Archive for the 'Books' Category

Small Kings – Zuek Simonetti

Small Kings – Zuek Simonetti

Automatic Books, an independent editorial project curated by Elena Xausa and Tankboys with Tommaso Speretta, presents “Small Kings”, a book by the New York based – but truly Italian – photographer Alessandro Zuek Simonetti.
“Small Kings” collects a selection of  b&w pictures shot in Passa Passa on the 30rd December 2009, a few months before the Tivoli Gardens district in Kingston witnessed an armed conflict between the Jamaican Army and sustainers of drug trafficker boss Christopher “Dudus” Coke, fighting against his extradition.

Alessandro attended the most famous Jamaican Dance Hall “Passa Passa” together with the journalist Anice Gaddis – author of an article/poster included in the book – to tell the risky story from both visual and narrative points of view.
If you wanna learn more about “Dudus” newsworthy tale, on the 14th of July “Small Kings” will be presented in Venice / Centro Espositivo Spiazzi from 7pm.

By Elisa Lusso – pictures by Alessandro Zuek Simonetti – courtesy of Automatic Books

Home Made by Yvette

Home Made by Yvette

Our lovely food contributor hailing from Holland, Yvette van Boven, will not be able to feature her tasteful illustrated-recipes this week cause she’s really busy on a project called “Home Made”. What is it all about? Essentially focused on food, which we cannot leave aside with Yvette, “Home Made” will be a collection of many useful and step-by-step illustrated stories-recipes, in which the reader will be challenged to learn and prepare new things. New home made things.

A series of tips to use the ingredients you already got in your fridge, without any expensive or complicated machine or device.
The book works up from the morning and cooks itself throughout the day; so you’ll be pleased to make your own brewed tea, bake cakes and why not, your own drinks, nibbles, bites, till mayonnaise for those who need something to eat after a night out.
The ‘Do it Yourself’ philosphy is the one embraced by Yvette, who wisely designed the fonts, cut and drew the illustrations, wrote all the recipes, made the food styling and finally set up the book. Within a totally womanly matter, her husband
Oof Verschuren shot the pictures inside the book. Will you be able to wait ‘Home Made’ to be out by the end of August? Considering this tantalizing preview, we won’t.

By Elisa Lusso – image courtesy Yvette van Boven

Guest Interviw n°16 – Mr. Olu Michael Odukoya

Guest Interviw n°16 – Mr. Olu Michael Odukoya

KILIMANJARO

Ciao Olu, would you please introduce yourself & Kilimanjaro Magazine?
My full name is Olu Michael Odukoya, born to a Nigerian family. I spent my teenage years traveling from one African country to another with friends. I studied film and photography a long time ago, worked as a an official artist before deciding to use printed matter as a way of communicating Art, Love and Everyday Life.

Kilimanjaro is a printed project dedicated to visual pleasure and experimental editorials. The driving idea is to create an ‘idealist’ magazine, and is not really based on any specific market or angle. We strive to mix a bit of design, photography, style and un-provocative thoughts to create something that says something from nothing. It has a romantic punk attitude – that is, it creates without any obvious restrictions; it’s something free. The conclusions are drawn by the audience: it could be art to someone, while another might consider it a magazine.

I believe in freestyle and organic creative direction. We live in a very tight environment in which things shift from one end to the other. A designer becomes a photographer, artists become celebrities, and so on. ‘Untitled’ is the future, and kilimanjaro provides a platform to explore this.

When was it that you realized that you wanted to work in the art/publishing industry?
Since I was a kid I’ve loved collecting magazines, especially Playboys and Right On (an American teen mag). I like the sense of movement and time that magazines hold. Before going to art school I wanted to be an optician and I did actually work as a dispensing optician while still curating Kilimanjaro. It was a strange profession. Dispensing optician by day, Artist by night. Then kilimanjaro continued to get stronger and bigger, so I reluctantly became the full-time unofficial art director.

Art, love, everyday life and…?
Yes, Art, love and everyday life. The ethos of kilimanjaro is my greatest achievement because over the years when I first used this language within a printed context (2003) and now I see on newsstands that magazine publication entitled ‘Love’ as and some new magazines using everyday life as their ethos to the idea behind the publications.

It’s all about love to me. My work is very thoughtful and my art direction is a very generous way I communicate with my audience.
I like to create things that make you go ‘wow, thats nice,’ and never use shock factor or over-intelligence in my work.
I like to produce things that people think they could invent themselves.

Speaking of, Love seems to be a recurrent theme on the pages of Kilimanjaro (your payoff, issue #3, #4, #9).
Is it purely coincidence?

