Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Phillips de Pury London Auction Design Catalogue online now!






Phillips de Pury & Company is pleased
to announce our upcoming auction of Design to be held in London on
25 September 2008 at 2pm.



Viewing 17 - 25 September

Enquiries +44 20 7318 4014

Catalogues
+44 20 7318 4039 / +1 212 940 1240


Please view the Design catalogue online.

To order the catalogue, please visit www.phillipsdepury.com or
call +1 212 940 1240.


Phillips de Pury & Company
Howick Place London SW1P 1BB



Photo Credit:
ALAN DEMPSEY AND ALVIN HUANG
'[C]space DRL TEN' pavilion, 2008

Monday, September 15, 2008

Brazilian Designer F. AKASAKA in SOMA and Black Book's September 2008 Fall Issue










F. AKASAKA

F.AKASAKA ◦ rua josé maria lisboa 838 ◦ são paulo ◦ brasil ◦ 01423-001 ◦ T +55 (11) 3057 3565 ◦ F +55 (11) 3885 2609
fakasaka@fakasaka.com www.fakasaka.com

Ghettogloss presents "Super Plush" by Mr. Funky, Sept. 25, 2008



For immediate release:

Ghettogloss has finally gone soft.
but it's only for Mr. Funky...

Ghettogloss presents
Super Plush by Mr Funky
Opening Reception
Thursday, September 25, 2008
7pm to Midnight


Join the Ghettogloss girls and Mr. Funky for the Super Plush art opening at Ghettogloss.

Featuring 22 artists, all equally adorable, in a group show of soft art --
soft sculptures, plush dolls, animals, monsters, robots galore--
all hand-sewn, knit, crocheted or glued with the kind of love that makes you just want to squeeze it.

Come love Mr. Funky at Ghettogloss in the Super Plush opening, Thursday September 25th.

Cocktails will be served.
Beats by DJ Lance Rock.

Super Plush will be on exhibit through October 2, 2008.

All press inquiries contact Fiora/Jessica at 323 912 0008
or ghettogloss@ghettogloss.com

Source: Jessica @ Ghettogloss

'Earth From Above' Makes NYC Debut In May 2009

Earth From Above

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Earth From Above, OUTDOOR EXHIBITION OF YANN ARTHUS-BERTRAND'S AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY,TO MAKE NEW YORK CITY DEBUT IN MAY 2009

Art installation with environmental message will travel to San Francisco and Los Angeles in 2010



New York, NY (September 11, 2008) – Capping a historic summer of public art exhibits in New York City, organizers today announced plans for the May 2009 New York City premiere of Earth From Above, an outdoor exhibition of large-scale aerial photographs by renowned French photographer and environmentalist Yann Arthus-Bertrand.

The free, eight-week exhibition will take place at the World Financial Center Plaza and along the Battery Park City Esplanade from May 1, 2009 to June 28, 2009. The event is expected to draw more than two million to the Battery Park City area over the course of two months. Picture Earth, the event's U.S. producer, will then bring the exhibit to San Francisco and Los Angeles in 2010.

"This summer, we are seeing that New Yorkers and tourists are hungry for outdoor experiences that surprise, inspire, and engage," said Chantal Buard, creative director and co-founder of Picture Earth. "We believe Earth From Above, with its breathtaking photos and powerful call-to-action, will draw even larger audiences. We are thrilled to bring Yann's extraordinary work and message to American audiences."

Since its 2000 premiere, Earth From Above has inspired more than 130 million people in over 120 cities throughout the world, including London, Tokyo, Beirut, Sydney, Mexico City, and Reykjavik. Born from Arthus-Bertrand's book, Earth From Above, which has sold more than 3 million copies in over 21 languages worldwide, the exhibit is recognized as one of the most influential environmental art events of the 21st century.

The exhibition was created by Arthus-Bertrand both to illuminate Earth's beauty and fragility, and inspire audiences to care for the planet and its resources. Its centerpiece is over 150 4-ft. by 6-ft.aerial photographs that capture the planet in astonishing, unexpected and often abstract ways. Each photo is accompanied by captions that link the image to the environmental and social issues at stake.

"The timing could not be better to bring Earth From Above to New York City," said Arthus-Bertrand. "People are eager now more than ever to get involved and play a greater role in the future of our planet, and I believe Earth From Above can be the catalyst that inspires them to take action." He continues, "When we see the beauty of our world, we feel emotion. And emotion brings reflection."

