Sunday, September 27, 2009

A Sliver of Social Change in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia



Saudi's first mixed sex university where women are free to dress as they please, and where they are able to drive? This seems like a definite step in the right direction for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Maybe it will be the precursor to a shift in the Saudi society's view of women and foreigners?

Saudi's deeply conservative society is looking to modernize, and I think King Abdullah's idea of a university being where change happens is a grand one because it is the young of today who initiate social change in society. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) will be one of the most modern in the world, boasting the world's fastest supercomputer, state of the art technology, and most importantly for Saudi Arabia, an environment that fosters equal opportunity for both males and females. We can only hope that more institutions like this one are set up in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
A classroom at KAUST
The KAUST campus
And if the following video serves to show how gender and interracial relations are treated in this university, I am bubbling with happiness.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Joan Fàbregas Collection

I was really pleased with Joan Fàbregas's collection at Barcelona's 080. Fàbregas stuck with basic black and white but played with a myriad of styles and silhouettes in his collection. It did not bore me for a second. There were a lot of sheer numbers in there that would be able to work in the Spring as well as probably the Fall and Winter. The designer moves on a range from simple to drastically detailed, but he maintains stability throughout the collection and the pieces mesh well together. My favorite is definitely the black overall-like piece in the picture above. 






Photos via: Homo-neurotic

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Givenchy Spring/Summer 2010



The background music! Enough said.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Momo for Y-3 Limited Edition Sneakers

I basically died over these kicks when I first saw them. They are a product of a collaboration between Momo the graffiti artist whose graffiti can be found all over Manhattan, and Y-3. The result is a heavily graffiti influenced hi-top that blows my mind with the use of geometry and color. The sneakers are limited edition and there will be 350 pairs selling for $380 each.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Iran Inside Out


Today is the last day to catch the Iran Inside Out exhibit at the Chelsea Art Museum. I will be there as an added incentive. :)

Here is a description from the Chelsea Art Museum site:

The groundbreaking exhibition features 35 artists living and working in Iran alongside 21 others living in the Diaspora. The result is a multifarious portrait of 56 contemporary Iranian artists challenging the conventional perceptions of Iran and Iranian art. 

 

In Iran Inside Out, 210 works comprising painting, sculpture, photography, video and installation come together, in a rare moment which allows visitors an intimate look into the people, both inside and outside a country that is more complex than images of veiled women, worn out calligraphy and what a handful of other emblematic images would suggest.

 

Curated by Sam Bardaouil and Till FellrathIran Inside Out is an examination of the means through which a young generation of artists is reconciling the daily implications of cultural and geographical distances with the search for individual artistic expression. The exhibition offers an unexpected insight into the artistic energy of a culture that is constantly evolving as Iranians living both in and out of the country, come of age living and working in contentious societies.  While half of these artists such as Vahid Sharifian, Barbad Golshiri, Farideh Lashai andJinoos Taghizadeh reside in Iran, the other half including artists such as Shirin Neshat, Shahram Entekhabi, Mitra Tabrizian and Shoja Azari has been interspersed in the Diaspora. 

 

Iran Inside Out explores the process of deconstruction and reinvention of both, self and art that has resulted from this cultural schism, often swinging between openness and dialogue, or seclusion and separatism. Ironically, contrary to one’s expectations, the artists living abroad often draw more on their cultural heritage, while those on the inside focus more on issues of everyday life without much regard to what ‘the outside’ views as specifically Iranian references. Yet, within these disparities, one element stands strong: the recurrent references, sometimes ambiguous, at times emotional, often nostalgic and on occasion satirical and even tragic to Iran the country, Iran the past, the Iran which has been lost and that which could be found.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Moscow Stylin'

via Face Hunter... I haven't seen a lot of street style photos from Moscow but if they're looking as cool as this guy, I love it already! I love pairing a jacket with shorts for a not so conventional look. And oh boy is that jacket amazing or what? And those shoes! I must get a pair like that. He is simply the epitome of calm, cool, and collected.

Nom de Guerre Fall/Winter 2009 Lookbook

Nom De Guerre released a lookbook recently for their Fall/Winter 2009 campaign. The beautifully photographed pictures come complete with commentary to set the mood for the collection which seemingly gives off a stylish Russian guerrilla army vibe, accented by fur leg warmers, bullet rounds, and the traditional Russian ushanka (fur hat). This campaign features photographer Erik Swain and a diverse group of models including Tal Lee, Ali Mehrabian, Terry Murphy, Christopher Purpura, Jamil Ramirez, Egil Rostad, Michael Russo, and Michael John Whitaker. Those fur leg warmers NEED to be mine!
Enjoy:













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