I love NYC based Netherlands Antillean designer and painter, Marion Bolognesi. –She paints the type of images that I ‘really’ want on my wall like the above collection called, ‘Eye Series’……..and when I grow-up, -I’m going to commission her to paint something for me… Its official, she’s now my favourite artists of all times –right now! For more information about Marion Bolognesi visit: http://www.marion-b.com/
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Saturday, 31 July 2010
Thursday, 22 July 2010
Who do I want to work with right now......Slavna Martinovic -that's who......
As you know by now -I'm always on the look out for 'Hot' talent -and they don't come much hotter than Slavna Martinovic -right now! Born in Belgrade, educated in Hong Kong [where she grew up] and a graduate of London College of Fashion -Slavna's global sensibilities oozes out of her work. A stylist [she has worked for: W, Harpers Bazaar, Flaunt, Contents, Cosmopolitan, US weekly, Marie Claire, Soma], a make up artist, an artist [she has a Masters degree in Multimedia Arts from the Faculty of Fine Arts in Belgrade] and costume designer [Slavna moved to Los Angeles in 1999 -where she worked in the music and film industry, with stars like Chloe Sevigny, Famke Janssen, Dougray Scott, Daniela Amavia, Tory Spelling, Pink, Usher]. In 2007 Slavna -started her fashion line creating limited edition hand crafted and finished luxury garments, accessories, jewelry and shoes –and her collection has been celebrated in uber glossies like: L'Officiel, Elle, Gala, Joy, Faar, Grazia et al.
I’m loving the [above] images of Slavna Martinovic’s A/W collection entitled 'How The Moon Floats Through Her'. Her classic, non-seasonal limited edition hand crafted and finished garments and jewelry are pieces of art -and I covet them all. I’d love to collaborate with her -in the near future. To check out Slavna Martinovic's prolific work -visit: http://www.slavna.net/
Labels:
Art,
Designer,
Fashion,
Slavna Martinovic,
Stylist
Monday, 28 June 2010
King Alex, Barnaby Bear, the Thames Clipper and Kandinsky…………
King Alex and Barnaby Bear on the Thames Clipper leaving Embankment Pier -heading towards TATE Modern –as happy as Larry…..
London by the Thames -one of the most beautiful and exciting cities in the world…
King Alex and Barnaby Bear taking in London’s many fabulous landmarks…
Were here...!
Barnaby Bear Loves the TATE…..
King Alex, Barnaby Bear and his daddy in front of a Roy Lichtenstein
The Andy Warhol room is fabulously inspirational
King Alex and Barnaby Bear in front of a of a Kandinsky
Walking towards London Bridge Pier –we stumbled across this sea of flags….
And behold we looked up and saw a Ghana flag; could this be a sign …is Ghana about to become the first African country to win the World Cup?
Labels:
Alexander Opoku,
Art,
Barnaby Bear,
Kandinsky,
King Alex,
Thames Clipper
Thursday, 13 May 2010
All I've ever wanted is a painting by Margaret Bowland......................
Flower Girl #2 (2009)
Flower Girl (2009)
Another Thorny Crown 2010
Party, Chelsea Gallery
Murakami Wedding 2008
Olympia Series #4 2006
"Art was until very recently a search for visual harmony – Picasso’s “lie that makes us realize the truth.” That lie was compositional, spatial harmony. But what was that truth? We no longer have any faith in Truth capitalized. Plato says in The Sophist that “by the art of painting we make another house, a sort of man-made dream product for those who are awake.” I believe in those houses, that in this illusory space our stories unfold. This space holds as much power now as it ever has. The human psyche still dreams, those dreams are still our stories, and within these stories our consciousness is revealed. I need art to be the story, in visual terms, of what happens to people.
