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

Sinead O'Connor Won't Sing 'Nothing Compares 2 U' Anymore

$
0
0
It's been "nine months or so" since Sinead O'Connor took her love away. That's when the singer lost her emotional connection to the hit "Nothing Compares 2 U," so earlier this week, O'Connor announced on Facebook that she will no longer perform the song.

One of only two O'Connor singles to chart in the U.S., the Prince-written "Nothing Compares 2 U" hit No. 1 in 1990, two years before the singer ripped up a photo of Pope John Paul II on "Saturday Night Live." Now, the 48-year-old Irish songstress says her Italian training dictates she avoid material that doesn't offer a rich emotional association. (If the only O'Connor song America knows is no longer on the table, at least we have those open letters to Miley Cyrus from a couple of years ago to enjoy.)

Here's O'Connor's full Facebook post:





Laura Benanti Tries Her Hand At Being A Rockette In This 'New York Spring Spectacular' Clip

$
0
0
Laura Benanti is a Tony Award-winning actress, singer and social media maven, but things don't go entirely according to plan when she tries out the slick moves of the Radio City Rockettes in this hilarious new video.

The exclusive clip is a sneak peek at Benanti's new role in the "New York Spring Spectacular," which opens at Radio City Music Hall on March 26. Also starring "Dancing with the Stars" veteran Derek Hough and the famed Rockettes, the new show is what Benanti calls "a spectacular love letter to New York City," inspired by the magic of spring.

Directed and choreographed by Tony winner Warren Carlyle and written by Joshua Harmon, the show is billed as a "heartwarming and wondrous journey" through New York. Still, Benanti says the piece also has a socially-conscious message, stressing the importance of a bonafide human experience over a digital one.

"The opportunity to send the message to 3,000-4,000 kids per show to please put down your phones and connect with another human is, I think, a wonderful thing," Benanti told The Huffington Post in an interview. "My hope is that people will leave the theater and put their devices away and go be with each other."

That lesson, Benanti added, is one that her character, Jenna, learns firsthand throughout the course of the show: "She's a bit like a lady Scrooge."




The role is a unusual choice for Benanti, who is best known for her acclaimed turn in the 2008 revival of "Gypsy" as well as her television stints in NBC's "The Sound of Music Live!" and ABC's "Nashville." She said she was drawn to the project because it gave her an opportunity to work with Carlyle and alongside the Rockettes, whom she deems "superheroes, athletes, artists and just incredible women." Meanwhile, the show gave her the chance to do "something that my little cousins could come watch and be really excited about."

Benanti's performance chops has already garnered heaps of praise from Harmon ("Bad Jews"), who called the actress "a total, total blast."

"She can sing like a dream, but she's also extremely funny, and that's a rare combination to find in one performer," he said. "It's been a pleasure to tailor the role and make the part play to her strengths because she has so many."

Harmon, who describes himself as a "jaded New Yorker," hopes the show will be just as impressive to a native Manhattanite as it is to an international tourist visiting the city for the first time.

"If you've never been to New York, the show is a great introduction," he said. "But if you're a born-and-bred New Yorker, it will remind you of some of the magic that's here every day that we probably take for granted and shouldn't."

He then noted, "What I love about New York is that it can become incredibly familiar, and yet still continually surprise you."

The "New York Spring Spectacular" is currently in previews at Radio City Music Hall, with an opening night set for March 26. For more information, head here.

One Photographer's Honest Portraits Attempt To Answer The Question: 'What Is Your Biggest Regret?'

$
0
0
Dropping out. Not saying "I love you" enough. Not listening. Not writing.

These are the deeds that fill people with remorse. Photographer Alecsandra Raluca Dragoi, born in Romania and now based in London, became fascinated with the simple yet torturous question: What is your greatest regret? Whether it is something someone has done, or more often not done, she wanted to highlight the depth of tragedy, nostalgia and even humor associated with the question.

pho

In her aptly named project, "What is Your Biggest Regret?," Dragoi sought to provide a space for strangers to explore their pasts, and all the remorse that dwells there. By setting up photo shoots in public spaces like parks and shopping malls, she created a venue for individuals to vocalize their deepest worries and guilt, ranging from the playful ("Shagging Lee's mom") to the heartbreaking ("Not being with my father when he died 15 years ago").

The photographer, who is only 22 years old, found it important to gain the trust of her subjects, inviting many of them to open up for the very first time. Despite her youth, she displays a profound understanding of time, forgiveness, and the power of sharing what's so long been repressed. She insists that the project was inspired by the work of conceptual artist Gillian Wearing, a woman known for photographing anonymous strangers with compassion and introspection.

"I think that frequently when you share your thoughts with somebody, even if it is strange person, you release a black stain on the soul and you can feel free," Dragoi writes on her photography site.

Dragoi's series isn't confined to the portraits she's able to snap herself. Anyone can contribute to the ongoing project by taking a photograph like the ones above and below, presenting a paper with a regret he or she wishes to share with the world. Participants can send the image to the artist via a Facebook message. Dragoi references an anonymous quote as inspiration to those who wish to take part: “If we spend our time with regrets over yesterday, and worries over what might happen tomorrow, we have no today in which to live.”

Check out a preview of the series below.

Hannibal Buress Jokes About Receiving Death Threats After Cosby Routine

$
0
0
While sexual assault allegations against Bill Cosby go back a number of years -- and were called out in a widely disseminated piece on Gawker in February 2014 -- it's comedian Hannibal Buress who is often credited with reigniting the public furor against the 77-year-old star.

"It's even worse because Bill Cosby has the fucking smuggest old black man persona that I hate," Buress said during an October 2014 stand-up routine that soon went viral. "He gets on TV, 'Pull your pants up black people, I was on TV in the 80s! I can talk down to you because I had a successful sitcom!' Yeah, but you rape women, Bill Cosby, so turn the crazy down a couple notches."

Now, speaking to Jimmy Kimmel this week, Buress said he did receive backlash for his part in the Cosby story.

"I get a lot of messages from people about it," Buress said, before joking about the kind of comments he received.

"The weirdest thing about getting a death threat from a male body builder-slash-stripper on Facebook is when you click on his profile and see that you have one mutual friend," Buress said. "And then having to hit your friend up and say, 'Hey man, can you tell your buddy to stop saying he's going to murder me?'"

Watch the video below:

A Brief History Of Artists Grappling With Loss And Death

$
0
0
death



"Grief turns out to be a place none of us know until we reach it," Joan Didion wrote in A Year of Magical Thinking.

Many of us are blind to the realities of loss and mourning until we're confronted with it head on, whether in the face of a devastating news headline, a lifeless animal on the side of the road, or the life-altering loss of a loved one. There are many, if not infinite shapes that loss can take, and the impressions they make upon us are just as varied.

"There is no real way to deal with everything we lose," Didion continues, and yet we, as humans, continue to find ways to cope. For centuries, artists have turned to their work to address feelings of anger, confusion, fear, sadness, hope and love. While no painting, photograph or object can ever mend the holes that materialize in our hearts, the following artworks address loss in ways that attempt to begin the healing process, however long it may take.

From the 15th century to 2015, these are just a mere portion of the artists who've turned to art in the face of loss. Their courage, thoughtfulness and, of course, talent, is as inspiring as ever.

1. "Triptych of Earthly Vanity and Divine Salvation" by Hans Memling

memling
via Wikipedia Commons


Memling, a 15th century German-born painter who worked in the tradition of Early Netherlandish painting, created this epic triptych comparing the beautiful luxuries of earthly existence with the looming prospects of death and eternal hell. The haunting image is a prime example of a memento mori, an artwork hinting at the mortality that taunts us all.



2. "Lamentation of Christ" by Andrea Mantegna

mant
via Wikipedia Commons


This epic painting, thought to have been created in the 1480s, portrays the body of Christ laid out and lifeless, as he's watched over by the Virgin Mary and Saint John. The work employs a masterful understanding of foreshortening and realism, both contributing to the overall unsettling impression of the work. Details like the holes left from the nails on the cross and Christ's inflated thorax present the tragedy not as mythical lore, but as the stuff of real life.



3. "Saturn Devouring His Son" by Francisco de Goya

goya
via Wikipedia Commons


In the later years of his life, between 1819 and 1823, the already fairly dark Goya took it a step further with what are now known as the "Black Paintings." After surviving two near-fatal illnesses, one which left him mostly deaf, Goya was terrified of relapsing, incorporating his fear and impending insanity into his artworks. The most renowned of the bunch depicts a wide-eyed Saturn feasting on one of his children, in what has to be one of the most frightening artworks of all time.



