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

Mom Hilariously Parodies 'The Bachelor' With 'The Babysitter'

$
0
0



”The Bachelor” is one of the longest-running dating show franchises on American television. While the final couples don’t always find enduring love, many of the show’s matches remain together to this day ― which begs the question, could the show’s method of matchmaking be applied to other aspects of life? 


Brooke from What’s Up Moms seems to think so. The vlogger stars in a hilarious new parody that gives “The Bachelor” a mom-ified twist. “The Babysitter” shows Brooke’s quest to choose the perfect person to watch her children out of a pool of eligible contestants.


The competition is heated to say the least. “I’m not here to make friends,” one contestant states in the spoof preview. “I’m here to make $15 an hour.”


From the CPR certified expert to the “Play-Doh enthusiast,” who will get the final sippy cup and accept the keys to Brooke’s minivan? We can only hope that a full series will follow to give us the answer.


For more on “The Bachelor,” check out HuffPost’s Here To Make Friends podcast 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.


French Artist 'Dazed' After Living In A Rock For A Week

$
0
0





French artist Abraham Poincheval was freed from a block of stone in a Paris museum on Wednesday after spending seven days enclosed in it.


He entombed himself in a body-shaped slot carved in a limestone boulder on Feb 22 at Paris’ Palais de Tokyo contemporary art museum.


Poincheval, 44, ate stewed fruit and purees while breathing through an air vent. He had some personal items such as a log book and an emergency phone line.


“I’m a little dazed, which I imagine is totally normal after one week living in a rock (...) which hosted me well. I thank it very much for having been so enthusiastic about welcoming me,” he told reporters minutes after his release. 



“Yes, there were very long moments of loss of self, where suddenly (...) you no longer know where you are, but you are there, and that is what was great (about it),” he said.


The artist was helped out of the room by medical team to the applauds of an audience that had gathered to witness his release.


In 2014, Poincheval spent 13 days living inside a hollowed-out bear sculpture, eating worms and beetles to mirror a bear’s diet.

-- 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.

Congress Wants Jeff Sessions To ‘Recuse’ Himself. Here’s What That Means.

$
0
0

Thursday morning, Congressional Republicans said they think Attorney General Jeff Sessions should recuse himself from investigations into Russia’s role in the U.S. presidential election.


The news comes after a report from The Washington Post, revealing that, during his confirmation hearing in January, Sessions failed to disclose the two conversations he had with Russia’s ambassador last year.


If the controversy had you Googling the exact meaning of “recuse,” you’re not alone; the word is the top lookup right now on Merriam-Webster, the dictionary shared on Twitter.






The dictionary defines “recuse” as a verb meaning “to remove (oneself) from participation to avoid a conflict of interest,” or, more specific to Sessions, “to disqualify (oneself) as judge in a particular case.”


In a blog post, Merriam-Webster continued:



Recuse came to English from French and ultimately traces back to the Latin word recusare (“to object to” or “to refuse”). Recusare in turn derives from the Latin root causa meaning “cause,” “apology,” and “lawsuit,” the ancestor of the English word cause. It’s also the source of the -cuse part of recuse, accuse, and excuse.



Merriam-Webster has been a reliable source of intel for political-related lookups during the past several months, tweeting the top searches during the presidential debates and President Trump’s speeches. In general, the recent most-searched words have been negative, including “carnage” on inauguration day.


The dictionary’s 2016 Word of the Year, which is determined solely by lookups, was “surreal,” with “fascism” as a close runner-up.


In uncertain times, it seems that the dictionary ― an irrefutable source of facts ― has become a means of making big, incomprehensible ideas more concrete, and more manageable. 






-- 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.

Your New Favorite Adult Coloring Book Honors The Drag Kings And Queens Of The South

$
0
0

We’ve covered a lot of adult coloring books in the past few years. So much so that the mere sight of a black-and-white mandala is the furthest thing from soothing to us. But when we got a glimpse of an upcoming coloring book celebrating the drag royalty of the South, our faith in the genre was restored. 


Illustrator Kasten McClellan Searles is the magical force behind Drag Queens of the South, a coloring book devoted to real-life drag performers who dazzle Southern states. 


“I’ve had a love for and fascination with drag queens ever since sneaking out to my first show as a teen,” Searles wrote in an email to The Huffington Post. “Drag shows have always been a welcome escape from my own daily creative work. During graduate school my friends and I would visit The Rose Room in Dallas and I was so inspired by the performances I saw there. Jenna Skyy and Cassie Nova lit up the stage with grace and humor.”



Searles began to wonder if there could be a way to combine her passion for drawing with her love of drag culture when the idea hit. As she put it: “The hair, the fashion, the makeup, the nails ― who wouldn’t want to color all that?”


To find her subjects, Searles scoped out local drag and gay clubs and approached kings and queens to be her muses. If they were into the idea ― and everyone was ― Searles snapped some reference photos and watched them perform. She then translated the images into black-and-white line drawings just waiting to be glammed up with a rainbow treatment. 



Searles is currently raising funds to produce the book on Kickstarter, and she’s already earned more than double her initial goal of $2,000. Many excited backers have written to her suggesting their favorite local clubs and queens, and Searles is hoping to visit and illustrate as many of them as possible. 


Through her project, Searles hopes to pay tribute to the drag community while also helping some adults engage in some much needed stress mitigation. “If I can provide some stress relief, humor, and honor these amazing drag performers, I’ll be very happy,” she continued. “If you haven’t been out to a show recently, get out there and support your local drag queens!”


Support Make 100: Drag Queens of the South on Kickstarter before March 7 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.

Texas Sportscaster Shreds Transphobes In Must-See Broadcast

$
0
0



Texas sports anchor Dale Hansen came to the defense of a transgender teen athlete in a two-minute address that’s worthy of repeat viewings. 


The WFAA-TV reporter didn’t mince words when it came to Mack Beggs, who was thrust into the national spotlight Feb. 25 after winning a state girls’ wrestling title. Though Beggs, 17, identifies as male and takes testosterone as part of the gender confirmation process, he was required by state regulations to compete according to his birth sex. 


And Hansen wasn’t having any of it. “Maybe I just hoped that in 2017, we would be done arguing about birth certificates, but obviously we’re not,” he said in the Monday broadcast, which can be viewed above. “Somebody has to find a better answer than what we’re being given now.”


In 2014, Hansen offered similar sentiments on behalf of Michael Sam, the first openly gay man to be drafted by the NFL. “I’m not always comfortable when a man tells me he’s gay; I don’t understand his world, but I do understand that he’s part of mine,” he said at the time


He doubled down on those remarks once more in his defense of Beggs, noting that “transitioning is a struggle I cannot imagine. It is a journey I could not make.” He said that Beggs “needs our support, and he does not a group of old men in Austin telling him who to wrestle because of a genetic mixup at birth... He’s a child, simply looking for his place in the world and a chance to compete in the world.”


WFAA-TV uploaded the video of Hansen’s remarks to Facebook, where it had received over 647,000 views as of Thursday afternoon. 