We inhabit a purely relative world, in terms of belief structures, yet each of us knows and in a sense, believes in, the need to be beautiful. My work is about beauty—what it means to be beautiful and what significance the idea has in the twenty-first century in the world of art. We all know that being beautiful is as important as being rich, that being beautiful is itself a form of wealth. One must be tall, thin and white. One’s features must be diminutive and regular. We recognize deviations from this norm, but recognize that these deviations, even if appealing, are far from ideal. The need to be beautiful fuels one of the largest and most ruthless industries in our world.
Beauty makes sense to me, has weight for me, only when it falls from grace. It starts to matter when it carries damage. Sorrow allows it to cast a shadow. It becomes three-dimensional. It enters our world.
Looking at Manet’s Olympia, I wondered about the two women depicted—the young, naked prostitute and the black maid servant—about the relationship between them and to the man observing them. His implied presence began to unite them to me, not as lovers, but as the prey sharing a foxhole. In my imagination, the women of my paintings entered that room. What my century brings to the ideas of race and beauty and sexual allure began to overlay Manet’s.
I began painting Anna, the dwarf in my pictures, two years ago. I was fascinated by the tragedy of her body. In Velasquez' paintings, dwarves possess the greatest sense of consciousness of any of his characters. Even in Les Meninas, after we take in the brightly lit perfection of the blond doll at the center, our eye is drawn to Velasquez’s own face, connects with him, and then moves laterally to the dwarf. The two—Velasquez and the dwarf—bracket with their awareness the hollow beauty of the golden child. That connection between the artist and the dwarf rings true to me. I believe in that space—outside the golden circle inhabited by the princess.
I see, in Anna, a perfect visual equivalence for what it feels like to live in this outside, other world. Being observed, as the young Olympia is in Manet’s painting, creates in every one of us the squirming need to appear desirable, beautiful. But even if we are lovely, in our need to be desired each of us subsumes who we are in order to present the blank screen of beauty necessary for admiration or affection—and in so doing, dies. Anna, however, like Velasquez and his dwarves, lives a life outside the harmonious, golden circle of “art.” That space outside feels absolutely honest to me.
After watching Anna leave my studio, I have knelt on the floor, stooped even lower, crawled, to see the room as she sees it. I have placed her in “Olympia” in a struggle with the young black girl . Today, this black girl is no maid, but another candidate for desire. Yet this young woman carries all the history of what it has meant to be a black woman—used by men, by artists, by us.
We are supposed to look away politely from the maimed. But I want to stare, inhabit their flesh. Such flesh feels like an honest revelation, what it feels to be stalked by the need to be beautiful. Hence, my paintings are never allegorical; nothing stands for anything else. They are the closest I can get to what my mind’s eye sees when it depicts the struggle of living to me.
As the painter, the observer of these young women, I am a predator, but it is the desire humans have had since the beginning of time—to hunt and consume their prey and dissolve within their spirits…scarily close to what we mean when we say we love."
Margaret Bowland [Brooklyn, NY, February, 2008]
Labels:
All I've ever Art,
Art,
artist,
Margaret Bowland,
Paintings
Saturday, 17 April 2010
Grace Kelly at the Victoria and Albert Museum
Victoria and Albert Museum
Room 40
London
SW7 2RL
Tel: 0844 209 1770
Open 10am-5.30pm (9.30pm Friday). Admission: £6 (concessions £4 / family
ticket £10-£18.70) [Until September 26 2010]
http://www.vam.ac.uk/index.html
Labels:
Art,
Grace Kelly,
King Alex,
Victoria and Albert Museum
Wednesday, 31 March 2010
America's talking about Erykah Badu's new video
I’m bored by the ominous crazy racket crossing the pond with regards to Erykah Badu's new music video… Is it controversial? Nope! All sista Badu’s doing is [what they called in Ghana] –‘exhibiting’… She has not lost her mind-d-d… Nope; Erykah’s a grown black woman who wants to be free…and I know just how she feels....I'm getting over a head cold [I still feel rough! If I was a dog -they would have me put down! It started last Sunday after a lovely trip to The British Museum with King Alexander] -and I would love to take it all off and lay on ground -feeling free, free, free....But I know the errm good people of ‘The Bar’ would complain or have me sectioned! Why aren’t people trying to understand what Ms Badu’s trying to convey [eeerrm sorry I better watch it again to find out what she's fighting for -….this time..hehehe.] -But all they want to discuss is the fact that Ms Badu’s BUTT naked at the very end off this video....! By the way I think she looks fabulous ...she's 39..!
