LuxuryActivist

LuxuryActivist is an international lifestyle webzine based in Switzerland. Get fresh news about luxury, arts, fashion, beauty, travel, high-tech and more. subscribe to our Happy friday luxury newsletter or follow us in social media.
Advertismentspot_img

Nicofolio – Japanese photoshoot

During his Dazed takeover, Nicola travelled to Japan to present a series of artists and creative talents he wanted us to know about. Shot by Matt Irwin is, amongst others, stylist Shun Watanabe, actress Kiko Mizuhara and Ambush designer Yoon. Cycy Sanders captured all the action, editing this, one of a series of behind-the-scenes vids for Dazed. Take a look at the video below, and the shoot above, taken from the December issue of Dazed & Confused.

Nicofolio – Chinese photoshoot

During his Dazed takeover, Nicola travelled to Hong Kong and China to present a series of artists and creative talents he wanted us to know about. Shot by Matt Irwin is, amongst others, Kevin Ma of Hypebeast and designer Philip Chu. Cycy Sanders captured all the action, editing this, one of a series of behind-the-scenes vids for Dazed. Take a look at the video below, and the shoot above, taken from the December issue of Dazed & Confused.

Zines unite!

Protests, talk of boycotting, and local shop windows declaring ‘No More Chain Stores.’ All this over a mini Sainsbury’s on Lewisham way. If you’re unfamiliar with New Cross there are two things you should know; the residents hate chain stores, and they like to get shit done. It was the ideal location for comic book-maker Dimitri Pieri to hold last Sunday’s South East London zine fest. Know for supporting the local arts community, the dimly lit Amersham Arms was chosen to house the event, and saw the entire bottom floor crammed with DIY enthusiasts keen to show off their stick and paste and photocopied and printed creations. Including Oregon-based feminist Alex Wrekk of Stolen Sharpie Revolution (a respected guide to zine making and zine culture) as well as plenty of UK self-publishers.

Peter Willis, an illustration graduate from the nearby Camberwell College of Arts and zine distributor, told Dazed Digital “I started making zines when I was about 12-13 because my sister wrote for fanzines and getting into punk introduced me to a lot of DIY ideas, opening up a world of kids in bedrooms writing down their ideas and trading them with people from all over the place.” He edits a journal called Limner, a stapled illustration zine exploring the art form from a more considered perspective. Amongst contemporary black and white drawings you’ll find critical essays on the teaching of illustration as well as its role in digital media. Willis says it’s the community aspect of zine making that really draws people in, and points us toMichael Crowe. Crowe is the author of the 40 page thick Mid-Midnight. Willis says it's full of “brilliant short stories that are unobtrusively clever, and often hilarious, and leave you with that satisfied smile when you read them.” We haven’t had a chance to read it yet, so you’ll have to find out for yourself. Crowe is also behind ‘Christmas Diaries,’ a collection of Xmas day entries from famous diarists, including Andy Warhol and George Orwell. A highlight: Samuel Pepys, who, on the 25th of Dec 1664, punches his wife, and doesn’t get why she’s miffed for the rest of the day.

From the 17th century and on to a zine about obscure punk bands and comic strips of oozing brains from Russell Taysom and Charlie Mellors.Flabby Dagger’s most recent edition contains cartoons such as ‘Teenage Mutant Chicken Nuggets,’ a gory homage to the fact that, apparently, The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were, actually, quite twisted back in the early 80s. The chicken nuggets bit? “There are a lot of chicken shops in London.” Hey there, New Cross! While ‘Piano From Hell’ documents an exchange between Charlie and a bespoke luxury piano company, in which he sends them a sketch for a piano shaped like a giant penis. There’s also a sketch called ‘Keep Your Pants On.’ “Flabby Dagger is a name Charlie had for a band he and I were going toform. After a few practices we realised we hated each other’s songsso we started the zine instead. It means limp penis,” explains Taysom. “It's not that bad though - I bought a zine made by girls called Knob Vomit once.”

For You The Traveller

Poignantly named 'For You The Traveller', artist Nabil Sabio Azadi's new book is a collection of notable names, stories, telephone numbers, and hand-drawn maps as a 'Human Guide to the World'. From metalworkers, farmers, artists, writers, and scientists to designers and shipwrights from around the globe, the hand-bound rabbit fur books feature insightful snippets to local regions in Greece to Kenya to New Zealand. Dazed spoke to Azadi about the nomadic lifestyle and the gifts it bestows...