4. "Skull of a Skeleton with Burning Cigarette" by Vincent van Gogh

2015-03-11-1426106068-9340066-500pxVincent_van_Gogh__Head_of_a_skeleton_with_a_burning_cigarette__Google_Art_Project.jpg
Wikipedia Commons


This undated painting, which currently lives at the Van Gogh Museum in Antwerp, renders a macabre vision of a smoking skeleton in a muted, monochromatic palette. It remains somewhat ambiguous whether the artist van Gogh was making a serious commentary on the brevity of life, or a sardonic jab at the seriousness of morbid art. The museum website explains: "It was probably executed in the winter of 1885–86, during Van Gogh’s stay in Antwerp. This skull with a cigarette was likely meant as a kind of joke, and probably also as a comment on conservative academic practice."



5. "Angel of Grief" by William Wetmore Story

aog
Wikipedia Commons


The 1894 sculpture, located in at the Protestant Cemetery in Rome, serves as the grave for Story's wife. Replicas of the heart wrenching statue sit everywhere from Luxembourg to Costa Rica to Stanford University.



6. "La Venadita (Little Deer)" by Frida Kahlo

frida
© 2013 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


This 1946 painting is far from the only time Kahlo addressed dark themes of death and suffering in her work. All too often she rendered herself in surreal scenarios trapped between life and death, symbolic of the extensive suffering she endured in her lifetime. Kahlo contracted polio as a child, severely weakening one of her legs. At 18, she endured a tragic tram accident in which she broke both her pelvis and spine, resulting in a life riddled with physical anguish, operations and addictive painkillers. Infertility, an abortion, and miscarriages were all subsequent consequences of her poor health. All this pain takes beautiful shape in Kahlo's imaginative paintings, in which she rips open her wounds for all to see.



7. "Poupées" by Michel Nedjar
michel nedjar


Nedjar, who was born 1947 in a village near Paris, grew up amidst stories about the horrors of the Holocaust, where many members of his family had lost their lives. "I identified with the corpses. I felt the violence," he said after watching "Night and Fog" on television. He channeled his dark visions into disturbing dolls that appear to be part cocoon, part fetus, part alien, part decaying roadkill, part nightmare. "This is not the decay of a fruit or a rose, as in the vanitas still lifes of the Dutch 17th century," Katherine Lieber wrote of the works. "This is not even the decay of an animal, like a gull found dead on the shore. The poupées reflect the dereliction that underlies human existence: the fragility of the body of that which is intelligent, thinking and self-aware, and the fact that it will decompose and rot quickly, once the spirit has fled."



8. "Silhouette" by Ana Mendieta

ana mendieta
via Museum der Moderne Salzburg


Mendieta, born in Havana, Cuba in 1948, moved to the U.S. at 12 years old to escape Castro's regime. She then began a brief yet ardent artistic career -- she died at just 36 years old -- grappling with issues of love, death and rebirth using her body and mother nature as a vessel. In "Silhouette," she lay shrouded in an ancient Zapotec grave, letting natural forms eat up her diminutive form.



9. "Ghost Pictures" by Francesca Woodman

fran
Guggenheim Museum


Woodman was only 22 years old when she killed herself in 1981 by leaping out of a window. Perhaps in part because of her untimely end, her work is imbued with a sinister chill, as if each image was in some way predicting the darkness to come. The brilliant young artist constantly photographed herself in domestic spaces, often trapped, smudged or fading away like a ghost. The hauntingly beautiful images address not only death itself, but the sort of death involved in the domestic existence many women were forced to experience



10. "Untitled" by Felix Gonzalez-Torres

fgt
Felix Gonzalez-Torres, “Untitled,” 1991. Billboard. Installation view of Felix Gonzalez-Torres Billboard Project. Artpace Foundation, San Antonio, TX. Jan.–Dec. 2010. © The Felix Gonzalez-Torres Foundation/Courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery/photo Tom DuBrock


Cuban-born artist Gonzalez-Torres created this quiet yet haunting billboard in 1991, the same year he lost his lover of eight years, Ross Laycock, to an AIDS-related illness. The massive image of the empty bed conjures associations of rest, desire, death and loneliness, as a place of intimacy and comfort is suddenly transformed into a space of isolation. Gonzalez-Torres mounted the image on 24 billboards to commemorate the day his love died.



11. "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living" by Damien Hirst

the physical impossibility of death

"I’ve got an obsession with death," the contentious Bristish artist once said. "But I think it’s like a celebration of life rather than something morbid." His massive 1991 piece consisted of a tiger shark preserved in formaldehyde in a vitrine. In 2007, a New York Times review captured the all-powerful effect of the work: "In keeping with the piece's title, the shark is simultaneously life and death incarnate in a way you don't quite grasp until you see it, suspended and silent, in its tank. It gives the innately demonic urge to live a demonic, deathlike form."

12. "The Morgue (Killed by Four Great Danes)" by Andres Serrano

serrano
Courtesy Yvon Lambert Gallery, Paris.


This 1992 photograph was taken, as you may have guessed, inside a morgue, by prolific provocateur Serrano. The chilling series brings the viewer in such close proximity to corpses it feels as if you are bending over their lifeless bodies. Every blemish, every scratch, every discoloration is disturbingly conspicuous, making the deceased feel at once more and less human.



13. "Before I Die" by Candy Chang

before i die
Photo Credit: Trevor Coe – Savannah, GA


After losing a friend, Taiwanese-American artist Chang expressed her grief in a simple yet transformative way, writing "Before I die I want to _____." on the wall of an abandoned New Orleans building. Within 24 hours, the wall was filled with personal aspirations, hopes and goals -- everything from "be myself completely" to "see equality for all." The project, illuminating the precious nature of life in an empowering and optimistic manner, has been recreated in over 500 cities and over 70 countries, including Iraq, China, Haiti, Brazil, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and South Africa.



14. "Natura Morta" by Maria Ionova-Gribina

maria

The Russian contemporary photographer Ionova-Gribina revisits our early encounters with death, often experienced via the loss of an animal, whether it's a beloved pet or an anonymous critter on the side of the road. In her photography series, Ionova-Gribina creates and captures monuments to animals she discovered riding on her bike, all of whom died of natural causes. She surrounds each animal with bright flowers picked from her backyard, creating beautiful tributes. "I wanted to find a way to save them for the world of art," she explains in her artist statement. "They were so unprotected… One or two days more and they would be eaten by worms."



15. "Thin Places" by Val Britton

thin

Oakland-based artist Val Britton crafts mixed-media cartograms, abstract roadmaps through physical locations as well as emotional and psychological terrain. She began the project as a way to connect with her father, a long haul truck driver who passed away when Britton was a child. "Based on road maps, routes my father often traveled, and an invented conglomeration and fragmentation of those passageways, my works on paper help me piece together the past and make up the parts I cannot know," she explains in her statement.



16. "No Seconds" by Henry Hargreaves

jwg
Henry Hargreaves


Contemporary photographer Hargreaves captured recreations of inmates' last meals, revealing the bizarre contrast between the gesture of kindness and the ultimate act of cruelty. "In New Zealand (where I’m from), and in fact nearly any where else in the developed world, the Death Penalty is just not even in the conversation," he explained. "It is a remnant of an earlier era. This little bit of civility, 'hey, we are going to kill you but what would you like to eat?' just jumped off the page." The images are coupled with text describing both the prisoner's criminal history and the dish they requested, yielding a complex portrait of how parts of even the most villainous figures in history remain relatable.



17. "Ad Infinitum" by Kris Vervaeke

kris

Vervaeka, a contemporary photographer, documents the eerily beautiful portraits adorning Hong Kong's cemeteries, as natural elements drive the images further and further into abstraction. "The images of black-and-white faces, having braved exposure to rain, sun and extreme temperatures, gain an ethereal glow as time eats away at them. As the faces fade into anonymity, their bodies fade into nature and the world beyond." The ghostly photos capture a peculiar location, at once a burial site and a portal to the world beyond, a house of death that is meant to remind us of life.



18. "Untitled (from the Essence Series)" by Denis Tarasov

vest
Image courtesy of the Saatchi Gallery, London


"In the nineties, the graves of criminal authorities began to have large and expensive tombstones -- at a height of about three meters [10 feet] and engraved with a full-length portrait and an expensive car in the background," Tarasov said in an email exchange with The Huffington Post. "This was done primarily to stand out and surpass all the dead in the cemetery, as well as the people that try to outdo everyone in life." Tarasov documents an unusual relic of 1990s Russia, an era of excess thanks to the newly privatized economic system. Specifically, he captures the opulent gravestones of mobsters and mafiosos, those who'd do almost anything to maintain their wealth. It's a morbid portrait of luxury and it's consequences quite unlike any other.



