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#is alpha fashion raymond
cosmicwafflemam · 2 years
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Gay people kinda rock tbh
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zarcsobsession · 11 months
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Resident evil Omegaverse AU
Remember! im not a English mother language! so if you find some error pls tell me and i correct the error!
Omegaverse is one of my favorite drugs, if you add Mpreg you give me a very big joy! So i have decide to make my personal version of Omegaverse in Re fandom!
Some Info is inspired from @sparkie96 works!
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!!! IMPORTANT NOTE !!!
My omegaverse is slightly different than most works I've gotten my hands on! Omega males DO NOT own a vagina! but the entrance to the reproductive system is located in the rectal area! When they go into pre-heat they will have very strong abdominal cramps because the canal has a muscle that "moves" when they go into heat, to close the digestive tract and open the reproductive canal, these cramps will also be there after the heat which will last about 2/3 days (together with the pre heat and the post heat it will last approximately 6/7 days). The look doesn't differ much! the bicinii is slightly wider than normal! They won't keep them growing when pregnant! his pecs will simply swell and that's it!
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Omegaverse in RE fandom!
In the world of Resident evil, omegas are really rare (3% of the entire world population), because they have particularly difficult genes to breed!, but they are not seen as weak, needy and that must be protected. Law enforcement agencies such as Police, Special Forces and others seek them out for use in rescue missions, because due to their nature they are able to calm down and help kidnap victims, such as in the case of Ashley's kidnapping. They are trained to resist psychologically to pheromones of any kind, and to bear severe physical and psychological trauma. Betas are the highest percentage of all (about 60% of the world population), they are very normal humans, pheromones do not affect them at all, and they only use them to recognize people. Alphas make up a good percentage, but not as much as betas (about 30%), they are men who are relatively strong and dedicated to protecting the people they love.
Finished all this rant here is the list of all the characters of RE and their secondary genre!
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Rebecca Chambers: Alpha(I loved his personality in RE Vendetta! and when i scolded the two kids arguing i adored her and my mind decided she was alpha!)
Billy Coen: Beta
Albert Wesker: Alpha(Albert is an "old school" alpha, where the omegas are just slaves and shouldn't exist!)
William Birkin: Beta
Chris Redfield: Alpha
Jill Valentine: Alpha
Barry Burton: Alpha
Brad Vickers: Beta
Leon S. Kennedy: Omega/Alpha/Beta(Its genre depends a lot on the plot! In some stories he is a beta/alpha turned into an Omega, only to have to continue taking "steroids" to return to alpha or appear as a beta!)
Claire Redfield: Beta/alpha( I'm uncertain)
Ada Wong: beta
Sherry Birkin: Beta/Alpha
Hunk: beta(???)
Carlos Oliveira: Omega
Mikhail Viktor: Alpha
Nikolai Zinoviev: Beta
Steve Burnside: Beta/Omega
Ashley Graham: Omega/Beta
Ingrid Hunnigan: Alpha
Jack Krauser:Alpha(When he wasn't a jerk he was a regular alpha, when he wanted his lookout he started thinking old fashioned like Wesker.)
Parker Luciani: Beta
Keith Lumley: Beta
Jessica Sherawat: Beta
Quint Cetcham: Beta
Raymond Vester: Beta
Sheva Alomar: Alpha/Beta
Josh Stone: Beta
Excella Gionne: Beta
Moira Burton: Beta
Natalia Korda: Genderless(Because of the experiments it doesn't have a secondary genre, it's marked as beta, but I don't have it!)
Alex Wesker: Alpha(like Albert)
Jake Muller: Alpha
Helena Harper: Alpha
Piers Nivans: Beta
Carla Radames: Beta
Ethan Winters: Omega
Mia Winters: Alpha
Clancy Jarvis: Beta
Zoe Baker: Alpha
Joe Baker: Alpha
Marguerite Baker: Beta
Lucas Baker: Beta
If I have forgotten someone you are more than justified in kicking me to add it!
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Forgot to mention, that large family groups or very close friends are referred to as a "Pack", and it is normal for members of this pack to help others in need! but a person can safely decide not to join any of these packs and remain alone!
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ps, you are more than welcome to take and use these combinations or info! at least remember to give me some credit, thanks!
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xtruss · 1 year
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Meet The Women Who Risked Everything To Be The First To Fly
As one female pilot wrote, "A woman who can find fulfillment in the skies will never again need to live her life in some man's spare moments."
— By Rachel Hartigan | March 8, 2023
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Known as la femme-oiseau (the bird woman) in the French press, Raymonde Laroche became the first woman to receive a pilot's license on March 8, 1910. She volunteered to fly for the French military during World War I but was refused because of her gender. Photograph By Chris Hellier/Corbis via Getty Images
The history of the first women who flew is a tale of breathtaking bravery and lives cut tragically short.
On March 8, 1910—113 years ago today—Raymonde de Laroche, a former Parisian stage actress, became the first licensed female pilot in the world. Nine years later she was killed when the experimental aircraft she was flying dove into the ground.
Harriet Quimby, a well-known journalist, became the first American woman to obtain a pilot’s license in 1911. She died a year later when her new plane pitched her into Boston Harbor.
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Harriet Quimby united femininity and practicality in her custom-made purple satin flying suit. Photograph By Theodore Marceau, Alpha Stock/Alamo
In 1921, Bessie Coleman was the first Black woman to receive a pilot’s license—she had to travel to France to find a flight school that would teach her. But five years later she was killed when a wrench got caught in her plane’s controls, sending the plane plummeting.
Flying was perilous in aviation’s earliest days. The planes were “flimsy contraptions fashioned from bamboo, wire, and fabric,” according to the late historian Eileen Lebow. They didn’t have seat belts or even a roof to hold the pilot should the aircraft flip over. Yet women like Laroche, Quimby, and Coleman were willing to risk their lives for the freedom that flights promised.
“Aviation was a new profession seemingly free from the gender expectations and sex typing that limited women elsewhere,” noted historian Susan Ware at the National Air and Space Museum’s inaugural Amelia Earhart Lecture in Aviation History in 2022. “Women were getting in at the beginning.”
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Bessie Coleman, the first Black woman flier, learned French so she could take flying lessons in Europe after no one would teach her in the United States. Photograph By George Rinhart/Corbis, Getty Images
For many of them the thrill of flying was intoxicating but so was the opportunity to be assessed on their own merits. “These women wanted to be judged as human beings rather than as women,” says Ware.
Coleman especially saw flight as a path toward broader gender and racial equality. "I knew we had no aviators, neither men nor women, and I knew the Race needed to be represented along this most important line,” she said shortly after she returned to the United States from France in 1921. “I thought it my duty to risk my life to learn aviating and to encourage flying among men and women of the Race who are so far behind.” Before she died, she’d planned to open a flight school that would welcome African American aviators.
Many early women fliers shared the dream that achievement in this field would lead to more independence. As one journalist and amateur pilot wrote in 1930, “A woman who can find fulfillment in the skies will never again need to live her life in some man’s spare moments.”
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The women of Smith College Flying Club, founded in 1934, are seen here learning every aspect of airplane maintenance, flying instruction, and flight logging management. Photograph By George Woodruff, Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Some of that independence would come from the ease of travel that aviation promised in its earliest incarnation. Many people, including Amelia Earhart, believed at first that airplanes would become as commonly owned by families as bicycles and automobiles already had.
Other women embraced the financial independence that they thought the new field would offer. Neta Snook, whose first solo flight was in a plane she rebuilt, made her living by offering up her plane for aerial advertising, test flying experimental aircraft, taking paying passengers up for aerial tours, and teaching beginning fliers, including Earhart. Gladys Roy, on the other hand, earned good money as a stunt pilot, dancing the Charleston and playing tennis on the wings midflight for amazed crowds at air shows. (Snook retired from aviation when she became pregnant in her mid-twenties and lived to be 95; Roy died at 25 when she accidentally stepped into a propeller.)
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Daredevil aviatrix Gladys Roy (left) trains for her flying acrobatics by balancing on the rooftop of a building in Los Angeles. In a 1925 stunt, she played tennis against Ivan Unger on a flying plane. Photograph By Topical Press Agency/Getty Images (Left) and Photograph By Apic/Getty Images (Right)
Sisters Katherine and Marjorie Stinson took a more long-term approach, establishing a flight school in Texas with their mother and brother that trained, among others, Canadian pilots in the run up to World War I. When the U.S. entered the war, the country’s civil aviation—including the Stinson School for Flying—was shut down. Katherine went to Europe to serve as an ambulance driver while Marjorie became an aeronautical draftsman for the Navy.
War and the development of commercial aviation conspired to dampen women’s hopes of equality in the air. Experienced women pilots such as LaRoche and Katherine Stinson volunteered to serve in their countries’ nascent air forces during World War I. They were denied, the military preferring to train unseasoned men. The same pattern occurred in World War II, although Women’s Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) did ferry U.S. military planes as civilian pilots during the conflict. (The Soviet Union, however, had three female air combat regiments.)
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Under simulated flight conditions, Women's Air Service Pilots (WASPs) learn how to handle equipment at high altitudes in a pressurized room at Randolph Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas. WASPs served as civilian transport pilots for the U.S. military during World War II. Photograph By Photoquest/Getty Images
The dream of every family owning a private plane never did materialize; the infrastructure required would have been too extensive. Instead, the commercial aviation industry developed, hiring men—many of whom had been trained as pilots by the military. It was no use pointing out, as Earhart did, that if women "had access to the training and equipment men had we could certainly do as well."
Helen Richey became the first female commercial pilot in 1934 but was hounded out of her job. The U.S. Commerce Department, under pressure from the all-male pilots’ union, decreed that women weren’t allowed to fly scheduled routes in bad weather (they’d previously considered “grounding female pilots for nine days a month during menstruation,” according to Ware).
There wouldn’t be another female commercial pilot until 1973, when Emily Howell Warner was hired by Frontier.
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Helen Richey shakes the hand of assistant postmaster general W.W. Howes before she takes off in 1934 on the flight that would make her the first woman to fly the U.S. Air Mail. Photograph By Bettmann/Getty Images
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hotdamnhunnam · 3 years
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On a scale of 0 to 100, how would you rate each of Charlie's characters- and Charlie himself - in terms of having a breeding kink👀🙃
Ahh this is a fun question!! 😋
Below are my ratings for each of them... I honestly could’ve spent hours analyzing but I just went with my initial gut reaction ✨
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GIFs by hunnamsource | misterhunnam | uuuhshiny
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Breeding Kink (on a scale of 1-100)
Charlie Himself: 69 (He digs this kink to some degree and he LOVES the idea of you having his kids, but he’s honestly more into the sensuous aspect of cum rather than the idea that it carries his seed and all that shit, and he values sex more for the mutual pleasure, hence my choice of number.)
Jax Teller: 100 (I mean come on... his club is called Sons for a reason. He’s an alpha male animal, so he’s really big on the pride of pumping you full. He’s territorial, gets off on the fact that he owns you, and wants you to pop out a whole reaper crew.)
King Arthur: 99 (He is the born king after all, and he grew up in a brothel. That means he has a whole kink for you being his queen as well as his whore. Your purpose in life is to please him and bear all the royal progeny he could possibly ask for. One point less than Jax’s 100%, just ‘cause this king is more careful and respectful about kinks that objectify women; he’s a noble-hearted gentleman.)
Raymond Smith: 50 (Speaking of gentlemen... Raymond can be convinced to enjoy many different kinks, but breeding isn’t particularly his thing. He describes himself as enjoying a “good old-fashioned 50/50 mix” and I think he’s 50/50 when it comes to this—the ability to vigorously fill you full of kids is just one of many qualities of his sophisticated dick.)
Will “Ironhead” Miller: 90 (This iron-dicked captain is all about control and absolutely loves the concept of his cum filling your hole. He’s territorial in a way that’s very different from someone like Jax for instance—very wholesome and thoughtful, getting off on the idea of owning not only your body and your child-bearing belly but also your beloved soul. So the ten points off of 100% are for the way Will tenderly cradles your face in all ten of his fingers and focuses on making you feel beautiful, rather than a cum dump as he pumps you full.)
Raleigh Becket: 24.7 (Even just thinking about this precious little cinnamon roll having any ‘kinks’ at all just makes me blush to be honest, I have no clue how to put a number on it?!? All Raleigh knows is that he lives to treasure and adore his girl 24/7, hence the number that I’ve given. He loves the idea of starting a family with you and everything, but he’s too pure by nature to ever consider it a kink.)
