ART/Culture: Where the Universe Sings

The nice thing about ART is that it’s universal.

Isolation Peak, Rocky Mountains. 1930. Oil on canvas. Hart House Permanent Collection, University of Toronto. Purchased by the Art Committee with income from the Harold and Murray Wrong Memorial Fund, 1946. (Lawren Harris).
Isolation Peak, Rocky Mountains. 1930. Oil on canvas. Hart House Permanent Collection, University of Toronto. (Lawren Harris).

And a necessary distraction. You can be anyone from anywhere and of any economic background or situation and appreciate what you see the same way (or not) as the next person.  This is why ART is so appealing and inspiring.  But aside from the recognized and renowned artists such as Picasso or Van Gogh (love them or not) it’s good to expand your knowledge of other well respected but maybe not so widely famous artists from other countries.  I’m having a Canadian moment here.  Those of you living in the U.S. might not have heard of the Group of Seven.  Comic book characters they’re not.

In the early decades of the twentieth century, circumstances brought together several artists who were committed to exploring, through art, the unique character of the Canadian landscape. Collectively they agreed: Canada’s rugged wilderness regions needed to be recorded in a distinctive painting style. This style would break from European tradition and reflect an increasingly nationalistic sentiment. Today, these men (and one woman, Emily Carr) are among Canada’s most famous artists. For many, their works have come to symbolize what is the distinctly Canadian identity.

When I lived in Toronto I had not paid too much attention to this Group of Seven but then I went to an exhibit at the McMichael Gallery to see what all the fuss was about and it changed me.  Just like the saying goes “if you love to travel, explore your own country first” (or something like that), the same goes for art.  So I did, and I learned something and appreciated what I saw – mostly the beautiful expansive and diverse landscape of my own country. Which, by the way I did explore in full since then.  So I can admit that Art did influence me in another respect.

This year at the Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) I looked forward to watching a documentary about one of the most influential Group of Seven artists – Lawren Harris.

A founding member of the Group of Seven and a major figure in the history of twentieth-century Canadian art, Lawren Harris (1885-1970) remains largely unknown in the United States. This year the AGO partnered with the Hammer Museum to introduce Harris’s iconic landscapes to audiences in Los Angeles and Boston. The Idea of North: The Paintings of Lawren Harris was the first major solo exhibition of his work to be shown in the United States.

Around this time I was watching CBC (a former employer of mine while living in Toronto) and saw comedian (author and artist himself) Steve Martin talking about his love of Lawren Harris’ work with news anchor Wendy Mesley.  It was very interesting.

Steve Martin was Michael's guide for a tour of a new exhibition of Harris's work at the Art Gallery of Ontario. (Art Gallery of Ontario)
Steve Martin was Michael’s guide for a tour of the exhibition of Harris’s work at the Art Gallery of Ontario. (AGO).

The exhibition The Idea of North: The Paintings of Lawren Harris was curated by comedian, musician, actor and writer Steve Martin in collaboration with Cynthia Burlingham, Deputy Director, Curatorial Affairs at the Hammer Museum, and Andrew Hunter, Fredrik S. Eaton Curator of Canadian Art at the AGO.

I have a lot of respect for this guy.
I have a lot of respect for this guy.

Yes, I too believe that while anyone can put brush to canvas, true artists are not created equal.  Sorry, but that’s what I really think.  The ones who really move you are guided by some other outside force.

An intimate portrait of the life and art of Lawren Harris, a founding member of the legendary Group of Seven, and the expansive landscapes that inspired him below.

WHERE THE UNIVERSE SINGS: The Spiritual Journey of Lawren Harris (trailer):

https://vimeo.com/192636801

And while writing this I decided that I’m going to attempt to create a painting of my very own.. on a whim with some friends….and some expert guidance….and some wine. It’s not until the end of this month.  It’s kind of on my revised bucket list and believe me, I’m not expecting to create something of “worth”…just somethin…somethin….do something that scares you….well….this is it.  I’m expecting that whatever it is, it will turn out to be pretty scary. However, according to my personal horoscope this month I have all of the cosmic mojo I need to accomplish—nay, excel at—anything I put my mind to.  A possible masterpiece??  You’ve got to believe!