Dazed Digital: Why was it important to put this book together?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: A friend of mine recently observed that as person I'm very preoccupied with this idea of communitas — the intense, sacred way we all share and interact with each other over our lifetimes. I'd never even heard of this area of anthropological study but I had to agree with him because if there is one thing I know concretely about my art, it is that I'm trying to give people a sense of solidarity with it. This book is probably the most tangible way I've done it yet. For You The Traveller as a guide to the world and its people facilitates companionship and I see solidarity in that. Beyond bringing people together, the book is also a collection of parables: accompanying each person's telephone number is a lesson from their life. To me solidarity also means communicating universal experiences and emotions back to people in order to create a sense of communion.

DD: How did the project first come about and who was involved?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: I blame an afternoon in June — barely six months ago — when I was sitting in the sun with the dog here on the East Coast of Australia and the whole book hit me in the head. I'm not really an intellectual artist and my work doesn't come from any calculation. Like many people, I also live in a busy internal world where things present themselves to me however I personally feel that I'm sort of expected to bring them into existence. I am proudly just the General Contractor. Usually I end up working with photography and sculpture so in this instance I was being asked to do some things I'd never done like illustration, book-binding and working with fur. I told myself to buck up, started that night, and have spent every day on it since.

DD: What are the greatest things one can learn from a nomadic lifestyle?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: That the winds of change tend to favour the sails of those who politely yell out to it, "Nice to meet you!"

DD: Why do you encourage people to get out on to the road?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: There is kinship and adventure to be found on it. The road can be home and if you transact with people justly, they will help you.

DD: What has been your favourite/craziest memory from travelling in 2012?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: There have been waterfalls, tablelands, caves, wild animals from deer to kangaroos but, as many people would say, the most revelatory and absurd experience has been falling in love and getting a dog.

DD: The best place you have ever been to?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: The best place I have ever been to existed for approximately ten minutes and it was a wooden gazebo in Royal Park, Melbourne which a small group of close friends and I ritually dressed in long streams of toilet paper, drenched in hand sanitizer and set alight. It looked like a burning palace from heaven and the lashes of fire that night remain the most beautiful thing I've ever seen. I am told that the gazebo has since been rebuilt.

DD: Your dream destination?
Nabil Sabio Azadi: I would like to go inside the Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc Cave in Southern France. It has some of the earliest known cave paintings — they're incredible. Horses galloping across stone walls that were drawn about thirty thousand years ago. I wonder about Paleolithic people and what similarities we might have had to them emotionally. Anyway, no one is allowed in the cave in order to protect the internal atmosphere so give me a ticket to Easter Island instead and I'll show you a happy man.

Portraits by Angela Ferro

For You The Traveller is available for purchase online here

Empress Of – Champagne

empress_of_press_2_hi

With only a handful of songs finished but a huge catalogue of recorded snippets released as a 'Colourminutes' series on YouTube, Empress Of is admittedly still developing her sound. So far however, it's been a delightful mix of abstract lo-fi retro sounds and glistening melodies with a nostalgic feel. Her delicate, feminine vocals are intricately weaved with faded synths and trippy percussion in her latest tracks Don't Tell Me and Champagne which you can exclusively download here.

Dazed Digital: How would you introduce your music to those who don't know?
Empress Of: I would hope that my music sounds as confusing to me as it does to others. I'm still developing a sound, whether on recording or at a live show, so I feel sometimes like there are a lot of good clashing elements in my music. Simple at times, but then intricate vocal melodies creep up from behind with ultra-present guitar parts or synths. It's definitely feminine, and even more definitively emotional.

Yuima Nakazato studio visit

As a pendant to Nicola Formichetti's full-on fashion in the #Fantasia issue, we set out, guided by the superstylist, to meet some of the most exciting Tokyo design talent of the moment. Yuima Nakazato makes brutally futuristic menswear, famous for his holographic pieces. Though the designer tells us his next collection will be different. So keep an eye out.

Dazed Digital: Can you tell us when you launched your label?
Yuima Nakazato: After my studies at Royal Academy of Antwerp, Ann Demeulemeester said: "Individuality should appear in a course, as well as in a creation". I started my label in my hometown of Tokyo, 2009.

DD: Who wears your clothes?

Yuima Nakazato: Mainly youth but especially people who like fashion.

DD: What's your most famous design?

Yuima Nakazato: The most famous designs are the hologram items (made from special material like a jewel/beetle). In my first collection there was a men's hologram dress and I've continued it up to now.

DD: What's the best moment in your career so far?
Yuima Nakazato:When I see someone wearing my clothes.

DD: What are your hopes for the future?
Yuima Nakazato:I want to express a richness of mentality in my work.

DD: What's your favourite thing about Nicola Formichetti?
Yuima Nakazato:His creation stems from the fusion of two cultures, Japanese and Italian. This will continue to broaden the horizons of fashion.