Henri Charrière (Papillon): 47.45 (Hmmm this one is... interesting. I’m not really sure what to think, as to Henri with any kinks. This slick Parisian safecracker is a mysterious little thing. He supposedly spent 13 years (or roughly 4745 days) imprisoned on Devil’s Island, so I’m just going to go with this number because I’m really undecided!
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jumperlink2-blog · 5 years
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Your Complete Guide to the Most Stylish It-Girls of All Time
Plenty of celebs are well-dressed—but it takes something truly special to elevate a person to “style icon” status.
The women who reach that rarefied realm do so in many ways. They might define an entire genre of style, like Brigitte Bardot did with her effortless, French-girl chic. They could be masters of using style to communicate emotional states, like Princess Diana did in her famous post-breakup “revenge dress.” They could embrace a totally unique vision, like Solange Knowles in her ethereal, avant-garde designs. Or, like Tommy Hilfiger ambassador Gigi Hadid, they might simply exude youthful joie de vivre in a way that captures everyone’s imagination—and inspires legions of imitators.
Whatever the special alchemy is that makes a stylish woman an It-girl, the 16 women ahead definitely have it. Read on for the legends who defined—or are re-defining—style as we know it.
Gigi Hadid
More than any of the other young models and influencers known as the “Insta Girls,” we’ve loved watching Gigi Hadid’s evolution into style icon. Hadid has a way of mixing streetwear, sexy basics, and high fashion, and she can definitely turn it all the way up to high glam for a night out (as she did here in a metallic mini dress).
But Hadid is the opposite of the haughty fashionista—she has a sunny spirit that imparts every look with a breezy, care-free elan. Like Christie Brinkley or Lauren Hutton before her, Gigi is a very American sort of fashion icon.
Photo: Raymond Hall/GC Images/Getty
Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell
Why yes, we are cheating by including these two legends in one pic. But Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss were simply the alpha and omega of ‘90s supermodels, badass Brits, and style icons. Fashion-wise, they were worlds apart—Naomi favored body-conscious, high-glam creations from designers like Azzedine Alaia while Kate favored a quirky mix of thrifted finds with avant-garde designer pieces.
But they were both supernova-hot, impossibly chic, and had an irresistible It-factor that made them the ones everyone wanted to swill champagne and kick it with them. Name a more iconic fashion duo—we’ll wait.
Photo: Dave Benett/Getty Images
Francoise Hardy
A singer-songwriter who emerged from France’s early-'60s “ye-ye” scene, Francoise Hardy was the sensitive girl with a guitar and a killer sense of style. With her wardrobe of slim-cut trousers, wide leather belts, Chelsea boots, and teeny miniskirts—and, of course, those iconic blunt bangs—she cut a figure of tomboy elegance that set the template for Daisy Lowe, Tennessee Thomas, Alexa Chung and so many It-girls since.
Photo: Andrew Maclear/Redferns/Getty Images
Chloe Sevigny
It’s a sad fact of fashion that an outfit that looks au courant right now will look a little tired in one year, and downright laughable in 10. But Chloe Sevigny has the miraculous ability to overcome this curse: Somehow, the looks she wore in 1998 and 2008 look just as amazing in 2018.
Maybe it’s because she never blindly follows the trends du jour, but instead works her own quirky, vintage-inspired style. Unlike many celebs who look “dressed” or “styled,” Sevigny looks like herself, and rarely like anyone else. She's the quintessential New York cool girl.
Photo: Gustavo Caballero/WireImage for Dan Klores Communications/Getty Images
Rihanna
Rihanna is the embodiment of DGAF. When she wears an underground designer, it can literally put them on the map (hey, Adam Selman, creator of the instant-legend “naked dress”), and when she embraces a trend, she instantly inspires a thousand imitators overnight (hello, every Instagirl wearing teeny shades).
She’s always willing to experiment with outlandish silhouettes, and unapologetically loves and flaunts her body through all its fluctuations. She dresses for herself and no one else—a true inspiration.
Photo: George Pimentel/WireImage/Getty Images
Marisa Berenson
A granddaughter of legendary couturier Elsa Schiaparelli, a model who was a fixture in late-'60s Vogue, and a muse to everyone from Halston to Yves Saint Laurent—fashion credentials do not get much more purebred than this, people.
But Marisa Berenson was so much more than just a pretty face: She was a fixture on the socialite scene, a patron of the arts, and a pioneer of the luxe-bohemian style that today finds expression in women from Mary-Kate Olsen to Rachel Zoe.
Photo: Gian Paolo Barbieri/Condé Nast via Getty Images
Solange Knowles
Anyone who still describes Solange Knowles as sister to a certain superstar is missing the point. Not only has Solo fully emerged as her own unique talent, with plaintive songs that explore love, loss, and Black identity, she’s done it all while pioneering a new kind of otherworldly style.
Ethereal layered gowns, metallic ruffled tops, dramatic jeweled headpieces—Solange effortlessly embraces avant-garde looks and serves up space princess like no other.
Photo: Mireya Acierto/Getty Images
Brigitte Bardot
Along with Marilyn Monroe, Brigitte is the woman who defined “blonde bombshell.” She also unwittingly created the blueprint for that whole French-girl chic that everyone’s still obsessed with (even if they don’t want to admit it).
Her striped, bateau-neck tees; slim-cut capri pants; ballet flats; cat-eye makeup; and what can only be described as “bedroom hair” single-handedly created the “pouty French beauty” archetype to which many women still aspire.
Photo: Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images
Alexa Chung
After years of Hollywood starlets such as Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton dominating the gossip pages, Alexa Chung was such a breath of fresh air when she hit the scene around 2007. The gravelly-voiced Brit with a cheeky sense of humor and winsome, '60s-inspired style had plenty of wit to go with her beauty.
After Alexa, every indie girl worth her salt invested in a Peter Pan-collar dress, a pair of ballet flats, and learned to flick her eyeliner—a look Alexa borrowed from Francoise Hardy and brought into the 21st century.
Photo: Ricky Vigil M/GC Images/Getty Images
Diana Ross
It is impossible to overstate the importance of Diana Ross. She was many things: An iconic singer with the Supremes and solo, an Academy Award-nominated actress, a fashion and beauty icon, and one of the world’s first Black superstars—all feats she achieved in an era of widespread discrimination. And yes, she was also a diva whose style was always about capital-g Glamour, darling: sequins, feathers, gowns down to there, and hair to the sky.
Photo: Waring Abbott/Getty Images
Meghan Markle
So much recent ink has been spilled about the Duchess of Sussex, it almost seems like overkill. But Markle’s impact on the royal family and the world of style truly matters—she’s the first truly fashion-forward royal. While women like Princess Diana and Kate Middleton were undeniably graceful and always occasion-appropriate, Markle brings a sense of experimentation and youthful sophistication to her tea-length skirts and sheath dresses that sets her apart from any royal before.
Photo: Chris Jackson/Getty Images
Bianca Jagger
This Nicaragua-born model and actress officially entered the realm of style icons when she married Mick Jagger in Saint Tropez in 1971, while wearing an impeccably cut white suit. Throughout the ‘70s, she emerged as the reigning queen of the Studio 54 scene, holding court with luminaries from the art worlds (Andy Warhol, Grace Jones) and bringing an unforgettably dramatic flair to her style—think giant flowers in her hair, red-sequin gowns with matching berets, and, oh yeah, that time she arrived to her birthday party in an off-shoulder dress riding a white horse.
Photo: Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen
Their fashion sense may be divisive—especially Mary-Kate, who tends to favor more eccentric looks than her twin—but in 2018, no one can deny that these women are fully-fledged style icons, both for their personal fashion and for the work they’ve done helming their luxury label The Row.
In fact, they don’t always get credit for embracing trends years before the rest of us catch on (Birkenstocks, circle sunnies, and Celine-esque oversized layers all spring to mind). But that probably doesn’t bother them—these are women who do their own thing, and let the rest of the world catch up.
Photo: Rabbani and Solimene Photography/Getty Images
Princess Diana
From the moment she announced her engagement to Prince Charles in 1981, Diana had an uncanny ability to connect with people and inspire fashion fervor. While some of her ‘80s formal looks veered into ruffly excess (it was kind of the style at the time), she always had a joyful approach to color and silhouette that thoroughly modernized the formerly-stuffy House of Windsor.
By the ‘90s she’d dropped her philandering husband and pared her style down to just the basics: sleek silhouettes, and sexy shorter hemlines that many interpreted as the ultimate revenge.
Photo: Jayne Fincher/Getty Images
Carolyn Bessette Kennedy
The fashion publicist entered the world stage fast when she began dating John Kennedy, Jr. in 1994. The pair were constantly followed by paparazzi, and Carolyn’s minimalist, luxe basics—sleeveless turtleneck sweaters, pencil skirts, kitten-heel pumps—was widely imitated by women everywhere, and defined chic in the mid-'90s.
A savvy, New York City blonde in the fashion industry with impeccable style, we see a lot of Carolyn in Carrie Bradshaw, and so many women since who come to the big city to pursue their fashion dreams (and maybe find love, too).
Photo: Lawrence Schwartzwald/Sygma via Getty Images
Source: http://stylecaster.com/most-stylish-it-girls/
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Black Skin Treatment.
http://blogpourhomme.fr/bitdefender-avis-comment-lutiliser-ou-lacheter-est-il-libre-prix/ 's an inquiry pondered by the beauty obsessed anywhere: Do skin, nail, as well as hair vitamins work? All-natural hair bristles step freely, permitting you to not only pick up sufficient product in one swipe, however additionally to blend it out wonderfully. THEY SAY: Created to re-energise as well as protect the skin cells at the epidermal joint to reveal more lifted, firmer and also shaped facial shapes making use of a scientific blend of plant stem cells. Aging skin could benefit most from products containing anti-oxidants or alpha hydroxy acids to assist fight versus creases As individuals age, the skin reduces its natural oil manufacturing, so added dampness comes to be a lot more important. A research study from Ehime University in Japan recommends that turmeric extract shields skin health from ultraviolet B radiation damage. I do unknown exactly what it is like to exist inside a black skin in 21st century America. It's true their method is time-consuming; unlike Raymond's informal slice and also toss-it-in method, I should char and skin the peppers, blanch as well as skin the tomatoes, and also utilize two pans to cook every little thing separately, draining each vegetable well after cooking. Bigger pores contribute to a variety of skin difficulties consisting of visible pores, unequal make-up application, raised breakouts as well as loosened, untoned skin which could be unpleasant. A sugar-based scrub will certainly liquify as it exfoliates, so it's impossible to overdo it. Use it when a week to carefully dismiss dead skin cells, which could result in monotony. Lots of scrubs utilize natural components, such as salt or sugar, as well as job to remove surface area skin in a effective as well as mild fashion. Generally, a tomato is ripe when it is soft sufficient to press without breaking the skin. Visitors need to be aware that individuals in the research with high olive oil intake additionally had the tendency to have healthier diets generally; olive oil usage may be a pen for a healthier lifestyle, which could explain some of the organization between usage and also skin wellness. Since you're diligently exfoliating as well as your skin is infant smooth, make your face fresh as well as glow-y and also-- for absence of a far better word-- radiant with these hydrating, firming, and lightening up active ingredients. In the 70s, you had all these gyms appearing, as well as from there we've had the expansion of the beauty and diet industry with people coming to be more familiar with certain food teams and more. You must change the skin site where you apply BUTRANS every week, making certain that at least 3 weeks (21 days) pass before you re-use the exact same skin site. For instance, gadgets can be massaged over the skin and also improve the body's natural painkilling features, without making use of medications. But it also might trigger some of the very same muscular tissue troubles as the pharmaceutical items. They can cause your skin to age too soon, making it look coarse, wrinkled and leatherlike. Peter Thomas Roth took this cutting edge biotechnology to reproduce perfect rose stem cells, and incorporated them with climbed remove to develop a mask that stimulates cell turnover. Renova must be utilized as component of a full skin care program that consists of avoiding sunshine and also making use of an efficient sunscreen and safety clothes. Your skin's all-natural oils will automatically offer the illusion of a slightly darker color. Eye Lotion: The delicate skin under the eyes is the starting point to reveal signs of creases or great lines. Readily found in many skin treatment creams, they are naturally originated from the likes of milk, sugarcane, wine, lemons or apples. Ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the sunlight is the number one reason for skin cancer, but UV light from tanning beds is equally as unsafe. Prof Hawk says: This is perfect for even the fairest, most sensitive skins because of the high SPF. Threw them out informed my doctor no more i will go natural and also if i stoke out to negative i uncommitted as i could not live in that much pain. I personally feel we are loosing trust on natural remedies, believing pharmaceutical companies have better remedies for everyone, yet bear in mind, even pains killers originate from all-natural resources as well as were simply located due to the fact that individuals utilized all-natural remedies that had no description to any individual. Over the years, Rice, whose cheeks, nose as well as chin are influenced by her vitilgo, has actually refined her make-up skills, 'painting' her skin to appear like she has pigment where she does not. Sales of anti-aging skin treatment treatments, which include items created to get eliminate dark circles, boosted to $1.08 billion in 2006, up from $588 million every year in 2001, according to Mintel, a market research firm. Afterwards, Nykady as well as associates (2001) performed 2 24 weeks, double-blind and vehicle-controlled tests to evaluate the efficacy and also tolerability of 0.02% tretinoin lotion used once daily in 328 patients with moderate to badly photodamaged skin. If you are a person who likes all-natural skin care, we also have something for you: Our Natural Homemade Elegance Care Tips. Rough Skin: Vitamin E oil gives the skin with required wetness along with anti-oxidants for intense healing. When he is so specific in his categorising of those woman kids that he starts to seem horribly like a lepidopterist, nor. In conclusion, the organic remove lotions were highly efficacious and also, with turmeric remove consisted of, can be utilized as solid photo safety skin care items in the future. Scrubing your face could assist to resurface your complexion as well as to lessen fine lines and also creases. To maintain these dead cells removaling, use an alpha-hydroxy acid-based cleanser at the very least twice a week, which will certainly leave you with beautiful, smooth skin, given that the acids in cleansers get to further into your skin's layers compared to physical scrubs, breaking the bonds between dead cells as well as loosening them. Antiaging skin care must always include anti aging supplements because the skin is dependent upon the micronutrients (phytochemicals, minerals, and also vitamins or phytonutrients) to reconstruct collagen, maintain dampness, as well as turn around aging by lowering of removing creases from the WITHIN as well as the OUTSIDE! It has a brightening as well as luminizing impact on the skin on the whole when used topically, and over time may also help in reducing unequal skin tone and also aid remedy locations of darker coloring as well. Though it takes quite a while to see a visible adjustment in skin tone, the pills do make a precise renovation.