 How about you?  Do you have a desire to paint?

Culture/Art/Film: Landfill Harmonic

This is the best feel-good movie I’ve seen in a long time.

landfil2 I just watched it with my film buddy who I met at VIFF. landfil1This film is not about garbage, it’s about making the best of the junk that surrounds you.

The reason it’s uplifting is that it points out that no matter what your living conditions are like, through the power of hope and dreams you can build on becoming what you desire and we realize that music is that unifying force that binds all people.  It’s pretty powerful.  It’s actually a film on the power of music through very unusual circumstances.landfil5landfil4

These kids play everything from the BIG THREE (Mozart, Bach, Beethoven) to heavy metal (play heavy metal with heavy metal) favourites.

Land Fillharmonic was showcased last year at various film festivals but was recently re-released in many cinemas worldwide (you’ll have to check in your hometown).  If so, I highly recommend seeing it.  WATCH TRAILER:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCjbd21fYV8

Landfill Harmonic follows the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura, a Paraguayan musical youth group who live next to one of South America’s largest landfills. This unlikely orchestra play music from instruments made entirely out of garbage. When their story goes viral, the orchestra is catapulted into the global spotlight. With the guidance of their music director, Favio Chávez (a most amazing man), they must navigate this new world of arenas and sold out concerts. However, when a natural disaster devastates their community, the orchestra provides a source of hope for the town.

Photo: d. king
Photo: d. king – one of the instruments taken in the lobby of VanCity Theatre Tuesday night.

Instruments Beyond Borders...harnessing the power of music to better children’s lives.  Many schools have now very unfortunately cut music from educational programs.  It’s good to give back.

Photo: d. king
Photo: d. king

An entirely volunteer, charitable Society dedicated to delivering donated musical instruments and funds to music education programs in disadvantaged communities at home and abroad.  In Vancouver instrument donations can be made at Tapestry Music (3607 West Broadway).  Tax receipts for donated instruments are available upon evaluation.

Music heals the world.  So will recycling.

ART: let’s talk about it

Art is so personal, isn’t it?art1

I was recently at a fundraiser where one of the live auction items was an original painting…which I disliked immensely but I do know that art can grow on you.  I wasn’t the only one who objected, however the piece ended up going for thousands.  Someone either loved it or just wanted to make a very generous contribution.  Another painting which I liked much better didn’t fare as well.

When I asked a friend to accompany me to a Picasso Exhibit she explained that she did not like Picasso. This coming from an art major.

What you display on the walls of your home is an eye into your mind and your soul.art2

It’s okay…not everyone likes the same things. But generally I believe investment pieces that make you feel good and you never tire of looking at are the very best to buy.  

Personally I’ve collected a lot of things that bring me back to places of interest.  Having said that, my taste is changing.  I’m taking down some works that no longer have a place on my walls.  They no longer hold a special interest and maybe never did. I want to upgrade.  Recently I purchased a large original painting from Santa Fe (no coyote in sight).  It holds meaning because I’ve been there on several occasions and identify with the setting.  I had to have it!  I also replaced a limited edition print with a beautiful *monotype.

So I’m no art expert but I have a few friends who are collectors and maybe through their influence I’m slowly making some changes.  Some things will stay the same though because they hold significant meaning.  Even if they’re important to only me; that’s enough!

But then I came across this article about how to buy art in a gallery and a guide to getting it right.  It’s worth a look for those who are interested.  Because there is some kind of a system to the whole thing. My advice: Always buy original when you can.

