Tampilkan postingan dengan label Art. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Art. Tampilkan semua postingan
Desainer Charlie Le Mindu, menimbulkan kehebohan di ajang London Fashion Week, karena menampilkan para model yang telanjang di atas catwalk. Seperti diberitakan Daily Mail, para model bugil itu hanya mengenakan sepatu boot berhak tinggi warna pink, topi, tas, wig, dan tanpa mengenakan pakaian yang menutupi tubuh mereka.
 

Bagi seorang pembuat wig, itu satu-satunya cara untuk mendapat perhatian atas karyanya, yaitu aksesoris rambut yang dikenakan oleh para model. Dalam satu adegan yang mengingatkan kita pada kisah klasik “Pakaian Baru Kaisar” itu, banyak “fashionista” yang tidak tahu harus mengarahkan pandangan mereka ke arah mana.
Desainer kelahiran Perancis itu meluncurkan labelnya baru setahun lalu tetapi sudah mampu menarik perhatian.
 
Dia juga dikenal berkat wig berbentuk menara Eiffel. Karyanya juga dipakai oleh Lady Gaga. Pelantun tembang “Poker Face” itu pernah mengenakan penutup kepala berbentuk bunga mawar hitam besar saat meninggalkan sebuah hotel di London. Tahun lalu di ajang yang sama, Le Mindu menyakiti kalangan aktivis hak binatang karena meluncurkan penutup kepala yangmenutupi seluruh wajah dibuat dari tikus asli dan bangkai tikus besar.
“Lebih baik membuat mereka (hewan pengerat itu) indah daripada memberikan mereka kepada ular,” kata desainer berusia 24 tahun itu saat ditanya mengenai tanggapan publik atas karyanya.
 
Karya terakhirnya bukan yang paling praktis dengan beberapa aksesori, termasuk penutup kepala beruang aneh bermotif leopard, yang menutupi seluruh wajah model yang memakainya.
Le Mindu lahir di pedesaan Perancis, dia belajar tata rambut di Vidal Sassoon dan Toni & Guy sebelum beralih ke wig dan membuka studio di kawasan Shoreditch yang trendi di East London yang menjadi basisnya saat ini.
sumber: http://www.duniakita.info/2010/09/model-telanjang-di-london-fashion-week.html

tags : model telanjang, model bugil, london naked fashion show, naked fashion 

8 Lukisan Realistik Yang Benar-Benar Seperti Aslinya

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realisticwalldrawings_11 realisticwalldrawings_08 realisticwalldrawings_07 realisticwalldrawings_06 realisticwalldrawings_05 realisticwalldrawings_02 realisticwalldrawings_01 

source : http://www.thisblogrules.com

Crazy Optical Illusions That Will Blow Your Mind

When you are looking at these photos your brain don’t know how to react. Every time you see something different or something that you think is on a good place or real. Optical illusions are great thing. Enjoy in these photos, and check out the video “10 optical illusions in 2 minutes” that will blow your mind. This guy is awesome and show us great skill with optical illusions. I can’t figure how he created some of the illusions in the video. Did you know the real meaning of: “An optical illusion (also called a visual illusion) is characterized by visually perceived images that differ from objective reality. The information gathered by the eye is processed in the brain to give a percept that does not tally with a physical measurement of the stimulus source. There are three main types: literal optical illusions that create images that are different from the objects that make them, physiological ones that are the effects on the eyes and brain of excessive stimulation of a specific type (brightness, tilt, color, movement), and cognitive illusions where the eye and brain make unconscious inferences.”

 
 
 

Spencer Tunick: Bare with Me

Bernadette McNulty meets Spencer Tunick – in Britain for two new works – for the first time since she took part in one of his famous mass-nudity photographs. So did he recognise her with her clothes on?