Love always finds a way – Ask The Beatles – “All You Need is Love”.

What’s your approach to the curation of your magazine’s contents?
I work on kilimanjaro like an artist making a piece of Art. It’s all about the process to me, while the end product is the less intriguing aspect. Since the magazine is not intended to report on conventional editorial content, its quite an interesting concept to make something up that you believe in sharing with people and they buy into it.

In some way, the curation process is quite tricky, as I can’t make up bullshit because its a printed matter and the mistakes have to be lived with. Also making the magazine involves some good research works and heavy thoughts on how to produce it in print. Then, it just happens and we flow with it. I have to say that the contributors of kilimanjaro are the main stars of the project, not me. I am blessed to have worked with some very talented people over the years.

Kilimanjaro’s printing format is unusual (96 x 68 cm). Is it just a matter of identity, or did you choose such a massive layout for other reasons?
Identity was one of the factors, but I did not want to be a magazine. I like the idea of posters, and after all these years the format is not really relevant anymore. Many other magazine have tried big format, then it fails. None are conceived as posters. Some old school vibes…..

Is there anyone you dream could work with you as a Kilimanjaro contributor?
I have actually worked with a lot of people I would love to have worked with but still i would love to work with the incredible Roni Horn… (artist from Hauser and Wirth). She rocks.

Looking backwards, how would you describe Kilimanjaro’s evolution?
My independent manifesto works. It still reaches people and I have been doing it since 2003. Self published – not overcrowded advertising – the people that buy it support it. Still inspiring a lot of nobodies and somebodies. Still trying to make interesting print work in this Digital Age.

You started Kilimanjaro with your own funds back in 2004 and things have changed drastically since then.
What is, in your opinion, the present and the future of the publishing industry?

I think Bi annual is definitely in at the moment. The content of printed matter should feel like there is thought and property thats worth keeping. The monthly magazine format is less effective because blogs have supplanted them in some ways. I think its really a great time for printed matter because all the junk ad space magazines are going off the shelves .
It was just too much, this-everyone-who’s-got-a-Macbook-can=be-an-art-director kind of thing. So it a good time for projects like kilimanjaro and other die hard publishers.

It feels much easier now and there is no overly patronizing independent magazine conference and seminars which makes it a commercial underground. Back in the days I couldn’t even put kilimanjaro in art bookshops because it was too Avant Garde or because it doesn’t carry a household name artist on the cover. Now all those artists are celebrities and now people want a change. It’s happening in fashion, politics, media and I’m sure its going to happen in art soon. Still happy to be here and I’m thankful for all the people / contributors that support the project and make this project exist.

What’s your (and Kilimanjaro’s) strategy for survival?
Don’t sell out! Make things yourself. Lose the traditional ways of making magazine it costs too much money. Invest your ideas around you.
Make a good sincere publication and let people come to you. Be patient if it does not work it does not mean it’s not good.

How do you think recession has affected the art industry? Creativity?
It a blessing! Things where not right before, it was all money money!
I will say this: make what you can afford! For kilimanjaro it has been a great time. Now a lot of people could get together and make something based on the creativity. It’s also a fresh start for the newcomers. I want new contributors with new energy to collaborate with. You might probably just have been sacked from a job you hated anyway. Now you have no excuse.

Interview by Enrico Grigoletti.
Editorial supervising by Tag Christof – image courtesy of
Kilimangiaro Magazine

Sang Bleu seduces Milano

Sang Bleu seduces Milano

Tonight marks the Milan launch of Sang Bleu V – the fifth issue of the experimental culture and style magazine.

Absolutely dripping with gritty, visceral, and stunning images (including a drop-dead, starkly gorgeous editorial shot by 2DM’s Vicky Trombetta and styled by 2DM’s Rossana Passalacqua, as well as another styled by 2DM’s Ana Murillas), the double issue is a feast of beauty and iconoclasm. Launched in London in 2004, Sang Bleu’s vision of that which is contemporary destroys the varnished surface of usual culture and fashion mags and looks with a poignant eye into the subcultures of tattoos, lowriders, body mods and fetishes.

Presented by Maxime Büchi & Marcelo Burlon at Gloria Maria Gallery, Via
Watt 32. Party following at Magazzini Generali.