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However even if you cannot validate spending lavishly in a salon, a number of new home-use gizmos, developed either for overall face renewal or to accelerate the healing of places as well as cold sores, have recently been introduced, also. Smoking too soon ages your skin by between 10 and also Two Decade, and makes it 3 times more probable you'll obtain facial wrinkling, specifically around the eyes and mouth. If you're established on doing it in your home, first, apply a natural blonde base color, such as John Frieda Accuracy Foam Colour in Light Natural Blonde ($ 12, ), which has saturating foam that permits full grey protection. It shows the special capability of the blind mole rat to hinder growth and also kill cancer cells, yet not typical cells. Although death prices are normally below for various other conditions, individuals's demands for reliable solutions for skin disease ought to be satisfied for a variety of essential reasons. Kate is a natural, fresh girl as well as I do not think she's vain yet she wouldn't be human if she didn't care exactly how she looked when she's constantly photographed in every paper and also every publication," says former royal correspondent Jennie Bond. Today's Miracle drugs or targeted therapies are pricey as expense of treating sophisticated intestines cancer cells patient that was $500 in 1999 is $250,000 in 2007 as suggested by Leonard Saltz, from Memorial Sloan-Kettering cancer cells Facility, New york city. They observed that retinol formula resulted in considerable renovation in great wrinkles after 12 weeks of therapy. So without defeating my head versus a wall surface to obtain narcotics, I picked much less problematic remedies like the cholestyramine, and also consuming more often, however less, and tracking what foods really do not function - For me, that implied, anything greasy or fatty, a lot of fiberous vegetables (which i used to love), and specific various other things like delicious chocolate or whipped cream, cheese, milk. Banana as well as coconut milk might seem preferable components for a smoothie compared to a beauty product, however both have many advantages for the skin. They're packed with fiber, as well as including them to your diet plan can aid lower cholesterol levels and reduce your threat of coronary heart disease.
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museumof2021 · 3 years
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January Special Feature: Inauguration Coats
I am an absolute *sucker* for a great coat - and January’s outdoor inauguration ceremony was RIPE was excellent choices. Lets dive in:
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It actually begins on the evening before the inauguration, as the Bidens and Harris-Emhoffs visit a memorial for the nation’s COVID victims.
Harris wears a coat designed by Kerby Jean-Raymond of Pyer Moss, a black designer who spent the early months of the pandemic working to gather and distribute PPE to overburdened hospitals in New York.
Dr. Jill Biden dons a mask and wrap-style coat from Jonathan Cohen, who is a rising star in sustainable fashion. His work heavily uses off-cut fabrics, that would otherwise be discarded.
The use of American designers stands in stark contrast to Melania Trump, who preferred European fashion houses like Gucci and Dior. Mrs Trump departed the White House in head-to-toe funerary black, wearing a Chanel coat, Dolce & Gabanna dress and Hermès handbag.
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The following day Vice-President Harris wears a long purple coat by Christopher John Rogers, a young black designer whose colourful garments have made him a rising star in American fashion.
The colour is a nod to Shirley Chisholm, the first Black woman to run for president. Harris frequently wears pearls, in homage to her historically-black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha.
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The only man who is going to make this list is Nikolas Ajagu, the husband of Harris’s niece Meena Harris. His Dior x Air Jordan 1 sneakers are the only shoes worth talking about. Kamala Harris frequently wore sneakers on the campaign trail - making this an appropriate choice, in my opinion.
His daughters Amara and Leela are dressed in custom coats designed to look like a pair of jackets once worn by Kamala and her sister Maya, the girls’ grandmother, when they were children.
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Amanda Gorman, the young poet laureate whose poem quickly became an inauguration highlight, wore a vivid yellow coat by Prada. It was an homage to her connection to Jill Biden, who attended one of her poetry readings three years prior and complimented her yellow dress.
The headband, worn around her braids like a halo, is also Prada. They sold out on the company’s website before the ceremonies had even concluded.
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Ella Emhoff, accompanied by brother Cole, wore a beautiful coat with a Miu Miu coat with an oversized collar and crystal-studded shoulders. The tweed coat is a runaway star among the night’s fashions. 
Fun fact - the siblings call stepmom Kamala “Momala” which is very sweet.
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Michelle stormed back into my heart with this monochromatic Segio Hudson look. Photos do no justice to how beautifully this coat moves - it ripples like a superhero cape. I love the pants. The post-Whitehouse Michelle is no longer bound by the restrictive style etiquette and can indulge in some winter-friendly, gorgeous slacks. 
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Dr. Biden’s powder blue tweed jacket was designed by fashion newcomer Alexandra O’Neill of Markarian.
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Finnegan Biden, Hunter Biden’s second-born daughter, wears a luxe camel coat from Brandon Maxwell while Natalie Biden, Beau’s eldest child, wears a bubble-gum pink coat from Lafayette 148 New York.
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Garth Brooks wore blue jeans - go off, casualwear king lol - and Lady Gaga came dressed in a voluminous gown. Her extremely large broach of a dove was likened to the Hunger Games’ mockingbird - a fitting analogy after the dystopian Trump years.
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I quite honestly cannot find great photos of Jill wearing this cashmere coat. It was only briefly peeped during the fireworks show on the Truman balcony and the railings obscured the view - but it is a beauty. The double-breasted Gabriela Hearst coat is embroidered around the hem with the federal flowers of each of the fifty states. The matching dress beneath it positioned the flower of Delaware - Biden’s home state - over her heart.
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Speaking of knockout looks, though, Ashley wore a sleek black Ralph Lauren suit.
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And finally - the mittens. A schoolteacher in Vermont made these mittens for Senator Bernie Sanders, utilizing wool from old sweaters and recycled plastic bottles. It’s an on-brand look for the environmentally-friendly politician.
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swewwefan · 7 years
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Dream Roster
Criteria: Good matches and economicall security. Heavy Weight:  36 Braun Strowman (WWE) Brock Lesnar (WWE) Finn Bálor (WWE) Samoa Joe (WWE) The Miz (WWE) AJ Styles (WWE) Bobby Roode (WWE) Kevin Owens (WWE) Luke Harper (WWE) Mike Kannellis (WWE) Rusev (WWE) Shinsuke Nakamura (WWE) Aleister Black (WWE) Andrade “Cien” Almas (WWE) Drew McIntyre (WWE) Kassius Ohno (WWE) Lars Sullivan (WWE) Oney Lorcan (WWE) Pete Dunne (WWE) Roderick Strong (WWE) Trent Seven (WWE) Tyler Bate (WWE) EC3 (Impact) Johnny Impact (Impact) Moose (Impact) Evil (NJPW) Katsuyori Shibata (NJPW) Kazuchika Okada (NJPW) Kenny Omega (NJPW) Tomohiro Ishii (NJPW) Tetsuya Naito (NJPW) Zack Sabre Jr. (NJPW) Hiromu Takahashi (NJPW) Cody (ROH) Dalton Castle (ROH) Silas Young (ROH) Cruiser Weight: 21 Akira Tozawa (WWE) Cedric Alexander (WWE) Jack Gallgher (WWE) Neville (WWE) Noam Darr (WWE) The Brian Kendrick (WWE) Kalisto (WWE) James Ellsworth (WWE) Sami Zayn (WWE) Ty Dillinger (WWE) Hideo Itami (WWE) Low Ki (Impact) Kota Ibushi (NJPW) Seiya Sanada (NJPW) Yujiro Kushida (NJPW) Ricochet (?) Will Ospreay (?) Austin Aries (?) Joey Ryan (?) RobVan Dam (?) Flip Gordon (ROH) Tag Teams: 15 (30) Sheamus & Cesaro (WWE) The Revival - Scott Dawson & Dash Wilder (WWE) American Alpha - Jason Jordan & Chad Gable (WWE) The Good Brothers - Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson (WWE) The Usos - Jimmy & Jey Uso (WWE) Fashion Police - Fandango & Tyler Breeze (WWE) Guerrillas of Destiny  -  Tama Tonga &  Tanga Loa (NJPW) The Young Bucks - Matt & Nick Jackson (ROH) The Best Friends - Beretta & Chuck Taylor (ROH) War Machine - Hanson & Raymond Rowe (ROH) Motor City Machineguns - Alex Shelley & Chris Sabin (ROH) Adam Page & Marty Scurll (ROH) The Authors of Pain - Akem & Rezar (WWE) Wesley Blake & Buddy Murphy (WWE) #DIY - Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa (WWE) Factions: 4 (12) The Shield - Seth Rollins, Dean Ambrose & Roman Reigns (WWE) New Day - Big E, Kofi Kingston & Xavier Woods (WWE) Sanity - Alexader Wolfe, Eric Young & Killian Dain (WWE) The Undisputed Era - Adam Cole, Bobby Fish & Kyle O´Reiley (WWE) Women: 23 Alexa Bliss (WWE) Asuka (WWE) Bayley (WWE) Nia Jax (WWE) Paige (WWE) Sasha Banks (WWE) Becky Lynch (WWE) Charlotte Flair (WWE) Ember Moon (WWE) Kairi Sane (WWE) Nikki Cross (WWE) Toni Storm (?) Mia Yim (?) Rhea Ripley (?) Candice LeRae (?) Jazzy Gabert (?) Taynara Conti (?) Sarah Logan (?) Piper Niven (?) Kay Lee Ray (?) Tessa Blanchard (?) Xia Li (?) Dakota Kai (?) Full Roster: 122
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walterfrodriguez · 6 years
Text
Miami Art Week recapped with 40 Instagram photos
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A Smörgåsbord of Miami Art Week offerings
Miami is a bit quieter today with the 2017 edition of Miami Art Week coming to a close last night.