Montel Williams and Sarah McBride were among the fans who applauded Hansen’s words on Twitter.










No word from Beggs on Hansen’s remarks just yet, but in a Wednesday interview with The Dallas Morning News, the teen said he was surprised at the national attention his story had received. 


“This is nuts,” he said, acknowledging that his case was just part of a “bigger, more complex situation” in sports. “My masculinity doesn’t define who I am. I define who I am,” he added. 

-- 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.

New Yorker Cartoonist Explains Why Humor Is The Heartbeat Of Democracy

$
0
0

It was surreal to watch President Donald Trump’s first address to Congress, especially for the Americans still struggling to come to terms with his exclusionary policies.


Perhaps even stranger was the shift in tone that Trump delivered, devoid of the exaggerations, insults and non-sequiturs that often comprise his speeches. Pundits soon responded, praising Trump’s “presidential” tone and calling the address Trump’s “most effective speech yet.”


Yet many were alarmed by Trump’s subdued and civil demeanor, which made his false and misleading statements ― especially those meant to rouse fears about out-of-control immigrant crime ― seem all the more credible. 


This New Yorker comic, by cartoonist Tom Toro, crammed all of those feelings and fears into a single, black-and-white panel. 



Toro is a Bay Area-born cartoonist who’s worked for The New Yorker since 2010.


After the election, Toro’s work has taken a slight detour, addressing the Republican candidate and now president. It’s no easy feat, translating Trump’s ridiculous moments into even more absurd scenarios and getting people to laugh at circumstances that can feel, in actuality, quite dismal. 


We reached out to Toro to learn more about the story behind the succinct and totally gutting image above, along with the challenges of making jokes at the expense of our new president.


What was your initial reaction to Trump’s address to Congress? 


My initial reaction was disgust. Disgust paired with a deep sadness almost like mourning. I felt woozy from woe. Which is probably a common condition that progressives, or anyone who’s awake to the reality of our political situation, must cope with constantly nowadays. Donald Trump is president of the United States. That unbelievable calamity hit home as I watched him stroll down the aisle like a gloating groom toward I, the viewer, and viewers all across the world, as we wait like unwilling partners at the podium-slash-altar.


I felt personally threatened but helpless, trapped, transfixed, and my despair gradually gave way to anger. Here we have a charlatan, a pathological liar, a confessed sexual predator, a hatemonger, a racist ― let’s not mince words - professing to speak on our behalf in an endless stream of hollow platitudes, and doing so with that phony, wincing gravitas that Trump uses to try to conceal his desperate ignorance. Yes, I was disgusted.  



How do you go about finding the right balance of humor and gravity in your work?


It can be difficult because Trump, as a subject of satire, has flipped the usual equation on its head. Instead of revealing the absurdity in what a politician has the gall to present to us as serious, we must now expose the seriousness of a politician’s galling absurdity. It’s bizarre.


Trump is actually, literally, a clown. (No disrespect to clowns.) He’s a buffoonish showman who traffics in wild fantasies. Some of this might be intentional, for the purpose of distracting the media and hiding his nefarious deregulation schemes, but I tend to believe it’s an outgrowth of his genuine stupidity. Trump is a 70-year-old adolescent who’s virtually illiterate and has now suddenly been tossed into most high-stress job in the world where he must act like he’s in total control. Of course it’s ridiculous. It’s raw comedy ― it’s the very plot of Charlie Chaplin’s “The Great Dictator.”


So what can a humorist do when reality itself mimics satire? Or almost puts satire to shame? Especially when the culprits are acting with such brazen hypocrisy ― thus plucking another arrow from the comedian’s quiver, who’s job it normally is to skewer hypocrites? It’s an unprecedented challenge. In my own work, I aim to bring the facts to bear on Trump’s behavior, on his policies and statements, to hopefully highlight their gross divergence from anything resembling normalcy, and to make it amusing for readers by condensing the whole idea into a single frame, a single moment, a spark. Friction is funny. Cartoons are best when combustive.



Do you feel a social responsibility as a cartoonist living in the era of Trump?  


I think all of us have a social responsibility to resist Trump’s destructive agenda in every way we can. Artists and comedians might get a lot of attention because we have a ready-made platform to express our views, but the creativity and humor of the spontaneous protests happening all across our country are far more powerful. It’s been so inspiring to see the witty, withering signs that people draw up, the eviscerating Twitter quips that get circulated, the imaginative forms of resistance people use to block the Republican bulldozer. I’m just trying to do my small part.


Humor is empowering because it’s connective. It’s associative. It binds together disparate ideas and thereby fashions new ones. It multiplies possibilities. While at the same time, by that same token, it undermines the opposition’s attempts to divide and isolate us. There’s a reason why Donald Trump is a singularly joyless and mean-spirited troll, why he has bald antipathy for the First Amendment, why he’s more thin-skinned than a molting serpent and he can’t take even a mildly critical jest: because humor is lethal to tyrants.


Humor is the heartbeat of a healthy democracy. And, well, as we’re soon going to show our so-called president, the joke’s on him.  


Toro will publish his debut cartoon memoir, about battling depression, next year through Dock Street Press.Follow him on Twitter and Instagram


-- 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 Denny's Tweet Will Take You On A Wild Philosophical Ride. No, Really.

$
0
0

We once lived in simpler times.


Before the advent of Twitter, brands had a harder time trying to reach the disaffected youth with casual language and “hip” slang. In this new age, however, corporations regularly shower their target audiences on social media with verbiage like “bae,” “fleek” and, from IHOP, “Back that stack up.”


At this point, the notion of a brand trying to sound like a millennial’s peers is so commonplace, it’s more often derided than praised. But a recent tweet from chain restaurant Denny’s, better known for its 24-hour breakfast menu than its cool factor, has the whole internet shook — in a good way.






If the joke isn’t immediately clear, just follow their instructions. That’s right: Zoom in on the syrup. 


If you’re having trouble, here’s what you can see on a zoomed-in version of the image:



Following the image’s instructions will have you zooming in all around the pancake image, finally ending on a close-up of the pancake’s butter, where it reads (spoiler):



Of course, if this tweet didn’t assuage the daily terror of being human, perhaps some buttery flapjacks could help.

-- 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.

Poet Has Fire Response For Anyone Who Asks 'Where Are You REALLY From?'

$
0
0




HBO Def Poet Carlos Andrés Gómez has a powerful clapback for anyone who’s ever asked “What are you?” or “Where are you really from?”


The spoken word artist and author’s performance of his poem ― aptly titled “But where are you REALLY from?” ― was featured on the We are mitú Facebook page on Tuesday. 




“In light of the escalating xenophobia in this country ― and, especially, the pervasive dehumanization of undocumented folks and refugees ― I had to write this poem,” Gómez told The Huffington Post. “I cannot tell you how many times I have been asked, ‘What are you? Where are you from?’ Those questions, particularly when they arise in tandem, have always felt demeaning.”