Text by Tag Christof – image courtesy of Sang Bleu

FoodMarketo by Apartamento Magazine

FoodMarketo by Apartamento Magazine

Apartamento as you know is an everyday life interiors bi-annual magazine written in English.
A place in print for people, not just objects. Apartamento is a magazine about homes, living spaces and design solutions as opposed to houses, photo ops and design dictatorships. It understands interior design as a means of personal expression, showing how people arrange their homes and the solutions they find to the same problems that everyone has. This year for the Milano design week, Apartamento with DesignMarketo – a company which was set up by Jerome Rigaud and Alexandre Bettler: “originally we wanted to help our designer friends to clear their stocks of amazing things they had piled up in their studio. We quickly realised what a wonderful tool it was to diffuse ideas and objects, work with our friends and also to meet new people. We want it to be some sort of hybrid in between a music label, a magazine, an art gallery and a corner shop” – has set up FoodMarketo!

FoodMarketo is half pop up store, half cooking workshop, selling contemporary design objects commissioned to over 30 international designers and hosting daily workshops to share recipes and everyday life ingredients.
The store will feature a unique interior designed by London based designers, Max Lamb & Lars Frideen. FoodMarketo is organised in collaboration with Marion Friedmann. Please come and visit us!

Designers:

Alexandre Bettler – All Cats Are Grey – Amandine Alessandra Andrew Haythornthwaite – Arabeschi Di Latte Atelier Sara Ivanyi – Atwork – Bannhocks & Hill – Bertjan Pot – Catherine Guiral (officeabc) – Charlotte Coulais – David Weatherhead – Do You Read Me – Fabien Caperan Ferran Lajara – Frank Bruggeman Harry Thaler – Jackson Lam Ken Kirton – Lars Frideen – Loris & Livia – Marco Dessí – Markus Bergström MischerTraxler – Nelly Ben Hayoun Nicola Enrico Stäubli – OK- RM – Olivia Decaris – Oscar Diaz – Oscar Narud Peter Marigold – Study O Portable TankBoys – Tomás Alonso

Workshops:

14 April,
13:00—17:00 + 18:00—20:00
Color Me Beautiful
A natural beauty session with Arabeschi di Latte

15 April
13:00—17:00
Gemma’s Jam
Discover your hidden marmalade skills with Gemma Holt

16 April,
14:00—17:00
The Bread Workshops
Make new bread friends with Alexandre Bettler

13—18 April
12:00—13:00
FoodMarketo Everyday Specials
Daily surprises for the early birds

By 2DM Blogazine  - image courtesy of Walter Pfeiffer, from the book ‘Welcome Aboard’ edition Patrick Frey 2001

Henrik Vibskov – Berlin

Henrik Vibskov – Berlin

Henrik Vibskov stopped by Berlin for a quick visit this past Sunday, where he presented his latest book of graphic works, entitled ‘The Panda People and Other Works.’

The designer-turned-musician-turned-artist gave a short talk and Q&A session in Mitte’s Pool Gallery, where the original prints are currently exhibiting. Vibskov uses archaic decidedly processes when creating his prints, using wood and stone engravings, complementing the Japanese Binding technique with which the book is held together.

The prints are identifiable as belonging to Vibskov’s mad world, but as he confirmed, do not necessarily correlate with his fashion endeavours. Simplistic, graphic, and almost childish, the pieces are medium specific, mostly inconceivable as being printed on textile.

Text & images by Dario Natale

What Happened? 80*81 – 032c Workshop

What Happened? 80*81 – 032c Workshop

Glossing over main historical events to reconstruct their bonds to the present is a perverse and lengthy method of investigation. Still, it must have been a kind of obsession for Georg Diez, always referring in his books to quantities of goings-on to base his considerations on its consequences for the present.
This time Diez, together with Christopher Roth gave birth to 80*81, a retro-visionary research in collaboration with many artists, astrologists, philosophers, psychologists, writers, filmakers and actors.

What Happened?”, the question-title, states the historical point of view from which each of these disciplines pervades the others in changing our everyday reality, emotions, knowledge, views and reactions.
In 1980, Ronald Reagan was elected, Pope John Paul II met Lech Walesa, Andy Warhol dined with William S. Burroughs at the Chelsea Hotel, and John Galliano was a Blitz Kid. And what happened in 1981, when Ayatollah Khomeini released the hostages, and AIDS surfaced? All these matters affected our culture by becoming ingrained in the past, present and future.
The 11 volumes of The 80*81 Book Collection serve as both guide and almanac. Each volume zooms through interviews, original documents, photos and a timeline to arrive at New Year’s Eve 1980.
In honor of Georg Diez and Christoph Roth, Société de 032c bar celebrates 80*81 with sounds, videos and documents this Saturday 20th March @ 032c Workshop, Brunnenstr. 9, 10119 Berlin.