To further raise awareness and motivate audiences to support sustainable living and development, the exhibit will also feature an "inspiration" pavilion, a walkable world map, and special educational programs.


About Earth From Above
Earth From Above is a platform for people who want to move the world toward a sustainable future. As a brand, Earth From Above includes experiences and content for the growing community of consumers, businesses, educational institutions, non-profits, and municipalities committed to reaching this shared goal.


Originally underwritten by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Earth From Above, the live event, is a large-scale, public art exhibition born from Earth From Above, Yann Arthus-Bertrand's best-selling, illustrated coffee table book. Worldwide, Earth From Above airs as a TV series, and can be found as a layer on Google® Earth. In 2008, it will launch as an online community portal in the United States (earthfromaboveusa.com). "Home," a feature documentary inspired by Earth From Above, produced by Luc Besson and financed by Francois Pinault, will premiere worldwide on June 5, 2009.

About Picture Earth
Picture Earth LLC is an eco-experiential and media company co-founded by Chantal Buard and Sivan Schlecter in 2006 to help launch Earth From Above, Yann Arthus-Bertrand's global call-to-action for sustainability with the American public. Picture Earth LLC educational products include Earth From Above live events, such as the critically acclaimed, public art exhibition, website and online community, video content, and poster kit program. Picture Earth partners with Matter of Trust, a 501(c)(3) public charity and fiscal agent. Contribution checks should be made out to Matter of Trust for Earth From Above-USA, and will help fund future exhibitions nationwide. For more information about corporate sponsorship and underwriting, visit earthfromaboveusa.com.


PRESS CONTACT:

Patrick Kowalczyk (patrick@pkpr.com)

Scott Piro (scott@pkpr.com)

PKPR, 212.627.8098

Press Release and Imagery courtesy of Sivan Schlecter @ Picture Earth.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

The Art of Menswear: Dior Homme Spring/Summer 2009





Collection: Dior Homme SS09
Designer: Kris van Assche
Website: www.diorhomme.com

New head designer at Dior Homme, Kris Van Assche, took references from the early days of Andy Warhol's Interview magazine and proved to be much successful. View the clip below to see the show in its entirety.



Images courtesy of design scene/the blog.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

The Art of Runway: Diane von Furstenberg Spring '09

The Art of the Black Model: Sessilee Lopez

Enjoy this video courtesy of NY Post featuring up-and-coming model Sessilee Lopez. You are granted a sneak peek into the everyday life of this everyday model. Please understand and digest Sessilee's bone structure; the only other individuals with cheekbones like hers are crackheads!

Monday, September 8, 2008

The Art of the Black Models: Chanel Iman

Chanel Iman is America's Next Top Model!

Thursday, September 4, 2008

The Art of Home Decor: Vincent Darre for Maison Darre



Longtime fixture of the European fashion scene which include stints at Prada, Fendi, Chanel, Moschino and Emanuel Ungaro, Vincent Darre has bravely branched out into the world of home decor. Maison Darre, located in Paris's First Arrondissement, houses such objects as wallpapers, rugs, furniture and limited-edition pieces that make this space seem more like a house than a gallery. "I like to think of it as a chaotic and surrealistic laboratory, close in spirit to the Wiener Werkstatte, " he says. "Every piece is numbered, and my artist friends will collaborate on special pieces for this metaphysical place."

32, rue du Mont Thabor; 011-33-1-42-60-27-97

1968: THEN and NOW-Gulf & Western Gallery, Tisch School of the Arts



Organized by Deborah Willis, chair of the Department of Photography and Imaging @ Tisch School of the Arts, this exhibit features photographs, paintings, letters and video installations of past and present. Artists such as Emma Amos, Thulani Davis, Jamel Shabazz, Hank Willis Thomas, Carrie Mae Weems and others as they explore social movements and their continuing effect four decades later. The information is listed below for your viewing pleasure. This exhibit is on view from September 2-November 22, 2008.

The exhibition will be on view in the Gulf + Western Gallery and in the 8th floor gallery of the Tisch School of the Arts Department of Photography & Imaging, located at 721 Broadway (at Waverly Place). Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. weekdays and noon to 5 p.m. Saturdays. This exhibition is open to the public and admission is free. Photo ID is required when entering the building. For further information, on the exhibition or any of its accompanying events, visit photo.tisch.nyu.edu or call 212/998-1930.