In the poem, the artist describes an interaction with an unnamed man who insists on knowing his heritage, even after the poet tells the man he’s from New York. Gómez then goes into an explanation of why he doesn’t “owe a goddamn thing to anyone” and why anyone asking those types of questions is problematic. 


“The question ‘Where are you from?’ in our current America is a slur disguised as a question mark,” he says in the poem, adding that the questions are microagressions that paint people as “others.” 


Gómez says he hopes that anyone who’s been asked these questions can relate to his words. 


“As I say in the poem, those microaggressive interrogatives are statements, in fact epithets, not questions,” he said. “I am a proud Colombiano, the grateful son of an immigrant. I hope this poem makes anyone who has ever been made to feel like an outsider empowered and seen.”


The poet also wants those who ask these types of question to think about the impact of their words.


“I hope this poem confronts and challenges anyone who feels justified in belittling another person because of their citizenship or refugee status, religion, ethnicity, or nationality,” Gómez said. “I hope this poem inspires someone to interrogate and recognize, for the first time, how implicit bias is enacted through language. We need everyone right now to stand up and resist in whatever way possible.”



type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related... + articlesList=573f62d6e4b0613b512a464a

-- 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.


Diving Into Lorde's Dreamy And Dramatic Album Art

$
0
0

Lorde revealed the album art for her sophomore album “Melodrama” today, a painting by New York–based artist Sam McKinniss. The image depicts our Lorde and savior tucked into bed, locking the viewer in with her signature intense-as-hell gaze.


McKinniss has described intensity as a core element of his artistic practice, illuminating a parallel between the two artists’ penetrating styles. “I think that’s always been my style really, just looking at pictures intensely,” he told Gayletter in 2013. “Being intense. And see if you can respond in some way to the world that you live in visually with light and color.” 


It’s understandable why an artist obsessed with intensity, light and color is the perfect choice to visualize the album whose first single is called “Green Light,” and was described by Lorde on Twitter as “the story of the last 2 wild, fluorescent years of my life.



LANA 4EVER

A post shared by Sam McKinniss (@wkndpartyupdate) on




Along with intensity, McKinniss’ paintings, which often feature pop culture icons as their subjects, feed off drama. Talking to ArtNews, he described “human perversity, elegance and drama” as the key motivations behind his work.


In his loving yet slightly depraved depictions of cult celebrities from Lana del Rey to Winona Ryder, McKinniss’ fixation with spectacle is on full view. His painted subjects are drenched in shadow and electric light, elevating them from humans to icons, celebrities to artworks. Sounds just about right for an album called “Melodrama.”


From the little we’ve seen and heard regarding Lorde’s upcoming album, McKinniss’ blend of neon light and dark underbelly makes for a stunning visualization of Lorde’s matured sound. More, please, soon. 



album of the year

A post shared by Sam McKinniss (@wkndpartyupdate) on





idk

A post shared by Sam McKinniss (@wkndpartyupdate) on



-- 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.

Diego Luna Talks Filming His First Sex Scene Before He Ever Had Sex

$
0
0



Conan O’Brien aired his late night show from Mexico City on Wednesday, in an attempt “to bring positivity to the people of Mexico and let them know that we hear them.”


The host’s first interview as part of the “Conan Without Borders: Made in Mexico” special was Diego Luna. The two enjoyed a shot of mezcal in the name of Mexico before O’Brien asked him about his sex life.


After noting that Luna began his acting career as a child star in Mexican telenovelas, O’Brien revealed that the actor “had sex on film before you had actual sex.”


“Yes, you’re going too far,” Luna responded with a laugh, before revealing that the scene was filmed when he was just 12 years old. The actor detailed what was going through his mind at the time. 


“I arrived, I was very nervous and I was just like, ‘I hope she likes it and after the scene, because I know it’s not going to be sex, but then something can start from there,’” Luna told the host. “And then I get there and I see 40 people looking at me with the camera ― s**t. And all I could just think of was, ‘Oh, I don’t want to have a hard [on], please, please, please. I don’t want to get too excited.’ And obviously it didn’t happen. I was 12, I couldn’t control it. She was very nice; she hid it.”


Afterward, O’Brien and the star discussed the importance of Luna being cast as one of the leads in “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story,” particularly considering he kept his accent for the role.  


Watch the full interview, in which Luna also discusses immigrants who fear deportation, 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.

What Cats Are Really Saying When They Meow, As Told In Comics

$
0
0

Cats have some wonderfully weird habits, from rubbing up against our legs to tip-toeing across our faces while we lay in bed. If only they could talk and explain their strange behavior!


In these on-point comics, artist Jimmy Craig of They Can Talk imagines precisely what those meows might mean in words.






-- 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.

SXSW Criticized Over Deportation Warning To Foreign Musicians

$
0
0

South by Southwest organizers rushed to explain a portion of their contract that warns immigration authorities may be notified if foreign musicians break festival rules. 


The music and tech festival, which begins March 10 in Austin, Texas, came under attack Thursday when Brooklyn-based musical act Told Slant canceled a scheduled appearance because of language in the contract.


The section says organizers reserve the right to “notify the appropriate U.S. immigration authorities” if “showcasing acts or their representatives have acted in ways that adversely affect the viability” of the festival. 


Another section warns that “accepting and performing in unofficial events may result in immediate deportation.”






Festival CEO and co-founder Robert Swanson said in a statement that the stipulations have been in performance agreements for years and that immigration officials have never been contacted about any international artist. 


“We understand that given the current political climate surrounding immigration, the language that was published seems strong,” Swanson said. “Violating U.S. immigration law has always carried potentially severe consequences, and we would be remiss not to warn our participating acts of the likely repercussions.” 


He worried that the contractual language would be misconstrued to suggest the festival’s policies were similar to President Donald Trump’s attempts to limit refugees and expel undocumented immigrants. With performers coming from 62 countries, Swanson said there will be attorneys to help any who encounter immigration trouble.


Swanson also said that Felix Walworth, who performs as Told Slant, had not contacted SXSW about the immigration language.


“It is, and always was intended to be, a safeguard to provide SXSW with a means to respond to an act that does something truly egregious, such as disobeying our rules about pyrotechnics on stage, starting a brawl in a club, or causing serious safety issues,” he said.


Swanson had initially accused Walworth of doctoring the contract. He told the Austin American-Statesman that two different sections together were pasted together in Walworth’s tweet to form “a much worse impression than what is real.”


A subsequent video tweeted by Walworth, however, appeared to show that he had not distorted it.


Representatives of Told Slant did not immediately respond to The Huffington Post’s inquiries. 






-- 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 Arrangement' Will Satisfy All Your Curiosities About Fake Celebrity Relationships

$
0
0





The first thing you need to know about “The Arrangement” ― E!’s new Hollywood-centric drama about a television actress who signs a contract to marry a movie star ― is that it’s definitely not, in no wayinspired by Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes and Scientology. At least that’s what the show’s cast and creators claim.