The last time Spencer Tunick saw me I was naked. Just before 8am on a grey Sunday morning at the end of April 2003, I was lying on the floor of the cosmetics department in London’s Selfridges among 400 nude bodies. A soft, firm blanket of flesh surrounded me, punctuated by individual sensations: an elbow in my calf, a leg over my belly, hair tickling my foot. If I raised my head, all I could see were torsos and limbs piled beneath the make-up counters. There was a low heat and the thick, rising smell of a damp stable. Initial, nervous giggling quickly subsided to a gentle hush as if we were swaddled babies who had been rocked asleep. There was, from the end of the hall, the faint sound of a flash bulb popping and then Tunick’s high-pitched American accent amplified through a megaphone, “That’s it! Thank you.”
In his book A Brief History of Nakedness psychologist Philip Carr-Gomm depicts the complex motivations behind people’s desire to strip off. From trying to return the body to a state of innocence to a defiant expression of sexual liberation; from the political protests of John Lennon and Yoko Ono to the Gok Wan-style declarations of self-esteem, being naked in public is still a powerful – and often illegal – taboo.
The experience of taking part in Tunick’s installation felt like a strange journey from curiosity, to terror, to a kind of euphoria. There was a sense of community among the naked participants; the sense of safe, surreal rebellion, skipping around a department store with no clothes on. Tunick worked quickly; it was all over in less than an hour. Even better, later on, I received – as does everybody who participates in a Tunick installation – a print of a photograph he had taken at the event.
I have spent hours poring over this image, the flesh coloured mounds of our sprawled bodies contrasted against the polished angles of the make-up counters.
I have tried, unsuccessfully, to identify myself among the mass but when I meet Tunick again in Salford this summer, I can’t resist asking: “Do you recognise me?”
It’s a question the 43-year-old American must get asked a lot. Since he embarked on his naked installations back in 1994, he has photographed hundreds of thousands of people around the world. Tunick jokingly says that when he was younger he looked a bit like David Blaine but there does seem to be something of the mysterious modern magician about him, and his ability to seduce people into taking off their clothes in increasingly spectacular locations.
In Mexico City, more than 18,000 people crouched naked in fetal positions for him in the Zocalo square. In Barcelona, they slumped down in the Plaça de la Constitució and in Amsterdam, they posed on their bikes. People have braved the cold and rain for this man: in Switzerland, volunteers stood on the Aletsch Glacier in temperatures of 10C. Most participants get up in the middle of the night for him; for his shoots, Tunick favours the dull light just before dawn breaks.
This year, two major works have brought him back to Britain. In the spring he was commissioned by the Lowry in Salford to create a work to celebrate the gallery’s 10th anniversary. Tunick decided for the first time to respond directly to the work of another artist. “I looked at L S Lowry’s paintings and saw how he grouped his matchstick figures together in city landscapes and public spaces,” he says. “I could really relate to that spirit.” In one of the most complicated shoots he has undertaken, Tunick bussed 1,000 Mancunians across seven locations in the city over two mornings. The resultant exhibition of photographs and documentary film, Everyday People, now on show at the gallery, captures what Tunick calls the echoes and transformations of Lowry’s world. “You can see the old industry of Manchester in the factories and smoke stacks that still exist but there is also the new industry of culture – of museums and colleges,” says Tunick. “For me the nude represents culture coming into the city and how culture makes the city a more open and accepting place.”
Next weekend Tunick will orchestrate another installation at the Big Chill festival in Herefordshire, where he is planning to spray-paint participants to create a kind of “Yves Klein-style colour painting” that will allude to the BP oil spill in Florida.