Sunday, 21 March 2010
Art: Jeff Koons’ Big Balloon Dogs for Alex….
P.s Alex said they are cool….x
Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Afghan Girl
Afghan Girl
A Life Revealed
Her eyes have captivated the world since she appeared on our cover in 1985. Now we can tell her story.
Photograph by Steve McCurry
She remembers the moment. The photographer took her picture. She remembers her anger. The man was a stranger. She had never been photographed before. Until they met again 17 years later, she had not been photographed since.
The photographer remembers the moment too. The light was soft. The refugee camp in Pakistan was a sea of tents. Inside the school tent he noticed her first. Sensing her shyness, he approached her last. She told him he could take her picture. "I didn't think the photograph of the girl would be different from anything else I shot that day," he recalls of that morning in 1984 spent documenting the ordeal of Afghanistan's refugees.
The portrait by Steve McCurry turned out to be one of those images that sears the heart, and in June 1985 it ran on the cover of this magazine. Her eyes are sea green. They are haunted and haunting, and in them you can read the tragedy of a land drained by war. She became known around National Geographic as the "Afghan girl," and for 17 years no one knew her name.
In January a team from National Geographic Television & Film's EXPLORER brought McCurry to Pakistan to search for the girl with green eyes. They showed her picture around Nasir Bagh, the still standing refugee camp near Peshawar where the photograph had been made. A teacher from the school claimed to know her name. A young woman named Alam Bibi was located in a village nearby, but McCurry decided it wasn't her.
No, said a man who got wind of the search. He knew the girl in the picture. They had lived at the camp together as children. She had returned to Afghanistan years ago, he said, and now lived in the mountains near Tora Bora. He would go get her.
It took three days for her to arrive. Her village is a six-hour drive and three-hour hike across a border that swallows lives. When McCurry saw her walk into the room, he thought to himself: This is her.
Names have power, so let us speak of hers. Her name is Sharbat Gula, and she is Pashtun, that most warlike of Afghan tribes. It is said of the Pashtun that they are only at peace when they are at war, and her eyes—then and now—burn with ferocity. She is 28, perhaps 29, or even 30. No one, not even she, knows for sure. Stories shift like sand in a place where no records exist.
Time and hardship have erased her youth. Her skin looks like leather. The geometry of her jaw has softened. The eyes still glare; that has not softened. "She's had a hard life," said McCurry. "So many here share her story." Consider the numbers. Twenty-three years of war, 1.5 million killed, 3.5 million refugees: This is the story of Afghanistan in the past quarter century.
Now, consider this photograph of a young girl with sea green eyes. Her eyes challenge ours. Most of all, they disturb. We cannot turn away.
"There is not one family that has not eaten the bitterness of war," a young Afghan merchant said in the 1985 National Geographic story that appeared with Sharbat's photograph on the cover. She was a child when her country was caught in the jaws of the Soviet invasion. A carpet of destruction smothered countless villages like hers. She was perhaps six when Soviet bombing killed her parents. By day the sky bled terror. At night the dead were buried. And always, the sound of planes, stabbing her with dread.
"We left Afghanistan because of the fighting," said her brother, Kashar Khan, filling in the narrative of her life. He is a straight line of a man with a raptor face and piercing eyes. "The Russians were everywhere. They were killing people. We had no choice."
Shepherded by their grandmother, he and his four sisters walked to Pakistan. For a week they moved through mountains covered in snow, begging for blankets to keep warm.
"You never knew when the planes would come," he recalled. "We hid in caves."
The journey that began with the loss of their parents and a trek across mountains by foot ended in a refugee camp tent living with strangers.