BY ANDY BATTAGLIA for mansionglobal.com

There it is, gleaming and white: a gallery filled with art looking for a new home. But sometimes the setting can be so mysterious, so alien and arcane, that knowing how to strike a deal can be elusive — or at least daunting to those who don’t know the art world’s often cryptic customs and codes.

The assumption is … galleries are these elitist places that are going to ignore you if you try to talk to them,” said Photios Giovanis, owner and director of Callicoon Fine Arts, a gallery in New York’s Lower East Side. “But that’s not true — the assumption is wrong. There may be galleries that will treat you rudely, but there are just as many, if not more, that are going to be kind and want to speak to you about what they’re showing. That’s why galleries are there — to show work and share it with an audience.”

Getting started

The first step is easy: “Ask questions,” Mr. Giovanis said, about the art on show and the artist who made it — but also other pieces that might not be displayed, like works on paper or other holdouts that gallerists often keep in storage. “That would create a level of engagement that is deeper than just transactional. Later on, that collector would be more prominent in the mind of the dealer.”

Another tip at the start is to learn the language, enabling one to ask the right questions in search of answers that might inevitably be beyond a beginner’s bounds.

If you take time to educate yourself, you’ll be ahead of the game,” Mr. Giovanis said. “People always say ‘buy with your eye’ and other clichés like that. That is fine, but it’s more a process of learning and, as you learn and look, what you like can change and develop. Don’t be afraid to make a mistake.”

Alexander Gray, operator of the Alexander Gray Associates gallery in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood, echoed similar points, with more tips to consider. He urged self-education by going to museums and talking to curators who can point to galleries in line with their discerning tastes.

When not to buy art

Be wary when too far from home, though: “One of the mistakes that people make is buying art while they’re on vacation,” Mr. Gray said. “That’s a really egregious mistake because, when one is at the beach, one is thinking about how great it is to be outdoors with seagulls. It can be something people will love and want to look at, but is it something that will retain value or enhance legacy? Most likely not. No dolphin art. No coyote art in Santa Fe.”

Consider an adviser

Displaying knowledge of the distinctions between shopping and collecting shows a gallerist a lot, Mr. Gray said, as does the act of working with an adviser to council on acquisitions or even just looking around.
“We love working with advisers, especially advisers working with new clients, because it means the new collector is taking the journey seriously enough to bring in expertise. It also helps us understand what their motivations might be,” he said.

Some advisers are primarily attuned to market activity while others tend toward the philanthropic possibilities of purchases that help particular artists and galleries thrive. In any case, Mr. Gray said, “We prefer advisors who are retainer-based for clients who are being given completely unbiased advice. A lot of advisors work on commission, but the transparency of the arrangement is important.”

Abigail Ross Goodman, principal and founder of the advisory firm Goodman Taft, said advising—in her case under a retainer structure—can be akin to a kind of art itself. “Our job is to educate, demystify and advocate on behalf of our clients and help them make choices off the bat,” she said.

Do your homework … and remember there’s no crystal ball

Regardless, from Ms. Ross Goodman, a simple bit of advice: take notes, in a Moleskine notebook or on a phone. “Train your eye, build up a visual vocabulary, keep track of your tastes and how what you respond to changes,” she said. “Sometimes the things that can be most daunting at first become objects that are the most generous over a lifetime.”

And, remember, all the advice and advisement in the world only goes so far.

“There’s no way to do this without getting your hands dirty,” Ms. Ross Goodman said. “One of the biggest mistakes a client can make is to be so driven by external information that they buy something that means nothing to them. There’s no crystal ball.”

At a certain point in the sometimes beguiling but often immensely gratifying world of art, she said, “Everybody has to take a leap of faith.”

Don’t be afraid to take a leap!

*The difference between monotypes and monoprints frequently baffles art buyers and sellers alike! Therefore, a description of that difference is useful at the outset.