A tall, bearish man with a hangdog expression, Tunick always remains clothed. Unlike his subjects, he does not derive much pleasure from his shoots. Arranging them is often a long, complicated process – recruiting participants through his website, finding locations, obtaining permission, making sure there are enough toilets on the day. “People see a man up a big ladder with a camera and think I am just a photographer,” he says, “but I have to plan everything beforehand quite carefully because you can only keep people with no clothes on standing in the cold for so long.”
For Tunick, the carefully choreographed installations are less important than the finished pictures. “I’m not fighting for public nudity,” he says. Nor is he a highbrow pornographer. “My work is not about sex. Any eroticism in my work tends to exist before and after [a shoot] but very rarely during it.” His primary motivation, he says, is to create works of art that alter our perception of the world by placing naked bodies in the frame.
Tunick’s photographic career started with a gimmick. When he was younger, his father owned a franchise for key-chain photography outlets at holiday resorts. As an art student he took snaps of holidaymakers and then put the pictures in plastic key-chain viewers which he sold back to them. “I spent four months running one of the franchises and I made $25,000,” he says. “I stuffed the money in an overcoat and moved to New York to make my art.” He began to take individual portraits of his friends and models posing naked in the deserted city. “I would use the money to buy the models breakfast. Thankfully the money lasted a long time.”
The number of people wanting to be in his pictures grew quickly. “Suddenly I had 28 people who wanted to pose for me. I was only taking pictures at weekends and realised I would be working all summer and fall to take their pictures. So rather than work with them individually I tried to accommodate everybody in one picture.”
That image – his first to group a number of bodies into a single mass – convinced Tunick that he had hit on something. “It was a great picture,” he says, “and I felt that I had found something I wanted to explore.”
Tunick’s fascination with the naked body has endured for nearly two decades. In that time he has gone from a renegade, arrested seven times in New York, to a global name. Lady Gaga wrote an 80-page college thesis on his work and Sacha Baron Cohen invited him to take part in his film Bruno (an invitation which Tunick reluctantly declined). He has also refused lucrative requests to allow his work to feature in advertisements. Even today, 90 per cent of his commissions come from art galleries and museums.
Although a hit with the media and the general public – in the first week the Lowry advertised for volunteers, more than 4,000 people applied – Tunick’s work doesn’t always provoke such a favourable response from critics. Some take issue with the seeming repetition of his technique and dismiss him as a one-trick pony.
“People are still frightened of nudity and that can inform the way they see my work,” he says. “But if you look closely, my work is not the same, it changes, but it changes very slowly because of the scale of what I do. [The installation in] Mexico City took three years to set up. At that rate, if I wanted to have an exhibition of 10 works of installations each involving over 4,000 people it would take 25 years to achieve.”
The Lowry exhibition particularly reveals the subtleties and resonances in Tunick’s work. Huddled together and crouched over in typical Lowry poses, the bodies seem vulnerable and delicate, dwarfed by the city around them. But in other scenes, such as one shot taken beneath the wings of Concorde at Manchester airport, the people seem to be brought closer in community by their nakedness, their bodies become a kind of flesh architecture.
Tunick sees himself in the tradition of artists such as Ellsworth Kelly or Cindy Sherman, who will spend their careers patiently ploughing the same furrow of inspiration. “I’m not a Damien Hirst-type artist that jumps from new idea to new idea,” he says. “I am more old-fashioned in that I work on one thing for a long time. That is what being an artist is. We obsess about something and enjoy that obsession. I love what I do, how it changes very slightly from city to city.”
The changing landscape of modern life seems to offer an endless canvas for Tunick to paint with naked bodies while also meeting the public’s hunger to become involved. At this rate, perhaps one day everyone will have a Tunick picture that they can try to find themselves in. “The body never stops being beautiful to me,” he says. “It never becomes mundane.”