Image courtesy of Tisch School of the Arts website.

DanzigerProjects: Paul Fusco's "RFK Funeral Train Rediscovered



PAUL FUSCO
RFK FUNERAL TRAIN REDISCOVERED
SEPT 5 – OCT 4, 2008


In conjunction with the September publication of the Aperture book "Paul Fusco RFK" the exhibition RFK Funeral Train Rediscovered will run through October 4th.

On June 5th, 1968, less than three months after the murder of the civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles as he was campaigning for the Presidential nomination. His death shook the country to its core. To Paul Fusco and millions of other Americans it seemed to represent the end of hope.

Kennedy's body was subsequently flown to New York City for a memorial service at St. Patrick's Cathedral and then carried by train from New York to Washington D.C. for burial at Arlington. That final journey took place on June 8th – a swelteringly hot early summer day. On board the train was the Magnum photographer Paul Fusco, then a young photographer on assignment for LOOK Magazine. As the train made its progress down the eastern seaboard, hundreds of thousands of mourners came out to line the railway tracks and pay their final respects to Bobby Kennedy and all he stood for.

From inside the train, Fusco began to take pictures of the mourners – people from every section of society – black, white, rich, poor, in large groups and on their own. By Fusco's own calculation, he took approximately 2,000 pictures in the eight hours it took for the train to make the usually four-hour journey.

The resulting images are one of the most powerful and affecting series of photographs ever taken. Shot on Kodachrome film – a film with a particularly vibrant palette favored at the time by photojournalists – Fusco's pictures blend the spontaneous look of snapshots with artistic precision of the decisive moment. Each photograph carries its own weight and tells its own story, but cumulatively the series is an epic vision of American dreams dashed and the indomitability of the American spirit.

Because LOOK Magazine's bi-weekly schedule caused it to come out a week after its rival LIFE, the magazine chose to print a retrospective album of pictures of RFK rather than pictures of the funeral, and so Fusco's RFK Funeral Train photographs were relegated to the picture files. Three years later, LOOK magazine folded. Unlike LIFE, there was no infrastructure to promote or exhibit work from the archive (just as interest in the medium of photography was exploding). Fusco managed to hold on to less than two hundred of his pictures, but the rest were folded into a collection of approximately five million pictures donated by LOOK to the Library of Congress.

The photographs would have remained an editorial footnote, were it not for the efforts of Natasha Lunn, a young photo editor at Magnum, who was shown the work in 1998 and passed them on to GEORGE magazine who published the pictures to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the RFK's death. The rediscovery had begun.

The pictures were subsequently exhibited at The Photographers' Gallery in London in November 1999, and with the support of Xerox, a limited edition of 300 books were published to showcase Xerox's print on demand technology. A year later the book was reprinted as a trade hardcover with a print run of 2000, but that edition has been out of print for many years.

As director of Magnum New York in 2003 - 2004, getting to know Paul was one of the many privileges of the position. Housing the work of legendary photographers like Capa and Cartier-Bresson, the depth and quality of the Magnum archive is legendary. Yet for me, nothing was more affecting than Fusco's RFK Funeral Train pictures.

When I opened Danziger Projects in 2005, I was determined to find a fresh way to show the work and a year later, I began the process of looking at all the pictures taken on that day that Paul had in his possession. While the original book edit of 53 pictures was indeed a strong one, there were extraordinary unseen images and I proposed doing a show that mixed the greatest published and unpublished photographs into one key set.

Shortly thereafter I showed a selection of these images to Lesley Martin at Aperture and suggested that as the book was out of print, republishing a new edition might be a worthwhile project. She agreed and as Aperture's new book was nearing finalization Lesley located the over 1800 unseen pictures at the Library of Congress. This group yielded even more treasures and the set of pictures we are now exhibiting ultimately consists of pictures from the original book, unpublished pictures from the Magnum archive, and the re-discovered pictures from the Library of Congress. (Aperture's book will now be published August 2008.)

After experimenting with many different papers and processes, we selected Cibachrome paper for the brilliance of its color and its proven longevity. The prints were made by Esteban Mauchi at Laumont Labs in New York, who worked brilliantly and dedicatedly for the full year it took to finalize the set. I would also like to thank Barbara Orbach Natanson, Head of the Reference Section of the Prints and Photographs Division at the Library of Congress whose help and enthusiasm made the continuing rediscovery process all the more significant.