Among the highlights: a powerful nuclear missile installation in Mana Wynwood, a four-story ice cream museum in Mid-Beach, five magnificent superyachts in town at various marinas, a new version of Wynwood Walls, a light sculpture featuring a 12-foot orgasm in a South Beach hotel lobby, and an autonomous swarm of 300 illuminated drones above the ocean in Faena District mimicking a flock of birds.
There were also a couple of big-time celebrity listings with the former homes of Sammy Sosa and Chris Bosh — they boast fantastic views of the ocean and the bay, respectively — hitting the market.
But not everyone was able to make it out to the wide array of installations, exhibits, and fairs, so we threw together an extensive Instagram roundup showcasing a sliver of what Miami Art Week had to offer.
The real #RemyMVP. #arteverywhere // #artbasel : @remymartin #swishandswing
A post shared by W South Beach (@wsouthbeach) on Dec 8, 2017 at 11:01am PST
Street Art ||| Where's an Alpha when you need 'em? w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel #SkeePhi
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:09am PST
My favorite piece of art at the @reddotmiami and @spectrummiami gallery yesterday. Art by @jwolffstudios, super dope. #miami #artbasel #artbaselmiami #trump #biggie #itwasalladream #art #artwork
A post shared by snapchat: richdarrell1 (@_richdarrell1) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:36am PST
Just days after the installation of a massive 65,000-pound, 38-year-old kapok tree at the base of Jade Signature in Sunny Isles Beach, the tower and Fortune International Group celebrated the unveiling of “Bonhomme Universe,” their new gemstone snowman, a whimsical piece is by Romania-born artist Daniel Knorr which was commissioned by Fortune International Group President and CEO Edgardo Defortuna. The sculpture will be accessible to the public, a potential future social media icon for Sunny Isles Beach. The unveiling was celebrated with a fashionable beachfront luncheon, guests included Edgardo Defortuna, and his wife, Ana Cristina; the artist himself Daniel Knorr, co-host Sarah Harreslon, founder of CULTURED magazine; Jason Frantzen, partner of Herzog and de Meuron; Raymond Jungles, founder of Raymond Jungles Inc.; Vice Mayor Dana Goldman of the City of Sunny Isles Beach; and former U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios. Defortuna spoke about his passion for art and the ability of sculpture to enliven and embellish outdoor spaces (December 8, 2017). #JadeSignature #SunnyIslesBeach #FortuneInternationalGroup #BonhommeUniverse #DanielKnorr #MiamiRealEstate #PROFILEmiami
A post shared by PROFILEmiami Real Estate (@profilemiami) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:49am PST
Street Art ||| It's all love, once you peel back.the onion. w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:03am PST
Happy Kanye = Happy Monday #happykanye #artbasel #artbaselmiami #artbasel2017 #wynwood #wynwoodart #miami #kanyewest #kanye #yeezy #art
A post shared by Kofi A. Oliver (@kofioliverphoto) on Dec 11, 2017 at 5:00am PST
On to the #MIA #bucketlist #artbasel
A post shared by erikalharris (@erikalharris) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:47pm PST
When Chi-town meets Miami (@ the artist!) #kanyewest #artbasel #graduation #um #art #walkfashionshow @walkfashionshow
A post shared by Erika S ♌ (@am.erikaaa) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:38am PST
Art Basel Miami Beach artist “Crano” photooftheday #20likes #amazing #smile #look #instalike #igers #picoftheday #food #instadaily #instafollow #followme #girl #iphoneonly #instagood #bestoftheday #instacool #instago #all_shots #follow #webstagram #colorful #style
A post shared by MiamiGezisi (@miamigezisi) on Dec 10, 2017 at 12:30am PST
Introducing Kotone , physical music works. Art + Music = happy #miami #artbasel #alamakproject #music #art
A post shared by RSquare (@rsquare_design) on Dec 10, 2017 at 1:55pm PST
A post shared by Alejandra Primavera (@alejandraprimavera) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:34pm PST
Seriously though
A post shared by Taryn (@trnharvey) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:32am PST
A post shared by Matt Paolillo (@m.p.lo) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:40pm PST
@mirusgallery had a lot of sick @okudart pieces at their @scopeartshow booth, this large canvas was my favorite. #Okuda #OkudaSanMiguel #MirusGallery #Scope #ScopeArtShow #scopemiamibeach #scopemiami #artbasel #ArtBaselMadness #baselorbust #streetartspringbreak
A post shared by Daniel Weintraub (@halopigg) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:02am PST
At the booth across from me @formmiami, the stunning ceramic vessels of @ashrafhanna_ceramicsandglass at @thenewcraftsmen from the UK
A post shared by Damon Crain (@culture.object) on Dec 7, 2017 at 12:44pm PST
Alex Gross
A post shared by Joshua Rhodes (@tatshoe) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:05pm PST
Art Basel was fun.
A post shared by Jose Diaz™ (@itsjosebro) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:46pm PST
Great to see the @artofdavidwalker translate so well from street to studio, and vice versa.
A post shared by Street Art House (@streetarthouse) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:02am PST
A post shared by Nikki Greenberg (@perspectivesbynlg) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:11pm PST
Art Basel Miami Beach at MBCC #truth #voiceshakes The more you're scared, the more it must be said.
A post shared by arnelinthesun (@arnelinthesun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 9:54pm PST
Space theme #ArtBasel2017 #ArtMiami
A post shared by Christina Riggs (@improspecta) on Dec 11, 2017 at 9:55am PST
A post shared by Marilia Celin (@marilia_celin) on Dec 9, 2017 at 7:54pm PST
Han Young #hanyoung #artmiami #miami
A post shared by L I S A T Ö R N E R (@lisalinneatorner) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:39am PST
#dance #happy #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Hana Choy (@chewychoy) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:32pm PST
#miami #miamiartweek #miamiartbasel #artbasel #artbaselmiami #talent #art #artistic #sculpture #color #green #beautiful #travelblogger #travel #traveling #2017 #miamilife #miamibeach #like #fun #lifeofalex #thelifeofalex #theamazinglifeofalex #instapic
A post shared by Alex Page (@alexpage5602) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:22am PST
We ♥️ this new work by #NathanSawaya #legobricks
A post shared by Avant Gallery® Art Is Life™ (@avantgallery) on Dec 1, 2017 at 5:07pm PST
A post shared by Norma Estrada (@sunshinegata) on Dec 10, 2017 at 8:49am PST
Now THIS is art with a great message #happywifehappylife #artbasel #artmiami . . . . . . #miami #miamilife #weekendfun #art #positivevibes #jewelry #jewelrydesigner #jewelryobsessed #sparkle #jewelleryaddict #jewelrybye #wordstoliveby
A post shared by Jewelry by E (@jewelrybye) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:31pm PST
#artbasel #artbasel2017 #artbaselmiami2017 #artbaselmiami #spectrum #reddotmiami #scopemiami #scopemiamibeach #scopeartshow #untitled #art #scope #bestweekever #miamiink #contextartmiami #artmiami #wynwood #wynwoodwalls #wynwoodartdistrict
A post shared by LOLA (@lola_in_the_city) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:58am PST
Art Basel in the sky #droneshow #faenaart @faena
A post shared by Eric Lopez (@ericanthonylopez) on Dec 6, 2017 at 7:49pm PST
Art Africa!!!! #internationalreviewofafricanamericanart #hamptonartlovers #artbasel #artafricamiami
A post shared by Hampton Art Lovers (@hamptonartlovers) on Dec 8, 2017 at 4:43pm PST
Art I’m sad I missed (1 of 2). Problem with working on an event during Basel is you don’t get to go see all the shows. Missed #pulseartfair #artlexing’s booth with #typoe’s colorful installation. Thank goodness there’s Instagram stalking though.
A post shared by Daughter of Design (@daughterodesign) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:09am PST
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. #artbasel #miamibeachedition
A post shared by Steven Rojas (@stevenrojas) on Dec 11, 2017 at 11:08am PST
Spotted at Untitled Exhibition #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Joy (@maccaholic) on Dec 6, 2017 at 5:46am PST
I can feel. Best part of Basel. I want this in my house . . . . . . . #feminism #feminist #feministart #girlpower #grlpwr #sexposi #bodyposi #yoni #yonipower #pussypower #sexed #sexeducation #sexpositive #bodypositive #sexology #womenrun #womenled #womenfounders #pussyart #vaginaart #witch #pussygrabsback #p2p #powertothepussy #vulvaart #vulvapride #bopo
A post shared by Madison (@we_badison) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:55am PST
Don’t it taste like #holywater? #artbasel #blessed #neonbible #jesuslikesarttoo #jesusdiedforyouandstuff #godwashere #sayurprayers #thankgoditssunday #aintnobodyprayinforme
A post shared by Princess Kitty Kat (@anasunbun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:17pm PST
The architecture of art, and vice versa @maxmakewell #basel #art #architecture #edenroc #scope #pulse
A post shared by Christopher (@christopherdaish_nycrealestate) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:16am PST
Casa Cor Miami • Amei o projeto da Arquiteta e Designer @su_chitra. A Indiana ousou no ambiente “The Conversation” com varias peças de design e o grafismo bem colorido! ♥️
A post shared by Jeh Adan, São Paulo, SP (@decorechic) on Dec 11, 2017 at 6:27am PST
A post shared by A1 Everything..... (@indian_papi) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:53am PST
from The Real Deal Miami & Real Estate News News | & Curbed Miami - All https://miami.curbed.com/2017/12/11/16763242/miami-art-week-instagram-photos via IFTTT
0 notes
juditmiltz · 6 years
Text
Miami Art Week recapped with 40 Instagram photos
Tumblr media
A Smörgåsbord of Miami Art Week offerings
Miami is a bit quieter today with the 2017 edition of Miami Art Week coming to a close last night.
Among the highlights: a powerful nuclear missile installation in Mana Wynwood, a four-story ice cream museum in Mid-Beach, five magnificent superyachts in town at various marinas, a new version of Wynwood Walls, a light sculpture featuring a 12-foot orgasm in a South Beach hotel lobby, and an autonomous swarm of 300 illuminated drones above the ocean in Faena District mimicking a flock of birds.
There were also a couple of big-time celebrity listings with the former homes of Sammy Sosa and Chris Bosh — they boast fantastic views of the ocean and the bay, respectively — hitting the market.
But not everyone was able to make it out to the wide array of installations, exhibits, and fairs, so we threw together an extensive Instagram roundup showcasing a sliver of what Miami Art Week had to offer.
