Ha/f Culture RSS

For the exotic, displaced, and eclectic. For those who are unique but can seemingly be from anywhere. For those who cannot accurately discribe themselves by checking “all that apply.” And for anyone who has ever been asked:

What are you?

Ha/f Culuture is a collection of articles and artifacts that celebrate the eccentric and multicolored; what is niether here nor there.

Archive

Nov
20th
Thu
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Shepard Fairey - “Supply and Demand” Coming to ICA Boston

Where mainstream meets rebellion, the first solo museum show for street art mogul Shepard Fairey, entitled “Supply and Demand,” will be opening in February at the Institute of Comtemporary Art in Boston. While Fairey has undoubtedly attained market success with his Obey label and Barak Obama posters, his work is met with harsh judgment from fellow street artists and art critics alike citing Fairey as a “sell out.” Due to the conflicting views of Fairey’s work, the success of his much anticipated show at the ICA is dependent on a number of lingering questions: will the work retain its invasive shock value once it is framed on a museum wall or, like so many street artist before him, will Fairey’s aesthetic fall flat once it’s taken out of its urban context? Will the prestigious exposure of Fairey’s socially charged motifs encite a public reflection on American culture or will it simply drive up the $40 price of posters on his website? Will viewers empathize with the artist’s  appropriation of communist propaganda or will they simply see his subjects as a vehicle for self promotion?

Will you pay the $12 admission fee to become inspired or to witness something that is just “cool”? You can be the judge.

Supply and Demand
February 6 - August 16, 2009 
The Institute of Contemporary Art
100 Northern Avenue
Boston, MA 02210 
t. 617.478.3103

Nov
19th
Wed
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Mr.: Nobody Dies

On view at the Lenmann Maupin gallery is a 35 minute film by Kaikai Kiki contributor Mr. The first film by the Japanese artist expands upon his examination of the Otaku subculture, which emerged in the 1970s and mainly consists of obsessive males whose fetishes include cuteness or kawaii, Mr. uses adolescent Japanese girls he discovered on the streets of Tokyo as the subjects for his film.  Inspired by the painting “It Hurts When it Hits Bare Skin,” the film follows these fictional characters, who are obsessed with a war-like survival game, as they transform from their peaceful everyday lives into Technicolor warriors outfitted in pink, yellow and green camouflage with matching guns. Throughout the film, the camera lingers suggestively on the girls, which makes for and awkward and uncomfortable viewing but is likely the point.

The monumental painting that inspired the film, “It Hurts When it Hits Bare Skin,” is also on on view at the gallery. The LM press release describes the sea of gumball colors: “Crowds gather in the Akihabara (Akiba) neighborhood around toy dispensers similar to those found in American supermarkets in hopes of winning coveted prizes. Never knowing exactly what item will emerge, they cheer “gotcha-gotcha”, the sound that the machine makes as it is dispensing the toy. This neighborhood is the epicenter of Otaku devotees and Mr. continues to explore this subculture that is obsessed with technology, manga, sci-fi literature, anime and video games.”

Nobody Dies
Through 21 February 2009
Lehmann Maupin
201 Chrystie Street
New York, NY 10002 map
tel +1 212 254 0054

Nov
18th
Tue
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RedBull Crashed Ice Open Draft

As a child growing up playing ice hockey I always fantasized what it would be like if all the city streets became frozen over and the world became a giant ice rink. I dreamed how awesome it would be to take the game to another dimension: gliding through street intersections, zipping through an alleyway, and body checking anyone who got in my way through a storefront window. Thanks to the amped up marketing team at RedBull, all of my dreams have come true.

A combination of hockey, downhill skiing, and boarder cross, the Redbull Crashed Ice competition is an ice race through the slanted streets of Old Quebec. There are 16 heats (four for the women) with 4 racers in each round with the top two advancing. The course itself includes massive drops, highway speeds (it is ice, after all), berms, and gaps which all lend themselves to sick air and X-treme havoc for competitors and Zamboni’s alike. But with a purse prize of $10,000 (and presumably a case of RedBull) going to the winner, lacing up the skates is well worth the risk of broken limbs and frostbite.

The event is scheduled for 24 Jan 2009, but qualifying rounds begin later this month all across Canada. Registration ends 24 Nov, visit the Redbull Crashed Ice website for more info.

Nov
14th
Fri
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Inazuma Festival: Japan Celebrates Americana

by Kiya Babzani for Cool Hunting

Japan’s love affair with Americana is no secret. Hot rods, hamburgers and Harleys hold a special place in Japanese culture and their market for classic denim and workwear is thriving. So it’s no surprise that the global leader in dressing up like the Fonz celebrated the fourth annual Inazuma Festival this Sunday on Odaiba, an island just off the mainland near Tokyo. Organized by Lightning Magazine, Inazuma (which is actually Japanese for “lightning”) is a seven-hour marketplace hawking clothes by Japan’s finest denim brands, with booths dedicated to everything from hot dogs and beer to Radio Flyers and motorcycles.