A monoprint is one of a seriestherefore, not wholly unique. A monoprint begins with an etched plate, a serigraph, lithograph or collograph. This underlying image remains the same and is common to each print in a given series. Other means of adding pigment or design are then employed to make each print in the series slightly different. The series of monoprints has a limited number of prints and each is numbered.

A monotype is one of a kind, a unique piece of artwork. It is the simplest form of printmaking, requiring only pigments, a surface on which to apply them, paper and some form of press. 

ART: BOWIE / COLLECTOR

David Bowie’s Art Collection is up for grabs

A gallery assistant poses with
A gallery assistant poses with “Beautiful, Hallo, Space-Boy Painting” by Damien Hurst during the press preview of the “Bowie/Collector” auction at Sotheby’s. Leon Neal/Getty Images

Art has always been for me a stable nourishment,” said David Bowie.

On the occasion of Sotheby’s historic three-part sale of the legendary artist’s personal collection, his close friend and fellow musician Bono offers an appreciation. Plus, a sampling of Bowie’s own insightful words on the artists he admired and a selection of the works with which he lived. 

BONO, SEPTEMBER 2016 said: David understood the power of the image better than any musician who ever lived. He spent his life creating images, some of which he tried to occupy or personify, some of which he hung from his music and some his music hung from. He knew that in his time, more than any other era, ideas often arrived as pictures and that the world was being shaped by photography, cinematography and, even still, painting.

A painting by John Virtue called 'Landscape No. 87', part of the Bowie Collection on display at Sotheby's. AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
A painting by John Virtue called ‘Landscape No. 87’, part of the Bowie Collection on display at Sotheby’s. AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth

BOWIE ON ART AND ARTISTS:

DAVID BOWIE was not just a collector of art, but also an informed authority on the subject. He was close to countless living artists and maintained conversations with them throughout his life. In 1994 he was invited to join the editorial board of Modern Painters magazine, to which he contributed in-depth interviews with the likes of Tracey Emin, Balthus and Damien Hirst, a review of the first-ever Johannesburg Biennale in 1995 and a response to the life and work of Jean-Michel Basquiat. Below is a selection of Bowie’s astute and deeply personal observations, first published in Modern Painters and The New York Times on the art and artists that fascinated and inspired him.

ON BALTHUS

Bowie suggested to the editors of Modern Painters that he might be able to secure an interview with the reclusive Balthus. Both men were living in Switzerland at the time and had met at a gallery opening for Balthus’s wife, Setsuko. One afternoon in the summer of 1994, Bowie drove to a mountain chalet in Rossinière to meet the painter, whose works of “timeless, serene, but disturbed sculptural claustrophobia” he greatly admired. Their conversation as well as Bowie’s introductory text are extraordinary. Sitting at lunch with the artist and Setsuko, he observed: “Balthus puts down his knife and fork and, staring at some far off point, says quietly:  ‘I awoke very early this morning. I went to my studio and started work. It would not come…. and I gazed at my painting then the small things around me and I felt such a tremendous…sense of awe.’” His voice dies away, leaving “a misty trail of remembrances, glories and maybe disappointments,” Bowie continued. “Locked in silence, we three sit, Balthus, Setsuko and I. The tragedy and chaos of the twentieth century rushes through the memory of its last Legendary Painter.”

ON MARCEL DUCHAMP

“Sometimes I wish that I could put myself in Duchamp’s place to feel what he felt when he put those things on show and said: ‘I wonder if they’ll go for this. I wonder what’s going to happen tomorrow morning,’ ’’ he said to Kimmelman in The New York Times. “I would understand that attitude perfectly, because the most interesting thing for an artist is to pick through the debris of a culture.”