We’ve all heard the rumors that the Church of Scientology allegedly auditioned actresses to become Cruise’s girlfriend before Holmes snagged the “role” and married him. That’s why comparisons between the show’s Kyle West (Josh Henderson) and Megan Morrison (Christine Evangelista) — the aforementioned movie star who belongs to a suspicious organization called The Institute of the Higher Mind and the struggling actress who is contracted to play his girlfriend — and their suspected real-life counterparts are so hard to resist.



“The Arrangement” may seem very much inspired by Cruise and Holmes’ relationship on the surface, but the show is more about the machinations of the Hollywood PR machine and every over-the-top relationship rumor tabloid addicts read over the years.


The concept of the Hollywood contract relationship, otherwise known as a “fauxmance” or “promance,” dates back to the studio system of the early 20th century. Actor Rock Hudson’s 1955 marriage to secretary Phyllis Gates was famously arranged by the actor’s agent, Henry Wilson, in an effort to hide Hudson’s sexual orientation from the public. Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn had audiences convinced of their love both on- and off-screen, but a 2012 memoir by Hollywood fixer Scotty Bowers claims their 26-year relationship was a decoy to distract from the same-sex relationships they both reportedly enjoyed.


Today, while Hollywood has become a friendlier place to openly queer actors, it’s possible there are relationships that are arranged to conceal a star’s true sexual orientation; however, it’s far more plausible that a fauxmance might be concocted to promote a shared project or raise a couple’s collective profile.


Take Kaley Cuoco and Henry Cavill’s fleeting 12-day fling back in the summer of 2013, which was widely believed to be a fauxmance ― not that anyone could officially prove it, of course. There just seemed to be something curious about the fact that the two started dating right around the time Cavill was promoting “Man of Steel,” and that somehow the paparazzi seemed on-hand to document every single one of their dates. The fact that their “relationship” ended just as quickly as it started, combined with a suspiciously short timeline between Cuoco and Cavill’s breakup and her new romance with soon-to-be fiancé Ryan Sweeting, added to suspicions their romance was less than authentic. Their coupling reeked of a PR-set up. Cuoco even admitted to Cosmopolitan that it brought her more attention than she ever received before.


“I had no one following me until I met Superman. I’ve been in this business for 20 years, and my whole life, I could go anywhere, do anything. There had not been one paparazzi photo of me until like seven months ago. The recognition has been crazy,” she told the magazine in a 2014 cover story.  



The problem with Cuoco’s statement is that while it used to be commonplace for the paparazzi to be out in full force following celebrities around town, hunting for that perfect picture, that happens far less often today unless you occupy the A-list.


Thanks to the tabloid boom in the early 2000s, being a paparazzo was a lucrative job. There seemed to be a heightened interest in seeing celebs doing mundane things, sparked in part by Us Weekly’s “Stars — They’re Just Like Us!” feature. In the mid-2000s, the right photo could fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars, but that kind of payout has dried up since the introduction of social media, allowing celebrities more control over their own image.


And for someone like Cuoco, who was able to keep her relationship with her “Big Bang Theory” co-star Johnny Galecki secret for two years without anyone finding out, it’s difficult to believe the paparazzi were suddenly able to capture intimate moments of her 12-day romance with Cavill ― unless, of course, they were specifically tipped off.


For all we know, Cuoco and Cavill’s brief dalliance with one another could have been real, but it’s hard to deny the overwhelming professional benefits they both enjoyed from the blink-and-you-missed-it affair. Such is the case with what is probably the most-discussed alleged fauxmance in recent history ― Hiddleswift.


From their humble beginnings born out of totally not staged photos on the rocky shores of Rhode Island, Taylor Swift and Tom Hiddleston’s extremely camera-ready relationship simply did not ring true for many fans. Hiddleston has gone on record claiming that “of course [the relationship] was real,” but believing that means ignoring aspects of their relationship that feel orchestrated.  






The Hiddleswift relationship materialized seemingly out of nowhere, becoming public knowledge a mere day before Kim Kardashian accused Swift of lying about having approved lyrics to Kanye West’s song “Famous.” From a PR perspective, a new, showy relationship not only distracted from the allegations, but also drew focus from Swift’s recent breakup with Calvin Harris.


If Swift benefited by trying to distract from negative attention, then Hiddleston, who was then known as a respected British actor, soaked up more attention ― both good and bad ― than he’d ever experienced up to that point.


Though he took some flak for some of the more attention-grabbing moments of the relationship, like wearing an “I ♥ T.S.” tank top at the beach, becoming fodder for tabloid gossip seems to have proven beneficial for his career. During the time Hiddleston and Swift dated, the actor capitalized on his newly raised profile by growing his Twitter following from 2.8 million to 3.8 million, and he took the opportunity to join Instagram, where he amassed 1.1 million followers in a matter of weeks, according to Refinery 29.


Hiddleston wasn’t an unknown before he dated Swift. In fact, he has two blockbuster movies ― “Kong: Skull Island” and “Thor: Ragnarok” ― due out this year. But every little bit of recognition helps when it comes to promotion and landing that next coveted role.


Observers of celebrity culture can only speculate over the authenticity of relationships like Hiddleswift and others that set off our collective bullshit detectors. That’s why gossip addicts will relish “The Arrangement” for painting Hollywood the way we assume it really is ― calculating and manipulative. From the specifics laid out in Kyle and Megan’s relationship contract, to staged interactions with celebrity exes, and the overreaching publicists and managers who pull all the strings, “The Arrangement” is rich in detail and probably more reflective of Hollywood than it would like to admit. 


“The Arrangement” premieres Sunday, March 5, at 10 p.m. ET.

-- 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.

How Poetry Helped This Eating Disorder Survivor Heal

$
0
0

“Anorexia is not a choice, but recovery is.” These are the words 20-year-old slam poet Blythe Baird lives by. 


The Illinois-native said she developed an eating disorder in high school, after growing up “an obese child” in an environment where weight and food were constant conversations in her life. Baird told HuffPost that her parents tried to help her lose weight by enrolling her in a diet program at a young age, but it only fueled her eating disorder. By high school anorexia had fully taken hold of her life. 


“When I was fat, people either made fun of me or didn’t see me. When I got thin, suddenly people saw me as attractive and worth talking to,” Baird said. “It was hard not to see my weight loss as the best thing that ever happened to me.”


Throughout high school, Baird said recovery was a constant battle. She would lose weight, gain it back, lose it again; she was in a constant state of recovering then relapsing. “Recovery has not been at all linear for me,” Baird told HuffPost, adding that there are different components to healing: learning to love your body as it is and then “the actual act of eating.” 


So, right around her 17th birthday, Baird began to write poetry, using her writing as an outlet for processing her eating disorder.  


“These stories were too heavy to carry around with me, so poetry became a home for them,” she said.


Since then, Baird has become an award-winning slam poet and a published author. Spoken word ― a form of poetry performed aloud for an audience ― is her artistic weapon of choice.



