Click for PDF - Patrik Sandberg
Transcription
Click for PDF - Patrik Sandberg
LAST THINGS FIRST LAST THINGS FIRST Once the symbol of total rebellion, the humble T-shirt has become a mainstay of our everyday lives. This spring, however, a new book will seek to reclaim the counterculture value of that particular wardrobe staple. Ripped: T-shirts from the Underground traces the role of the Tee from the days of ’60s rock to ’70s post-punk to ’80s pop, showcasing styles worn by everyone from John Cale to the Germs to Madonna. Selected from vintage fashion collector Cesar Padilla’s personal archives, the rare shirts make for a highly visual history of one iconic piece of clothing. Jeff Groen BURGLAR For those who have ever spent any significant amount of time searching for that perfect crewneck sweatshirt that’s been washed so many times yet miraculously remains both sturdy and soft, you are not alone. Burglar.Co.,Ltd, a Swedish brand launched in 2008 that specializes in workwear and military-inspired basics, is the brainchild of one such tireless aficionado of vintage garments and hand craftsmanship. Sebastian Bacigalupe traveled over three years to far-flung locations in order to find precisely the right materials and manufacturing techniques needed to execute his vision. The comfortable, effortless pieces that resulted belie their carefully researched origins. Burglar. Co.,Ltd will soon offer a wider range of accessories and leather products, but in the meantime, Bacigalupe is working on a bag made from his most recent find, a hundred-year-old cotton and canvas sail. Sometimes it’s just easier to let someone else do the legwork for you. Grace Kapin. BLACKOUT T-SHIRTS BOOK Ripped: T-shirts from the Underground is out in March 2010 from Rizzoli IN A BOOK CLOTHING BOOK MAGNUS UNNAR The environmentalist Edward Abbey once said, “You can’t study the darkness by flooding it with light,” but David Nye is out to prove him wrong. In his new book, When the Lights Went Out, Nye traces the 20thcentury significance of a blanket of night falling over society. The imposed blackouts during World War II make an appearance as examples of military action. New York City’s 1965 and 1977 blackouts are contrasted to reflect the dissolution in societal bonds in those decades. California’s rolling blackouts in 2000 and the power failure that brought down the northeast in 2003 demonstrate the nation’s increasingly creaky infrastructure. Through causes economic, strategic, environmental, or just plain belligerent, Nye explores the effect of darkness on the American mind, painting a picture of a modern civilization so consumed with life under glowing bulbs that night itself seems unnatural. Jonathan Shia These days, no architect is complete without his own monograph. Now, Tham & Videgård Arkitekter are preparing to join the big leagues with their new book from Arvinius Förlag. Bolle Tham and Martin Videgård, the duo behind the Stockholm-based boutique firm, have built a reputation over the past decade for their nuanced creations that reflect and react to their surroundings in an environmentally-sensitive way. Tham and Videgård, who were profiled in our last issue, approach each commission with fresh eyes and a sensitivity to the project’s unique circumstances, a practice that makes each of the buildings collected in the self-titled book, edited by Tomas Lauri, a refreshing surprise. All of Tham & Videgård Arkitekter’s greatest hits are here, from the reputationmaking Kalmar Museum of Art to their colorful interior for the Humlegården Apartment, showcasing a body of work that pushes architecture forward without sacrificing its humanity. Jonathan Shia Fashion design is not an easy game to play these days. But amid the darkness and downsizing, there are a few young designers who have chosen the current atmosphere of upheaval as the perfect time to expand. Endovanera’s David Michael Hershberger is one such radical, opting to launch his first complete womenswear collection for Fall 2010 in addition to the men’s line he has been producing since 2005. The women’s pieces will take their cues from men’s cuts and fabrics while adhering to the brand’s core principle of wearability and its multifarious inspirations (medieval warriors and gypsies among them). Grace Kapin BOOK Magnus Unnar’s ebullient photographs have long been injecting a dose of much-needed vitality into the arm of fashion. This spring, Unnar administers another jolt with his first book release, In the Middle of Something. The stunning monograph, out now in a limited run of five hundred copies, showcases an amalgam of twenty-seven images in vibrant color, shot over the course of several years in New York, London, and Iceland. Focusing on themes of friends and family as they relate to place and time, In the Middle is a landmark release from one of the most cunning artists in fashion. Patrik Sandberg Teengirl Fantasy might be thought of less as a fantasy about teen girls and more of what a teenage girl’s deepest fantasies might sound like. Comprised of Oberlin College friends Nick Weiss and Logan Takahashi (both male), this L.A.