By Elisa Lusso

Here’s Sang Bleu 5

Here’s Sang Bleu 5

Tonight I had a dream: in the morning, while I was drinking plenty of coffee as usual to get up, the bell rang and a very special delivery boy named Marcelo came to my door and handed me a big shopping bag filled with many copies of Sang Bleu 5. To my great pleasure, this wasn’t too far from reality!

The brand new issue of Sang Bleu is reaching 2DM in the next few days, while we had the pleasure of attending a few shows during last MFW with its publisher and editor-in-chief Maxime Buechi, in an enjoyable and intellectual environment. We really can’t wait to flip through the pages of the magazine and neither can Vicky Trombetta and Rossana Passalacqua, who are counted among the numerous contributors to the fifth issue. This time around, SB5 is a two-volume magazine of more than 600 pages.

Sang Bleu 5 will open its valuable pages for the first launch in Paris @ Ofr tonight from 5.15 pm, and in the meantime we can all get ready for the Milanese launch of the magazine due out on April 16th, an double-event curated by Unotre and the delivery boy from my dream, Marcelo Burlon.

By Elisa Lusso – Pics: Sang Bleu 5 cover, Maxime during his visit in Milan

The Art and Life of Chaz Bojórquez

The Art and Life of Chaz Bojórquez

Curated by Marco Klefisch & Alberto Scabbia

“THE ART AND LIFE OF CHAZ BOJÓRQUEZ” is the first monograph on Charles “Chaz” Bojórquez, an artist of Mexican origin who at the end of the 1970’s started out in his district of Los Angeles, following the tradition of Cholo graffiti which was widespread in the suburbs of the Californian metropolis.
Chaz Bojórquez soon found a style of his own that has influenced whole generations of street artists, writers and tattooists. His symbol or “tag”, created in 1969, is a stylised skull called Senor Suerte (Mr Luck): inspired by Mexican folklore and especially by the cult of Holy Death it is one of the first examples of stencil art applied to the street and it subsequently became an image for protection against death among the street gangs.
The other feature of this artist’s aesthetic is calligraphy: in fact Bojrquez was one of the first writers to employ special typographical characters, hard to read but of great aesthetic impact, creating an original synthesis of psychedelic style, Fraktur and Chinese calligraphy. Bojórquez was also one of the first to pass successfully from street art to the galleries: today his works are in the permanent collections of American museums such as the National Museum of American Art and the Orange County Museum of Art, inasmuch as they are considered expressions of South Californian Latino culture.

The book is in three sections: the first opens with introductory texts by Greg Escalante, François Chastanet and the editors, followed by an interview in which Chaz Bojórquez goes back over the milestones in his artistic formation.
The second part deals with Bojórquez’s drawings and works in black and white, while the third is dedicated to his paintings. The editors have also included several photographs that document certain crucial moments in the artist’s life.

March — Friday 5th — 2010

Official release with booksigning by the artist
RADIO — Via Pestalozzi, 4 — Milano
from 6 pm to 9 pm

supported by: Damiani Editore and Carhartt

By Marco Klefisch & Alberto Scabbia

Walter Albini by Maria Luisa Frisa & Stefano Tonchi

Walter Albini by Maria Luisa Frisa & Stefano Tonchi

“The imagination to power Walter Albini and his time” is not just a book about the life of Walter Albini, but a large “fresco” of a crucial moment in which Albini was a supporter and protagonist, that  marks the passing of the atelier and the affirmation of a serial fashion and industrial production that can be reached by most. Born in Busto Arsizio in 1941, he completed his studies of art in Turin then moved to Paris, where he remained dazzled by Coco Chanel after meeting her.

Soon thereafter, he began working with Mariuccia Mandelli, and at Krizia he became familiar with the industrial techniques applied to knitwear and yarn. His big break came in 1972: Albini worked simultaneously for five independent Italian fashion companies. It becomes clear for him that he must abandon the idea of the atelier of the 50′s and envision a new way to design and produce. Albini created clothing and fabric, always striving for a unity of style. He never ceases to amaze, choosing in 1977 an exhibition of clothes on panels: twelve outfits belonging to friends, photographers, artists, whose personal care styling, once again becoming a vanguard of the times. He always chose unusual locations for his fashion shows: the Cafe Florian in Venice, the gardens in the south of Rome, a restaurant in the Brera neighborhood in Milan. A proponent of the total look, he himself put it into practice by drawing with parallel styles of fabrics, furniture, glass and objects. Many constants mark his style: from the beloved Gastby look, declined in both unisex and androgynous versions, to the shirt-jackets and bicolor shoes and early amphibians. He invented the perfection of style well in advance, leaving a timeless legacy.

By Stefania Seoni | image by 2DM from Walter Albini by Maria Luisa Frisa & Stefano Tonchi

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