa tribute to surrealism toddlers everywhere can enjoy.) But it’s not so much his age as the span of his career that’s amazing ― the author and illustrator has been working for nearly 50 years, releasing a total of over 70 books, most of which he wrote and illustrated. That amounts to nearly one and a half books every year.


In honor of his professional longevity, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia, is celebrating the wonder that is Eric Carle this summer with a giant retrospective consisting of more than 80 collages from his half-a-century career. We have a preview of the instantly recognizable artworks on view below, the ones that will take you back in time, to an era filled only with trains, pancakes and rubber ducks. 


Bonus: a few facts you’ve always wanted to know about the man who memorialized the lifecycle of a lepidopteran.



Born in America, Eric Carle actually grew up in Nazi Germany.


Carle was born in Syracuse, New York, in 1929, but moved to Germany with his parents when he was 6 years old. During World War II, his father was drafted into the German army ― he spent eight years as a prisoner of the Russians ― only to return home when his son was 18 years old. Carle ended up graduating from the celebrated Akademie der bildenden Künste, an art school, before moving back to the U.S.



He began his career as a graphic designer for The New York Times.


Carle started his life in New York City in 1952, with, as his online biography states, “a fine portfolio in hand and 40 dollars in his pocket.” His first job? A graphic designer in the promotion department of The New York Times.



His literary career began in 1967 when educator Bill Martin Jr. asked Carle to illustrate Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?


Martin came across Carle’s advertisement work; specifically, an image he made of a red lobster while working as an art director for an ad agency that specialized in pharmaceutical products. So, they embarked on a collaboration that would result in Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? A year later, Carle wrote and illustrated his first original book, 1, 2, 3 to the Zoo.



The Hungry, Hungry Caterpillar was voted the No. 2 children’s picture book behind Where the Wild Things Are.


In 1969, Carle released The Hungry, Hungry Caterpillar, which, according to the School Library Journal, is the second best picture book for 21st-century readers. Note: The entry for Hungry Caterpillar lets fans in on a secret ― the book was originally titled A Week with Willie Worm.



He creates his images by painting on white tissue paper.


He then cuts and tears the abstract, acrylic-covered papers into different concrete shapes. High Museum visitors will be able to see examples of this unique technique up close, including the original collages of Brown Bear, Yellow Duck and Green Frog (from Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?).


Carle explained his technique to The Horn Book:



I make my pictures out of hand-painted tissue papers that I paint with acrylics. Then I cut and tear these painted papers and glue them onto illustration board. My painted papers are like my palette. There are many different mediums to work in; I just happen to like collage. I enjoy the process of gluing the pieces down in a picture. I am very interested in details, brushstrokes in a painting, and textures. So the process of painting my tissue papers is very satisfying to me. Many children have also done collages at home or in their classrooms. In fact, some children have said to me, “Oh, I can do that.” I consider that the highest compliment.




He believes “the passage from home to school is the second biggest trauma of childhood.”


Carle, who two children of his own, has said


“I believe the passage from home to school is the second biggest trauma of childhood; the first is, of course, being born. Indeed, in both cases we leave a place of warmth and protection for one that is unknown. The unknown often brings fear with it. In my books I try to counteract this fear, to replace it with a positive message. I believe that children are naturally creative and eager to learn. I want to show them that learning is really both fascinating and fun.”



He founded an entire museum dedicated to children’s book art.


It’s called The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, and it’s currently celebrating the 75th anniversary of Robert McCloskey’s Make Way for Ducklings (1941).



He receives over 10,000 fan letters every year.


Carle’s stories have been translated into 62 different languages. He’s sold more than 132 million copies of his books worldwide. And, according to The Guardian, he receives more than 10,000 fan letters every year. The Nonsense Show was rumored to be his last book, but in an interview with The Chicago Tribune, he teased a potential Quentin Blake-inspired project. 


So, yes, your favorite children’s book illustrator is still making art.



”I See a Story: The Art of Eric Carle” will be on view at the High Museum of Art through January 8, 2017.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Why Actors With Disabilities Need To Be Part Of The Diversity Discussion

$
0
0


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Refugees Use Scraps To Build Houses That Remind Them Of Home

$
0
0

Refugees, who have left their homes behind, often have to create makeshift ones along the road, using any materials they can find.


In his photo series “Invisible Cities,” Italian photographer Marco Tiberio documents the resilience and resourcefulness of refugees in the camp of Calais, in northern France, to build these temporary residences. 


“When you see the usual reportage on refugees, you see their faces, you see their poverty,” Tiberio told The Huffington Post. “But with photos of houses, I’m trying to portray something else: their skills. Refugees are just looking to live their lives as normally as possible, and to build something that reminds them of home.”



The Calais camp, also known as “the Jungle,” is a makeshift camp where migrants often live in dire conditions in tents and huts.


According to aid organizations, there are somewhere between 5,000 and 7,000 refugees in Calais, Reuters reported. 


Tiberio’s photos, taken last summer, capture the camp before the government demolished its southern part in February and March. Earlier this month, the Calais mayor said the remaining half of the camp would be dismantled soon as well. 


These eight photos show how refugees have built temporary homes ― and communities ― with whatever they can find in the Calais “jungle.”