-meets-New-Jersey-in-Ohio-and-sometimes-Amsterdam duo has constructed a sound that is nearly impossible to categorize. Part 4/4 rhythm electronic house, part swirling melodic shoegaze, and part booty techno, their lengthy tracks are oftentimes sped up and slowed down in blessed-out simultaneity. When asked which word they would invent to make up their own genre tag, Takahashi decidedly states: “sleephouse,” without even pausing to think. Their ability to get crowds going, even in Brooklyn, has resulted in a few heated situations. “Once, in Baltimore, a couple was having actual sex on top of the table with our gear on it,” recalls Weiss. “I had to actually push against the guy’s back to keep them off of me. He was all sweaty. It was really gross.” Patrik Sandberg Teengirl Fantasy’s debut full-length is out in May 2010 from True Panther US/Merok UK. Photography Marco Roso TEENGIRL FANTASY SHOP DOROTHY IANNONE American expatriate artist Dorothy Iannone has spent decades channeling her own life story into her psychedelic and highly sexual paintings. In recent years, the Berlin-based Iannone has become something of an icon to the Peres Projects–set, and fittingly she will show at the gallery’s Los Angeles space this April. There, she will present a set of drawings, paintings, and silkscreens that recounts the female sexual experience in her signature, heavily stylized aesthetic. Jeff Groen DEBUT Dorothy Iannone’s show runs April 10– May 29, 2010, at Peres Projects, L.A. SHOW RIC PIPINO IN A BOTTLE KAREL FUNK Tham & Videgård Arkitekter is out now from Arvinius Förlag. Photography Åke E:son Lindman SOUNDS LIKE SATURDAYS NYC Blackout, 2003. Photography Sergio A. Fernandez. Courtesy +Kris Graves Projects, Brooklyn. When the Lights Went Out is out in March 2010 from MIT Press ENDOVANERA’S THAM & VIDEGÅRD Photography Fredrik Skogkvist In the Middle of Something is out now Skaters have Supreme, tennis players have Tretorn, and now surfers have Saturdays. The Soho café–slash–lifestyle store just opened last September, but it’s already a downtown classic. Beginning with coffee from La Colombe, the shop, opened by good friends Morgan Collett, Colin Tunstall, and Josh Rosen—all refugees from the city’s creative industries—has expanded over the winter months to include surfboards, wetsuits, and a perfectly edited selection of surf-inspired wear, from Isaora parkas and Birdwell Beach Britches board shorts to Spring Court sneakers. “Surf culture used to have such a sharp look, and at some point that was lost,” says Rosen, who oversaw the space’s transformation from gallery to surf-shop. The store is just the starting point for what will become a lifestyle brand, with the first capsule collection available in March. “We wanted to design clothes you can wear to head to Montauk, surf, then throw on a button-down and go out,” Rosen explains. “Very classic, nothing too contemporary.” Summer can’t get here fast enough. Jonathan Shia Karel Funk’s photorealistic portraits feature masculine subjects obscured by an assortment of outerwear: GoreTex hooded jackets, down-filled puffer coats, and classic windbreakers are de rigueur. Contrasting with stark white backgrounds, the pieces are an exercise in creative expression through clothing—or, in this case, creative expression through paintings of clothing. Funk’s palette echoes the environmental landscape missing from the adjacent negative space, and the garments themselves reverberate the theme of nature and man’s place within it in painstaking detail that attracts the viewer even as the subjects turn away. The result is a transfixing meditation on polarity, or at the very least, an austere and vibrant celebration of winter-wear. Patrik Sandberg The ever-elusive perfect haircut. Some of us have never experienced it. Others have had it once and never been able to replicate it. It’s all going swimmingly (glowing reviews from friends, strangers stopping you on the street) until you take that first shower. Afterward it looks somehow… different. Flatter? Duller? Totally freakish? Ric Pipino is no stranger to the age-old at-home hair care lament. Following the opening of his downtown salon last spring, he set out to develop a line of signature products with precisely this problem in mind. Revolution in Cut consists of shampoos, conditioners, primers, and styling products that focus on six basic haircuts, rather than hair type or condition. “Over my years of styling, I realized that none of the brands I used ever focused on the haircut itself, it was always about the hair texture,” explains Pipino. “It occurred to me that if I designed products that focused on the style of the haircut, clients could manage their particular cut at home until their next appointment.” The neroli-scented products recreate the salon experience, taking into account Pipino’s personal cutting techniques and approach to styling, and, unlike most luxury products, they won’t cost you the equivalent of this month’s rent. That’s right: innovative, salon-caliber haircare readily available at drugstore prices, all thanks to a straight male hairstylist. Who would’ve thought? Grace Kapin Ric Pipino’s Revolution in Cut is available at CVS Beauty 360 locations nationwide. Photography Adrian Gaut MARCELO GOMES “Karel Funk” runs April 3–May 1, 2010, at 303 Gallery, NYC SHOW BOOK His expressive, color-drenched photographs distill the essence of his native Brazil, but for his upcoming book, photographer Marcelo Gomes is going darker. Experimenting with longer exposures but sticking to his now-signature journalistic style and layout, the aptly titled Taciturn Heart explores the moodier yin to the artist’s cheerful yang. Some images of dark blue oceans and mysterious women fill the limited-edition book with a sense of longing, while others prove that Gomes’s optimism is never lost. Christopher Bartley Taciturn Heart is out now from Hassla Books