



I am so in love with Connie Lim’s Illustration series of playing cards. I’m not even a card player, but I would consider a round of Gin or 21 with this deck. . .



Fashion powerhouse Tom Ford , known for his provocative ad campaigns (see below) has turned his designer eye to the big screen. Ford is debuting his film, A Single Man at the Toronto Film Festival this fall, and has seen positive reviews already from critics, including Kaleem Aftab of the Independent, stating,”Tom Ford proves he’s just as much of a stylist in the director’s chair as he was when he turned around the fortunes of Italian fashion house Gucci in the 1990s,” . . . The film is an adaptation of a Christopher Isherwood novel set in early 1960s California. It is a drama about a gay college professor, played by Colin Firth, who learns at the beginning that his lover has died. The trailer looks promising, and lets just say that Tom Ford is known more for his more risque editorial ads (see below) we can only imagine what his directorial debut will result in. . .

a. . . cologne ad. . .yes. . .

Agnes Varda, how I love thee, let me count the ways. Have you ever seen someone so inspiring it’s painful. The first time I saw Agnes Varda’s film, Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse, I didn’t just think, “wow, she is a great filmmaker” I thought, “holy shit! I want to be her!” Being very confused about the direction my life was taking while studying world religions as my bachelor’s degree (and for the majority of my life), I never really planned things, I always just felt as if I fell into things. Watching Agnes’ films I felt as if I saw for the first time in the modern generation, an artist who truly did what their heart desired and didn’t worry about what others would like to see. She seems to make films out her insatiable and geniune curiosity in life, not for some executive looking to make an extra buck. To me that is a beautiful and all too rare type of artist in the contemporary day. Thank you Agnes Varda, for your passion and your curiosity. Thank you for sharing that with the world. Entre Nous, c’est si bon.
Agnes came out with a new film last December entitled, “The Beaches of Agnes” which is an autobiographical documentary about her life. Agnes has been known to disclose certain aspects of her life, often making herself apart of the story in many of her films, my personal favorite being Les glaneurs et la glaneuse (translation: The Gleaners and I). Agnes also made a touching film about her husband Jacques Demy, Jacquot de Nantes. Varda’s work was a precursor of the the French new wave style of film in the 1960′s, attending the prestigous Ecole du Louvre. She expressed herself at first through photography, but soon moved into film proving herself a unique and qualified filmmaker that met the ranks of Godard, Demy and


JAMES HOUSTON! JAMES HOUSTON! Embed your brain with this name and keep him on your watch list. The British graduate student of graphic design took on Radiohead’s remix challenge to remix the track “Nude” from their album “In Rainbows” for his graduate thesis. Although Houston missed the deadline for the competition, his rendition of the track takes an amazingly unique perspective, and has garnered much earned attention. For those of you who’ve heard the track (and I shun those of you who haven’t) the concept of remixing it seems futile. But because of the ridiculousness of it, is just how Houston approached it, as he stated, “I decided to take the piss a bit, as the contest seemed to be in that spirit.” Houston used ordinary objects including an Epson printer and a HP scanner which results in a fantastic jaw dropping sound.

Michael Anerson's work at the Ace Hotel
Artist Michael Anderson has been collecting graffiti stickers since the early nineties, peeling them off lampposts and train station walls, he recently put them to amazingly innovative use by creating a commissioned mural in the lobby of the Ace Hotel in New York City. The mural consists of 4,000 or so collected stickers, from Andersons massive 40,000 plus collection, that was scanned from his notebooks onto black-and-white silk paper and then collaged to create a enticing mural that demands gawking.

Michael Anderson's work at the Ace Hotel

Paris, France 1989
When traveling I always make it a sort of mission to find unique postcards to send home to family and friends. While staying in Paris this summer, I not only found a beautiful postcard, I discovered a photographer whom I have become deeply infatuated with: Elliott Erwitt. Born in 1928 to Russian parents and raised in Paris France, Erwitt was strongly influenced at an early age after a meeting with photojournalist legend Robert Capa and fashion photographer Edward Steichen. Erwitt seems to have taken inspiration equally from both these photographers and used it to create his own genre of “candid” photos that are superbly composed, often with themes of irony and a touch of the absurd all while remaining thought provoking and emotionally moving.


Elliott Erwitt

Elliott Erwitt
Welcome the obscure and unknown, the derelict and forgotten. A world so overrun with advertisements and marketing gimmicks that the truth has become a big lie. This is an attempt to explore and explain the often misinterpreted vision I have of the world, it is not one of pessimism, but one that loves the beauty of the underrated and unexplored. I hope to share this vision through the many different concepts of art–anything that challenges this idea and forces it to do a 180 on itself should suffice. . . won’t you join me in this quest?