 


1. The House Of A Former Architect



”This is Alpha’s house. He is a refugee from Sudan who is an architect. He built his own house following the shape and design of the houses in the Nuba Mountain region and around it he built an art space for the camp, where he displayed graffitis and paintings.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


2. A Home That Pays Tribute To Its Host Country



“This house belonged to Sudanese refugees ― it was one of the only ones to display a French flag, and to have a small garden.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


3. A House Protesting Lack Of Proper Housing 



“This house was inhabited by five Sudanese refugees. They wrote on the external wall, ‘This is not a housing solution,’ as a protest.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


4. A House Half-Built



“This house is in the second step of construction, when they put blankets to insulate the interior part of the house. The first step is a simple framework made of wood, while the last one is when they put a plastic cloth on top of the blankets to protect the house from the wind and rain.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


5. The Home Of A Churchgoer



“This tent was situated just in front of the church. It was owned by an Eritrean refugee called David, 22, who used to take care of the church of the camp. Some days after we met he managed to reach the U.K.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


6. A Makeshift Market



“This was a shop situated in the central commercial area of the camp. They sold any kind of product ― from cigarettes to orange juice ― which they usually bought in a small supermarket in Calais city centre.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


7. The House Of An Inspired Painter



”Abdellah, who owns the house, is a painter from Sudan. He was very happy to be in Calais because he had the chance to keep on with his passion, something prohibited in Sudan. Abdellah managed to get asylum in France.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


8. A Home That Will Be Missed



”One of the inhabitants of the house was Rashid, from Sudan. Rashid had a university degree in electronics, and his goal was to use it to find a job in France. He managed to get asylum in southern France, near Toulouse. I talked with him, and he told me he was happy, but he missed Calais.” ― Marco Tiberio


 


H/T Wired.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

12 Baby Names Inspired By Irish Surnames

$
0
0

Irish family names have influenced new parents for a long time. From Ryan to Riley to Rowan and Connor to Quinn, the U.S. popularity lists are filled with cheery Irish surnames that American parents have chosen as first names for their babies.


Here are 12 such names that embody that infectious Irish charm ― some of them new to the scene, others on their way up, and a few from the past that deserve a fresh look.


Brennan


A softer, cooler update of Brendan, Brennan entered the popularity list in 1966 and has now reached number 446. Will Ferrell played a character named Brennan Huff in the film “Step Brothers.” It’s a common surname in Ireland, where the O’Brennans were influential in a large territory. Stateside, William Brennan was a U.S. Supreme Court justice.



Callahan


More upbeat than Calvin, Callahan has a long history. More recent is as the last name of Clint Eastwood’s “Dirty Harry” character. Though it’s never ranked on the Social Security list, Callahan is Number 599 on Nameberry.


Crosby


Though Crosby is known as a last name thanks to musicians Bing and David, Dax Shepard’s “Parenthood” character Crosby Braverman inspired parents to consider it for a first name. Crosby entered the list in 2011 and is now number 576 nationally, 496 on Nameberry. Kenny Loggins also has an adult son named Crosby.


Cullen


We can thank the Twilight franchise for the rise of this cool Irish surname. Though it’s not quite as popular as it was during the Twilight era, it is still strong at number 571 and 389 on Nameberry. Curran is another, similar possibility.



Dennison


Dennison would make a stylish namesake for a Grandpa Dennis, just as Donnelly or Donegan would for an Uncle Donald, or Halloran for an ancestral Harold. The first Dennison to cross the pond landed in the Colonies in 1623, so its transatlantic roots are deep.


Farrell


An attractive Anglicization of the Irish Fearghal, Farrell, meaning “courageous,” feels far fresher than the dated Darrell/Daryl. A surname for several notables, including the dashing Colin, Farrell appeared off and on at the lower levels of the top 1000 baby names list from 1924 to 1967, most popular in 1935. Parents may also consider the longer form Farrelly.


Finnegan


Finn is one of the hottest names of the day at number 209, but for those who prefer it as a nickname, there’s a choice of Finlay, Finley, Fingal, or the adorable Finnegan, which itself is number 405. Associated with the James Joyce masterpiece Finnegan’s Wake, Eric McCormack spelled his son’s name Finnigan and VP Biden has a granddaughter Finnegan. Similar in feel: Flanagan, Corrigan and Hartigan.



Hayes


Another stylish category of Irish surnames ― sophisticated, single-syllable and ending in ‘s.’ Ranked at number 539, its highest ever, the presidential name Hayes was chosen by Kevin Costner for one of his sons in 2009, the year it entered the charts, and Hayes Flynn was a character on “Bones.”


Phelan


Pronounced FAY-lan or FEE-lan, and meaning ‘wolf’, this would make a handsome choice for parents seeking a Celtic name with a subtle animal allusion. Rhyming cousin Whalen has the same meaning.


Lennon


Derived from an Irish name meaning “lover” in Gaelic, this rock-related surname has been soaring for both boys and girls ― it’s now slightly higher on the girls’ list, thanks to female singer Lennon Stella. Lennon entered the boys’ list in 2008, 28 years after the Beatle’s tragic death. And two decades after Liam Gallagher and Patsy Kensit used it for their son.



Rafferty


Jude Law and Sadie Frost chose this name early on for their son Rafferty Law, now a 19-year-old model. Nicknames like Raff and Rafe make it even more appealing.


Sullivan


You can’t get more Irish than this, as it’s the third most common surname in Ireland, tops in Kerry and Cork counties. As a baby name, it’s currently ranked in the U.S. at number 459. Patrick Dempsey used it for a son, as did singer Tom Waits and actor James Masters. Sprightly nickname Sully appears in Pixar’s “Monsters, Inc.” and recalls another laid-back surname: Tully.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images