Recovery is a choice I have to consciously and continuously make every day.
Blythe Baird


Baird’s slam poems are intrinsically feminist with many dissecting her long-fought battle with anorexia.


“If you develop an eating disorder when you are already thin to begin with you go to the hospital,” Baird says in one of her most popular poems “When The Fat Girl Gets Skinny,” which has more than a million views on YouTube. “If you develop an eating disorder when you are not thin to begin with you are a success story.”


In 2014, Baird was the youngest competitor at the National Poetry Slam. In 2015, she published her debut book, a collection of her poetry, titled Give Me A God I Can Relate To.


Now a college student in Minnesota double majoring in Women’s Studies and Creative Writing, Baird sees spoken word and writing as therapeutic tools that pushed her to recovery. 


“Recovery is not linear, nor does it have a past tense,” she said. “Recovery is a choice I have to consciously and continuously make every day.”





As part of National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, HuffPost sat down with Baird to discuss her battle with anorexia, her love for poetry and how she used her writing to heal. 


When did you first discover slam poetry? 


I first discovered slam poetry in high school. I had never heard of it before. There was this thing at my school called “Writers Week” where different authors come to speak to students. Sierra DeMulder (who is now like my big sister) was performing. She had a line in one of her poems, “Your body is not a temple. Your body is the house you grew up in ― how dare you try to burn it to the ground?”


It rocked my shit. It made me want to take recovery seriously. I was amazed that a poem could have that much of an impact on me. I wrote my first poem a few years later, when I went to Slam Camp in Minnesota, where Sierra was my counselor. I haven’t stopped writing or performing since. Now, I’m a counselor at the same camp I wrote my first poem at. 



It is a rebellion and act of political warfare to consume in a culture that tells us we are only meant to be consumable.
Blythe Baird


How has poetry helped you on your path to healing?


Writing has become integral to my healing process. I write because I have to let these experiences live outside of myself. These stories were too heavy to carry around with me, so poetry became a home for them. My involvement in spoken word has completely shaped the lens through which I view the world. It taught me how to articulate an argument in a way that is clear, concise, effective, and artistic. It also taught me how to pull the meaning and significance out of my personal experiences in order to use them as a method of eliciting social change.


When I get messages like, “I ate breakfast because of your poem,” or “I started going to therapy and getting help because of your poem” or even “Your poetry makes me feel like I’m not alone,” I remember that my writing is doing bigger things than I as a person am capable of. I want to honor that. That is healing and motivating for me, too.





If you could give advice to someone struggling with an eating disorder right now, what would you say? 


Recovery is possible and beautiful. One day, after years of starving and gaining and fighting, I stepped on a scale and suddenly the number didn’t say anything about me. That night, I ate dinner with my family and nothing on my plate said anything about me, either. I got ice cream from a truck and I didn’t have to make myself earn it. I could take it just because I wanted it, just because it tastes good. Recovery is freeing and worth striving for. Also, even if you mess up, don’t give up. It’s an ongoing process. 


Why do you think it’s so important for everyone ― but young women especially ― to understand that their worth is not determined by a number on the scale?


In a world that does everything in its power to convince women that we need to be smaller, that we should occupy less space, it is a radical act to take. It is a rebellion and act of political warfare to consume in a culture that tells us we are only meant to be consumable. This, too, is fighting the patriarchy.


Head over to Baird’s website to read more about her. 


If you’re struggling with an eating disorder, call the National Eating Disorder Association hotline at 1-800-931-2237.


type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related... + articlesList=563bbd27e4b0b24aee497475,575084fbe4b07f2507c96869,580652fae4b021af347762f3




-- 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.

Ballerinas In Puerto Rico Reflect The Beauty Of Latin America's Dance Scene

$
0
0

Vianca E. Palacios @viancaepalacios #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on




Three years ago, Omar Robles began photographing ballerinas, asking professional dancers to leave the confines of their performance halls and step out onto the streets of their cities. His series from Cuba, in particular, caught the attention of the internet in 2016, showcasing an aspect of the country’s creative culture that has long been celebrated by locals but rarely given its due reverence abroad. 


“Cuba has one of the top-ranked ballet companies, thus why I dreamt of visiting the island for a long time,” Robles told The Huffington Post last year. “Their dancers are just some of the best dancers in the world.”


In that same interview, Robles noted the connection between Cuba and his own home, Puerto Rico, explaining that his decision to shoot in and around Havana had to do with his own connection to Latin America. Robles only makes it back to Puerto Rico once a year, most often to visit family. This year was no different, save for the fact that he managed to recruit a few ballerinas from Puerto Rico’s dance scene to take part in a street photography project in San Juan.



Laura Valentín @lvalentinpr #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on




Before and after his series in Cuba, Robles has staged similar ballet-focused shoots in urban areas of Mexico, Guatemala, Hong Kong and other parts of the U.S. He focused on Latin America, primarily because, he explained, he is Latino. He also feels the dance scenes across South and Central America deserve more attention.


“When you think of dance, you hardly think of Latin America,” Robles explained in a recent phone conversation with The Huffington Post. “You always think of Europe, Asia and the U.S. After I went to Mexico and Cuba, I saw that there’s a lot of potential there that should be rewarded. So I kind want to set myself that goal.”


That goal, of course, is to shine a spotlight on the ballet dancers who reflect the beauty of Latin America’s dance scene. “Latin America is rich in music and dance ― culture in general,” Robles said. “It’s within our roots. I think Latinos, we are very dramatic; we always express in very dramatic forms.”




Unfortunately, Robles pointed out, ballet is an art form that requires a lot of money ― training and equipment can be very expensive for aspiring dancers. As a result, dancers in less wealthy regions of Latin America don’t always have access to the kinds of instructors and facilities that ballerinas in, say, New York City do.


“When I was in Guatemala and Cuba, where there’s not the same amount of resources, I saw a different [dance] technique,” he told HuffPost. “Whereas in Mexico, there’s much more money, in Cuba, there’s probably less money than even in Guatemala. But the quality of dancers [in Cuba] is outstanding ― that’s because it’s prioritized.”


Robles sees his work, in part, as a means of underscoring the spirit of dance that’s worth prioritizing. While in Puerto Rico, he met with Vianca E. Palacios, Laura Valentín, Camila M. Rosado and Courtney Stohlton, and photographed the women en pointe at familiar spots across San Juan.


He also, as he outlined in a blog post online, sees his work as a way of reclaiming a home he’s left behind in many ways. Sadly, his rare visits to Puerto Rico frequently revolve around a death or illness in the family. His San Juan photos will allow him to “bring home back with me,” in a joyful way.



Camila Maylee @_camilamaylee #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on




Attempting to deal with his own homesickness, Robles says he was reminded of the hardships so many families separated by distance grapple with around the world. “I can’t even imagine the struggles felt recently by families threatened [by] the unmentionable ‘ban,’” he wrote on his blog, referencing President Donald Trump’s executive order that temporarily blocked people from a handful of countries from entering the U.S.