"Rural people like Sharbat find it difficult to live in the cramped surroundings of a refugee camp," explained Rahimullah Yusufzai, a respected Pakistani journalist who acted as interpreter for McCurry and the television crew. "There is no privacy. You live at the mercy of other people." More than that, you live at the mercy of the politics of other countries. "The Russian invasion destroyed our lives," her brother said.
It is the ongoing tragedy of Afghanistan. Invasion. Resistance. Invasion. Will it ever end? "Each change of government brings hope," said Yusufzai. "Each time, the Afghan people have found themselves betrayed by their leaders and by outsiders professing to be their friends and saviors."
In the mid-1990s, during a lull in the fighting, Sharbat Gula went home to her village in the foothills of mountains veiled by snow. To live in this earthen-colored village at the end of a thread of path means to scratch out an existence, nothing more. There are terraces planted with corn, wheat, and rice, some walnut trees, a stream that spills down the mountain (except in times of drought), but no school, clinic, roads, or running water.
Here is the bare outline of her day. She rises before sunrise and prays. She fetches water from the stream. She cooks, cleans, does laundry. She cares for her children; they are the center of her life. Robina is 13. Zahida is three. Alia, the baby, is one. A fourth daughter died in infancy. Sharbat has never known a happy day, her brother says, except perhaps the day of her marriage.
[Credit: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2002/04/afghan-girl/index-text]
Labels:
Art,
National Geographic,
photographer,
Photography,
Steve McCurry
Friday, 28 August 2009
Art: Sunflowers By Van Gogh

After a meeting in Charing X last week, I had an hour to spare before a quick 'catch-up' with my friend Ingrid at St.Pauls [I must take my son to one of their Sunday services] -and off cause there was no contest [surrounded by Museums] -it was time to visit my dearest and oldest friend, 'Sunflowers' By Van Gogh -at The National Gallery. I truly love this 'Post Impressionist' painting. But I don't know why! One of four versions of sunflowers that Vincent van Gogh painted, this version [with 15 sunflowers] was painted in Arles, in 1888 -and is now happily hanging in Room 45 at The National Gallery -moving me and freaking me out in equal measures [-depending on the time or day]. But I am sooo drawn to it. I don't know if it's because of Van Gogh [the famous Dutch artist's story is very moving], or it's beauty [lets face it, - at times it looks more sad than beautiful] or the optimism of the yellow [used sooo richly throughout, -even though, -when viewed with a hundred jumpy tourist behind you, -it can take on a brownish hue] or the fact that millions of people have stood in that same room -in awe of this [majestic] painting? .....What I do know -is I find the shabby chicness of the sunflowers comforting -and I can't believe how thick the paint is [on closer inspection] -and I'm crazy about the brush strokes.... and at times the experience is very spiritual. Sunflowers By Van Gogh can be found in Room 45 at The National Gallery. www.nationalgallery.org.uk
Thursday, 21 May 2009
Thursday, 16 April 2009
Art: I Am Not A Paper Cup by James Burgess, 2007

For the man or woman who has everything -and still expects, birthday presents -why not present them with this chic, double-walled porcelain cup from MoMA (it comes with a pliable silicone lid -that keeps beverages hot and doesn't burn your hand). The, 'I Am Not A Paper Cup' was created by artist, James Burgess and is -a gorgeous functioning piece of art -plus, its eco-credentials are huge -it can be used as an alternative to disposable cups (and will make any, 'have-it-all-er ' feel fluffy and warm knowing -they (alone) are saving planet earth) and cost -$20.00. The MoMA ( Museum of Modern Art) website is always worth a look. Like the V&A, -it carries fabulous, quirky and classic -consumables by world renown designers, like -Eames' Lounge Chair and Ottoman, Sori Yanagi's Butterfly Stool, Arne Jacobsen's Serving Set and much more, -plus they deliver to the UK. www.momastore.org/
