Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 July 2013

'Knock You Down (Major Lazer vs. Jack Beats Remix)' Sees 'Old Friend' Diplo Reworking Banger (Exclusive Download)


Remix packs have long been the rage in the dance music community, a quick way for artists and managers to draft friends and label-mates into providing a spin on pre-existing tracks. It's the former case with Jack Beats and Major Lazer's rework of "Knock You Down," in which producer/Instagramer-extraordinaire Diplo teams up with the U.K. duo for a fun take on a popular club banger. "We're old friends with Diplo so we really wanted to include him on this package," DJ Plus One and Beni G said in an email to HuffPost. "It turned out to be us and Major Lazer doing the mix on a bashy, big drum flex for the clubs and we're very proud of it." The track appears on "Jack Beats Remixed Vol. One" EP, due out August 13 on Skrillex' OWSLA. No need to wait until then, though: It's available as a free download above. The original version of the tune is available for your listening pleasure below.

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Lovefest: Heart to Mouth

Lovefest: Heart to Mouth An Erotic Subversion of the Ultimate Amorous Icon from Creative Wunderkind Bart Hess

Lovefest: Heart to Mouth Sheath your arrows: the voluptuous red heart, international symbol of love, is reimagined in this a visceral new short by genre-defying Dutch artist Bart Hess. With echoes of high-tech fetish fashion and Jeff Koons’ contemporary pop art classic “Hanging Heart,” Hess’ latest video stages a Sapphic encounter from within crimson latex balloons. “I want to create a tension between the body and material—almost as though they become one,” says the multidisciplinary creative NOWNESS - READ MORE

Thursday, 4 April 2013

A Moment with “The Man”: Thoughts on Ragnar Kjartansson’s Recent Work

Ragnar Kjartansson, The End–Venice, 2009. Performance view. Venice, June 2009. Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York, and i8 Gallery, Reykjavik.

As the youngest artist ever to represent Iceland at the Venice Biennale, Kjartansson penetrated the art world’s collective consciousness with The End–Venice in 2009. This performance piece, like so much of his subsequent work, managed to be at once playful and provocative, sly and guileless. Ensconcing himself with friend and fellow artist Pall Haukur Bjornsson in a Venetian palazzo for the Biennale’s six-month run, he proceeded to churn out one painting per day, each depicting the variously posed yet invariably Speedo-clad Bjornsson.
The resulting œuvre—144 canvases in total—alluded to diverse artistic periods and riffed on numerous painterly styles. Overtly bound to the ephemeral, irretrievable conditions of their making, the canvases made explicit the duality of temporal independence and historical specificity implicit in the material work of art. Ultimately, the works inhabited an uncertain state between autonomy and implication, and despite their elemental, antic energy, they evinced a certain lack—the viewer, knowing the paintings’ role within a larger artistic project, could scarcely help but see them as material fragments of an unreproducible whole.

Ragnar Kjartansson, “The End–Venice,” 2009. 144 paintings. Dimensions variable. Installation view. Luhring Augustine, 2010. Courtesy of Luhring Augustine, New York.
The End—Venice refracted the ebb and flow—backward, forward, side-to-side—of contemporary art itself; it effectively “performed” the conditions of uncertainty, ambivalence, and contingency that inform so much art making and viewing today. The End also elucidated a particular approach to the creative act that has distinguished Kjartansson’s practice, an approach that has its roots in Icelandic history and culture. As Kjartansson has explained, “You drive through the [Icelandic] landscape, and every hill, every farm, has a story connected to it. That’s how my performance works are. I don’t believe in the idea that you have to obtain the art piece to have it—or even see the art piece. It exists as a story.”[1]
Which brings us to the artist’s recent video The Man (2010), a centerpiece of the current exhibitionRagnar Kjartansson: Song at Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art. The notion of story, and a profound attunement to the mysteries of place and time, resonates with especial force in this work; in fact, the video further illuminates those cross-currents of past and present, individual and social, aesthetic and experiential that inform the artist’s ever-evolving body of work.

Ragnar Kjartansson, “The Man,” 2010. Still from a single-channel video; color, sound, 49 minutes. Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York, and i8 Gallery, Reykjavik.

THANX - DailySERVING - Written by 

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

PXA Paris Basketball Tournament 2012 Video


With the PXA basketball tournament to the city of Paris. Here's Pigalle's take on the event: Hosted by Nike Stadium Paris and Pigalle Paris, the event invited different personalities of the fashion and music industry around Europe to create teams and live the fun side of basketball. This year the level for the Men's games was definitely higher and exiting, while the girls had a more relaxed and fun tournament. Paris Team O5 won the finals against the German Team Port Authority. After the match was over it was time to celebrate - the night started with the showcase of rapper Stanley, then followed by Tekilatex and Cut killer with NBA player Boris Diaw. It was a good choice for the mixed crowed who participate in the event. Love and basketball was the mood for the PXA 2012 - we are already looking forward to the next edition.

Monday, 9 July 2012

Red Wing Shoes Amsterdam — Shoe Care

Red Wing Shoes Amsterdam — Shoe Care from Tenue de Nîmes on Vimeo.

The video demonstrates how to take care of all different types of leather as produced by the Red Wing’s SB Foot Tannery. Every type of leather has its own qualities, that subsequently demands its own method of cleaning and conditioning. With the video, Red Wing Shoes Amsterdam shares its knowledge on proper shoe maintenance to ensure your shoes stay healthy and can be treasured for over a lifetime.