Before the travel ban, Robles, who was born Omar Said, experienced the effects of discriminatory vetting processes at airports firsthand. “I was detained once for three hours just because of my name. Not in the U.S., but it did happen,” he explained. “To be honest, I started fearing [after Trump signed the executive order]. Last year I went to a gallery show of my work in Canada, and when I went though the border on the train, both coming in and out of the country, I was questioned for half an hour. It’s very embarrassing and unnerving. At this point I know it’s coming every time, but it gets me nervous. I know I have to nothing to fear, but just the fact that I’m going to get discriminated against each time is unnerving.”


Despite these experiences, Robles admits he feels lucky, because “even though most americans don’t know it,” Puerto Rico is part of the U.S. “That is not the case for many people.”




Check out more from Robles’ Puerto Rico photo series below. To see more of his work, head to his Instagram.



Courtney Stohlton @courtneystohlton #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on





Laura Valentín @lvalentinpr #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on









Courtney Stohlton @courtneystohlton #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on





Camila M. Rosado @_camilamaylee #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on





Courtney Stohlton @courtneystohlton #OZR_Dance | #

A post shared by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on





-- 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.


'White Tears' Is The Horror Story 'La La Land' Should Have Become

$
0
0

Despite dramatically failing to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards, “La La Land” was a film juggernaut of 2016. Audiences and critics thrilled to its romantic, yet melancholy, portrayal of an idealistic jazz fiend (Ryan Gosling) who privileges musical purity. Well, not universally ― some bridled at the positioning of white keyboardist Sebastian as the savior of jazz music; his foil, the sellout of the film, is played by John Legend. The white guy is the one who really cares, and by his caring he earns a certain ownership over the pure jazz tradition. He represents the best of jazz.


For filmgoers who chafed at seeing a bland hipster tap his way into a white savior role for an African-American musical tradition, White Tears will hit bookstores bearing inside a remarkably similar setup ― but also the comeuppance “La La Land” never gave to Sebastian. Where “La La Land” is a nostalgic musical romance, White Tears is a supernatural mystery, a horror story, and ultimately a tale of black Americans’ historical exploitation by white profiteers.


The novel opens on Seth, the book’s narrator, living in New York City and wandering the streets recording the ambient sounds he encounters. It’s not long after college, and he lives with Carter, his best friend from the liberal arts school they attended together. Seth is awkward, nerdy and self-conscious of his tenuous position in life as a new graduate with little safety net, but Carter buoys the partnership with his careless charisma, his single-minded passions, and, perhaps most importantly, his seemingly endless supply of cash. Carter Wallace is a scion of an enormously wealthy family, and he uses his dough to fund his and Seth’s shared pursuit: music.


The odd couple’s friendship was forged over music ― specifically, their particular interest in how the sounds they love are created. Though Seth prefers new, shiny music like EDM (old music makes him feel uncomfortably unmoored from the present, as he slips deeply into what he listens to), Carter’s ideal is the early, unpolished era of musical recording. Such is the strength of his personality, and the depth of Seth’s naive admiration for his new friend, that the obsession with vintage records, specifically the blues, becomes a shared one. Carter’s place, and later their apartment, fills up with expensive mixing boards and rare vintage microphones; he pays top dollar for blues records, the older the better. They begin collecting 78 RPM records, which were common in the gramophone era but were mostly phased out by mid-century ― 45s are too close to modern audio recording for their taste.


In college, Carter is a typical white Rasta; by the time they’ve moved to the city, he’s savvier, a hipster in an old-fashioned haircut and suspenders. “We really did feel that our love of the music bought us something, some right to blackness, but by the time we got to New York, we’d learned not to talk about it,” Seth recalls. “We didn’t want to be mistaken for the kind of suburban white boys who post pictures of themselves holding malt liquor bottles and throwing gang signs.” Of course, the blues buddies aren’t any different from those suburban white boys, save for their tact about flaunting their self-perceived ownership of black musical tropes. Their love for the music convinces them that the music is for them. They set up shop as a boutique production company, pursuing the crackling, analog sound that Carter deems authentic.


Instead of triumph, however, what ensues is dizzying mayhem. The pair becomes fascinated by a blues song Seth picked up while recording chess players at Washington Square Park. Carter convinces Seth, the skilled one of the operation, to rework the recording ― playing it through a feeble vintage speaker to re-record it, layering it with fuzz and distortion: “By the time I’d finished, it sounded like a worn 78, the kind of recording that only exists in one poor copy, a thread on which time and memory hang.” Carter fakes a record label and calls the mysterious singer Charlie Shaw; he dates the song to 1928 and releases it on a file-sharing site. Blues collectors clamor over this precious discovery, bidding to buy the record.


Then one commenter posts a series of all-caps queries, insisting that they meet in person to discuss their finding. “Now I will tell you something,” he types, once the meeting has been arranged. “Before you posted that song, I had not heard Charlie Shaw since 1959.”


They’re dismissive, certain that Charlie Shaw is a figment of their own masterful imaginations and encyclopedic 1920s blues knowledge. Then tragedy strikes Carter, leaving Seth panicked and at odds with his friend’s wealthy, insular family, who are already suspicious of their son’s trust-fund-free friend ― except for Leonie, Carter’s older sister and an aspiring artist. Together, Leonie and Seth journey South in hopes of saving her brother and locating the real Charlie Shaw ― if the real Charlie Shaw exists. In the process, Seth is confronted with police brutality against black men, the roots of the prison-industrial complex in slavery and Jim Crow, and the exploited, unrecognized work of black musicians ― which become closely intertwined in the narrative.


The book is moody, threatening, and profoundly dark; Kunzru’s prose has a Delilloesque density, constructing settings and atmospheres so charged and vivid they seem to envelop the reader in a miasma of mise-en-scène. Carter and Seth’s work, and the idealistic gloss they layer over a creeping sense of historical guilt, receives no artistically optimistic reading from Kunzru. “He respects the music,” Seth tells Leonie, defensively. “That doesn’t make them like you any better,” she replies. “It’s theirs. They’d rather you left it to them.” It’s a glib reading of a complex dynamic, offered by an insulated daughter of privilege, but there’s a kernel of truth: The boys can’t buy authenticity and ownership of the blues tradition with the strength of their interest. It belongs to someone else.


Kunzru, a British writer of Indian descent, is here taking on a dynamic somewhat outside his direct experience. When it comes to the black blues tradition, he’s taking an outsider perspective: the reader comes along with him on Seth’s journey, one defined by historical naivety and self-absorption. White Tears isn’t exactly a re-centering of black experience, but a collapsing of the white hero mythology that often guides American movies, books and TV shows that nominally address black culture. It zeroes in on an impulse that yearns to be pure, uncompromising and compensatory, finding the nasty worm of entitlement and exploitation that’s burrowed at the heart.


