1. picture of the day: Desperately seeking Susan

    February 1, 2012
    by Esther Moisy-Kirschbaum

    Or one of the greatest jackets in cinema history.


  2. SKIN: a film by Ryan Hope

    January 31, 2012
    by Reba Maybury

    Ryan Hope reveals Garage magazines ambitious project which tattooed pieces of the most contemporary and prestigious artwork on to willing volunteers. With the likes of Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Raymond Pettibon images being tattooed by other tattooers  this project brought up many interesting questions about ownership and prices of the tattoos made.

    Other than bringing up these intriguing questions the film has been made in the most detailed and achingly stylistic way. The film also gives a voice to the tattooed and their own personal experiences rather than the hugely famous artists who created the images.

    Watch it here:


  3. Without Why

    by Eugenia Lapteva

    ‘When rhythm has become the sole and unique mode of thought’s expression, it is then only that there is poetry. In order for mind to become poetry, it must bear in itself the mystery of an innate rhythm. It is in this rhythm alone that it can live and become visible. And every work of art is but one and the same rhythm. Everything is simply rhythm.’ (Hölderlin in conversation with Sinclair, 1804.)


  4. picture of the day: Harold & Maude

    January 30, 2012
    by Esther Moisy-Kirschbaum


  5. damir doma & pedro barateiro, edited by aaron chan, selected by dazed and confused

    January 27, 2012
    by Reba Maybury

    Dazed Digital interview Aaron Chan and premier this exciting new collaboration. The film has been chosen for Channel 4′s Random Acts series too. Check out more now! Links underneath:

    http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/12519/1/random-acts-aaron-chan

    http://randomacts.channel4.com/#view/179

     

     


  6. picture of the day: Zabriskie Point

    by Esther Moisy-Kirschbaum

    Doesn’t it look like a moving Kandinsky painting?


  7. picture of the day: Boys don’t cry

    January 25, 2012
    by Esther Moisy-Kirschbaum