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Helmut Newton: Legacy The Late Photographer’s Three Protégés Discuss his Lasting Influence

The long-time assistants of legendary fashion image-maker Helmut Newton, photographers Mark Arbeit, George Holz and Just Loomis, pay tribute to their mentor in this excerpt from new short Three Boys from Pasadena. Boldly approaching Newton in 1979 after getting a tip that he would be dropping into a Pasadena boutique, the three young art students and aspiring photographers were taken on as his assistants. It was the beginning a professional and personal relationship that would last up until Newton's death in 2004. “He loved to ride in my old, beat-up ’69 Dodge Dart—pulling up to the valet at the Beverly Hills Hotel with all the fancy cars there,” recalls Holz. “He thought it was such a cool and camp thing to do.” Mixing archive footage with Arbeit, Holz and Loomis's recollections of working with the provocative lensman, Three Boys from Pasadena accompanies an exhibition at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. Originally hung at the Helmut Newton Foundation in Berlin in 2009, the show features memorabilia and Polaroids documenting the trio's years working with Newton alongside a retrospective of their subsequent photographic careers—including personal projects and commercial works for the likes of French Vogue, Harper's Bazaar and The New York Times. Three Boys from Pasadena is at the Williamson Gallery of the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, until 26 August. Dedicated to June and Helmut Directed and Edited by Joey Carey Produced by Mark Arbeit, George Holz, Just Loomis Archival footage by Just Loomis Music by Julia Haltigan Music Supervision by Concord Music Group SOURCE NOWNESS

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

In Bed With Invader

 French Street Artist, Invader, is known the world over for his distinctive street decals - showing the process the artist goes through - For an entire night - watch this...

Tim Marsella: The Ballroom Cape Town's Young Dancers Waltz Through the Photographer's Vibrant New Short

Tim Marsella: The Ballroom Cape Town's Young Dancers Waltz Through the Photographer's Vibrant New Short The gliding figures and twirling colors at a junior ballroom dancing contest in the Cape Town suburb of Athlone are captured by photographer Tim Marsella in today’s film. While shooting a commercial in the South African city, Marsella heard a radio announcement about the competition and went to check it out as soon as there was a break on set. “The contest was taking place in a sports hall of the local Muslim community and the young dancers were all dressed up—it was gorgeous,” he explains. thanx nowness

Tim Marsella: The Ballroom on Nowness.com.

Monday, 23 January 2012

Damien Hirst “On the Spot” Video

Damien Hirst: On the Spotfrom Matt Black on Nowness.com.

The Industrious Art Star Occupies Gagosian Galleries Worldwide with His Complete Spot Paintings A rhinestone-wearing Damien Hirst explains the theory and thought behind his infamous spot paintings in the latest short from filmmaker Matt Black. The legendary British artist, made famous by submerging mammals in formaldehyde and creating jaw-droppingly expensive jewel-encrusted skulls, has become one of the most prolific and lucrative names in contemporary art.

Monday, 28 November 2011

i-D Magazine “The Stepping Stone” Issue by KAWS Video

i-D Magazine has compiled a small piece looking back at the highly coveted issue featuring KAWS, providing a greater insight into the project and looking at the process and inspiration.

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Copyright - Forever Less One Day

In the below video, C.G.P. Grey takes a look at the interesting world of copyright in the U.S. and the affect it has had on the creativity of mainstream culture. The six-minute-long short film gives a quick history of the copyright law since it's inception back in the 1700's, and uses Disney and Star Wars as case studies.

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Video: Björk - Crystalline

After announcing her upcoming multimedia offering Bophilia, Björk has released a Michel Gondry directed video for the album's lead single - "Crystalline". Gondry is a close friend of Björks and has collaborated frequently with the musician in the past. This video sees a bunch of hallucinogenic visuals depicting crystals and laser beams growing from the surface of a distant planet, with the Icelandic singer taking center stage. Björk's new album Biophilia is due for release 27 September via Nonesuch/One Little Indian. Thanx HUH  

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

Woodkid - Iron


Woodkid - Iron from WOODKID on Vimeo.

IRON EP on ITUNES : itunes.apple.com/​fr/​album/​iron-ep/​id423849905
First EP "IRON" available on Itunes.

WOODKID - IRON - Video directed by Yoann Lemoine
Cinematography by Mathieu Plainfosse
Featuring Agyness Deyn
Produced by Mourad Belkeddar
Styling by Ellen Af Geijerstam
Post Production by OneMore Prod
3d Artist : Jonathan Benabed
Flame Artist : Herve Thouement
Label & Video commissioner Pierre Le Ny
P & C 2011 GREEN UNITED MUSIC
CAVIAR / HSI / ONEMORE PRODUCTION 

Friday, 11 March 2011

YELLE - Safari Disco Club


YELLE - Safari Disco Club / Que veux-tu (exclusive full length edit) from Yelle on Vimeo.
Hot off the press!!! Check out our exclusive 8min long video showcasing not just 1 but 2 songs from our upcoming album 'Safari Disco Club'! Directed with love by Jeremie Saindon... READ MORE

Thursday, 10 February 2011

Vice Film - Jihad Milkshakes


In true Vice style, this film takes an open minded view of a serious modern conflict - muslim religious views in england. A look at both sides of the story, Vice magazine and VBS always provide a unbiased, and ever so slightly comical view. Check out the rest of Vice's videos here.