By the time White Tears resolves, it’s still tricky to assign a single genre to the novel: It’s a story about ghosts, about sounds reverberating not just through space but through time, about grievances leaking through the fabric of decades, and about retribution, violence and hatred. At every turn, Kunzru’s words concoct a dreamlike world where the past isn’t dead, nor even past, and the boundaries of reality flicker at the margins. For a nation seduced by a fantasy of white appropriation, maybe a horror story of white appropriation is exactly what we need.


The Bottom Line:


In hypnotic style, White Tears punctures the fantasy of a white male musical hero championing black artistic traditions, uncovering a dark and ugly underbelly.


What other reviewers think:


Publishers Weekly: “The excellent new novel from Kunzru (Gods Without Men) opens as a coming-of-age yarn and ends as a ghost story, but its real subject is a vital piece of American history: the persistence of cultural appropriation in popular music.”


Kirkus: “Record collecting turns dangerous in a smart, time-bending tale about cultural appropriation.” 


Who wrote it?


Hari Kunzru is a British novelist. He has been recognized as one of Granta’s 20 Best Young British Novelists (2003) and awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship (2014). White Tears is his fifth novel. Fun fact: Kunzru is married to Katie Kitamura, whose well-received novel A Separation came out in February.


Who will read it?


Fans of gritty literary genre fiction and racially provocative novels.


Opening lines:


“That summer I would ride my bike over the bridge, lock it up in front of one of the bars on Orchard Street and drift through the city on foot, recording. People and places. Sidewalk smokers, lover’s quarrels, drug deals. I wanted to store the world and play it back just as I’d found it, without change or addition. I collected audio of thunderstorms, music coming out of cars, the subway trains rumbling underfoot; it was all reality, a quality I had lately begun to crave, as if I were deficient in some necessary vitamin or mineral.” 


Notable passage:


“The first thing he told me after he unbolted the door was that I should prepare to cry. He’d cried. He’d been crying for two hours straight. He told me to just sit and listen ― I wouldn’t be the same after. He turned to the desk, and through the studio speakers came the sound of a New York street. Traffic, the sound of footsteps. My footsteps. I quickly recognized Tompkins Square in the East Village. I could hear barking from the dog run, skaters panhandling by the benches. He turned up the volume. I heard myself walk past the skaters into a sort of aural dead zone. The street noise faded, the dogs too. The only significant signal was the sound of a guitar, someone fingerpicking in a weird open tuning that made the instrument seem to wail and moan. It was mesmerizing, the performance of a musician struggling with inexpressible pain and loss. The recording was completely clear, unmarred by voices or traffic.”


White Tears
By Hari Kunzru
Knopf, $26.95
Publishes March 14, 2017  


The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.


type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related... + articlesList=58a78e0ae4b045cd34c1da7e,57b766d5e4b00d9c3a17ae4e,586aeaefe4b0eb58648a3ccf


Every Friday, HuffPost’s Culture Shift newsletter helps you figure out which books you should read, art you should check out, movies you should watch and music should listen to. Sign up 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.

Artist Honors The History Of Broken Promises That Preceded Standing Rock

$
0
0

From a distance, Gina Adams’ quilts look familiar ― well-worn and stitched with intricate geometric patterns in vibrant colors, they wouldn’t look out of place draped on a couch at a rustic bed-and-breakfast. The closer one looks, however, the more unusual they look. Letters and words begin to leap out from the checkered colors, and still closer examination shows that the quilts are spelling out pieces of history.


In this project, “Its Honor Is Here Pledged,” Adams sewed the words of broken treaties between the U.S. government and Native American tribes onto quilts, creating soft blankets with sharp messages. “Sewing together injustice with an object of comfort stirs deep emotion,” wrote Adams in her statement on the works. 


In an email to The Huffington Post, the artist explained that seeing native people in America use quilts for warmth was a common theme in her research of old photos in the Smithsonian Museum and archives. “Blankets were one thing that was given to the Native people who were forced to move to the new reservations,” she wrote. “It is my wish that the viewer gain an understanding that there is a relationship between the treaty text and the impact that it still has on present generations.”



To create the artworks, Adams used quilts she found in “antique stores, flea markets and gathered from dusty attics,” specifically seeking out faded, frayed and torn blankets. “I wanted to use a material that was created one hundred years ago,” she told HuffPost. “I feel the age in the quilt speaks to the language and implied weariness that still exists in the treaties.”


On top of the aging fabric, she sewed letters cut from new and old calico ― a colorful cotton fabric. The swatches were carefully chosen to work together with and across the original quilt, “creating a rhythm” viewers are drawn into. The colors of the words weren’t chosen with an eye to clarity; Adams told HuffPost that she wanted “the fabric letters to blend and fade weaving in and out of the quilts surface.”


It’s a visual strain to piece together the full text on a quilt, yet certain letters jump out, enticing one to read more closely. “The language of these treaties was meant to be confusing,” she wrote. “It’s 100 plus years later and the words still are today.”


The many broken treaties signed by the U.S. government with Native tribes have been centuries-long grievances for those tribes, but have been more recently brought to the national media spotlight by protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline by the Standing Rock Sioux. The pipeline was rerouted to tunnels under Lake Oahe, near the Standing Rock reservation, which the tribe protested, in part, as a violation of the 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie.


“What is happening at Standing Rock is directly connected to the treaties and the protection that they give to Native American lands and water,” Adams pointed out. “In the treaties it is stated that not the United States nor any other corporation or company would ever be allowed to alter the territory stated with in them.” After taking office in January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order allowing the pipeline to move forward


Apparent continuing violations of these treaties provide little hope for healing ― especially given the horrific treatment of the protesters, who refer to themselves as “water protectors,” encamped at Standing Rock. But Adams’ quilts are their own bid for recognition and healing, and she told HuffPost that they sprang from “the hope that change could occur.”


That change would start, she said, with an apology, one given “out loud and directly from all United States Government... This apology would begin the process of healing for Native people of the United States who carry inherited trauma and pain... With these apologies, it would be possible that a great healing would begin.” That healing, she added, would only be the first step: “Once the healing begins, then the work of going back to the language of the original documents and taking accountability for all of the articles and promises that were given should happen.”


“My hope was that present people would reconsider the need to reinvestigate the treaties,” she wrote. “Viewers come into the installed gallery space expecting to just see art quilts… they don’t expect the emotions they feel from the language that exists with the space. The beauty is that art does have the power to create ripples of change. If we don’t as a collective people start with small ripples the larger ones may never happen.”


View some of Adams’s quilts below, and check out her work on her website.



 H/T Hyperallergic

-- 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.

These Disney Princesses Have Been Reimagined As Women's Rights Activists

$
0
0



Let’s get down to business, to defeat... the patriarchy?


These Disney princesses want to be where the protesters are in these resistance-inspired illustrations. Oregonian Amanda Allen Niday has created nine picketing princesses who take on issues like racism, sexism, and xenophobia.










The 27-year-old illustrator told Teen Vogue she got the idea after watching women gather for the Women’s March in January.