 source : http://www.telegraph.co.uk

Naked Volunteers Pay Homage to LS Lowry

 Hundreds of people shed their clothes and their inhibitions, baring all in the name of art.
Volunteers posed for Spencer Tunick, the American artist, in a park in Salford as he aimed to reflect the work of LS Lowry in a large-scale installation.
Naked figures, male and female, young and old, spread out across Peel Park as Tunick gave them instructions through a loudspeaker.
The installation, Everyday People, featuring a mixture of photography and film, focuses on ordinary men and women, referencing the style of Lowry who is best-known for his “matchstick men” - figurative works depicting a mass of bodies going about their everyday lives.
The work was commissioned by The Lowry gallery in Salford to celebrate its tenth birthday and will be shown there from June 12.
Tunick, who is famous for his art works featuring naked bodies, has photographed similar pieces at the Sydney Opera House in Australia, the Institut Cultura in Barcelona, Spain and the Baltic Centre in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear.
Over 4,000 people applied for 1,000 places for Everyday People, which is being staged in eight secret locations around Salford and Manchester, with volunteers ferried between each location in heated buses.
Speaking after the event, Tunick said: “I think being naked creates a new meaning for the background. It creates a relationship between the concrete world and the real world.”
Joyce Stevens, 56, a secretary from Liverpool, was among the naked volunteers.
She said: “I wanted to push my boundaries and see how far I could go.
“When I was registering initially I didn’t know what it was letting myself in for. Towards the end it was a bit chilly but I feel like I’ve accomplished something.
“Liberated is probably not the word but maybe that will kick-in when I’m back sitting on the bus and a bit warmer.”
Stephen Parkinson, 42 a shop assistant, from Wrexham, North Wales said: “It’s been a good day and everybody has been buzzing about the event. I’m little bit cold but it is worth it.
“People say that it’s a sexual experience but it’s actually more tribal. We are bonding with a good group of people. We were all waiting outside the Lowry at 10.30 last night to make a piece of history.
"Spencer’s done some good work and I hope that one day it will be there as a piece of art for everyone to enjoy.
“I didn’t really know much about him apart from a few pictures I’d seen on the internet but after doing a bit of research I decided I wanted to have a go at it when the opportunity came along.
"It was more out of intrigue than passion but everybody’s got into the spirit of things and it’s just been truly great.
“Some people view naturism a bit like a scene from Carry on Camping but they need to understand that it’s not like that any more. It’s about celebrating the body and being with like-minded people of all shapes and sizes.
"It’s not to everybody’s tastes but it shouldn’t be frowned upon.”
Joyce Stevens, 56, a secretary from Liverpool, said: “I wanted to push my boundaries and see how far I could go.
“When I was registering initially I didn’t know what it was letting myself in for. Towards the end it was a bit chilly but I feel like I’ve accomplished something.
"Liberated is probably not the word but maybe that will kick-in when I’m back sitting on the bus and a bit warmer.”
Victoria Denning, 56, a humanist from Birmingham: “I’d heard about Spencer before and had seen a lot of his other work in the likes of Sydney, Barcelona and Mexico.
"When you look at it to start off with, quite often don’t realise that it’s naked bodies being photographed. It becomes a single entity.
“Immediately you feel that it’s a piece of artwork. As soon as we stripped-off and walked down the first hill it didn’t look like naked bodies, it looked like art straight away.
“As Spencer puts you all into position and tells you what to do, you begin to see what it’s going to look like. I’m really looking forward to seeing it when it’s finished so I’ll be coming back up to Salford for that.
“There was one very drunken man, who we came across on the street, for a look who will have wondered what was in his cider last night.
"But there was nothing sexual at all and it wasn’t like exposing yourself because everybody else was in the same position.”
Chris Walton, 18, nightclub promoter from Altrincham, Cheshire said: “I’m always looking for new experiences and fancied doing something a bit crazy, so when I heard this on the news I thought it was right up my street!
“When you’re getting your kit off in a situation like this you have a laugh about it with your mates, because there’s a safety in numbers thing.
“At times we all had to move in one direction. Whether getting naked in a park is the right direction to be moving-in is a different question, but maybe something will come from it.”
Bob McDevitt, 42, a publisher from Glasgow, also took part. He said: “I took part in the Newcastle one a couple of years ago and I enjoyed it so much that I wanted to have a go again because it’s such a unique experience.
“There’s something about people taking their clothes off that is a real leveller. Prejudices and concerns go out the window. It was about learning and expressing what it is to be human." 
source : http://www.telegraph.co.uk