PhotographyDaisuke Hamada

Nicopanda GIF riot – Akihiko Taniguchi

When Nicola first began his Dazed takeover, he emailed us about five innovative GIF designers from around the world. Now, we've asked these Tumblr-ers to make their own adaptation of Nicola's panda illustration, the symbol at the heart of Nicola's new concept fashion lineNicopanda.

We've already had contributions from GIF makers German Lavrovskiy and Mr-GIF, and now we're introducingAkihiko Taniguchi. Having already experimented with the presentation of GIFs in his project, GIF 3D Gallery,where he created an interactive space to display the GIFs as work's of art in a gallery, we asked Taniguchi a few questions about his custom Nico-panda-GIF and the future of GIF-making.

Tell me about the panda GIF you made.

Sometimes I make the visual sketch using processing. And again this time, I made the sketch using processing before converting it into a GIF.

Tell me about your practice and style.

I don't always make GIFs. I'm interested in modeling and composition - how objects overlap - and producing another meaning from there.

What do you do when you’re not making GIFs?

Surf the web. Make art work in other forms.

How did you start making GIFs?

I was seldom making GIFs until now. But I was happy researching internet art and making my own artwork for several years. From those activities, I noticed the importance and peculiarity of the GIF. Then I made GIF 3D Gallery this summer. This is an internet artwork, which can put GIFs onto a pedestal in a 3D gallery, and be viewed online. I made the pedestal for the GIFs at first. Then, I came to make GIFs for the pedestal.

What’s your all time favourite GIF and GIF designer?

Anthony Antonellis, Francoise Gamma and Matt Goerzen. He is mainly a painter, but I think his GIFs are also the concept and statement of his work.

Recent months have seen a return of the GIF as an item of popular discourse and funny thing to drop into an email. What do you put this down to?

1. The decline of the flash and the spread of Tumblr.
2. Increased susceptibility to the internet in daily life.

A GIF format is a very old graphics format. However, compared with other graphics formats, the GIF is special. GIF can use a transparent background and it is always related to a background where it's placed. GIF resembles three-dimensional sculpture rather than pictures and photographs which always cut off the world squarely. GIF exists like a substance with mass.

Where do you think the art of the GIF maker is going?

It is not only a question for GIFs. Some internet artists feel that the relation between actual space and the internet is sensitive. I think that two trials exist there.The first is the trial which tries to place GIFs (internet artwork) in a gallery on the internet, and the second trial which tries to put GIFs in an actual space.It will have to do with the materiality of the aforementioned GIF. I think GIF became a media independent from other image formats. Although it is not applied to all GIF makers, I think how actual space and the internet are mediated/connected is something important to consider.

Fashion Roundup: Rihanna’s ‘Diamonds’ Remix and the Hits and Misses from American Music Awards 2012!

Lena Dunham lands her first major fashion magazine cover, featured on the cover of i-D’s “Wise Up” issue. The creator of hit TV series ‘Girls’ seems to be getting bigger and bigger in the fashion industry, featured on more covers than several super models this year with covers on ASOS Magazine, L Magazine and New York. Check her Miley-inspired chop! (MTV Style)

Christopher Kane parting ways with Versus. The Scottish designer states that he is really excited about the new direction for Versus, but his main focus right now will be on his own Christopher Kane label. Meanwhile it is said that Donatella Versace will design the brand's new line. (Styleite)

W Magazine’s new December issue will feature the extraordinary talented actress Marion Cotillard. After starring in blockbusters such as Inception, Midnight in Paris and The Dark Knight Rises, Cotillard stuns in a Christmassy ‘Red Hot’ appearance in an architectural red coat and metallic belt. (Huffington Post)

FashionTV and Diamonds go together like a wink and a smile, and that’s why we loved Rihanna’s ‘Diamonds’ single! But the new remix featuring Kanye West is a whole new level of music glitter. (Refinery 29)

The American Music Awards 2012 was one of the biggest events of the week, showcasing several great red carpet appearances, with a distinct sparkly golden theme worn by Heidi Klum, Taylor Swift, Elisha Cuthbert and Hayden Panettiere. Review the hits and misses of the awards ceremony. (CeleBuzz)

Closing our list of fashion highlights of the week, here is a great new video from R.E.M featuring Lindsay Lohan also directed by James Franco. R.E.M actually broke up around a year ago, but this new video ‘Blue’ was just released. In the video Lindsay poses in front of mega photographer Terry Richardson. Take a look:

LuxuryActivist

LuxuryActivist is an international lifestyle webzine based in Switzerland. Get fresh news about luxury, arts, fashion, beauty, travel, high-tech and more. subscribe to our Happy friday luxury newsletter or follow us in social media.
Advertismentspot_img