19. "Left Behind" by Jennifer Loeber

ring

"I found myself deeply overwhelmed by the need to keep even the most mundane of my mom's belongings when she died suddenly this past February," contemporary photographer Jennifer Loeber explains in her artist statement. The artist turned to the things her mother left behind, formerly banal objects transformed into tangible evidence of her mom's existence, as artistic inspiration. The resulting images are thoughtful odes to her mother's memory, as experienced through a tube of lipstick, a curling iron, a pearl ring, and the other day-to-day objects she used and loved.



20. "At Rest" by Emma Kisiel

at rest

Contemporary photographer Kisiel captures roadkill on the side of American highways, surrounded by flowers in the location where their lives came to their untimely end. "My images draw attention to the fact that, while man has a vast impact on animal and natural life, generally in American society, people are separate from wildlife and the souls of animals have little value," she explains in her artist statement. "To cause the viewer to feel struck by this notion, I photograph memorials I have built surrounding roadkill at the location at which its life was taken."



21. "Invisible Presence: Bling Memories" by Ebony G. Patterson

patterson
Courtesy of the artist and Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago.


Patterson's performance, a spectacular procession of blinged-out coffins with feathers, tassels and sequins, took place on April 27, 2014 in Kingston, Jamaica. The work was influenced by the funeral practices common in Jamaican, lower-income communities, thus providing visibility to the often overlooked region. "A bling funeral is a powerful declaration of presence, and that is what I have tried to bring to this public space at carnival time," Patterson explained in an interview with the Jamaica Observer.

22. "Asphalt and Chalk, Michael Brown, Sean Bell, Amadou Diallo, Trayvon Martin" by Titus Kaphar

jerome
©Titus Kaphar. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.


Kaphar's 2014 work features the faces of young, unarmed black men who lost their lives at the hands of the police. Using chalk on asphalt paper, Kaphar traces their faces until one bleeds into the other and any sense of recognition is obscured, rendering a hazy image reminiscent of a chalk outline of a body on the street. "As you look at the drawings, your eyes struggle to reconcile the multiple faces into one," Kaphar told the Huffington Post, "In these pieces, I’m thinking about mistaken identities, similar life struggles, and fitting the description."

What Miles Teller Learned After His 'Divergent' Comments Went Viral

$
0
0
Miles Teller is an impossibly charming regular guy who just happens to be pretty famous. That personable nature has served the 28-year-old actor well during his rise through the ranks of young Hollywood, but his willingness to be open also got him in trouble.

Last year, in an interview with Lynn Hirschberg for W Magazine, Teller said his time spent making "Divergent" was difficult. "I didn't have an interesting part, and I'd taken the film for business reasons: It was the first movie I'd done that was going to have an international audience," Teller said. "I called my agent and said, 'This sucks.'"

With three movies left in the franchise, including this weekend's "The Divergent Series: Insurgent," Teller was quick to clarify his comments. Speaking about the incident months later, Teller told The Huffington Post that it was frustrating to watch as his words "exploded."

"I felt like the sentiment or what I was saying was misconstrued and you don't have the opportunity to say, 'This is kind of what it was,'" Teller said about the comments going viral. "It's already out there and you can't bring it back in because it had taken off."

Teller was particularly upset about the idea that anyone would think he did a job solely for the money (and he clarified what he meant to Lionsgate, the studio behind "Divergent," and the franchise's producers).

"I kind of pride myself on being somebody people can relate to and can be accessible to anybody," Teller said. "That's how I was raised. I am very proud of the person I am and the career I've been able to shape for myself. That was the one where I felt like How did that happen to me? I'm not that person."

miles teller insurgent
Miles Teller with Theo James and Shailene Woodley in "The Divergent Series: Insurgent"

Teller's back in "Insurgent," once again playing Peter, a duplicitous member of the Dauntless faction who plays both sides in whatever way serves him best.

"The thing about Peter is that he's looking out for numero uno. That's a nice thing to play," Teller said of the character. He found portraying Peter in the first film was tough, only because Teller couldn't wrap his head around all of Peter's motivations.

"You always want to make these characters redeemable," Teller said. "The first one, when I'm stabbing someone in the eye with a butter knife -- which they ended up cutting -- I was like, 'Man, he doesn't have a lot of redeeming qualities.' In the second one, it's a credit to author Veronica Roth and how she wrote the character, that he's a little more complex than people initially gave him credit for. Peter is a little deeper than they thought."

Teller said a key to the film's success with his character was that it was written with Teller in mind, and played to his particular strengths.

"After the first one, they were telling me that when they screened 'Divergent,' Peter was getting all the laughs," he said. "I was like, 'Really? I don't remember doing much comedy in that stuff.' But it's a nice pressure release for the audience. He breaks up the life or death journey that Tris [played by Shailene Woodley] is on. Peter is one of the more human characters, which people respond to. I was really happy with the path they took."

And while Teller has transitioned to a leading man thanks to roles in "Whiplash" and the forthcoming "Fantastic Four" (where he plays Mr. Fantastic), he still appreciates a good supporting part.

"At this point, I'm happy that I'm Peter and not Four [Theo James' character]," Teller said. "He's doing a ton of action and other stuff. To me, I want to play the most interesting character for me. If I were to get a script -- even if it's this movie, 'The Stopwatch Gang,' that I'm producing now -- and this one guy is the leader of the group but I think another guy is more interesting, I'd have no problem doing that."

"The Divergent Series: Insurgent" is out on March 20.

Proenza Schouler's New Video Is As Beautiful As It Is Confusing

$
0
0
When it comes to bizarre fashion campaigns, Proenza Schouler has a monopoly on the market (anyone else remember their space-age video from spring/summer 2013 or their trippy spring/summer 2014 campaign?).

Well, for spring '15, head-designers (and founders) Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez brought the weird. On Thursday, the womenswear label released a short film called "Legs Are Not Doors," which features a bevy of beautiful women wearing their spring 2015 collection talking about a stream of seemingly unrelated topics. Though many gorgeous faces make appearances in the 1:54 short -- like Chloë Sevigny, Liya Kebede, Binx Walton and Fei Fei Sun -- the highlight has to be the very pregnant Liv Tyler who stuns in a fringe top as she says, “I’ve always loved being a woman, so I’ve never wanted to be a man. But I definitely think it has its challenges.”

Directed by Harley Weir and Jen Brill and inspired by Glenn O’Brien’s TV Party, this conceptual film will leave you asking questions for days.

Pharrell Slams 'Blurred Lines' Verdict

$
0
0
Pharrell Williams has stayed quiet since the "Blurred Lines" case reached a verdict, which awarded Marvin Gaye's family $7.3 million for copyright infringement. But in an interview with the Financial Times, Williams spoke out against the ruling, calling it a "handicap" to artists.

"The verdict handicaps any creator out there who is making something that might be inspired by something else," he said. "This applies to fashion, music, design ... anything. If we lose our freedom to be inspired we’re going to look up one day and the entertainment industry as we know it will be frozen in litigation. This is about protecting the intellectual rights of people who have ideas."

The jury ruled that Williams and Robin Thicke copied Gaye's song, "Got To Give It Up," when writing their smash hit "Blurred Lines," but Williams also asserted that they didn't rely on the track. "There was no infringement," he said. "You can’t own feelings and you can’t own emotions ... [In music] there are only the notations and the progression. Those were different."

Williams' statement echoes what many music critics, legal experts and industry insiders have been saying since the ruling came out: this is a bad look for the future of music.

New 'Avengers: Age Of Ultron' Remembers The Jokes

$
0
0
What separates Marvel movies from those made around DC Comics characters? Jokes, for one thing. It's intentional: "The worlds of DC are very different," Warner Bros. chairman and CEO Kevin Tsujihara recently said. "They're steeped in realism, and they're a little bit edgier than Marvel's movies." True, but they don't have Robert Downey Jr. being a smart aleck, and sometimes that's all you want. "Actually, he's the boss," Downey-as-Tony Stark says about Captain America in a new and funny trailer for "Avengers: Age of Ultron." "I just pay for everything." ZING! The movie is out May 1.

Teen's Exquisite Instagram Account Will Give You Serious Book Envy

$
0
0
All it takes is one look at Emily Ables’ Instagram account to know she has a thing for books. She also happens to have more than 50,000 followers.

On her @blueeyedbiblio account, the 18-year-old posts lovely photos of books she’s read and what she’s #currentlyreading. Her theme is a combination of minimal details, such as her white bookshelves and gray walls, with colorful book covers.





“I usually put a lot of thought into my photos to make sure they look nice while also showing off the books I want to share with everyone,” she said in an email to The Huffington Post.

For Emily, reading is more than a way to pass the time. It’s her passion, which she discovered the first time she read the “Harry Potter” series.