“I felt inspired by the way women expressed themselves on their signs, from the witty and charming to the downright scathing. Women coming together from all backgrounds to say ‘we are HERE and we MATTER,’” Niday said. “I wanted to hold onto that message as my newsfeeds dissolved back into squabbling and finding faults in our difference, rather than understanding.”


Niday used that inspiration in combination with lines the princesses said in their respective movies to create the images you see below.


She chose quotes that “would allude to their story as whole, had deeper meaning within the movie, or referenced modern issues.”









Disney princesses have oft been reimagined ― primarily because they’re such iconic figures in pop culture. Niday told Teen Vogue that she wanted to use these characters to “remind girls that they’re brave, strong and valuable” and “symbolize what women can or should do.”


If you want to check out more of Niday’s work, here is her Instagram and her Society6 page.


h/t Teen Vogue 




-- 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.

Gavin Rossdale Sings About Unrequited Love In 'The Beat Of Your Heart'

$
0
0

Gavin Rossdale says he poured his heart and soul into the songs that make up the upcoming Bush album. Sometimes he’s the protagonist in the story. Other times, it’s simply a “truthful emotion” that drives the track. Either way, the songs are personal. And in many instances, writing them was therapeutic for the Bush frontman.


Due out March 10, “Black and White Rainbows” follows the band’s 2014 release, “Man on the Run.” It features 15 songs, including “The Beat of Your Heart,” which makes its debut on The Huffington Post a week before the album release. 



“It’s one of those ones where it’s sort of about unrequited love. Imagine if you could date Edie Sedgwick and she’s too out there on a limb,” Rossdale told HuffPost, referring to the “it” girl of the 1960s. “It just reminds me of certain things and people through my life that were just a bit elusive and you couldn’t quite connect to but just would be really infatuated with. So it’s about caring about someone from a distance and trying to be there for them and they’re too strung out and too busy to really connect with you ... It has that sense of someone who’s just out of reach. But it doesn’t mean you don’t love them.” 


Listen to the track 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 Sartorial Genius Of Georgia O'Keeffe

$
0
0

The great American painter Georgia O’Keeffe flooded canvases with color, conjuring plants and sunsets and lakes with a generous relationship to her palette. At the mere mention of her name, images of flowers surely come to mind, their petals spread open in front of the viewer, each stamen and stigma brushed with heavy doses of gold or pink or green.


Yet images of the artist herself, who was born in 1887 in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, are mostly devoid of color. She preferred to memorialize herself in black and white, as evidenced by the astounding amount of portraits for which she posed. In front of the camera ― whether it was held by her husband Alfred Stieglitz or a slew of other famous photographers including Ansel Adams, Philippe Halsman, Bruce Weber, Annie Leibowitz and Andy Warhol ― she frequently appeared in monochrome. She was more likely to brandish a cape and bowler hat, accessories coded male at the time, than a floral dress or broach.


“Everyone wanted to redress her to make her appear more feminine,” Wanda Corn, a Professor Emerita in art history at Stanford, and the guest curator behind the Brooklyn Museum’s latest show, “Georgia O’Keeffe: Living Modern,” explained in a tour on Wednesday. But O’Keeffe was steadfast in her style: minimalist, modern, androgynous, deliberate.



“She was black-and-white before she met Stieglitz,” Corn added, echoing the overall tone of her show. O’Keeffe was no one’s muse. Aware of her place in history before it was even set, she sat in front of cameras to take hold of her public persona. She dressed in monochrome, capes and all, to cleverly feed her growing status not just as an artist, but a pioneer of every aesthetic she touched.


”Living Modern” bills itself as the first exhibition to examine O’Keeffe’s “self-crafted persona.” With a cascade of artworks paired with personal objects from O’Keeffe’s wardrobe, the show tells a story of how she evolved beyond the easel. The paintings and photographs and pieces of her closet ― handmade dresses, denim, hats, shoes, jewelry ― reveal how she owned her identity, and her eventual celebrity.


The exhibition, separated into four parts, follows her early rise in the New York art world, where she had her first solo show at the Brooklyn Museum in 1927, to the years she spent traveling to the American Southwest, a region that would steal her heart, to the career she nurtured after Stieglitz died. The black-and-white custom suits she’d wear to meetings or openings in New York contrast with the chambray button-down shirts and cowboy hats that marked her New Mexico existence. She was rarely photographed in the latter; more often she was seen in the wrap dresses that constituted her signature outfit later in life, with little or no embellishments.


“Nothing is less real than realism ― details are confusing,” she famously said. “It is only by selection, by elimination, by emphasis, that we get the real meaning of things.” 



“Living Modern” is part of the Brooklyn Museum’s “Year of Yes,” a series of programs that celebrate the 10th anniversary of the institution’s Sackler Center for Feminist Art. The decision to spotlight O’Keeffe’s clothes, in conjunction with an anniversary aimed at “reimagining feminism,” was made with careful thought.


Corn has been planning the O’Keeffe tribute since at least 2011, Cody Hartley, senior director of collections and interpretation at the O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, told The Huffington Post. Much of the clothing on view comes from the two homes, once owned by the artist, that are now managed by the O’Keeffe.


Would Corn have organized a similar exhibition for a male artist who’d lived his life so strategically through clothing? “Yes, I think she would have,” Hartley explained. Of course, the appeal of such an exhibition centered on O’Keeffe, rather than any male artist, is that her clothing ― whether she made pieces herself, commissioned them, or voraciously collected them ― was an extension of her agency in a male-dominated realm. She understood the power of putting on a cape, more often worn by male artists, and staring into a camera. She understood how her personal style, not just her art, could reflect her sincere commitment to modernism. She earned her title, Mother of American Modernism, by being in charge of her identity.



The last room of the Brooklyn Museum show appropriately focuses on O’Keeffe’s life after Stieglitz, the artist who helped catapult her to fame. Before she died at the age of 98, O’Keeffe had become a beacon for a new wave of feminism, a celebrity reincarnated, at least for the 1960s generation who knew her only as a single artist.


At the end of her life, O’Keeffe was the woman, independent in her career and style, who’d left New York City behind for the freedom and solitude of New Mexico. Living a life close to the land, she dabbled in organic gardening and cooking. She was “prescient” to a new audience of housewives, students and young feminists, Corn said, who weren’t so familiar with her early career alongside Stieglitz. They’d later read her interview with Andy Warhol in 1983, or read her 1974 New Yorker profile, or visited her major exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American art in 1970, which later traveled to Chicago and San Fransisco. 


Today, over 30 years after her death, O’Keeffe is still a celebrity. While she never fully embraced the feminism that adopted her as an icon during her life ― “Write about women. Or write about artists. I don’t see how they’re connected,” she once told a journalist ― her ability to move through life unencumbered by expectations, so ready to take control of her image out in the world, continues to garner respect. 


Her face, peering at viewers dozens of times throughout the halls of the Brooklyn Museum, dares you to think otherwise.











Georgia O’Keeffe: Living Modern” is on view from March 3 to July 23 in the Morris A. and Meyer Schapiro Wing on the fourth floor of the Brooklyn Museum.

-- 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