ON DAMIEN HIRST

A painting produced collaboratively by Damien Hirst and David Bowie called 'Beautiful, halo, space-boy painting' 1995, part of the Bowie Collection on display at Sotheby's auction rooms. The painting is estimated at 250,000-350,000 pounds (318,000- 445,000 US dollars). AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
A painting produced collaboratively by Damien Hirst and David Bowie called ‘Beautiful, halo, space-boy painting’ 1995, part of the Bowie Collection on display at Sotheby’s auction rooms. The painting is estimated at 250,000-350,000 pounds (318,000- 445,000 US dollars). AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth

Hirst was one of only a handful of high-profile contemporary artists for  whom Bowie publicly expressed his admiration, interviewing him for Modern Painters in 1995. “He’s different. I think his work is extremely emotional, subjective, very tied up with his own personal fears –  his fear of death is very strong – and I find his pieces moving and not at all flippant,” Bowie told Michael Kimmelman in an extensive 1998 interview in The New York Times.

ON JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT

A painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat called
A painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat called “Air Power’ 1984, estimated at 2.5-3.5 million pounds (3.18- 4.45 million US dollars), part of the Bowie Collection. AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth

“I feel the very moment of his brush or crayon touching the canvas,” wrote Bowie of Basquiat in a 1996 issue of Modern Painters. “There is a burning immediacy to his ever-evaporating decisions that fires the imagination ten or fifteen years on, as freshly molten as the day they were poured onto the canvas.” Bowie acquired Basquiat’s Air Power in 1997, the year after he played Andy Warhol to Jeffrey Wright’s Basquiat in Julian Schnabel’s 1996 biopic of the artist.

ON FRANK AUERBACH

“I find his kind of bas-relief way of painting extraordinary,” said Bowie of Auerbach in the 1998 New York Times interview with Kimmelman. “Sometimes I’m not really sure if I’m dealing with sculpture or painting.” Auerbach’s work provoked strong reactions: “It will give spiritual weight to my angst. Some mornings I’ll look at it and go, ‘Oh, God, yeah! I know!’ But that same painting, on a different day, can produce in me an incredible feeling of the triumph of trying to express myself as an artist. I can look at it and say: ‘My God, yeah! I want to sound like that looks.’”

From 1–10 November, the collection will be exhibited at Sotheby’s New Bond Street galleries in London, giving fans, collectors, art lovers and experts a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to immerse themselves in the extraordinary range of objects that informed Bowie’s private world. British artists, including high profile painters and sculptors such as Frank Auerbach and Henry Moore, make up the heart of the collection, representing over 200 pieces in total.

A gallery assistant poses with
A gallery assistant poses with “Chess Set” by Man Ray (est. £20,000-30,000) during the press preview of the “Bowie/Collector” auction at Sotheby’s. Leon Neal/Getty Images
Technicians prepare artworks from the Bowie Collection to go on display at Sotheby's. AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
Technicians prepare artworks from the Bowie Collection to go on display at Sotheby’s. AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
A photo of David Bowie on the auction labels of items during the press preview of the
A photo of David Bowie on the auction labels of items during the press preview of the “Bowie/Collector” auction at Sotheby’s. Leon Neal/Getty Images

What a great memento for those who appreciate Art & Bowie.  

I don’t know where I’m going from here but I promise it wont’ be boring – David Bowie

Source: sothebys.com

Style: Shoot First – the ART of capturing the MOMENT

Harry Benson: Shoot First harrybenson1

Now here’s a documentary for those who adore art, culture, music, fashion, politics, celebrity & larger than life celebratory,  astonishing and horrendously shocking legendary moments in time.

Saying that Scottish photographer Harry Benson is a Zelig-like character who’s witnessed every major cultural and political event of the last 50 years is not an exaggeration. Here’s just a partial resumé of the man’s astounding life: he arrived in America with the Beatles in 1964 as a photographer for their American tour (he took the famous photo of the Beatles’ hotel room pillow fight); he has photographed every American president from Eisenhower to Obama; he was just a few feet away from Bobby Kennedy on the night Kennedy was assassinated; he was alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. on the Meredith march and attended his funeral; he was in the room when Nixon resigned; he was there when the Berlin Wall went up—and when it came down; and he has taken iconic fashion photos for the likes of Vanity Fair, Paris Match and a half-dozen other magazines.