“Those books gave me friends and showed me that reading can allow you to experience incredible things, like being a wizard and casting spells,” she said.





Aside from the boy wizard, Emily enjoys reading books from her favorite author, Rainbow Rowell. She also reads “The Outsiders” once a year.

“Something about it is just so special to me," she said. "I'll always be revisiting it and its characters.”

hello this is my face ft. my really messy bookshelves #shelfie

A photo posted by @blueeyedbiblio on





Since her Instagram has become so popular, she’s been getting offers to review books. She also might start updating her blog, which is how she originally wanted to share her love for books with others.

Based on her Instagram success, whatever comes next in Emily’s @blueeyedbiblio adventure will certainly be a page-turner.

Scroll down for more of Emily's photos.
















H/T Seventeen

Follow HuffPost Teen on Twitter | Instagram | Tumblr | Pheed |

Photographer Perfectly Captures Unique Beauty Of Eerie Underwater Park

$
0
0
These creepy, yet beautiful, images showcase a remarkable marine sculpture park dedicated to conservation.

In February, London-based Photographer Claudia Legge captured images of statues in an underwater sculpture park. captured images of the statues inside MUSA, a giant underwater sculpture park in the waters surrounding Cancun, Isla Mujeres and Punta Nizuc in Mexico.

The park is filled with concrete statues built by Jason deCaires Taylor and modeled after villagers in Cancun. It exists to draw tourists away from Cancun's existing coral reefs in an effort to conserve the coral and creatures that live there, its website notes.

Legge -- who specializes in underwater photography, generally featuring nude women surrounded by gauze -- spoke to design and art website It's Nice That about choosing to photograph the sculpture park.

"It just seemed mysterious and fascinating," Legge told the outlet, calling the experience "a bit eerie." "It was very epic swimming around the sculptures."

She said shooting the sculptures was more challenging than shooting humans -- and a lot "more physical" since the artworks are located in open water.

"I'd say it was harder because you have to be very creative with your angles and composition in order to make them striking photographs," she told The Huffington Post in an email.

We'd say she succeeded.

See some of Legge's work, below:

These Gorgeous Dolly Parton Prints Will Renew Your Faith In Fan Art

$
0
0
It’s hard to imagine a public figure who's inspired more fan art than country music legend Dolly Parton. And while fan art isn't always the most eye-pleasing, that's not the case for “Tease it to Jesus," a portrait portfolio containing works from 35 printmakers.

For the project -- organized by Smokey Road Press, a letterpress, binding and design studio in Athens, Georgia -- printmakers from across the country created their own renderings inspired by the “Coat of Many Colors” singer. The works will be displayed in a debut exhibition Thursday night at Pioneer House in Knoxville, Tennessee.

The pieces are stunning and, yes, occasionally alarming.

(Story continues below)
justin
Justin Plakas, untitled. Letterpress.


rhonda
Rhonda Ratray, "All Seeing Heart." Screen print.


asuka
Asuka Ohsawa, "In Dolly We Trust." Letterpress.


Margot Ecke, the owner of Smokey Road Press, told The Huffington Post that each year, her studio organizes a portfolio project around a specific theme. This year, with the annual SGC printmaking conference taking place about 45 minutes from Parton’s namesake Dollywood theme park, she felt a Parton theme was appropriate.

“I love Dolly, and she’s really fun to draw. She’s so colorful,” Ecke explained. “I can’t think of any other icon that’s more beloved than Dolly, and it seems like everyone feels a connection to her.”

Ecke said the response to the portraits, which she’s been posting to social media and the Smokey Road Press website, has been incredibly enthusiastic. She described the experience of opening each artwork as “pure joy.”

There’s one piece in the portfolio that particularly stands out to her: "Dolly" by Maren Munoz, an artist based in Madison, Wisconsin, with whom Ecke had never previously worked.

maren
Maren Munoz, "Dolly." Screen print.


Ecke called Munoz’s print (see above) “both sensuous and grotesque” and said it displayed line work that is “aggressive and confident yet expressive, you can tell she really knows what she is doing.”

“It captures the over-the-top quality of [Parton's] features, and I can’t keep my eyes off of it,” Ecke said.

“Tease it to Jesus” will next travel to Smokey Road Press in Athens, where it will be on display beginning April 4. It will also go on display in Dallas later this year.

Meanwhile, all of the prints are for sale on Smokey Road’s website and through many of the individual artists’ websites.

View more of the "Tease it to Jesus" Parton portraits below:

sage
Sage Perrott, "Bittersweet." Screen print.


samantha
Samantha Mosby Belcher, "Beyond Compare." Relief print.


kathryn
Kathryn Polk, "Hairway to Heaven." Lithography.


lily
Lily Smith+Kirkley, untitled. Linoleum relief print.


ines
Ines Hernandez, "Dolly!" Letterpress.

'Empire' Is Showing Us A New Way To Think About Black TV Characters

$
0
0
The Fox drama "Empire" reigned supreme Wednesday evening, capping off its breakout first season with a two-hour finale whose latter half drew 17.6 million viewers, according to Associated Press reports. That's about an 18 percent jump from the show’s March 11 episode, which 14.9 million people watched. It's also the greatest number of people to watch the first-season finale of a TV drama since "Grey's Anatomy" in 2005.

Since its Jan. 7 debut, “Empire” has stirred up numerous conversations about show creators Lee Daniels and Danny Strong, and the ways in which they've addressed various topics -- some of them drawn from Daniels’ own traumatic early life -- that often go unmentioned on black television.

“’Empire’ is resisting the impulse to present the typical one-dimensional, stereotypical characters we have seen in the past around representations of African Americans,” said Robin R. Means Coleman, an author and communications professor at the University of Michigan, told The Huffington Post.

“While some have noted that its attention to ALS and being bipolar is oversimplified, and that the 'homophobia-in-the-Black-community' narrative is a bit clichéd, that fact of the matter is that ‘Empire’ is a series that is 'going there,' on these important issues," Coleman continued. "More, these discussions reside right alongside other topics that have not typically been seen in a Black series, such as IPOs.”

Even as ratings have soared over the course of the season's 12 episodes, critics have debated "Empire's" authenticity and its portrayal of African-Americans. Others have questioned whether the show is glorifying certain stereotypes that are often associated with inner-city black communities.

During a recent appearance on "Access Hollywood," Terrence Howard, who plays "Empire" patriarch Lucious Lyon, mentioned that he'd like to hear the show's characters use the n-word in the second season. Though the n-word is almost never heard on television today, it was heard on many popular black TV shows of earlier eras, including “Sanford and Son” and “The Jeffersons.”

“I believe if we’re gonna really tackle racism, if we’re gonna tackle bigotry, if we’re gonna tackle homophobia, we need to attack it dead on," Howard said on "Access Hollywood." "You don’t just sit up, you know, 'let’s give a little aspirin right here.' No, we need to take the sutures, open up the problem and reach in and grab it."

“And since [the n-word] is used in almost every conversation in most black neighborhoods, why is it that we don’t hear it on TV anymore?" he continued. "Are white people afraid of it? Did they create the word? But if this is something that we use on a daily basis, then let’s address what it really means.”

Should a popular a sitcom such as “Empire” incorporate the usage of the n-word in an effort to combat racism and maintain authenticity within the black community? According to a highly unscientific poll of HuffPost readers, the answer is no by a margin of almost 3 to 1.

“We are supposed to be in such progressive times as a nation and a culture, why do we have to retread to something that represents such a heinous part of our history,” the entertainment journalist Karu F. Daniels told HuffPost in an email.

“Why does a fictitious prime time soap opera have to be ‘that authentic’?" Daniels went on. "I think enough slurs have been used. They don't need any more. It's not a reality show. And it's not cable. We are talking about a primetime soap opera right? There are black people on ‘The Young & The Restless’ and ‘The Bold & The Beautiful’ -- some from humble backgrounds -- they don't use the n-word.”

Besides "Empire's" eagerness to tackle explosive topics, another key part of the show's success has been Taraji P. Henson, who plays Lucious's ex-wife, Cookie. Henson has gained a cult following for her work on "Empire," which continues in the lineage of Shonda Rhimes' force-of-nature black leading ladies on “Scandal” and “How To Get Away With Murder." In fact, Strong recently entertained the idea of having "Scandal's" Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) show up on a future episode of “Empire.”

“I think television viewing audiences are seeing a surge in strong black female lead characters that haven't been seen for years on primetime television dramas. And that's a good thing,” Daniels told HuffPost. “Shows such as ‘Scandal’ and ‘Empire’ and even ‘Tyler Perry Presents The Haves And The Have Nots’ are infectious, over-the-top soap operas that an underserved and virtually ignored demographic gravitate towards because they walk in the door knowing that it's fictitious entertainment as opposed to the over-produced, scripted schlock that reality TV has become.”