The real #RemyMVP. #arteverywhere // #artbasel : @remymartin #swishandswing
A post shared by W South Beach (@wsouthbeach) on Dec 8, 2017 at 11:01am PST
Street Art ||| Where's an Alpha when you need 'em? w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel #SkeePhi
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:09am PST
My favorite piece of art at the @reddotmiami and @spectrummiami gallery yesterday. Art by @jwolffstudios, super dope. #miami #artbasel #artbaselmiami #trump #biggie #itwasalladream #art #artwork
A post shared by snapchat: richdarrell1 (@_richdarrell1) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:36am PST
Just days after the installation of a massive 65,000-pound, 38-year-old kapok tree at the base of Jade Signature in Sunny Isles Beach, the tower and Fortune International Group celebrated the unveiling of “Bonhomme Universe,” their new gemstone snowman, a whimsical piece is by Romania-born artist Daniel Knorr which was commissioned by Fortune International Group President and CEO Edgardo Defortuna. The sculpture will be accessible to the public, a potential future social media icon for Sunny Isles Beach. The unveiling was celebrated with a fashionable beachfront luncheon, guests included Edgardo Defortuna, and his wife, Ana Cristina; the artist himself Daniel Knorr, co-host Sarah Harreslon, founder of CULTURED magazine; Jason Frantzen, partner of Herzog and de Meuron; Raymond Jungles, founder of Raymond Jungles Inc.; Vice Mayor Dana Goldman of the City of Sunny Isles Beach; and former U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios. Defortuna spoke about his passion for art and the ability of sculpture to enliven and embellish outdoor spaces (December 8, 2017). #JadeSignature #SunnyIslesBeach #FortuneInternationalGroup #BonhommeUniverse #DanielKnorr #MiamiRealEstate #PROFILEmiami
A post shared by PROFILEmiami Real Estate (@profilemiami) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:49am PST
Street Art ||| It's all love, once you peel back.the onion. w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:03am PST
Happy Kanye = Happy Monday #happykanye #artbasel #artbaselmiami #artbasel2017 #wynwood #wynwoodart #miami #kanyewest #kanye #yeezy #art
A post shared by Kofi A. Oliver (@kofioliverphoto) on Dec 11, 2017 at 5:00am PST
On to the #MIA #bucketlist #artbasel
A post shared by erikalharris (@erikalharris) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:47pm PST
When Chi-town meets Miami (@ the artist!) #kanyewest #artbasel #graduation #um #art #walkfashionshow @walkfashionshow
A post shared by Erika S ♌ (@am.erikaaa) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:38am PST
Art Basel Miami Beach artist “Crano” photooftheday #20likes #amazing #smile #look #instalike #igers #picoftheday #food #instadaily #instafollow #followme #girl #iphoneonly #instagood #bestoftheday #instacool #instago #all_shots #follow #webstagram #colorful #style
A post shared by MiamiGezisi (@miamigezisi) on Dec 10, 2017 at 12:30am PST
Introducing Kotone , physical music works. Art + Music = happy #miami #artbasel #alamakproject #music #art
A post shared by RSquare (@rsquare_design) on Dec 10, 2017 at 1:55pm PST
A post shared by Alejandra Primavera (@alejandraprimavera) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:34pm PST
Seriously though
A post shared by Taryn (@trnharvey) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:32am PST
A post shared by Matt Paolillo (@m.p.lo) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:40pm PST
@mirusgallery had a lot of sick @okudart pieces at their @scopeartshow booth, this large canvas was my favorite. #Okuda #OkudaSanMiguel #MirusGallery #Scope #ScopeArtShow #scopemiamibeach #scopemiami #artbasel #ArtBaselMadness #baselorbust #streetartspringbreak
A post shared by Daniel Weintraub (@halopigg) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:02am PST
At the booth across from me @formmiami, the stunning ceramic vessels of @ashrafhanna_ceramicsandglass at @thenewcraftsmen from the UK
A post shared by Damon Crain (@culture.object) on Dec 7, 2017 at 12:44pm PST
Alex Gross
A post shared by Joshua Rhodes (@tatshoe) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:05pm PST
Art Basel was fun.
A post shared by Jose Diaz™ (@itsjosebro) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:46pm PST
Great to see the @artofdavidwalker translate so well from street to studio, and vice versa.
A post shared by Street Art House (@streetarthouse) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:02am PST
A post shared by Nikki Greenberg (@perspectivesbynlg) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:11pm PST
Art Basel Miami Beach at MBCC #truth #voiceshakes The more you're scared, the more it must be said.
A post shared by arnelinthesun (@arnelinthesun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 9:54pm PST
Space theme #ArtBasel2017 #ArtMiami
A post shared by Christina Riggs (@improspecta) on Dec 11, 2017 at 9:55am PST
A post shared by Marilia Celin (@marilia_celin) on Dec 9, 2017 at 7:54pm PST
Han Young #hanyoung #artmiami #miami
A post shared by L I S A T Ö R N E R (@lisalinneatorner) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:39am PST
#dance #happy #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Hana Choy (@chewychoy) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:32pm PST
#miami #miamiartweek #miamiartbasel #artbasel #artbaselmiami #talent #art #artistic #sculpture #color #green #beautiful #travelblogger #travel #traveling #2017 #miamilife #miamibeach #like #fun #lifeofalex #thelifeofalex #theamazinglifeofalex #instapic
A post shared by Alex Page (@alexpage5602) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:22am PST
We ♥️ this new work by #NathanSawaya #legobricks
A post shared by Avant Gallery® Art Is Life™ (@avantgallery) on Dec 1, 2017 at 5:07pm PST
A post shared by Norma Estrada (@sunshinegata) on Dec 10, 2017 at 8:49am PST
Now THIS is art with a great message #happywifehappylife #artbasel #artmiami . . . . . . #miami #miamilife #weekendfun #art #positivevibes #jewelry #jewelrydesigner #jewelryobsessed #sparkle #jewelleryaddict #jewelrybye #wordstoliveby
A post shared by Jewelry by E (@jewelrybye) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:31pm PST
#artbasel #artbasel2017 #artbaselmiami2017 #artbaselmiami #spectrum #reddotmiami #scopemiami #scopemiamibeach #scopeartshow #untitled #art #scope #bestweekever #miamiink #contextartmiami #artmiami #wynwood #wynwoodwalls #wynwoodartdistrict
A post shared by LOLA (@lola_in_the_city) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:58am PST
Art Basel in the sky #droneshow #faenaart @faena
A post shared by Eric Lopez (@ericanthonylopez) on Dec 6, 2017 at 7:49pm PST
Art Africa!!!! #internationalreviewofafricanamericanart #hamptonartlovers #artbasel #artafricamiami
A post shared by Hampton Art Lovers (@hamptonartlovers) on Dec 8, 2017 at 4:43pm PST
Art I’m sad I missed (1 of 2). Problem with working on an event during Basel is you don’t get to go see all the shows. Missed #pulseartfair #artlexing’s booth with #typoe’s colorful installation. Thank goodness there’s Instagram stalking though.
A post shared by Daughter of Design (@daughterodesign) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:09am PST
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. #artbasel #miamibeachedition
A post shared by Steven Rojas (@stevenrojas) on Dec 11, 2017 at 11:08am PST
Spotted at Untitled Exhibition #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Joy (@maccaholic) on Dec 6, 2017 at 5:46am PST
I can feel. Best part of Basel. I want this in my house . . . . . . . #feminism #feminist #feministart #girlpower #grlpwr #sexposi #bodyposi #yoni #yonipower #pussypower #sexed #sexeducation #sexpositive #bodypositive #sexology #womenrun #womenled #womenfounders #pussyart #vaginaart #witch #pussygrabsback #p2p #powertothepussy #vulvaart #vulvapride #bopo
A post shared by Madison (@we_badison) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:55am PST
Don’t it taste like #holywater? #artbasel #blessed #neonbible #jesuslikesarttoo #jesusdiedforyouandstuff #godwashere #sayurprayers #thankgoditssunday #aintnobodyprayinforme
A post shared by Princess Kitty Kat (@anasunbun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:17pm PST
The architecture of art, and vice versa @maxmakewell #basel #art #architecture #edenroc #scope #pulse
A post shared by Christopher (@christopherdaish_nycrealestate) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:16am PST
Casa Cor Miami • Amei o projeto da Arquiteta e Designer @su_chitra. A Indiana ousou no ambiente “The Conversation” com varias peças de design e o grafismo bem colorido! ♥️
A post shared by Jeh Adan, São Paulo, SP (@decorechic) on Dec 11, 2017 at 6:27am PST
A post shared by A1 Everything..... (@indian_papi) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:53am PST
from Curbed Miami - All https://miami.curbed.com/2017/12/11/16763242/miami-art-week-instagram-photos via IFTTT
0 notes
nicolesrollins · 6 years
Text
Miami Art Week recapped with 40 Instagram photos
Tumblr media
A Smörgåsbord of Miami Art Week offerings
Miami is a bit quieter today with the 2017 edition of Miami Art Week coming to a close last night.
Among the highlights: a powerful nuclear missile installation in Mana Wynwood, a four-story ice cream museum in Mid-Beach, five magnificent superyachts in town at various marinas, a new version of Wynwood Walls, a light sculpture featuring a 12-foot orgasm in a South Beach hotel lobby, and an autonomous swarm of 300 illuminated drones above the ocean in Faena District mimicking a flock of birds.
There were also a couple of big-time celebrity listings with the former homes of Sammy Sosa and Chris Bosh — they boast fantastic views of the ocean and the bay, respectively — hitting the market.
But not everyone was able to make it out to the wide array of installations, exhibits, and fairs, so we threw together an extensive Instagram roundup showcasing a sliver of what Miami Art Week had to offer.
The real #RemyMVP. #arteverywhere // #artbasel : @remymartin #swishandswing
A post shared by W South Beach (@wsouthbeach) on Dec 8, 2017 at 11:01am PST
Street Art ||| Where's an Alpha when you need 'em? w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel #SkeePhi
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:09am PST
My favorite piece of art at the @reddotmiami and @spectrummiami gallery yesterday. Art by @jwolffstudios, super dope. #miami #artbasel #artbaselmiami #trump #biggie #itwasalladream #art #artwork
A post shared by snapchat: richdarrell1 (@_richdarrell1) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:36am PST
Just days after the installation of a massive 65,000-pound, 38-year-old kapok tree at the base of Jade Signature in Sunny Isles Beach, the tower and Fortune International Group celebrated the unveiling of “Bonhomme Universe,” their new gemstone snowman, a whimsical piece is by Romania-born artist Daniel Knorr which was commissioned by Fortune International Group President and CEO Edgardo Defortuna. The sculpture will be accessible to the public, a potential future social media icon for Sunny Isles Beach. The unveiling was celebrated with a fashionable beachfront luncheon, guests included Edgardo Defortuna, and his wife, Ana Cristina; the artist himself Daniel Knorr, co-host Sarah Harreslon, founder of CULTURED magazine; Jason Frantzen, partner of Herzog and de Meuron; Raymond Jungles, founder of Raymond Jungles Inc.; Vice Mayor Dana Goldman of the City of Sunny Isles Beach; and former U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios. Defortuna spoke about his passion for art and the ability of sculpture to enliven and embellish outdoor spaces (December 8, 2017). #JadeSignature #SunnyIslesBeach #FortuneInternationalGroup #BonhommeUniverse #DanielKnorr #MiamiRealEstate #PROFILEmiami
A post shared by PROFILEmiami Real Estate (@profilemiami) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:49am PST
Street Art ||| It's all love, once you peel back.the onion. w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:03am PST
Happy Kanye = Happy Monday #happykanye #artbasel #artbaselmiami #artbasel2017 #wynwood #wynwoodart #miami #kanyewest #kanye #yeezy #art
A post shared by Kofi A. Oliver (@kofioliverphoto) on Dec 11, 2017 at 5:00am PST
On to the #MIA #bucketlist #artbasel
A post shared by erikalharris (@erikalharris) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:47pm PST
When Chi-town meets Miami (@ the artist!) #kanyewest #artbasel #graduation #um #art #walkfashionshow @walkfashionshow
A post shared by Erika S ♌ (@am.erikaaa) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:38am PST
Art Basel Miami Beach artist “Crano” photooftheday #20likes #amazing #smile #look #instalike #igers #picoftheday #food #instadaily #instafollow #followme #girl #iphoneonly #instagood #bestoftheday #instacool #instago #all_shots #follow #webstagram #colorful #style
A post shared by MiamiGezisi (@miamigezisi) on Dec 10, 2017 at 12:30am PST
Introducing Kotone , physical music works. Art + Music = happy #miami #artbasel #alamakproject #music #art
A post shared by RSquare (@rsquare_design) on Dec 10, 2017 at 1:55pm PST
A post shared by Alejandra Primavera (@alejandraprimavera) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:34pm PST
Seriously though
A post shared by Taryn (@trnharvey) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:32am PST
A post shared by Matt Paolillo (@m.p.lo) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:40pm PST
@mirusgallery had a lot of sick @okudart pieces at their @scopeartshow booth, this large canvas was my favorite. #Okuda #OkudaSanMiguel #MirusGallery #Scope #ScopeArtShow #scopemiamibeach #scopemiami #artbasel #ArtBaselMadness #baselorbust #streetartspringbreak
A post shared by Daniel Weintraub (@halopigg) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:02am PST
At the booth across from me @formmiami, the stunning ceramic vessels of @ashrafhanna_ceramicsandglass at @thenewcraftsmen from the UK
A post shared by Damon Crain (@culture.object) on Dec 7, 2017 at 12:44pm PST
Alex Gross
A post shared by Joshua Rhodes (@tatshoe) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:05pm PST
Art Basel was fun.
A post shared by Jose Diaz™ (@itsjosebro) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:46pm PST
Great to see the @artofdavidwalker translate so well from street to studio, and vice versa.
A post shared by Street Art House (@streetarthouse) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:02am PST
A post shared by Nikki Greenberg (@perspectivesbynlg) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:11pm PST
Art Basel Miami Beach at MBCC #truth #voiceshakes The more you're scared, the more it must be said.
