Karl Lagerfeld is Never Happy Anyway. Documentary about the iconic fashion designer, Karl Lagerfeld.
An hour with designer Karl Lagerfeld. At the end of 2007 Fashion Week in New York, he discusses his life, his career in fashion and his latest work. He is joined by Harriet Mays Powell, Fashion Director for New York magazine.
Brooklyn-based tattooist Scott Campbell has taken the art form to another level—not just by being one of the most sought-after tattoo artists in NY (if not the world) but for using a laser cutter to etch his intricate old-world designs into everything from laptops and books to leather chairs, tables and paintings. In this field trip to Scott’s Brooklyn tattoo parlor and studio, he shows us around, demonstrates how the laser works and does some coloring on a tattoo.
A video by Pipilotti Rist
Villa dall'Ava, Rem Koolhaas, Saint-Cloud, 1990, une maison pos�e sur une structure en verre
film documentaire Stan Neuman
la suite > http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2tope_villa-dallava-2_creation
A portrait painting demonstration by Jeff Hein.
“COCKSUCKER BLUES” was the title of a song Mick Jagger wrote to be the Stones’ final single for Decca Records, as per their contract. Its context and language was chosen specifically to anger Decca executives.
Trailer for documentary about two Swiss star architects on two very different projects: the national stadium for the Olympic summer games in Peking 2008 and a city area in the provincial town of Jinhua, China.
Artist Damien Hirst discusses his (RED) auction, Bono and Damien Hirst have joined forces with Sotheby's and Gagosian Gallery to organise the most significant charity auction of Contemporary Art ever The (RED) Auction which will be held at Sotheby's in New York on Valentine's Day, Thursday, February 14th, 2008. The proceeds are to go the United Nations Foundation to support HIV/AIDS relief programs in Africa conducted by The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
The BAPE phenomenon began in 1993, with a small shop in trendy Harajuku. Nigo created clothes with his signature ape designs and camouflage prints, then employed the age-old marketing strategy of exclusivity.
He carefully rationed his creations -- producing extremely limited numbers, giving half of them away to trendy club-mates, and selling the other half.
BAPE clothes became the ultimate badge of street credibility, and demand spiked because there was hardly any supply.
In the past decade BAPE ha