“Cookie represents a hood-rat with a heart of gold who made many sacrifices to do what she thinks is right," Daniels continued. "She's not perfect and polished and doesn't try to be. But she, surprisingly, can be the moral center of the show.”

“Olivia is more aspirational to some. She has the pedigree and all of the sophistication we haven't seen in primetime television since Diahann Carroll was on ‘Dynasty’ 30 years ago," he added. "But she is flawed when it comes to matters of the heart, having an affair with a married man. And because of those types of imperfections, it humanizes her in a way that is relatable to many.”

Poet Jane Hirshfield On How To Read Poetry And Restore 'Amazement'

$
0
0
Jane Hirshfield has written eight volumes of award-winning poetry -- she just published a new collection, entitled The Beauty: Poems -- and is currently a chancellor of the American Academy of Poets, so few are more well-positioned to demystify poetry for readers. In her new essay collection, Ten Windows: How Great Poems Transform the World, Hirshfield continues a prose exploration of the poetic form commenced in her earlier collection Nine Gates: Entering the Mind of Poetry.

To understand poetry may be as simple as experiencing the beauty of a finely wrought verse -- for example, you can read Hirshfield’s stunning “Fado” here. But as the art of the poem grows less familiar to readers, who feel less sure of what poetry is meant to achieve and how they’re meant to experience it, Hirshfield’s thoughtful explication is vital. She reveals to us what poetry truly is, and what it can offer us. Below, Jane Hirshfield talks about the best-kept secrets of poetry -- plus, an excerpt from Ten Windows:

What do you think poetry offers that other mediums don’t?
Poetry is perhaps the instrument able to play more parts of a life at once. It draws from the feelings and from the mind, from this moment’s physical heft and physical fragrance, from one person’s tilt of memory and the world’s shared stories, from biology, physics, cooking, from language’s own hidden knowledge and from music itself. Poems’ statements are multiple, kaleidoscopic. In the registries of grief, they show us that beauty still exists. Amid happiness, they remind us of longing and transience. The tug-of-wars and flood-plain meanderings of poems aren’t contrariness or a way of ducking. The call-and-response of form isn’t arbitrary or ornamental. Poems offer ways to say a larger yes to what in our lives is not answerable by the straightforward and simple. I mean by that almost any moment of any day, if you look closely.

What led you to fall in love with poetry?
The question might equally be, why do some people lose their love of it? All who are small and new to words love poems, their giddy sound-and-sense-making. That’s why toddlers babble happily and why lullabies put babies to sleep. Look at the words of lullabies, fairy tales, children’s books, though; they are chinked through with terror. “And down will come "Poems’ statements are multiple, kaleidoscopic."cradle, baby and all!” Even in infancy, poems are teaching us that terror is part of a human life, and that it’s all right to go to sleep anyhow, because some age-old singing will hold you. Whatever the darkness brings, you will survive it, as others have ... until someday you won’t. Poems include the unincludable, too, and make even that welcome. They remind that our lives are larger and more mysterious than we sometimes feel them. I needed that life raft, as a child. I still do.

What is the most important thing to do when reading a poem?
Listen, without worrying too quickly about whether you understand or not. Give yourself over to a poem the way you give yourself over to your own night dreaming, or to a beloved’s tales of the day. And then, try to listen first to a poem the way you might listen to a piece of music -- the meaning of music isn’t some note by note analysis or paraphrase, it’s to find yourself moved.

What makes a poem “good”?
You feel a poem is good if, having read it, you find yourself at its end a different person -- larger, more permeable, wilder, more awake, more informed, more saddened, more free. The specific flavor or quality of the change almost doesn’t matter, so long as the movement is toward increase rather than narrowing. Galway Kinnell once said, “The title of every good poem might be “Tenderness.” You can feel that in Whitman, in Dickinson, in Neruda, in Cavafy, in Bishop, in Basho -- read any of them, and you can’t help but feel your human fate and their human fates are shared ones. Good poems do this without simplifying our human particularity, range, and oddness. They are themselves singular, memorable, and as unmistakably real and consequential as any other event in a life.

Reading good poems, you feel yourself singular and also part of a common existence. “Common” is a word not usually thought of as praise. But one thing good poems do is take what seems ordinary and burnish it with the motions of paid attention, until its radiance and astonishment can again be seen. Doing dishes. Adding 2 + 2. Looking out a window. Existence itself is nothing if not an amazement. Good poems restore amazement. They are also, always, instruments of further discovery. They sieve from the air what isn’t yet knowable and can’t be held on a page, yet is ineradicable within us, once it’s been given.

How does reading poetry change us as people?
It makes us more permeable, more compassionate, more rigorous, and, in needed ways, smarter. I mean that in the broadest sense: more awake and alert to subtlety and connection, more open to new feelings and new understandings. Empathy with not only people but ants and trees and mountains; sound-work’s lattice, on which surprises of thought can climb; developing the capacity for abiding in the complex and multiple and open -- all these things make us smarter. I don’t, though, want to put forward some idea of poems as primarily useful. Or at least, let me say this: one way poems "Existence itself is nothing if not an amazement. Good poems restore amazement."may be useful is by showing how thin usefulness is. Animal joy, the babbling of babies to their stuffed bears, limericks, Gerard Manley Hopkins’ sonnets of praise and despair -- sometimes the dismantling of rational response is the most needed thing. So much of the illness of the contemporary world comes from living in silo-mind, fixed inside received concepts and purpose. Good poems take down the silos. They are windows flung open.

What do most people not understand well enough about poetry?
Perhaps that a poem is there, available, waiting for them when it might be needed. Poetry isn’t something difficult or dutiful, not academic, not a test. A lyric poem is at bottom an intimate speaking, the seismograph and footprints of actual life. It’s true that the poetry is the part that escapes defining and can’t be pinned down. But that’s all right. The gift is that the poem remains an amplitude that can be entered again, because the words for saying it over again are there.

Excerpted from the preface to Ten Windows:
Good art is a truing of vision, in the way a saw is trued in the saw shop, to cut more cleanly. It is also a changing of vision. Entering a good poem, a person feels, tastes, hears, thinks, and sees in altered ways. Why ask art into a life at all, if not to be transformed and enlarged by its presence and mysterious means? Some hunger for more is in us -- more range, more depth, more feeling; more associative freedom, more beauty. More perplexity and more friction of interest. More prismatic grief and unstunted delight, more longing, more darkness. More saturation and permeability in knowing our own existence as also the existence of others. More capacity to be astonished. Art adds to the sum of the lives we would have, were it possible to live without it. And by changing selves, one by one, art changes also the outer world that selves create and share.

This book continues the investigation begun in an earlier volume, Nine Gates: Entering the Mind of Poetry. The questions pursued by poems themselves are speckled, partial, and infinite. These books, though, pursue as well a single question: How do poems -- how does art -- work? Under that question, inevitably, is another: How do we? Inside the intricate clockworks of language and music, event and life, what allows and invites us to feel and know as we do, and then increase our feeling and knowing? Such a question cannot be answered. “We” are different, from one another and, moment by moment, from even ourselves. “Art,” too, is a word deceptively single of surface. Still, following this question for thirty years has given me pleasure, and some sense of approaching more nearly a destination whose center cannot ever be mapped or reached.

Excerpted from Ten Windows by Jane Hirshfield. Copyright © 2015 by Jane Hirshfield. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

How Modern Cinderella Adaptations Have Given The Tale's Outdated Feminism A Makeover

$
0
0
Even with Egyptian and European roots, Cinderella is one of American culture's most famous folktales. Decades after Mary Pickford portrayed the hapless scullery maid in 1914's silent film and Disney popularized the story in 1950's celebrated singalong, the latest adaptation topped the box office last weekend, collecting a fancy $70.1 million across North America. But in the years since "Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo" became a rite of passage for 4-year-olds everywhere, stories based on the Cinderella archetype have had to determine whether to redraft the fairytale for an increasingly feminist audience.

The new movie, "Cinderella," written by Chris Weitz ("About a Boy," "The Golden Compass") and directed by Kenneth Branagh ("Hamlet," "Thor"), borrows a note that certain other adaptations have played: the prince (Richard Madden, aka Robb Stark on "Game of Thrones") first encounters Cinderella (Lily James, aka Rose on "Downton Abbey") in everyday garb before the ball has even been announced. “She’s not waiting around for a prince to rescue her, and she’s dealing with life as best as she can,” James told The Daily Beast. But beyond that and some basic dialogue choices which lend the mistreated heroine slightly more agency, most of the plot beats are squarely aligned with the Disney movie that many now commonly associate with standard Cinderella lore. (It should be noted that this, too, is a Disney release.)