A post shared by arnelinthesun (@arnelinthesun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 9:54pm PST
Space theme #ArtBasel2017 #ArtMiami
A post shared by Christina Riggs (@improspecta) on Dec 11, 2017 at 9:55am PST
A post shared by Marilia Celin (@marilia_celin) on Dec 9, 2017 at 7:54pm PST
Han Young #hanyoung #artmiami #miami
A post shared by L I S A T Ö R N E R (@lisalinneatorner) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:39am PST
#dance #happy #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Hana Choy (@chewychoy) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:32pm PST
#miami #miamiartweek #miamiartbasel #artbasel #artbaselmiami #talent #art #artistic #sculpture #color #green #beautiful #travelblogger #travel #traveling #2017 #miamilife #miamibeach #like #fun #lifeofalex #thelifeofalex #theamazinglifeofalex #instapic
A post shared by Alex Page (@alexpage5602) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:22am PST
We ♥️ this new work by #NathanSawaya #legobricks
A post shared by Avant Gallery® Art Is Life™ (@avantgallery) on Dec 1, 2017 at 5:07pm PST
A post shared by Norma Estrada (@sunshinegata) on Dec 10, 2017 at 8:49am PST
Now THIS is art with a great message #happywifehappylife #artbasel #artmiami . . . . . . #miami #miamilife #weekendfun #art #positivevibes #jewelry #jewelrydesigner #jewelryobsessed #sparkle #jewelleryaddict #jewelrybye #wordstoliveby
A post shared by Jewelry by E (@jewelrybye) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:31pm PST
#artbasel #artbasel2017 #artbaselmiami2017 #artbaselmiami #spectrum #reddotmiami #scopemiami #scopemiamibeach #scopeartshow #untitled #art #scope #bestweekever #miamiink #contextartmiami #artmiami #wynwood #wynwoodwalls #wynwoodartdistrict
A post shared by LOLA (@lola_in_the_city) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:58am PST
Art Basel in the sky #droneshow #faenaart @faena
A post shared by Eric Lopez (@ericanthonylopez) on Dec 6, 2017 at 7:49pm PST
Art Africa!!!! #internationalreviewofafricanamericanart #hamptonartlovers #artbasel #artafricamiami
A post shared by Hampton Art Lovers (@hamptonartlovers) on Dec 8, 2017 at 4:43pm PST
Art I’m sad I missed (1 of 2). Problem with working on an event during Basel is you don’t get to go see all the shows. Missed #pulseartfair #artlexing’s booth with #typoe’s colorful installation. Thank goodness there’s Instagram stalking though.
A post shared by Daughter of Design (@daughterodesign) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:09am PST
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. #artbasel #miamibeachedition
A post shared by Steven Rojas (@stevenrojas) on Dec 11, 2017 at 11:08am PST
Spotted at Untitled Exhibition #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Joy (@maccaholic) on Dec 6, 2017 at 5:46am PST
I can feel. Best part of Basel. I want this in my house . . . . . . . #feminism #feminist #feministart #girlpower #grlpwr #sexposi #bodyposi #yoni #yonipower #pussypower #sexed #sexeducation #sexpositive #bodypositive #sexology #womenrun #womenled #womenfounders #pussyart #vaginaart #witch #pussygrabsback #p2p #powertothepussy #vulvaart #vulvapride #bopo
A post shared by Madison (@we_badison) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:55am PST
Don’t it taste like #holywater? #artbasel #blessed #neonbible #jesuslikesarttoo #jesusdiedforyouandstuff #godwashere #sayurprayers #thankgoditssunday #aintnobodyprayinforme
A post shared by Princess Kitty Kat (@anasunbun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:17pm PST
The architecture of art, and vice versa @maxmakewell #basel #art #architecture #edenroc #scope #pulse
A post shared by Christopher (@christopherdaish_nycrealestate) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:16am PST
Casa Cor Miami • Amei o projeto da Arquiteta e Designer @su_chitra. A Indiana ousou no ambiente “The Conversation” com varias peças de design e o grafismo bem colorido! ♥️
A post shared by Jeh Adan, São Paulo, SP (@decorechic) on Dec 11, 2017 at 6:27am PST
A post shared by A1 Everything..... (@indian_papi) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:53am PST
from The Real Deal Miami & Real Estate News News | & Curbed Miami - All https://miami.curbed.com/2017/12/11/16763242/miami-art-week-instagram-photos via IFTTT
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darlenelaure · 6 years
Text
Miami Art Week recapped with 40 Instagram photos
Tumblr media
A Smörgåsbord of Miami Art Week offerings
Miami is a bit quieter today with the 2017 edition of Miami Art Week coming to a close last night.
Among the highlights: a powerful nuclear missile installation in Mana Wynwood, a four-story ice cream museum in Mid-Beach, five magnificent superyachts in town at various marinas, a new version of Wynwood Walls, a light sculpture featuring a 12-foot orgasm in a South Beach hotel lobby, and an autonomous swarm of 300 illuminated drones above the ocean in Faena District mimicking a flock of birds.
There were also a couple of big-time celebrity listings with the former homes of Sammy Sosa and Chris Bosh — they boast fantastic views of the ocean and the bay, respectively — hitting the market.
But not everyone was able to make it out to the wide array of installations, exhibits, and fairs, so we threw together an extensive Instagram roundup showcasing a sliver of what Miami Art Week had to offer.
The real #RemyMVP. #arteverywhere // #artbasel : @remymartin #swishandswing
A post shared by W South Beach (@wsouthbeach) on Dec 8, 2017 at 11:01am PST
Street Art ||| Where's an Alpha when you need 'em? w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel #SkeePhi
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:09am PST
My favorite piece of art at the @reddotmiami and @spectrummiami gallery yesterday. Art by @jwolffstudios, super dope. #miami #artbasel #artbaselmiami #trump #biggie #itwasalladream #art #artwork
A post shared by snapchat: richdarrell1 (@_richdarrell1) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:36am PST
Just days after the installation of a massive 65,000-pound, 38-year-old kapok tree at the base of Jade Signature in Sunny Isles Beach, the tower and Fortune International Group celebrated the unveiling of “Bonhomme Universe,” their new gemstone snowman, a whimsical piece is by Romania-born artist Daniel Knorr which was commissioned by Fortune International Group President and CEO Edgardo Defortuna. The sculpture will be accessible to the public, a potential future social media icon for Sunny Isles Beach. The unveiling was celebrated with a fashionable beachfront luncheon, guests included Edgardo Defortuna, and his wife, Ana Cristina; the artist himself Daniel Knorr, co-host Sarah Harreslon, founder of CULTURED magazine; Jason Frantzen, partner of Herzog and de Meuron; Raymond Jungles, founder of Raymond Jungles Inc.; Vice Mayor Dana Goldman of the City of Sunny Isles Beach; and former U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios. Defortuna spoke about his passion for art and the ability of sculpture to enliven and embellish outdoor spaces (December 8, 2017). #JadeSignature #SunnyIslesBeach #FortuneInternationalGroup #BonhommeUniverse #DanielKnorr #MiamiRealEstate #PROFILEmiami
A post shared by PROFILEmiami Real Estate (@profilemiami) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:49am PST
Street Art ||| It's all love, once you peel back.the onion. w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:03am PST
Happy Kanye = Happy Monday #happykanye #artbasel #artbaselmiami #artbasel2017 #wynwood #wynwoodart #miami #kanyewest #kanye #yeezy #art
A post shared by Kofi A. Oliver (@kofioliverphoto) on Dec 11, 2017 at 5:00am PST
On to the #MIA #bucketlist #artbasel
A post shared by erikalharris (@erikalharris) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:47pm PST
When Chi-town meets Miami (@ the artist!) #kanyewest #artbasel #graduation #um #art #walkfashionshow @walkfashionshow
A post shared by Erika S ♌ (@am.erikaaa) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:38am PST
Art Basel Miami Beach artist “Crano” photooftheday #20likes #amazing #smile #look #instalike #igers #picoftheday #food #instadaily #instafollow #followme #girl #iphoneonly #instagood #bestoftheday #instacool #instago #all_shots #follow #webstagram #colorful #style
A post shared by MiamiGezisi (@miamigezisi) on Dec 10, 2017 at 12:30am PST
Introducing Kotone , physical music works. Art + Music = happy #miami #artbasel #alamakproject #music #art
A post shared by RSquare (@rsquare_design) on Dec 10, 2017 at 1:55pm PST
A post shared by Alejandra Primavera (@alejandraprimavera) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:34pm PST
Seriously though
A post shared by Taryn (@trnharvey) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:32am PST
A post shared by Matt Paolillo (@m.p.lo) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:40pm PST
@mirusgallery had a lot of sick @okudart pieces at their @scopeartshow booth, this large canvas was my favorite. #Okuda #OkudaSanMiguel #MirusGallery #Scope #ScopeArtShow #scopemiamibeach #scopemiami #artbasel #ArtBaselMadness #baselorbust #streetartspringbreak
A post shared by Daniel Weintraub (@halopigg) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:02am PST
At the booth across from me @formmiami, the stunning ceramic vessels of @ashrafhanna_ceramicsandglass at @thenewcraftsmen from the UK
A post shared by Damon Crain (@culture.object) on Dec 7, 2017 at 12:44pm PST
Alex Gross
A post shared by Joshua Rhodes (@tatshoe) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:05pm PST
Art Basel was fun.
A post shared by Jose Diaz™ (@itsjosebro) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:46pm PST
Great to see the @artofdavidwalker translate so well from street to studio, and vice versa.
A post shared by Street Art House (@streetarthouse) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:02am PST
A post shared by Nikki Greenberg (@perspectivesbynlg) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:11pm PST
Art Basel Miami Beach at MBCC #truth #voiceshakes The more you're scared, the more it must be said.
A post shared by arnelinthesun (@arnelinthesun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 9:54pm PST
Space theme #ArtBasel2017 #ArtMiami
A post shared by Christina Riggs (@improspecta) on Dec 11, 2017 at 9:55am PST
A post shared by Marilia Celin (@marilia_celin) on Dec 9, 2017 at 7:54pm PST
Han Young #hanyoung #artmiami #miami
A post shared by L I S A T Ö R N E R (@lisalinneatorner) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:39am PST
#dance #happy #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Hana Choy (@chewychoy) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:32pm PST
#miami #miamiartweek #miamiartbasel #artbasel #artbaselmiami #talent #art #artistic #sculpture #color #green #beautiful #travelblogger #travel #traveling #2017 #miamilife #miamibeach #like #fun #lifeofalex #thelifeofalex #theamazinglifeofalex #instapic
A post shared by Alex Page (@alexpage5602) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:22am PST
We ♥️ this new work by #NathanSawaya #legobricks
A post shared by Avant Gallery® Art Is Life™ (@avantgallery) on Dec 1, 2017 at 5:07pm PST
A post shared by Norma Estrada (@sunshinegata) on Dec 10, 2017 at 8:49am PST
Now THIS is art with a great message #happywifehappylife #artbasel #artmiami . . . . . . #miami #miamilife #weekendfun #art #positivevibes #jewelry #jewelrydesigner #jewelryobsessed #sparkle #jewelleryaddict #jewelrybye #wordstoliveby
A post shared by Jewelry by E (@jewelrybye) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:31pm PST
#artbasel #artbasel2017 #artbaselmiami2017 #artbaselmiami #spectrum #reddotmiami #scopemiami #scopemiamibeach #scopeartshow #untitled #art #scope #bestweekever #miamiink #contextartmiami #artmiami #wynwood #wynwoodwalls #wynwoodartdistrict
A post shared by LOLA (@lola_in_the_city) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:58am PST
Art Basel in the sky #droneshow #faenaart @faena
A post shared by Eric Lopez (@ericanthonylopez) on Dec 6, 2017 at 7:49pm PST
Art Africa!!!! #internationalreviewofafricanamericanart #hamptonartlovers #artbasel #artafricamiami
A post shared by Hampton Art Lovers (@hamptonartlovers) on Dec 8, 2017 at 4:43pm PST
Art I’m sad I missed (1 of 2). Problem with working on an event during Basel is you don’t get to go see all the shows. Missed #pulseartfair #artlexing’s booth with #typoe’s colorful installation. Thank goodness there’s Instagram stalking though.