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This year’s festival welcomed 40,000 fans—some of who had camped out over night to get priority entrance—all intent on snatching up the most limited-quantity items, which were produced in batches as small as 20. Dry Bones attracted an acutely rockabilly crowd, while the motorcycle outlaws gravitated towards Iron Heart (who also held the distinction as the only booth with an on-site Union Special sewing machine to chain stitch jeans while customers waited). Female visitors tended toward Pure Blue Japan’s indigo-dyed tees, tanks and shorts, and purveyors of WWII-era military gear turned the Real McCoy booth into an Air Force meeting circa 1952, straight down to the leather helmets and goggles.

The most popular brands, however, were perennial favorites Flat Head and Samurai , who were thronged for the whole event despite booths a full three times the normal size. In addition to their own gear, Flat Head sold selections from Wild Child and CH favorites Self Edge. This marks the beginning of a partnership where Flat Head will continue to represent the two brands in the Japanese market.

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While firmly focused on the fashions of yesteryear, the 2008 Inazuma Festival is a testament to Japan’s ability to improve on the classics. The festival featured flight jackets so painstakingly tailored that the manufacturer made less than five percent profit on its sale and leather accessories constructed by hand from start to finish without ever touching a machine. It’s this care and dedication to textiles that ensures the endurance of Japanese brands, not to mention many future Inazuma Festivals to come.

Nov
13th
Thu
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Insight Dopamine Campaign

The Dopamine campaign from Australian skate/surf clothing company, Insight, is an inspired collection of photography in film that is infused with imagery from counterculture art movements of the 30’s and 50’s. Shot in a grainy black and white, this is not your typical surf film as highlight reel aerials cut abruptly to surreal underwater scenes of decadence: a man in a lab coat frantically downing a bottle of grain alcohol, a submerged bicyclist navigating through a beatnik graveyard, and a motorcycle riding femme fatal. These grungy images are reminiscent to the defiant spirit on which Californian surfing was founded, as captured by Greg Noll in his late 50’s films featuring La Jolla surfers riding their flexy flyers while dressed in Nazi uniforms.

Lending their ruffian talent to the film’s soundtrack are the likes of Black Lips, The Raveonettes, and King Khan & The Shrines among others. A brilliant photography series accompanies the film, shot by Dustin Humphrey.

Check out the rest of the posters at the Insight website.

Nov
12th
Wed
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Prince Of Kunqu: Jazz Meets Chinese Opera

by Louisa Lim for NPR Morning Edition

Imagine a musical cross between a 600-year-old form of Chinese opera and free-form jazz. It sounds like a clash of musical cultures, and in some ways it was.

On stage, with heavy white makeup pancaking his face, his body swathed in embroidered silken robes, Jeffrey Zhang looks every inch the traditional Chinese opera singer. So it comes as a shock when he opens his dressing-room door and reveals himself to be a cool 34-year-old in jeans with spiky hair. But this is the man known as the prince of kunqu, an ancient Chinese form of opera.

“I’m very proud to be a kunqu singer,” Zhang says. “It’s the mother of Chinese opera. It has 600 years of history, compared to Peking opera, which has just over 200 years of history.”

Unlikely Collaborations

Kunqu is an art form governed by strict rules: The rehearsal of most plays takes at least six months, while some can take three years just to rehearse. Despite his age, Zhang has been singing kunqu for 22 years. And he’s known as an innovator for his collaborations — with pop stars, Japanese kabuki actors and even ballet dancers — to bring kunqu to a wider audience. Zhang says it’s a move driven partly by desperation.

“Let’s be honest: It’s an art form that’s facing extinction,” Zhang says. “It’s an art form with a very small audience, just like those who buy Prada or Louis Vuitton. I want to bring it to more people, so they get the chance to form their own opinion on it. If they don’t hear this art form, they’d never know if they like it or not.”

So he decided to combine his operatic arias with free-form jazz piano, as played by the Belgian pianist Jean-Francois Maljean.

“I’m interested in every musical experience, and inspiration can come from there,” Zhang says. “And honestly — and we have to be honest — it’s also a means to be introduced to a new audience.”

Maljean says he had never heard of kunqu when first approached by his record company about the fusion experiment. At first, he says he found the idea a bit weird and didn’t know how workable the collaboration would be. Both sides admit that it was not without its tensions.

“What was most difficult is to make it different,” Maljean says. “For the Western audience, when we listen to the kunqu for the first time, it seems to be always the same. And the melodies are about the same. That’s why we add also some other instruments.”