Paul Fusco was born in Leominster, Massachusetts in 1930. He received his B.F.A. in photojournalism from Ohio University and went directly to work for Look magazine as a staff photographer and traveled extensively in South East Asia, Mexico, India, Europe and Russia. In 1974 he joined Magnum Photos. His work has appeared in publications such as LIFE, Time, Newsweek, The Sunday Times and Paris Match. He has exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D.C.. Most recently, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York acquired six of the RFK Funeral Train photographs .

James Danziger. New York City, 2008.

For more information on the exhibition, please e-mail info@danzigerprojects.com or call 212 629 6778.

Danziger Projects
521 West 26th Street
New York, NY 10001
Telephone 212.629.6778
info@danzigerprojects.com
www.danzigerprojects.com

Hours
Tuesday - Friday, 11-6
Saturday, 12-6
Monday and Tuesday by appointment

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Rashid Johnson: The New Escapist Promised Land Garden and Recreation Center and Cosmic Slops @ Monique Meloche, CHI, USA



Rashid Johnson is one of the more promising young artists to emerge from Chicago in recent years, with photographs and sculptures in exhibitions across the country. This fall, two galleries stage a large-scale homecoming for the artist. At Monique Meloche, Johnson constructs a site-specific installation, transforming the gallery into a "mystical recreation space that remixes black history with references to alchemy, divination, and astronomy. This exhibit is also being shown at Richard Gray Gallery.

-Karsten Lund

Monique Meloche
118 N Peoria St.
Chicago,IL
312.455.0299

Opens Friday Sep 5 (6–9pm)
Sep 5 – Oct 7
Tuesdays–Saturdays (11am–5pm)
ADMISSION: FREE

Rashid Johnson, Self portrait in the finals of the New Negro Escapist Social and Athletic Club Summer Tennis Tournament, Courtesy the artist and moniquemeloche.

Art Quote of the Day, Wednesday, September 3, 2008



You should keep on painting no matter how difficult it is, because this is all part of experience, and the more experience you have, the better it is.. unless it kills you, and then you know you have gone too far.
-Alice Neel

I HEART @ Leo Kesting Gallery "Guaranteed Good Works," Sept. 4-21, 2008



Forgoing the staunch wisdom of the artworld that dictates a solo exhibition of your largest star to coincide with the advent of fall, Leo Kesting Gallery presents Guaranteed Good, a presentation of New York's hottest young artists. Established artists Brian Leo, Ray Sell, Jonny Fenix and Shawn Bishop-Leo will showcase works alongside gallery newcomers such as Casey Porn, Tuffer Weidner and Donna Cleary.

"It is important that the work of rising young talent is not overlooked by the art world at a time when the market is strongest," states gallery co-director David Kesting. "The vitality of the art scene is fueled by ambitious artists who are aware of what the collector desires. Hence the title of this exhibtion."

Work from: Daniel Edwards, Jonny Fenix, Brian Leo, Ray Sell, Jason Douglas Griffin, David Meanix, Shawn Bishop-Leo, Donna Cleary, Ezra Talmatch, Seth Carnes, Sergio Coyote, Brenda Buck, Casey Porn, Lisa Kuppinger, Eric Trosko, Diane Dwyer, James Turek, Chris Georgalas, Graham Slick, Tara Deporte, Jessica Liberty, Allison Berkoy, Dave Tree, Tuffer Weidner, Nick Dyball and Lincoln Capla will be on display.

A total of 26 artists will be exhibited in this collection of stunning work. We hope you will be able to join us at the gallery's reception for the artists on Thursday September 4 from 7:00 until 10:00 pm.

From its origins as Capla Kesting Fine Art in Brooklyn, the Leo Kesting Gallery launched in 2003 and developed an aggressive campaign to introduce new figurative artists to collectors and art supporters. Leo Kesting offers the art viewing public an opportunity to see forthcoming talents in an intimate setting where undiscovered, cutting-edge artists are presented to the contemporary art scene.

Leo Kesting Gallery is located at 812 Washington St at the corner of Gansevoort in Manhattan's Meat Packing District. A, C, E, or L train to 8th Ave and 14th Street or 1,2,3 train to 14th Street. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Sunday from 11am until 7pm.

www.leokesting.com
www.iheart.org

Image: Seth Cames, iheart, mixed media on canvas, 2001

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Cypriot wall paintings get HIV test/Have you been tested today?