A post shared by Daughter of Design (@daughterodesign) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:09am PST
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. #artbasel #miamibeachedition
A post shared by Steven Rojas (@stevenrojas) on Dec 11, 2017 at 11:08am PST
Spotted at Untitled Exhibition #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Joy (@maccaholic) on Dec 6, 2017 at 5:46am PST
I can feel. Best part of Basel. I want this in my house . . . . . . . #feminism #feminist #feministart #girlpower #grlpwr #sexposi #bodyposi #yoni #yonipower #pussypower #sexed #sexeducation #sexpositive #bodypositive #sexology #womenrun #womenled #womenfounders #pussyart #vaginaart #witch #pussygrabsback #p2p #powertothepussy #vulvaart #vulvapride #bopo
A post shared by Madison (@we_badison) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:55am PST
Don’t it taste like #holywater? #artbasel #blessed #neonbible #jesuslikesarttoo #jesusdiedforyouandstuff #godwashere #sayurprayers #thankgoditssunday #aintnobodyprayinforme
A post shared by Princess Kitty Kat (@anasunbun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:17pm PST
The architecture of art, and vice versa @maxmakewell #basel #art #architecture #edenroc #scope #pulse
A post shared by Christopher (@christopherdaish_nycrealestate) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:16am PST
Casa Cor Miami • Amei o projeto da Arquiteta e Designer @su_chitra. A Indiana ousou no ambiente “The Conversation” com varias peças de design e o grafismo bem colorido! ♥️
A post shared by Jeh Adan, São Paulo, SP (@decorechic) on Dec 11, 2017 at 6:27am PST
A post shared by A1 Everything..... (@indian_papi) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:53am PST
from Curbed Miami - All https://miami.curbed.com/2017/12/11/16763242/miami-art-week-instagram-photos
0 notes
fashiontrendin-blog · 6 years
Text
Stylish Anniversary Gifts That Will Make Any Man Happy
https://fashion-trendin.com/stylish-anniversary-gifts-that-will-make-any-man-happy/
Stylish Anniversary Gifts That Will Make Any Man Happy
Buying the perfect anniversary gift for the man in your life can be a confusing prospect. What do men want? Do men actually want anything? Should I just get him another pair of socks? These are all questions you’ve no doubt been asking yourself while on your quest for a great gift idea and, being men ourselves, we feel well equipped to answer them.
Choose something from our suggestions below and you can be sure that the grin on his face when you give it to him will be genuine and not just a forced grimace before he quietly discards it in the back of the wardrobe never to be seen again.
A Timeless Timepiece
Just like birth, death and the changing of the tides, men’s love for watches is a fact of life. Plain and simple. However, just as those tides change, so do trends. With that in mind, a timeless ticker is always going to be the way to go.
Forgo rubber bits, calorie counters and flashing LED lights in favour of clean designs, classic round faces and simplicity. When he’s still proudly rocking it 20 years in the future you can fire us a quick telepathic iMessage – no doubt using your government-issued, Apple iBrain implant – to say thanks for the sage advice.
Buy Now: £149.00
Some Quality Denim
As far as male wardrobe staples go, they don’t come much more essential than a good pair of jeans. The importance of this humble garment is often underestimated, leading many blokes to settle for either Jeremy Clarkson-esque dad denim or reality TV-inspired, muscle-fit sausage casings.
Save yourself the embarrassment by getting him some decent selvedge denim. It’ll fit better, last longer and won’t leave him looking like an ageing car-enthusiast or a Geordie Shore cast member. Can’t say fairer than that.
Buy Now: £145.00
A Crisp Oxford Shirt
We don’t know what will be going on 100 years from now. Will humankind have managed to stop global warming? Could science have reversed the ageing process? Is Corrie still going to be on the telly? No way of knowing. But one thing we’re sure of is that men will still be wearing Oxford shirts.
A preppy button-down slides nicely into almost any outfit, so what better garment to give him on your big day than this time-tested wardrobe staple?
Buy Now: £45.00
A Weekend Bag
While he might think a supermarket carrier bag is an acceptable receptacle for his capsule wardrobe when you head off on a romantic weekend away, you are smart enough to know better. A neat holdall or duffel is a must for every man, taking him from office, to gym, to holiday in style.
Buy him a stylish leather weekender before your anniversary trip to ensure that bag for life stays firmly in the kitchen cupboard, where it belongs.
Buy Now: £149.00
A Digital Camera
Ever fancied a personal photographer to help keep your Instagram on lock? Well, this could be your golden opportunity. A one-off payment of a few hundred quid for a camera, compared to the tens of thousands you’d be paying to employ a professional lensman every time you want to update your feed, seems great value for money.
Seriously though, what man wouldn’t want a shiny new camera to play with?
Buy Now: £219.00
A Premium Malt
If your other half fancies himself as a bit of a drinks connoisseur, why not add a special bottle to his bar? Raymond Chandler once said: “There is no bad whisky. There are only some whiskies that aren’t as good as others.” If that’s to be believed, it makes a bottle of the good stuff a pretty safe bet for a gift, so take it to the next level with a scotch single malt from the likes of Lagavulin, Bruichladdich or Glen Grant.
Buy Now: £55.45 For 70cl
A New Tablet
Are you sick and tired of pestering your significant other to get off his phone? Well, a new tablet is guaranteed to get his attention focused elsewhere. Granted, it will just be on another, slightly bigger screen – but that’s something, right? Okay, perhaps not, but this is the 21st century so you’d better get used to it.
Buy Now: £339.00
The Gift Of Music
Gone are the days when all that was needed to show your undying affection for someone was a NOW That’s What I Call Love CD. This is a digital age we’re living in and an outdated media format packed full of Leona Lewis songs just doesn’t quite say ‘I love you’ in the same way it used to.
Instead, why not sign him up for a streaming service where he can access all of his favourite tunes, audiobooks and more? He’ll thank you for it, we guarantee.
Buy Now: £9.99 Per Month
Something For The Coffee Table
The function of a man’s coffee table books are twofold. Firstly, they’re good for flicking through while lounging about on the sofa. Secondly, they let everyone who visits know how cool and interesting he undoubtedly is.
Having said that, they’re not really the sort of things that many guys purchase themselves, so help him out and buy him a new one yourself.
Buy Now: £35.00
Some New Knitwear
Somewhere, sometime long ago, an unknown maverick gazed upon a flock of sheep and thought to him/herself, “I’m going to shave them and wear it”. In daring to dream, this unsung hero unknowingly forged the way for you to buy the man in your life the perfect, woolly, anniversary gift. Because who doesn’t love the tactile, stylish insulation of good kniwear, right? Exactly.
Buy Now: £195.00
A Brown Leather Belt
Had enough of your man’s trousers falling down in public places? We don’t blame you. Put a stop to it in style by picking up a handsome belt for him this anniversary. Timeless, classic and functional – a brown leather version is a versatile casual accessory, guaranteed to hold those keks firmly in place.
Buy Now: £45.00
Some High-Quality Headphones
Make his morning commute that little bit less soul destroying with some high-fidelity headphones. Guaranteed to drown out everything from that blood-curdling screech the train makes on a particularly violent corner, to babies crying loudly on buses, you’ll be buying him a little extra time to relax when life is hectic. That’s a pretty valuable gift.
Buy Now: £230.85
A Personalised Photo Album
As much as he might like to pretend to be a tough alpha male, chances are there’s a softy underneath and a book filled with photos of all your happiest memories together will never fail to bring a tear to his eye.
Make sure he has a tactile way to look back, rather than relying on a load of files on a computer that may or may not go kaput at any given moment.
Buy Now: £90.00
A Casual Briefcase
Smart leather briefcases are all well and good if you’re a City finance guy who wears a shiny watch and points angrily at colourful numbers on multiple computer monitors while shouting at people down the phone.
If this doesn’t sound like your other half, why not treat him to something more laid back to cart his laptop around in instead? All the functionality of a briefcase but he can carry it while wearing jeans without looking weird. Perfect.
Buy Now: £149.00
Some High-Tech Trainers
The way trainer trends are advancing, it won’t be long until they can jog down to the gym all by themselves and do our workout for us while we sit on the sofa watching Netflix and eating Doritos. While that dream may still remain slightly out of science’s reach, you can treat him to some top-of-the-line kicks with some pretty astounding features.
Plus, no excuse for not getting off his arse and going for a run now.
Buy Now: £129.00
Winterproof Outerwear
Maybe it’s a man thing, but there’s something deeply reassuring about wearing a top layer that you have full confidence could hold its own if you somehow ended up lost in the Alps on your way to the pub. Granted that’s an unlikely scenario, but why take the risk? Get the love of your life a quality winter coat he can rely on while looking great at the same time.
Buy Now: £89.90
A Grooming Gadget
We might have hit ‘peak beard’ several years ago, but if he’s still struggling to let go of that unruly chin wig, why not give him a little nudge in the right direction? Conversely, if the man in your life is all about those carefully carved cheek lines, make his preening routine that little bit smoother with a beard trimmer that will snip him into shape.
Buy Now: £80.00
0 notes
cissyjones · 7 years
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What is a Trend Forecaster?
A précis on the first chapter from Martin Raymond’s “The Trend Forecaster’s Handbook” 
Martin Raymond; the co-founder of The Future Laboratory, a consumer-insight, trend-forecasting, and brand-strategy agency whose clients include Louis Vuitton, Laurent-Perrier, American Express, BMW and Lamborghini. He is a popular media commentator on trends and business. Now writing a Handbook on Trend Forecasting, this gives readers a new insight to a learning towards such an un-talked about industry. Within Chapter one of the book “The Trend Forecasters Handbook” Martin explains the basics and differences of what a trend is and what a forecaster is; explaining them in two completely different levels, to further the topic Martin then explains to readers what the job role entitles - Fashion forecasters predict upcoming trends, and present trends that are on the decline.
The anatomy of a trend - Martin expresses and teaches that trend can only be done by fieldwork, social observation, exercising empathy or utilizing your imagination, or even a daydream, to envision future scenarios which will or can happen. That forecasting isn’t all about guesswork or inspirational flashes, but rather it is about applying qualitative and quantitative skills in ways that allows identification of new and emerging shifts in the cultures and societal changes as they happen. Then for, teaching readers such as Students and Academics the inside and outs of trend forecasting and the consumer-insights techniques.
Chapter one of the book gives readers an another insight to a “trend forecasting hybrid” which means a requirement to be inventive and imaginative when creating words that best suggest a trend you are attempting to encapsulate. Word developed by The Future Laboratory to capture the trends that are set to impact the on tomorrows consumer landscapes, for example:
·      Bleisure -  Business and Leisure ·      Consumanism – Conscience and Consumerism ·      Brandtocracies – Brand and Democracy ·      Alphaluxe – Alpha and Luxury
Are all words which will now been known throughout the industry - Other than this, Martin has included other key points within this sharp, in-depth handbook such as: The Anatomy of a Trend Definition of a trend forecaster, the definition of a Trend, memes and trend viruses, diffusion of innovations, diffusion of innovation types and diffusion of innovation curve to broadcast ways of learning and developments for other readers. The handbook itself is designed to open your eyes, sharpen your senses and remind you that there is one command that underpins and drives all forecasters “To dare, to know to challenge”. With chapter one being so highly visual, it shows how brands do everything to get in touch with influential and innovators; how a profession in this area is all about creating a profound and long term grid for future living. With trends nowadays Martin has explored and explained how trends are now a fundamental part of society’s emotional and psychological change, showing readers the positives of forecasting, how trends can be used to expect what will be new and popular in current and future culture, how these people can anticipate what is new and next in the upcoming years, making readers understand what drives and motivated consumers
   The Trend Forecaster’s Handbook Martin Raymond Published by Laurence King Publishing, London Paperback 388 illustrations, 216 pages 280 x 216 mm ISBN: 978-1-85669-702-6
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moodboardinthecloud · 7 years
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Joy Williams, the Art of Fiction in the Paris Review
Joy Williams couldn’t find her glasses before a lecture some years ago and used prescription sunglasses instead. During Williams’s walk to the podium, an audience member was heard asking if the writer had gone blind; another remarked how inspiring it was for Williams to recall the lecture from memory. She had been asked to discuss craft. She did not discuss craft. She discussed Kraft cheese and the “twiddling” nature of art pursued “within a parameter of hours in prisons, nursing homes, and kindergartens,” and then she opened a valve. What would be the point, she said,
to discuss the craft of Jean Rhys, Janet Frame, Christina Stead, Malcolm Lowry, all of whose works can teach us little about technique, and whose way of touching us is simply by exploding on the lintel of our minds. It is not technique that guided them. Their craft consisted of desire.