"The structure of the story responded very well to making time to allow [Cinderella] to become strong, empowered and intelligent. We make various choices to do that," Branagh told HuffPost Entertainment when asked what attracted him to the reboot. The director said his "Cinderella" shows "who she was, where she was born and then [provides] a chance to see a relationship with the prince develop. So, it was about the excitement of reimagining that character and sort of turning this tale on its head from the inside out."

Transforming the fairytale "from the inside out" is not a novel notion, even if some adaptations have lived up to that objective more than others. The 1997 television movie that updated Rodgers & Hammerstein's 1957 musical -- itself a TV production that first starred Julie Andrews and then, in a reboot eight years later, Lesley Ann Warren -- also finds the prince (Paolo Montalban) taking an interest in a plainly dressed Cinderella (Brandy Norwood) ahead of the ball. Later, when the wicked stepmother (Bernadette Peters) declares a woman should hide her worst qualities until after her wedding, Cinderella protests, saying a suitor should appreciate her for who she is.



Robert Freedman, who adapted the musical for ABC's Wonderful World of Disney, said there was a conscious decision to deconstruct what young boys and girls see in outdated Cinderella stories. "We didn’t want the message to be 'just wait to be rescued,'" Freedman said to The Huffington Post. That applies to both Cinderella, who pines for life away from her vicious stepsisters, and the prince, who doesn't want to be married off to the woman of his father's choosing.

That's in contrast to 2004's "A Cinderella Story," the critically reviled but lucrative teen rom-com starring Hilary Duff and Chad Michael Murray. Leigh Dunlap wrote the script, which went nowhere at first because, as she recalls, there were "two or three" other Cinderella adaptations being shopped around Hollywood at the same time. It wasn't until director Mark Rosman recruited Duff, with whom he'd worked on "Lizzie McGuire," that the script underwent a bidding war. Warner Bros. won and it immediately went into preproduction.

Dunlap says feminist updates are inevitable today. To understand why, just read Peggy Orenstein's 2006 New York Times essay, "What’s Wrong With Cinderella?," or her 2011 book Cinderella Ate My Daughter. But when Dunlap wrote "A Cinderella Story" in 2003, there was nary a mention of needing to revise the classic structure. Dunlap used the plot fixtures "trapped" in her head to craft a movie about a high school outcast who develops a relationship with the school's unhappy quarterback after the two bond via anonymous online chats.

In Dunlap's eyes, Cinderella is the original makeover fable. Today, we see sprinklings of that archetype everywhere, as NPR's Linda Holmes pointed out in her comprehensive look at the story's evolution. George Bernard Shaw's popular 1913 play "Pygmalion," in which Henry Higgins makes a bet that he can train the threadbare Eliza Doolittle to pass as a duchess, stems from a Greek myth with roots in Ovid. That play became the source for 1964 Best Picture winner "My Fair Lady," as well as inspiration for the teen rom-coms "She's All That" and "The Duff." With slightly different twists, it also arguably contributed to 1990's "Pretty Woman," itself a source of endless debate about feminist values. Detractors slam what they see as a tale of white-male greed paraded out with rom-com conventions.

J.F. Lawton initially wrote "Pretty Woman" as a gritty drama called "$3,000" -- a reference to the money we now see Edward Lewis (Richard Gere) pay Vivian Ward (Julia Roberts) for a week's worth of escorting. Rather than channel Cinderella, Lawton structured "Pretty Woman" similarly to Hal Ashby's "The Last Detail," in which a miserable sailor unresistant toward his prison sentence is shown a fun time and no longer desires incarceration. Walt Disney Studios snatched up the script. After recruiting Garry Marshall to direct because he'd helped to lighten the glum novel Beaches as a Bette Midler vehicle, then-president Jeffrey Katzenberg asked that "$3,000" become a romantic comedy. Lawton said numerous discussions ensued regarding the feminist subtext of a wealthy businessman swooping up a sex worker from the street and transforming her into a Rodeo Drive-shopping, snail-eating glamour shot.

pretty woman scene 1990

Lawton said, for example, that he and Marshall pushed back when executives told them it wasn't necessary for Vivian to say at the end that she planned to finish high school. It's one of multiple steps they took to protect Vivian's self-determination. One of the chief complaints Lawton has heard since the movie opened concerns the lack of morality tale -- specifically, that Vivian is not punished for her supposed sexual deviance. But for Lawton, "Pretty Woman" is not as much of a Cinderella yarn as some of its criticism implies.

"I think we told the right story because what we said is, 'This guy accepts her for who she is,'" Lawton said. "He doesn’t care about her past. A lot of stories that talk about prostitution always condemn the woman for having done that. Vivian doesn’t come at the end and say, 'Oh, I’m sorry for what I did, I realize everything I did was wrong.' We’ve gotten both praise and criticism from feminists, and a lot of people see it as a materialistic thing. On one level, you could say there’s money involved, but she’s the same person at the end that she was at the beginning. If you look at it beat for beat, he doesn’t change her."

Still, Lawton, who is collaborating with Marshall on a "Pretty Woman" stage musical, acknowledges that the movie probably wouldn't be made today. He noted "tremendous hesitation" after pitching a similar script in 2000, even though "every week on TV a hooker gets murdered."

If any movie has satisfied the contemporary demands placed on the Cinderella folktale, it's 1998's acclaimed "Ever After," starring Drew Barrymore as an empowered heroine who debates class structure, quotes Thomas More and refutes any dependence on the prospect of a royal savior. You'll still find balls, glass slippers and a fairy godmother (or godfather, rather), but the core themes have been stripped away. "Into the Woods," the Stephen Sondheim musical that became an Oscar-nominated film, also inverts the antiquated messages, with Cinderella deciding that life at the palace isn't so thrilling after all.

"Every generation is going to have its own Cinderella story, whether it be something like 'Pretty Woman' or whether it’s a retelling of the actual Cinderella myth," Freedman said. "There are very strong myths that young girls and young boys have grown up with for centuries that help shape the way they perceive themselves and their place in the world. Some of those myths have held them back, particularly women, or have given young boys expectations about what it is to be a man that is not really the whole story of what it is to be a man. I think the myths still have power and you have to harness that power while at the same time considering what message you’re sending to young people today and what you want them to get out of the story."

What Bacteria And Smell Have To Do With Feminism Today

$
0
0
kitchen





Can you imagine what's it like to hand-collect bacterial specimens from 100 of your closest female friends and colleagues? According to Anicka Yi, the intrepid artist behind a new installation at New York's Kitchen space, it requires a lot of legwork, q-tips and ziplock bags, plus a desire to turn field reporter/mad scientist on your peers.

For her project "You Can Call Me F," she successfully gathered samples from 100 women, as part of a larger effort to draw a parallel between the fear of contagion and the unease with which some view feminism and its ability to redirect power. That might seem like a big leap, from bacteria to banging down the doors of patriarchy. That's because unpacking Yi's project is hard work, so it's best to start with the basics.

you
Anicka Yi, Grabbing At Newer Vegetables, 2015, Plexiglas, agar, female bacteria, fungus, 84.5 x 24.5 inches, Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal


Korean-born, American-based Yi is currently in residence at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she's been working with synthetic biologists in the hopes of creating a superbacterium. That's where the 100 samples come in. Yi and her MIT collaborators, Tal Danino and Patrick Hickey, are engineering the superbacterium from the biological information she gathered. That superbacterium is what's producing a "pretty pungent" odor at the Kitchen.

The smell -- Yi also described it, in a phone call with The Huffington Post, as "a little funky" -- is but one sensual layer in an installation chock-full of visual cues that recall viruses, hygiene and the gritty nuances of encroaching ecosystems. At the Kitchen, her specimens sit inside plastic quarantine tents stuffed next to incubating lizard eggs, bowls of agar and dried shrimp. The ephemera helps build a laboratory of paranoia, an environment meant to mimic the passing fright one may just as easily attach to an Ebola outbreak as the growing organization of women's networks.

four
Anicka Yi, Detail of Fontenelle, 2015, Vinyl, steel pipes, motorcycle helmet, scent diffuser, glass container, water, kombucha, scoby leather, nylon string, worklight, 122 x 78 x 50 inches, Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal


"All the women [who gave samples] are in my professional network," Yi explained. "They are artists and curators and theorists and critics and collectors. These are the people I come into contact with on a day-to-day basis. Since the premise [of the project] is that a virus could start with any one person, I had to have come into contact with these women over the course of three to six months. I would have had body contact, have been in the same room or at the same party. I really wanted to create the essence that we are physically together, exchanging energy and senses. Feminism -- it's all in the air."

