MATTHEW PORTER – SUNCLIPSE

Posted on 2016-11-28

Designed jointly by Le Corbusier and Oscar Niemeyer, the UN building is a looming monolith. The structure was captured by Porter at sunset in what feels like the twilight of the midcentury optimism that gave rise to the eponymous organization and its home. “Sunclipse,” the title of the show, takes its name from a neologism for “sunset,” and is meant to remind us that the earth is not the center of the universe but merely a lucky satellite, and was coined by the visionary Buckminster Fuller–a quixotic futurist whose utopian projects and schemes are often regarded as historical curiosities if not abject failures. Fuller himself embraced failure–celebrated it, even, as a sign of creativity and free-thinking. “There is no such thing as a failed experiment, only an experiment with unexpected outcomes.”

The photographs that make up the exhibition are marked, as always with Porter, by exquisite technical control, and yet they also demonstrate the dark romanticism of once-glowing visions of the future gone slightly dim. The exhibition is organized around images of a dome house built in Cape Romano, Florida. Conceived and constructed by oil baron Bob Lee in 1980, the complex was not designed to be an experiment in utopian living but simply an extravagant vacation home that partook of the aesthetic vanguard developed by dreamers like Fuller (a familiar legacy, from radicalism to luxury architecture). And yet, pummeled by one hurricane after another throughout the 1980s and 1990s, it became a climate-battered ruin as surely as any semi-colonialist effort to build modern (and modernist) utopias in and around the world’s deserts and jungles (as in Henry Ford’s Brazilian Fordlandia or Paolo Soleri’s Palm Springs Arcosanti). It’s an act of hubris, to present a sandy shoulder against the ocean’s bite. The former is always in retreat against the latter.

Opposite – Cape Romano #1, 2016

Exhibition runs through to December 18th, 2016

INVISIBLE-EXPORTS
89 Eldridge Street
New York
NY 10002

invisible-exports.com

  

FRANCESCA WOODMAN

Posted on 2016-11-28

Francesca Woodman was an American photographer known for her large and singular oeuvre. Her photography exhibits many influences, ranging from symbolism to surrealism to fashion photography and to a great extent explores issues of gender and self. Using herself as the prime subject of her photographs these are not self-portraits in a conventional sense but rather dialogues with the self and an exploration of representation of the body in relation to its surroundings. On her frequent use of herself as a model, she observed “It’s a matter of convenience — I’m always available.”

The exhibition takes the artist’s first work Self-portrait at 13 (1971) as starting point. In this photograph Woodman is using what can best be described as a homemade “selfie-stick” and the resulting image is partially blurred and her face obscured by her own hair. This seminal work points to what will become Woodman’s interest in how people relate to space and how that relationship can be played out in two-dimensional images.

Opposite – Self-portrait at 13, Antella, Italy, 1972

Exhibition runs through to December 18th, 2016

Andréhn-Schiptjenko
Hudiksvallsgatan 8
Stockholm
Sweden

www.andrehn-schiptjenko.com

  

CHRIS ENGMAN – PROSPECT AND REFUGE

Posted on 2016-11-28

In his exhibition Prospect and Refuge, Chris Engman continues his investigations into the medium of photography. He also returns to his roots with the use of imagery from nature, often combining this with architectural imagery to bring the outdoors in and the indoors out. Natural light is combined with artificial light, geometry is combined with wilderness, and, as always in Engman’s work, the relationship between illusion and materiality is explored. In the process this work considers and questions notions of habitation, landscape, and the natural environment.

Engman’s process entails selecting a site in nature–often during a hiking or camping trip–and carefully documenting it from a single perspective over multiple visits. Upon his return to his studio in the city, he prints the images and uses them to line the surfaces of different interior spaces, “collaging” multiple prints onto walls, ceilings, floors, and even furniture and objects in his studio and the living and dining room of his own home–in effect, recreating the site in an indoor location and thereby bringing the wilderness inside. Other images within this exhibition were shot entirely outdoors.

Opposite – Refuge, 2016

Exhibition runs through to December 21st, 2016

Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
2685 S. La Cienega Blvd.
Los Angeles
CA 90034

www.luisdejesus.com

  

THE UNKNOWN GIRL

Posted on 2016-11-28

After refusing to answer a late-night knock on her clinic door, a doctor seeks to uncover the truth behind the mysterious death of her unidentified caller, in this social-realist procedural from Belgian auteurs Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne.

In theatres December 2nd, 2016

www.theunknowngirl.co.uk

  

ADIDAS X NAKED: SAMBA + ULTRABOOST

Posted on 2016-11-28

Opened in 2004, NAKED is a Copenhagen-based store that specializes in women’s sneakers. NAKED collaborates with adidas Consortium on a Samba and UltraBOOST in their signature color palette inspired by the ocean that surrounds us.

The Samba gets a refreshing update, featuring an upper of turquoise ostrich leather as Naked takes this classic indoor trainer and transcends it into a thing of casual beauty. The UltraBOOST, a contemporary runner with a light flexible Primeknit upper and adaptive boost™ sole, is shifted to occupy a similar space. The colorway frees the world renowned technical runner from the performance space and lets it loose as a luxe lifestyle shoe. Both models play with texture and material, the Samba through the leather and the UltraBOOST through its knit.

www.adidas.co.uk

  

COLUMBIA X ROGUE ONE: A STAR WARS STORY

Posted on 2016-11-28

Columbia unveiled three limited-edition, high-performance jackets inspired by Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. The collection represents the first movie merchandise collaboration for Columbia.

The limited edition is inspired by key characters from the film, Sergeant Jyn Erso, Captain Cassian Andor and the Imperial Death Trooper.

Jyn Erso Rebel Jacket: Crafted of stretch twill cotton, Sergeant Jyn Erso’s jacket features rugged leather-look details on the sleeves and throughout the garment. The quilted, insulated vest can be worn separately or layered with the jacket to complete your rebel ensemble, and features genuine leather debossed Rebel Alliance patch.

Captain Cassian Andor Rebel Parka: Built to withstand the harshest conditions, Cassian’s parka features a sherpa lined hood, with detachable faux fur trim detail. Omni-Heat™ Reflective lining reflects body heat back to the wearer, and Omni-Tech™ waterproof breathable fabric keeps you dry and protected. Genuine leather debossed Rebel Alliance patch and premium fabrics pay tribute to this character.

Imperial Death Trooper Jacket: Waterproof, breathable and fully seam-sealed, the Imperial Death Trooper Rain Jacket is packed with the same features as Columbia’s award-winning OutDry Extreme Diamond Shell Jacket. Reflective Imperial Army shoulder details showcase allegiance to the Dark Side, along with striking design lines and pop color chest zippers that take inspiration from the Death Trooper’s imposing armor.

Available on December 9th at Columbia retail locations and online.

www.columbia.com