LONDON- A scientific technique generally used in testing for the HIV virus is being utilised for the first time in the conservation of wall paintings in a remote Cypriot monastery.

Samples of the wall paintings of the little-known Crusader period monastery of St John, in Lampadistis in the Republic of Cyprus, the ethnically Greek southern part of the island, are being sent by conservators from the Courtauld Institute to the Getty Museum in Los Angeles for analysis.

The samples are then being tested with the immunological technique Enzyme-Linked Immuno­Sorbent Assay (Elisa), in which an enzyme is attached to a sample to detect the presence of an antibody.

In conservation this technique is useful in determining what type of organic binder (such as glue or egg) has been used in the painting and enables conservators to choose the most appropriate method of conservation.

The Getty Conservation Institute is a pioneer in this area of research, which is of interest to conservators because of its potentially wide application and relatively low cost (the basic equipment costs less than $10,000, whereas alternative methods and apparatus can cost up to $586,000) and for its high level of accuracy in identifying specific materials.

Lampadistis monastery, in the Troodos mountains, is one of a group of ten local religious buildings on Unesco’s world heritage list. It is richly decorated with wall paintings mainly dating from the 13th century, when Cyprus became the last Crusader outpost in the Mediterranean.

The paintings, made of traditional pigments on lime plaster, are situated in a complex of three churches, now all covered with an immense pitched roof. The vicissitudes of time and earlier interventions have left much of the enormous decorative scheme, which covers the vault, pillars and walls of the churches, in a neglected state. “The buildings have a long history with lots of interventions,” says Sharon Cather from the Courtauld. “Architectural changes were made; mid-20th-century conservation has resulted in surface bloom, and the paintings have been damaged by salts.” The scenes include more than 30 episodes from the New Testament including the entry into Jerusalem and Christ surrounded by angels, but some of these are blackened from the smoke of candles or damaged by water infiltration.

The Courtauld has a team of conservators living in the monastery and is currently focusing on stabilising the paintings. As well as Elisa, they are also using another non-invasive technique—ultra violet and infrared imaging—which the Courtauld and the Getty have developed to make it easier to transport and so take to remote locations such as Lampadistis.

The conservation programme is due to end in 2011, and is being carried out with funding from the Cyprus Department of Anti­quities and the A.G. Leventis Foundation. This foundation was created by the late Dino Leventis, Unesco’s former permanent delegate to Cyprus, who died in 2002.

The local Bishop, the Most Reverend Neophytos, Metro­politan of Morfou, has taken a keen interest in the restoration and has set up a museum within the monastery, with icons from local churches.

Source: The Art Newspaper

Book of the Week: "Fashion and Surrealism" by Assouline



To get into the spirit of Fashion Week, I decided to recommend one of my all time favorite books "Fashion and Surrealism."If any one really knows Surrealism then you know its presence in haute couture and in designs by John Galliano, Yves Saint Laurent, Christian Lacroix and many others. This book focuses on the most important figures of the Surrealism movement: Salvador Dali, Joan Miro, Rene Magritte and Man Ray. Fashion is heavily influenced by Surrealism and long live the art of creativity.

Art Parade 2008



In conjunction with PAPER magazine and Creative Time, Deitch Projects presents its fourth annual Art Parade, once again turning West Broadway into a carnival with manifold performers, artists, and floats. As always, chaos rules: expect wild inflatable creations by rogue street illustrator and Deitch artist Barry McGee, as well as a motley crew of cavemen, hot dogs, and astronauts courtesy of monster-maker Kenny Scharf. Even if you miss Yoko Ono's project involving 365 white balloons or the troupe of rainbow roller skaters, don't sleep on the performance by topless alien-rock outfit the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black. Summer may be ending, but there's enough creative magic here to carry you through the darkening days.

Source: Flavorpill

Monday, September 1, 2008

Lowell Boyers @ Half Gallery, L.E.S., NYC



LOWELL BOYERS
SEPTEMBER 5TH - OCTOBER 1ST

ARTIST RECEPTION:
SEPTEMBER 4TH, 6-8PM

HALF GALLERY
208 FORSYTH STREET
NY, NY
INFO@HALFGALLERY.COM

WWW.HALFGALLERY.COM

Golden Lady: Kate Moss by Marc Quinn



Another tribute for the upcoming Fashion Week.