Aside from the specimens, another fleeting smell lingers in "You Can Call Me F." It's subtle, but not for lack of trying. You see the odor was gleaned from the inside of one of Larry Gagosian's galleries in New York City, a network of art havens Yi refers to as "representative of the apex of patriarchy." The smell is actually more a lack of smell, what Yi bottles up as a combination of cleaning products and anxiety. While you might not notice it, its inclusion in the show plays a major roll. Smell, according to Yi, is part of a greater value system.

"In our society, in the West, we associate power with no smell. We don’t want to think of the President of the United States or the IMF as having a smell. Finance and government are associated with a lack of smell," Yi asserts. "When something is very pungent and funky in our society, [it is often associated with] someone who is uneducated or impoverished or an immigrant. I really wanted to foreground these prejudices. What are these smells? How do we attribute value to these kinds of smells? It comes down to hygiene and discomfort, along the lines of gender and ethnicity."

one
Anicka Yi, You Can Call Me F installation view, 2015


In another life, Yi had entertained a career in perfumery, but the art world is where she took root. Like any other field, it has its problems. "There is a feeling one encounters as a female artist, a feeling I felt about a year ago. I started noticing very obvious things that other male counterparts do -- they really organize, run in packs, and are there to boost each other. There’s a sort of an instinct that males have, a survival instinct. 'I can advance if we advance each other.' Which creates a solid power structure. I noticed that women don’t do that. We tend to abandon the group, for a lot of different reasons."

Yi's work isn't meant to solve the problem outlined above. She notes self-organization and support systems are popping up all around her, in which women are choosing not to assimilate but to form packs within the "giant power petri dish" of art galleries. A more general fear of feminism persists in Western society though. And if anything, Yi believes her project just brings up more questions, rather than resolutions, about the future of women and, well, smells.

"There are so many misconceptions about smell," she concludes. "It’s all purely subjective, and we have no real vocabulary around it. In other cultures, they have hundreds of words to describe smells. We don’t have a consensus. It’s a very undeveloped area."

five
Anicka Yi, Detail of Your Hand Feels Like a Pillow That's Been Microwaved, 2015. Vinyl, steel pipes, metal bowls, beeswax, dried shrimp, glycerin soap, hair gel, metal pins, seaweed, foam, plasticine, pigment powder, worklight, 122 x 78 x 50 inches, Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal


Going forward, Yi has ambitions of starting a smell symposium, to bring together the minds -- "noses," she joked -- of the art and science fields, feasibly highlighting the different ways in which the various experts work. While the scientists she's surrounded by at MIT strive to prove hypotheses in study, Yi relishes the interdisciplinary flexibility of art making, and her world's willingness to fail. "It’s a medium for me, failure. I’m prepared for failure. I set out with that in mind."

And because Yi's installation aims to connect a dense configuration of dots in as many ways as it can, the title of the show hides another association. The "F" in "You Can Call Me F" -- a sly nod to the heightened thriller excitement of classic novels like V for Vendetta -- can stand for anything. "Female. Fungus. Failure. You name it."

"You Can Call Me F" will be on view at the Kitchen until April 11, 2015.

two
Anicka Yi, You Can Call Me F installation view, 2015


'Insurgent' Author Veronica Roth Opens Up About Complicated Female Characters

$
0
0
"The Divergent Series: Insurgent" protagonist Tris Prior (Shailene Woodley) is physically strong, but she's not a stock "strong female character." Like actual human beings, she's a lot of different things at once -- tough and vulnerable, kind and cruel. In prep for today's release of the film -- the second in the "Divergent" book trilogy turned four-part blockbuster franchise -- The Huffington Post got on the phone with author Veronica Roth to talk about its "complicated, morally ambiguous" women, her recently announced upcoming young adult series, and the literary scene's contempt for genre fiction. (Mild "Insurgent" spoilers are ahead.)

shailenewoodleyglass

The gender dynamics in the "Divergent" series are so much more realistic than those we're used to seeing in big blockbusters. Were you consciously trying to push up against stereotypes when you conceived the world?
I don't know if it was something in my head everyday while I was writing. But I am, of course, interested in seeing a wide variety of representations of women, and I find it fascinating to write about. It's definitely something that's important to me. I remember at a certain point in "Insurgent," when I was writing, thinking, like, "There are no men in this scene, and I love that." Not that I don't find men interesting to write about. But just that Tris was coming up against these kind of complicated, morally ambiguous people in her life. It was really exciting to write.

Yeah, we have to have the Bechdel Test to measure whether two women in a film speak about something other than men, because it's so rare. But to have scenes between Tris and Janine, or between Tris and Evelyn -- it's, like, oh, complicated realistic women who are the stars of the books and films.
It's especially wonderful to see it in the movie. Because it's Naomi Watts [as Evelyn] and Shailene Woodley. And then it's Kate Winslett [as Janine] and Shailene Woodley. Kate Winslett and Naomi Watts. Octavia Spencer [as Johanna] and Shailene Woodley. It's just like really hugely talented women and they are talking about things other than romance for extended periods. It's great.

You started working on the series when you were an undergrad in the creative writing program at Northwestern. College writing scenes are notoriously snobby toward genre, or any fiction that's not in the kind of traditional MFA program style. How was your work treated by your classmates and professors?
Well, I kept pretty quiet about what I was writing because of that stigma. I didn't even give them a chance -- I don't think I was terribly fair to my classmates in that way. Because some of the things that my classmates wrote about -- I remember one wrote a Western, and another one wrote a post-apocalyptic thing. So I think they were really receptive to genre fiction. But I still kept it under wraps, like "Ah, I'm afraid." What I wrote for the program was like realistic literary fiction.

So you kind of lived a double literary life.
Yeah! I had my alter ego. By day, literary writer. By night ...

Do you ever want to pursue that literary fiction writing avenue?
I think what I'm more focused on is applying the things I learned in that program to become a better writer generally, and do the genre fiction that I love. Nothing is better than when people are able to successfully marry those two things. One great example is Alaya Dawn Johnson who wrote The Summer Prince. God, that book is amazing. And she's such a great writer. And it's also sci-fi.

Why do you think that genre fiction or YA fiction is kind of viewed as less serious in the lit community?
There are a lot of theories about that -- I'm not sure. It's kind of like the same way that dramatic movies always win Oscars and not comedies, or that comedic actors are not seen as good actors until they do a dramatic role. I'm not sure why we do that. Negative emotions are not the only emotions that we have, and focusing on them to the exclusion of joy and humor and all those things is limiting our human experience in a really significant way.

I feel that way also about the way people reject young adult fiction out of hand. Like, are you really so hostile toward your youth that you can't understand how these struggles are universal? How you continue to have them as an adult, and how important it would have been for you to read something powerful at that age? I don't understand that hostility at all.

I'm also always confused by that hostility because people who feel that way were probably affected by fiction aimed at young people in their youth. But as soon as they grow up they're no longer willing to consider it.
Right, and a lot of the time I see that with people who aren't terribly compassionate towards their teenage selves. They're like, "Oh I was an idiot at that age." Like, no you weren't. You were young and you were still developing. It's okay that you said stupid things. Or that you made bad decisions. That's all right. And you're still making bad decisions now, I guarantee! You're a human being.

I was excited to see your new series announced. When you wrote the Divergent books you were so close to these teenage struggles we've been talking about just because you were so young. Are you finding it different to go back and explore young people's identity questions when you're a little more sure of your life path?
I think I do have to sometimes remind myself that maybe at that age I wouldn't have made this or that choice in that situation. I really try to focus on the character and what they've been through in their life and what they have yet to learn -- as opposed to thinking of them as kind of emblematic of a particular age -- and I think that helps a lot. But it is something that I think I keep in mind a little more than I used to, just making sure that I'm faithfully representing people of that age instead of being like, "You should be more grown up!" towards my characters.

What made you decide to write your next series from the point of view of a male protagonist?
Well, even though the pitch kind of focuses on one character, there are a few prominent characters in the book. So it's not just about him. But, I don't know. It's just a character that I've known for a while. I've been mulling it over for a long time. I'm not sure exactly why, he's just the one in my brain.

The series explores themes of revenge and redemption. I know you've had an interest in theology and I wondered if there was a connection between that interest and the theme of the series.
You know, if it's there, it's not really that conscious. I think the revenge part was really interesting to me, and it's especially opposed to my beliefs about morality. You know, revenge is the opposite of what I am for. But I think that's especially compelling because, kind of like we've been talking about, writing about complex characters who make decisions that you don't necessarily agree with is just really interesting. And finding ways to be sympathetic to those characters even though they're doing bad things -- or things that you think are bad -- it encourages compassion and empathy, and I like it.