Freeing Strict Musical Forms

For his part, the Chinese opera singer struggled with the very idea of improvisation. Schooled for decades in precise melody and timekeeping, he says he found the very nature of jazz somewhat unsettling.

“Jazz is very free: It’s all about improvisation of melodies. But kunqu isn’t,” Zhang says. “From the moment I open my mouth to sing, it has extremely strict rules. So jazz has freedom, and kunqu doesn’t. And combining the two is extremely difficult.”

Thus, most of the improvisation is from the pianist, who winds his music around the ancient operatic art form. For Zhang, experimentation only goes so far, setting opera to a jazz backdrop without improvising the notes he sings. But it’s worth remembering that the risks he’s taking are far larger, including accusations that he’s diluting this ancient art form, thus hastening its end. Nonetheless, both musicians say their clash of musical cultures has, in the end, produced something new.

“I wouldn’t have been two, three times to China if I wasn’t sure it would work. No, I’m sure it’s interesting,” Maljean says.

“I think our music provides a big space for our inspiration to collide,” Zhang says. “It produces a multiplying effect: The whole is bigger than the sum of its parts. Mine is opera, his is piano, and when we mix together, it produces a new musical dimension.”

Follow Jeffery Zhang’s journey artistic discovery through his blog. More info can be found at www.jeffreyzhang.com.

Nov
11th
Tue
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Chronicles of Never Jewelry

Australian based Chronicles Of Never (a reference to Neverland) works loosely with the concept of space within space for their imaginative line of jewelry. Heavily influenced by architecture and with a fondness for industrial materials, the jewelry range includes forms that are very solid and angular. While the masculine objects are well suited for men, these objects can also provide an interesting juxtaposition on a woman’s frame. But regardless of your gender, anyone can appreciate the label’s quirk and sense of fairytale wonder: “All metal comprises of compressed robot limbs, brought to you from the Never World,” reads the Chronicles Of Never website.

Chronicles Of Never contact:

T. + 61(0)2 9280 0080

F. + 61(0)2 9280 0080

E. info@chroniclessofnever.com

Nov
10th
Mon
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William Eggleston: Democratic Camera, Photographs and Video, 1961-2008

With intense color and seemingly banal subject matter, the Whitney’s current restrospective on the work of William Eggleston serves as a foil to the Southern imagery depicted in HMA’s Road to Freedom collection.

Working in the Mississippi Delta, Eggleston was somewhat a pioneer in the realm of color photography. Thirty years ago photographs carried artistic merit if they were black and white. Color pictures were considered tacky and cheap, the stuff of cigarette ads and snapshot albums. However, we of course can retroactively view Eggleston’s work and know that it is not cheap; Eggleston adapted the dye transfer process used in advertising, which was the most expensive color process available at the time. Writes art critic Holland Cotter, “It produced hues of almost hallucinatory intensity, from a custard-yellow sunset glow slanting across a wall to high-noon whiteness bleaching a landscape to pink lamplight suffusing a room.”

Perhaps most evident in Eggleston’s work is its striking contrast to contemporary images of the South, which often depict extreme racial tensions and turmoil in historical significant accounts of the civil rights movement. In comparison, Eggleston’s subjects appear to be nobodies and nothing: a girl reclining on a lawn, a rural sign, an abandoned tricycle. But upon second look these deceptively bland images reveal grandeur through Eggleston’s mastery of composition: the girl is a sleeping giant as her body dominates the frame, the sign stretches across an artificial horizon created by a sloping sheet metal roof, and the tricycle appears to be colossal as it is shot from a supine vantage point.

Effectively, it is Eggleston’s treatment of these mundane images from Southern life evokes feelings that are all at the same time indifferent, nostalgic, and reverent; making Democratic Camera a show that will surely resonate with those of us who harbor conflicting sentiments of growing up in the South.

“William Eggleston: Democratic Camera, Photographs and Video, 1961-2008” continues through Jan. 25 at the Whitney Museum of American Art; (212) 570-3600, whitney.org.

Nov
7th
Fri
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Road to Freedom: Photographs of the Civil Rights Movement, 1956-1968

Somewhat surprisingly, this 2008 summer show at the Altanta High Museum of Art was a first of its kind for any major museum: a collection showcasing the photographic history of the civil rights movement. Behind the pictures are stories of smashed equipment and journalists beaten, of activists drawn south by images, of amateurs who picked up cameras for the first time.

If you missed the exhibit, you can revisit the collection through the HMA’s publication, which presents a narrative of some of the key moments during the movement, including the Freedom Rides of 1961, the Birmingham hosings of 1963, and the Selma to Montgomery March of 1965.

These are the unforgettable images that helped to change the nation, increasing the momentum of the nonviolent movement by dramatically raising awareness of injustice and the struggle for equality.

You can appreciate our social progress with the “Road to Freedom” book, available at the HMA online store.