Golden girl: solid gold sculpture of Kate Moss unveiled


LONDON (AFP) — A solid gold sculpture of British supermodel Kate Moss worth 1.5 million pounds (2.8 million dollars, 1.9 million euros) was unveiled in London on Thursday

The 50 kilogramme (110-pound) work is by artist Marc Quinn, previously famous for a controversial sculpture installed in London's Trafalgar Square of a pregnant woman with no arms due to a medical condition.

"I thought the next thing to do would be to make a sculpture of the person who's the ideal beauty of the moment. But even Kate Moss doesn't live up to the image," he said.

Moss herself has been in the news this week for her latest comments on size zero fashion models, in which she lamented how thin she has been at earlier stages in her career.

"I didn't eat for a long time. Not on purpose. You'd be on shoots with bad food or get on a plane and the food would be so disgusting you couldn't eat it," she told US magazine Interview, widely cited in the British press.

"I remember standing up in the bath one day and .. I was so thin! I was never anorexic.... I remember thinking, I don't want to be this skinny."

The golden sculpture, entitled "Siren," will go on display surrounded by other pieces including Crouching Venus, the goddess of love, at the Nereid Gallery of the British Museum on October 4. The show runs until January 25.

Converse Casting for Print Ad Wants YOU



We're gearing up for a small print campaign for CONVERSE, and it calls for some unique headshots of interesting looking folks. Instead of using faux cool kid models from a traditional casting agency, we wanted to highlight some of our interesting and diverse friends and fam.

Now, this isn't a big time photo shoot or anything. We're doing several spreads – a classic black and white layout with a headshot on one page, which will be slightly obscured by a cool design element. The headshot will be an added "design element" to our final layouts. We'll end up with about 20 portraits that will be chosen for the print campaign. Our homey Taku (takustudio.com) will be shooting the final portraits in NYC over the next week or so.

If you, some of your interns, or any of your friends have a dope look and fit the descriptions below that coincide with our featured product stories, then hit us up ASAP. If you or any of your friends have a digital headshot at the ready, then shoot them over to us to review, too.

Please include a snapshot (close up photo)
Name
Occupation
Hometown
Contact Info


PRODUCT STORIES
The Chuck: It is the badge of independence. The Optimistic Rebel. Music feels right for this but not in a way any other brand could do it. It's about that emerging artist who spent late nights writing songs in this shoe. It's about that creativity, not the obvious concert-going hipster cool. They're not a music critic. They make great music happen.

Purcell: The Hamptons. Country clubs. Polo. Badminton. Ferris Bueller. More edge. Rich, privileged kid, but he just may revel and drive his car into a pool. He knows he can fuck around up to a point then he'll use his dad's connections to get a sweet paying job. Half his life is spent subverting the pretentious system he was brought up in. he does it to piss them off. But he knows he's good down the road. It's a bit Chevy Chase in Caddyshack.

One Star: Chill. Suede. It made its debut in basketball. Back in the 70s. ABA. Lots of colors. After Hoops it became a skate shoe. Then it went away for a while and came back during grunge in the early 90s. It's one step beyond the Chuck. The Chuck is mass. The One star is understated. Therefore it is a bigger badge of independence. Considered by many to be the coolest Converse shoe. But that many is a select few. Cobain wore them instead of the Chuck. Enough said. (Try to ignore the Target distribution in the US. It's much cooler in the rest of the world than it is here in the US.)

Running: Run like hell. This is kids running from the law. He/She's a bit of a knucklehead. Imagine Ewan McGregor in the opening scene of Trainspotting running his ass off, with the biggest shit-eating grin.

Pro Leather (Basketball): Soul. Classic. Dr. J. The 70's. This is about when the game was a good time. Back when pros played ball in the summer in what was called t-shirt leagues on concrete.

Skate: NYC or Sao Paulo streets. Attitude. Swagger. die-hard skateboarder. Not famous. Not even sponsored. Just grinding in and out of traffic, causing a ruckus, just for the fuck of it.


Talent Payment (We never said we'll make you rich)
- $100 to take initial headshot
- $500, if used in our final print campaign


Contact: Stanley Lumax | slumax@anomaly.com | 646.228.4173


Source: Stanley Lumax @ Anomaly Communications