Benson, now 86 and still working, certainly deserves the wonderful tribute offered here in Matthew Miele and Justin Bare’s fascinating portrait. Featuring testimonials from Sharon Stone, Alec Baldwin, Donald Trump, Piers Morgan, Dan Rather, James L. Brooks, Henry Kissinger, Ralph Lauren and Joe Namath among others, the film reveals that Benson is not only a globetrotting legend of the photography world but that he’s also a nice guy!

TRAILER:

 

Source: VIFF  M/A/D | Style in Film

The ART of FOOD – Alinea

As I mentioned before, the series Chef’s Table is not your run-of-the-mill cooking series.

A dish containing duck, huitlacoche, strawberry & white corn on an acrylic art piece designed to act as a plate.  Photo: Nathan Weber for the New York Times 
A dish containing duck, *huitlacoche, strawberry and white corn on an acrylic art piece designed to act as a plate.  Photo: Nathan Weber for the New York Times.

I just finished watching the series on NetFlix.  Many of the restaurants in the series are Michelin star or at the very least, way above average. Some are destinations in that they are in very remote locations. They all take food to a whole other level.  It’s a total experience for the senses. They are among the 50 best in the world.  If you love food then prepare to be inspired!

I loved all the shows but I think my favourite was the one which appeared the most artistic – that of Alinea Restaurant in Chicago.

Chef and Restaurateur Grant Achatz is more than another rock star chef; he’s a true artist.

Restaurateur Grant Achatz, left. Source: Alinea Restaurant
Restaurateur Grant Achatz, left.  Source: Alinea Restaurant
Plateless dessert. Source: Alinea Restaurant
Plateless dessert.
Source: Alinea Restaurant
Helium balloon dessert made with apple. Source: Alinea Restaurant
Helium balloon dessert made with apple.
Source: Alinea Restaurant

The opening scene shows him staring at an abstract art painting and appreciating what he sees.  He tries to incorporate art into his food while retaining the integrity of the taste and overall dining experience.  He offers something unique.  You’ve got to appreciate that.

Alinea is a three-Michelin-star restaurant.

If you’ve never eaten at Alinea – where diners must purchase a ticket in advance rather than pay on the day – you may have a long wait: every meal for the rest of the year (apart from New Year’s Eve) is sold out.

 Alinea’s tasting menu costs diners between $210 and $295 per person, depending upon availability and demand and excluding beverages.

There is a difference between dining and eating. Dining is an art. When you eat to get most out of your meal, to please the palate, just as well as to satiate the appetite, that,my friend, is dining.” – Yuan Mei

Website: http://alinearestaurant.com/

*What is Huitlacoche?. Pronounced whee-tla-KO-cheh, huitlacoche is also known as corn mushroom, corn smut or Mexican truffle. It is a fungus, which randomly grows on organic corn (not sprayed with any fungicide). It is rare, as it develops on the corn ears as they ripen after the rainy season or an errant rainstorm. Huitlacoche will consume the corn kernels and push itself out through the corn shucks, easily visible in a cornfield.

Your guide to Michelin Star Restaurants around the Globe:

https://www.viamichelin.com/web/Restaurants

Shaking things up – prose and cons

Bob Dylan was just awarded the Nobel prize for Literature “for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.”

Ill: N. Elmehed. © Nobel Media 2016
Ill: N. Elmehed. © Nobel Media 2016

What’s so wrong with that?

To the person who asked “does this mean that I can win a Grammy?” No!  It just means that people are taking more notice of great songwriting and poetry which have their place (or prose) in the writing world.  If so, then in my opinion Rodriguez (of searching for Sugarman fame) & Leonard Cohen should be next in line.

Maybe they should open it up to noteworthy artists who paint for a living.  They are like literature for the soul.  Open up a new category?  Something to think about?  I think so!