You once said that one of Tris's major flaws was that sometimes she had a lack of compassion. Is she someone who believes in revenge?
I feel like she might, yeah.

That's kind of a big part of "Insurgent," about whether or not she's going to kill Janine.
I think it's definitely something that she, in particular, would question. But she's always got her parents in her head, telling her what's right and what's wrong. And I think that overrules her kind of crueler or more blood-thirsty aspects. She's always hearing them and she eventually listens. I think that when I was writing Insurgent, I knew that, like, parents conquer all somehow. Well, you know, for her in particular cause they sort of crystallize themselves as these perfect beings in her mind at the moment that they die. So that's something that she struggles with throughout the series.

Is it strange at all for you to occupy this kind of liminal space between author and celebrity?
[Laughs] I honestly don't think about it. The reason I laugh is because I cannot possibly think of myself that way. And I feel like you're not actually a celebrity until people recongize you in public and that doesn't happen. Which is great. But, you know it is an interesting time that we're living in right now because authors are more accessible than ever with Twitter and Tumblr, and all those things so people feel like they know you. And in a way, it has its challenges but I've really liked the way it shortens the distance between me and my readers. If we're like obsessively fan girling over "Harry Potter," then they know they're not that different from I am and I'm not that different from them. So we get to have a more sincere relationship, which is really great.

I know you have a big Twitter presence. Have you made any particularly impactful connections?
I think -- it sounds kind of silly -- but when we just have inside jokes. Like I tweeted a couple months ago about like, "Veronica is gone, only Blob remains," cause I was like wrapped up in blankets and jammies for like five days in a row. And I still have followers on Twitter who ask me how Blob is doing. I think that makes social media feel really fun and not like such a harsh place.




Are you fans of any new YA series that you think we should keep our eyes on?
Yeah! I am a greatly rabid fan girl of many series. Shadow and Bone [the Grisha trilogy] by Leigh Bardugo, and she's got a companion novel coming out called Six of Crows that's in the same world but it's not the same characters. And I'm just finishing up Daughter of Smoke and Bone [by Laini Taylor], those books are really excellent. Also, it's not a series but Alaya Dawn Johnson, Love is the Drug is out now, and I'm excited about reading that too. She's someone to keep an eye on. I think she's brilliant.

This interview has been condensed and edited.

What Alan Cumming Likes Most About Being 50 (VIDEO)

$
0
0
It's hard to imagine someone other than Alan Cumming playing all the roles in "Macbeth," earning multiple Emmy nods for "The Good Wife" and starring in the current Broadway revival of "Cabaret," but as he tells it, he could have left fame behind 10 years ago -- and possibly never gotten the chance to take on those roles.

When Cumming sat down with the web series #OWNSHOW, he opened up about his mindset in the various decades of his life, including the time when he felt ready to walk away from public eye. That attitude stands in stark contrast with Cumming's mindset in his 30s, which is when he says he was eager to emerge as an actor and make a name for himself.

"Just before I was 30, I got divorced, and so I've had this kind of bad -- really bad -- time and breakdown," he says. "So, when I was 30, I was kind of like, 'Okay, I'm ready. I'm all sorted out now. I've made some changes.'"

During that decade, Cumming won multiple awards for his theater work, including a Tony, and starred in films alongside the likes of Tom Cruise ("Eyes Wide Shut") and Gwyneth Paltrow ("Emma"). His career was a great success, but when the actor turned 40, he began to rethink his chosen path.

"My big sad thing when I was 40 was that I was like, 'I don't want to be famous anymore,'" he admits. "That was my little flip at 40."

Cumming, of course, chose not to leave acting behind. Now 50 years old, he explains why this latest decade is truly something special.

"At 50, I just actually feel really great," he says. "It's a great age because… I'm still as active in life as I've ever been, but I also feel I have wisdom because I've had all these experiences. I really like that combo."

More from #OWNSHOW



Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter

The Unlikely Story Of An Artist, A Baby Doll And The Promise Of Motherhood

$
0
0
Upon first glance, the following photograph appears innocent enough -- a mother holding her child in her lap. However, with a bit more investigation, the viewer sees that the child is not a child at all. It's a hyperrealistic doll, often referred to as a "Reborn" by a tight subculture of individuals, drawn to the dolls for various reasons, appropriately dubbed Reborners.

The woman holding it is artist and photographer Jamie Diamond, who can be seen dressed in her own mother's clothes. The image isn't such a normal photograph anymore.

doll

In her series "I Promise to be a Good Mother," Diamond reenacts specific childhood moments, playing the role of her own mom. "The project was inspired by and named after a diary I kept as a girl that documented the relationship with my own mother, written as a kind of rule sheet for later life," Diamond explained to The Huffington Post. "I started staging specific memories from my childhood, acting out recalled events and behaviors. Eventually the performance evolved into an exploration of the complexities surrounding the paradox of the mother/child relationship, investigating both its vernacular and art historical depictions, while mimicking and ignoring the traditional visual signifiers of motherhood."

For her co-subject, Diamond enlisted a Reborn doll by the name of Annabelle. The dolls sell for around $500 online -- though some go for as much as $10,000. The reasons for owning such a doll are varied, from coping with empty-nest syndrome, a miscarriage or loss of a child, to alleviating stress with Alzheimer's and dementia patients.

play

In another series titled "Mother Love," Diamond dove deeper into this world, ingratiating herself into the subculture of Reborners. She created dolls in her studio and set-up an eBay store called Bitten Apple Nursery. Before selling the dolls, she would snap their portraits. "Working with the Reborn community has allowed me to explore the grey area between reality and artifice where relationships are constructed with inanimate objects, between human and doll, artist and artwork, uncanny and real," Diamond says in her statement. "I have been engaged with this community now for four years and while working and learning from these women, I’ve become fascinated by the fiction and performance at the core of their practice and the art making that supports their fantasy."

With the images featured here, Diamond was more concerned with her own experience of childhood and motherhood, as well as the societal pressures and anxieties associated with the maternal lifestyle. "I was exploring the idea and representation of motherhood, the stereotypes and clichés as well as the fears and contradictions I feel about becoming a mother, about being a good mother, as well as the stigma attached to being an artist and a mother. So in the same way a method actor develops a character, I started to investigate the role from multiple perspectives, beginning with the view from my childhood."

mam

Diamond's images blur the line between the fantastical and the real, questioning whether immaterial manifestations of motherhood can hold as much power as the so-called real thing. The images are at once uncanny and nostalgic, mirroring how our memories tend to mutate the more we recall them. Like Cindy Sherman on maternity leave, Diamond shows that there is room for complexity in the most cozy of domestic spaces, illuminating how our desires and fears inform the roles we play and those we enlist to help us.

See Diamond's reconstructed childhood below and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Russell Simmons Set To Celebrate Three Generations Of Hip-Hop In New Broadway Musical

$
0
0
NEW YORK (AP) -- Music mogul Russell Simmons is producing a brand new stage musical that will celebrate three generations of hip-hop, from Run DMC to Kanye West.

Simmons said Thursday that "The Scenario" will feature an original story written by author and hip-hop historian Dan Charnas, author of "The Big Payback: The History of the Business of Hip-Hop." He's aiming to premiere it in New York City in late 2016.

"People will sing along and leave happy," Simmons said. "So many of these songs will reach everybody in the audience. That almost never happens."

Simmons, who won a 2003 Tony for producing "Russell Simmons Def Poetry Jam," said the new musical will have a love story, contain a fight-the-power element and be a "celebration of hip-hop." It's still being written and song selection will likely be a tough task.

"There are so many great songs!" he said. "Do I need something from Kurtis Blow? From Drake? I just don't know. Jay-Z? LL Cool J?"

Simmons was one of the first players in the burgeoning hip hop scene in the 1980s. He is co-founder of the pioneering Def Jam Recordings record label, which has represented such artists like the Beastie Boys, Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez, LL Cool J and Kanye West. And Simmons also created the Def Comedy franchise.

Jukebox musicals have been made with punk songs, hair metal, Abba songs and Carole King, but rap and hip-hop music has yet to produce a Broadway hit. "Holler If Ya Hear Me," a rap musical that used over 20 Tupac Shakur songs, closed last year after less than two months.

Though Simmons never saw "Holler If Ya Hear Me," he said he didn't consider it to be "a celebration of hip-hop" and "I don't see any way in the word to compare what I want to do with what they did."

He said "The Scenario" will lean more toward a celebration of the music of hip-hop than social commentary, although "you can't help but mention that it did more to integrate America than any other pop cultural phenomenon."

The new musical will be produced by Simmons; Def Pictures/Jake Stein; Big Block/Scott Prisand, Scott Benson, Tom Pellegrini and Jamie Bendell; Brian Sher and Stella Bulichnikov.

Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images