Home: 'Vortex Credenza' -the Mother of all sideboards


“LINLEY pieces have longevity, their quality of construction and on-going stylistic relevance making them future classics.” davidlindley.com
I like to keep abreast of stuff, I am going to buy when I grow up -and decided to visit the LINLEY website this morning. I am now -totally exhausted, -in a good way. But even writing about the gorgeous, -grown up posh stuff on offer at LINLEY is draining. Everything at LINLEY's is lovingly and beautifully made by artisans (carpenters) and unless you have 'loadsamoney' -don't bother. You can also commission the good people at LINLEY (they make bespoke furniture -the type, folk dream about); or they can 'make-over' your home -to look just like Buckingham Place -if you want (the founder and chairman, David Linley is the Queen's (of England) nephew, -or order the, 'lovingly' made, uber - 'Vortex Credenza' (£POA) -a beautiful (African-esque) sideboard – which plays with geometry -and is made from Santos rosewood and sycamore -as part of the LINLEY 2008 op art inspired Art Furniture Collection. There aren't many pieces of furniture that demand attention like the 'opera of all furniture's' -'Vortex Credenza'. Built like a spaceship, this bourgeois sideboard might claim to be -conventional, but very few sideboards have -a sexy, geometric-y, distorted look -(created by its op art marquetry veneer -my goodness) -causing the piece to look both concave and convex. It does not open in a conventional way, -my goodness, -and the insides (and draws) are all lined in plush, vibrant materials -such as gold leaf and padded velvet (my goodness). Errrrm...the charms of 'Vortex Credenza' are too numerous to list (for example, hidden drawers that reveal more secret drawers ...-my goodness) -but you can buy/view this 'Diva' sideboard at: www.davidlinley.com/
Labels:
Art,
David Linley,
Furniture,
Queen,
Vortex Credenza
Thursday, 9 April 2009
Art: Dawn Okoro -An artist with a heart..


I love Dawn Okoro's work -there is a lovely fashioned vibe about them. The two (oil on acrylic) paintings above (top, 'frame' 2009 -24x36 and bottom, 'animadversion' 2008 -24x24) -are a fabulous celebration of the black female. Currently a Law student at University of Texas, -Dawn juggles her studies with her painting (many are commissioned portraits of celebrities like, Shaun Robinson of "Access Hollywood", Victoria's Secret model Nichole and Erykah Badu) and collaborations with various Charities. She also teamed up with Erykah Badu -to raise awareness for the singer's non-profit organization.
www.myspace.com/dawnokoroart
Labels:
Art,
artist,
Charities,
Dawn Okoro,
Erykah Badu,
Paintings
Saturday, 28 March 2009
Art: Natasha Law

Labels:
Art,
Jude Law,
Matches,
Natasha Law,
Paintings
Art: Grace Jones

I popped into my favourite charity shop last week and fell in love with an Ercol original. The settee was in excellent condition -and the grey textured fabric, was very chichi (it also had accompanying footstools). Unfortunately, I don't have the space (or money) and had to walk away from it. It would have been lovely, -to be a lady who lives in a pulchritudinous house with original Retro Furniture by Ercol -never mind (it will happen at the right time). Thankful it was not a wasted journey. I bought Grace Jones' Nightclubbing LP years ago but unfortunately, I managed to rip off a part of the cover (when I removed the price tag) -and this put my nose out of joint. Anyway, as I love my covers -perfect, I kind of didn't celebrate this piece of art, as I should have (it was never displayed). Well you can image my joy when I came across another copy of the above in mint condition -I snapped it up, and skipped my way out of the shop. I am now enjoying the latest edition to my art collection. I love this record sleeve, it is fierce -Grace looks like an African carving. Viva Grace.
Monday, 16 March 2009
Art: Benicio del Toro

I am loving this oil painting of the gorgeous Benicio del Toro by artist Lindsey Bull -her work is very rock'n'roll. Check out her other pieces at http://www.londonart.co.uk/
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