CHECK THIS OUT:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sh05PyTURs&list=PLlOu5-_qNR9BYLoZCLPfAkejwn1EP7Ee_

Lifestyle/Film – from FRANCA to FREIGHTENED

The Vancouver Film Festival is almost over. For the past two weeks I’ve seen my share of GLOOM to GLAMOUR through cinema and ended up going home with either a smile on my face or more often than not, with a heavy heart.franca1Being a film critic is not as simple as it seems. Did I say film critic? Well you know what I mean..my version.  It’s kind of like speed dating (not that I’ve ever done that) – you have to weed through many movies before you come across a great film.  But that great one will stick with you and may even change your life forever.

I even have a film buddy now.  Someone I met in the pass holder lineup from the very beginning of the festival and we kept bumping into each other, sitting together, crying at times and finally comparing films and such and sharing real life moments in time (while waiting for each film to start).  We promised to keep in touch and meet up every so often to see a new movie because we seem to have the same taste in film.  And let me tell you that finding the perfect film buddy is a lot harder to come across than the other more popular kind of  “F” buddy.

So I have only a few more reviews to share, a very small amount compared to all that was offered at the festival.  I’m sending them into the VIFF press office and hopefully they’ll decide to invite me back again next year. This has not only been a real pleasure and a privilege but a great opportunity to share with you some very engaging films and a chance to expand my audience.

These two documentaries will make you question everything you buy.

Franca: Chaos and Creation

The high price of fashion…

I was looking very forward to this documentary about legendary editor-in-chief, Franca Sozzani of Vogue Italia, considered the world’s most important fashion magazine.  It’s the magazine for fashion insiders to visit the territory where fashion, art and provocation meet. Her astonishing but often controversial magazine covers have not only broken the rules but also set the bar high for fashion, art and commerce over the past 25 years.

Sozzani remains deeply committed to exploring subject matters off limits to most and occasionally redefining the concept of beauty in the process.

The film features interviews with Karl Lagerfeld, Bruce Weber, Baz Luhrmann, Courtney Love and many others.  A film for style buffs.

*Trailer for Franca:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvD8l12X9pA

Freightened: The Real Price of Shipping
franca2

The higher price of fashion.  There’s always a cost.  How much are we willing to pay?

This is in stark contrast to Franca and something to give serious thought to.

“There are three kinds of people in the world.  The living, the dead and those that are at sea” – a line from the movie.

This film sheds real light on where a huge portion of our clothing really comes from.  It will make you question your choices (hopefully) the next time you shop for that next great deal.  Maybe we should read clothing labels like we are now paying more attention to our labels on food.  Because there’s a story behind them and it’s not a pretty one. Those $20 jeans weren’t just shipped here from Bangladesh: the constituent parts traveled thousands of miles before they met in the factory.  But it’s not just about clothing, it’s about everything we consume in our crazy world of WANT.  And 90% of everything we consume arrives via ship so this is essential to know about. Because many of us are unaware of the consequences of industrial container shipping as it is today and has been for many, many years. And it’s drastic impact on the environment….which affects everyone and the future of the planet.  But it’s not too late to make some changes…if only they will listen (but we don’t know who they really are because the owners are hard to track down).

Denis Delestrac is opening our eyes to the incredibly important implications of things we take for granted. And you won’t believe your eyes.

From the VIFF website:

Freightened is indeed a scarifying look at our oceans and harbours, and what the behemoths and leviathans that ply our seas are doing to them. It’s all because of what we buy!  The unit travel costs of huge industrial container shipments are astonishingly small, but the environmental costs are ridiculously large. Why bother to learn more? Why think global and buy local? The open seas are shockingly free of oversight and regulation. Dirty fuels, chemical leakage and animal-killing noise abound in a regime of tax avoidance and maintenance neglect, and we know so little about it. What are the plans for our Port of Vancouver?

Food for Thought?  

*Trailer for Freightened:

 

Design/Film: The Architect

“As an Architect  I have the job of transforming hopes and dreams into wood, glass, steel and concrete.  But if the dreams aren’t there, there is very little I can do.”

– a line from the  The Architect

Clip from the Film
Still from the Film

Last night I attended the VIFF premiere of a new movie called “The Architect”.  I wanted to see a light comedy after the heaviness of the last several movies.  Something with a design element to it.  The Architect was reminiscent of “The Cable Guy” starring Jim Carrey but only in the sense that the architect (played by James Frain) was annoyingly cloying in his attempt to help out, thus getting on the nerves of his employers as he tries to infiltrate their lives.

The movie was written and directed by Jonathan Parker who was in attendance to answer questions from the audience as was one of the main characters, Eric McCormack (Will & Grace, Broadway, etc. Parker Posey plays his wife in this bizarre tale of obsession and deceit when a couple (played by McCormack & Posey) hire a supposedly top notch visionary architect to build their dream house right after buying a tear-down.  But what they’re not prepared for is the architect’s brash ego informing them to follow his own designs and desires.  The wife, a creative type of her own,  gets swept up by the architect as creative designer – a stark contrast to her husband’s very practical side.  A husband by the way,  quite skeptical of the intentions of the architect in question.

You begin to realize who the dream house really belongs to –  The Architect.architect1

What’s funny is that Eric McCormack (originally from Vancouver) is building a home here and his own architect was at the screening.  He pointed him out in the audience at the Vancouver Playhouse.  He said if that wasn’t enough he also hired an interior designer.

Some lines from the film:

I don’t know why people hire architects and then tell them what to do

I believe it is just as important to design a chicken coup as it is to design a cathedral

Q & A
Q & A with Director and Actor.  Photo: d. king

The Trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rn9pk_186P4

For more information on the Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) please visit: 

https://www.viff.org

Style/Film: Personal Shopper

I really wanted to love this film.  Of course the name alone  appealed to me as you must have already guessed.  It was a definite YES on my list and it was a front runner at the Cannes film festival.

Kristen Stewart in Personal Shopper
Kristen Stewart in Personal Shopper

I mean it had ALL the elements of a fantastic movie.  An unassuming young woman (played by Kristen Stewart) riding a scooter around Paris picking up vetements from shoppes like Chanel for her super model employer who is too high profile to do it herself.  She also has a special gift of being a medium (not in size but in a psychic way).  She’s waiting for a sign from her twin brother who passed away.  And she’s able to tap into the spirit world when disturbing signs appear before her but they are not that of her brother.

The movie is almost unclassifiable.  It has a little of everything but doesn’t quite hit the mark.   It’s a bit of a thriller but not really because it’s too disjointed.  It leaves you a bit in the dark…wanting answers.

And even though Kristen Stewart does an excellent job in the role it made me question why a super model would choose a mopey dishevelled looking girl who doesn’t dress well to go to these upscale boutiques to choose clothing and accessories.  Just saying.

But maybe I’m missing something because while I bided time at Nordstrom waiting for the next movie to begin I came across this image:

Photo: d. king
Photo: d. king

Apparently Karl Lagerfeld saw something special in the young actress beyond the messy hair and frowned lips.  Lagerfeld & Stewart have collaborated many times to bring to life the true spirit (no pun intended) behind the fashion house Chanel.  Speaking of the actress, Lagerfeld once declared: “She is a real personality.  I don’t compare her to any other actress and she is really modern, whatever that means.  And I think that she is perfect for the Chanel image of today.”

So who am I to argue with Karl!

But going back to the movie….I liken it to a Thanksgiving meal that you enjoyed but they forgot about the cranberry sauce and gravy.

Trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hghXP4F3Qs

There is one more showing on Oct. 13th

For tickets please visit: https://www.viff.org/