She went on:
We are American writers, absorbing the American experience. We must absorb its heat, the recklessness and ruthlessness, the grotesqueries and cruelties. We must reflect the sprawl and smallness of America, its greedy optimism and dangerous sentimentality. And we must write with a pen—in Mark Twain’s phrase—warmed up in hell. We might have something then, worthy, necessary; a real literature instead of the Botox escapist lit told in the shiny prolix comedic style that has come to define us.
She smiled, thanked the audience, and sat. There were no questions. A student at the reception wondered aloud if tonight’s craft talk could have possibly destroyed future craft talks. “I hope so,” her friend said.
The Paris Review had already run several of the earliest, weirdest Joy Williams stories before George Plimpton agreed to publish State of Grace under the magazine’s book imprint in 1973. The novel, her first, would be nominated for the National Book Award when its author was thirty. (She lost to Gravity’s Rainbow.) She went on to write three more eerie, eccentric novels of life on the American margins as well as four renowned collections of stories, upon which her reputation solidly rests. Many have attained cult status beyond the normal anthologies—“Traveling to Pridesup,” “The Blue Men,” “Rot,” “Marabou,” “Brass”—and are frequently passed around M.F.A. departments with something like subversive glee. They are, as Williams probably hoped, unteachable as craft. The New York Times admitted more than it meant to, perhaps, when a reviewer claimed her work was “probably not for everyone.” Over the decades, wildly different stylists—Donald Barthelme, Don DeLillo, Raymond Carver, William Gass, Karen Russell, Bret Easton Ellis, James Salter, Ann Beattie, Tao Lin—have all expressed unqualified admiration.
Williams was married to Rust Hills, fiction editor of Esquire, for thirty-four years, until his death in 2008. Now she divides the seasons between Arizona, Florida, and New England, crisscrossing the country in an old Ford Bronco with two sable-black German shepherds, writing in motels or as the occasional guest of a college. She uses a flip phone. She types postcards in lieu of e-mail. She has never owned a computer. She continues to wear the same prescription sunglasses, indoors or out, night or day.
She was a writer-in-residence at the University of Wyoming when this interview was arranged. It was October; snow whipped between the ranges like a sandstorm, while several big rigs had jackknifed on black ice coming into Laramie. I phoned from a coffee shop, and she gave me directions: thirty miles north to a ranch where the Bureau of Land Management had relocated herds of wild mustangs. Williams was staying in a red-roofed log cabin with a porch swing and fire pit. The sun broke through like something from Doctor Zhivago. Everything about the wintry scene felt germane to this particular artist: the scope and grandeur of the natural world, the monkish quiet, two dogs with lively personalities, and—roaming everywhere—hundreds of wild horses, nervous and arrogant. Huddled in a hoodie, Williams made coffee with almond milk before sitting across from me at a pine table. She got up several times to retrieve objects or fuss with the dogs. When the talk was over, she drove us into town for a martini and we returned after dark. There was a fat moon. She cut the truck’s headlights and moved, very slowly, through the herds as they sniffed and stepped aside, hides glowing with moonlight.
“Forget the interview,” she said. “Write about this.”
Paul Winner
INTERVIEWER
What do you teach, when you’re visiting a college? Is there a philosophy you try to impart?
WILLIAMS
James Salter once taught a whole course of novels that were written when the authors were the same age as his students. Isn’t that clever? Well, it could also be intimidating. Mostly you just need to support them until they get older and sort themselves out a bit.
INTERVIEWER
What kind of child were you?
WILLIAMS
An only child, growing up in Maine. My father was a Congregational minister. He had a church in Portland. It was a big city church, a beautiful, very formal place. His father was a Welsh Baptist minister who, as a young man, won the eisteddfod in Wales. His prize was a large, ornately carved chair, the bard’s chair, which I wanted very badly as a child. The chair made it to this country but was given to my father’s older brother, who gave it to a historical society in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, from which it was washed away in a flood. Preachers and coal miners, my genealogy.
INTERVIEWER
You said you still own your father’s Bible.
WILLIAMS
Oh, yes. He had lots of Bibles. I kept them all. I’ve got my father’s notebooks, his sermons. One of these days I’ll get them organized. My mother always said she was going to throw them out. They’re not meant to be read, they’re meant to be heard, she said. But I’ve still got them.
INTERVIEWER
Were you a good student? An avid reader?
WILLIAMS
When I was a child I thought the answers to tests had to be transmitted to a person through some kind of food. Perhaps I read it in a book. In any case, it seems I was always preparing myself for tests, or thought I was. I was uneasy with my presence in life. Who was I, anyway? What was I supposed to do? Even with my obsession with preparing for the tests of the day, I was an indifferent student before I went to college. I had my heart set on Colby, in Maine, this tiny liberal-arts college, but I didn’t get in. Marietta, in Ohio, is where my father went, so I went there. I loved it. I was Phi Beta Kappa.
INTERVIEWER
Do you have your key?
WILLIAMS
I do. Do you want to see it? The first was stolen, so my husband tracked down the Phi Beta Kappa people and got me another one. They don’t give it to just anybody, apparently. As I said, I loved college. I had the guidance of an elderly, morose, chain-smoking English professor—Dr. Harold Dean. I never spoke well or argued well in class. But filling up blue books with the gleanings and gleamings of thought, which somehow became a new thought—that was very fulfilling to me. I read Donne, Dickinson, transcendentalism, Eliot, Camus, surrealism. I drank it all up. I was obsessed with Dickinson. The professor gave me her collected poems, three volumes in a box set. A lovely thing. It fared very badly in Florida, all those years, eaten by insects.
INTERVIEWER
Is it true that when you left home, your family gave you multiple copies of the same book?
WILLIAMS
Miss MacIntosh, My Darling. When I was going off to college, I got two copies of this thing, this impossibly neurotic, very strange book by this woman who’d been working on it her whole life, Marguerite Young. What were they thinking? I got Berryman’s collected poems at some point for a birthday, but back then I guess my parents read a review somewhere and thought, You know, well, Joy thinks she’s going to be a writer.
INTERVIEWER
Had you already started writing? You were published quite young.
WILLIAMS
Not so young.
INTERVIEWER
Twenty-two.
WILLIAMS
A lot of those stories aren’t collected. “The Roomer,” my first published story—it was in The Carolina Quarterly and won an O. Henry—that’s never been collected. I didn’t want to. I thought it was sinister and immature. George Plimpton introduced me once at a reading in that voice of his and said that he’d discovered me, that he’d done the first published story of mine. I had to speak up, from the audience, “Uh . . . ” He laughed, charmingly.
INTERVIEWER
From college, you went to Iowa?
WILLIAMS
On graduating, I wanted to join the Peace Corps. It was the early sixties, after all. But the cadaverous Dr. Dean—really, his looks were remarkable—he convinced me otherwise. He wanted me to become a writer. He wanted me to go to the writing program at the University of Iowa and become a writer. So another two years in the Midwest, far from my heart’s home in Maine. The workshop at Iowa met in Quonset huts on the river, then—freezing.
INTERVIEWER
You mentioned that Iowa was, for you, two years of social awkwardness. A shy, Eastern daughter of a minister surrounded by all these big alpha-male writers, Andre Dubus, Raymond Carver—
WILLIAMS
Ray Carver was in the poetry classes. He was always a poet. I knew his wife Maryann better. We were waitresses together, but I was always getting fired. In the workshops I studied with R.V. Cassill and Vance Bourjaily. A more imperfect match there cannot be imagined. Richard Yates came in at some point, I think. Eleven Kinds of Loneliness had just come out in paperback. He seemed a little remote and anxious to me, though not particularly lonely. Revolutionary Road was hugely impressive, but the stories touched me not at all. They seemed old-fashioned, resolving themselves on small matters.
INTERVIEWER
Had you begun your first novel, State of Grace?
WILLIAMS
I graduated, got married, and moved to Florida, where my husband worked at the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. We had a dog, a beach, a Jaguar XK150, black, which to this day I wish I still possessed. Then the husband was trans- ferred to Tallahassee. I didn’t want to live in the big city, I wanted to live in the country. We rented a trailer in the middle of tangled woods on the St. Marks River. Didn’t know a soul, husband away all day. I wrote State of Grace there. Excellent, practically morbid conditions for the writing of a first novel. We returned to Siesta Key, and I got a job working for the Navy at the Mote Marine Laboratory, researching shark attacks.
INTERVIEWER
Shark—
WILLIAMS
The only job I’ve ever had, other than teaching. Well, there was the waitressing. But I was writing, I was getting published in The Paris Review. Really, I had no idea what I was doing.
INTERVIEWER
Did you feel alone with the work? Utterly adrift?
WILLIAMS
I had no connections, no writing circle. I typed everything single-spaced so it would look as though it were already published. Looking at those manuscripts now, I’m amazed at how fluid everything was. No hesitation, no correction, no revising. What a gift! What or who had given me this gift? I mean, the stories weren’t brilliant. They might not have even been particularly good. But I wrote stories, I began and ended them. I didn’t have much experience with anything, but I had my thoughts. I believed stories should have a purity and not be about what was going on—and there was a lot going on, of course, in my life. My husband and I acquired a toucan, then we had a baby. No one knew I was going to have a baby. I was skinny, no one seemed to remark. You know, I didn’t even tell my parents, my dear, dear, supportive, loving parents. When my husband called them on April 6, the day Caitlin was born, they didn’t believe him. Why did I do that? I don’t know. It was so cruel. I suppose I was a little odd, a little secretive. I still have secrets.
INTERVIEWER
Is that what stories are to you? Secrets?
WILLIAMS
I recently received a letter from an Iowa Workshop grad—typical—seeking my participation in a “collaborative” interview. The question was, Why do short stories matter and why should we value them? What a retro question. It sounded like something out of the 1940s. I was too weary for a reply, but I think they probably don’t matter all that much. A herd of wild elephants matters more. And which stories are we talking about? There are so many of them.
INTERVIEWER
Can you define a story, if not its usefulness?
WILLIAMS
What a story is, is devious. It pretends transparency, forthrightness. It engages with ordinary people, ordinary matters, recognizable stuff. But this is all a masquerade. What good stories deal with is the horror and incomprehensi- bility of time, the dark encroachment of old catastrophes—which is Wallace Stevens, I think. As a form, the short story is hardly divine, though all excel- lent art has its mystery, its spiritual rhythm. I think one should be able to do a lot in less than twenty pages. I read a story recently about a woman who’d been on the lam and her husband dies and she ends up getting in her pickup and driving away at the end, and it was all about fracking, damage, dust to the communities, people selling out for fifty thousand dollars. It was so boring.
INTERVIEWER
You tend to mistrust the literal. How do you conceive stories? Do you start with metaphor?
WILLIAMS
I honestly don’t know how I approach such things. That’s the frustration. You want to have your writing do more, and speak more, and yet ... Do you want more coffee?
INTERVIEWER
So back to Florida, early 1970s, holed up in a rented trailer.
WILLIAMS
This may be boring or irrelevant, but I go away to Yaddo, in the winter. I write a story called “Taking Care.” I show the story to a writer there, a sophisticated feminist from New York. She suggests I cut the final line, “Together they enter the shining rooms.” I am dismayed. I become suspicious of readers. Of course I will not cut the line. It carries the story into the celestial, where it longs to go.
INTERVIEWER
In your mind, you’ve finally written your first good story.
WILLIAMS
I send the story to The New Yorker. I receive a nice letter in return. Rather, it begins nicely and admiringly but ends on a somewhat accusatory note. The story is insincere, inorganic, labored. Only once in my career will I appear in The New Yorker. And as Ann Beattie said, the only thing worse than never appearing in The New Yorker is being accepted only once by The New Yorker. I send it to a new magazine called Audience, a hardcover, oversize, heavily illustrated magazine. Its fiction editor is Rust Hills. He loves the story. He is utterly moved by the story. In a few months I return to Yaddo—winter again—and he, quite by coincidence, is there, too.
INTERVIEWER
When was this?
WILLIAMS
I met Rust in 1972. We were both married to other people and I had a two-year-old. By 1974, we were married to each other and Rust had formally adopted Caitlin and given her his name. He had a house in Stonington, Connecticut, and I had a cypress house on a lagoon close by the beach, on Siesta Key. The only writer around was John D. MacDonald. We got to know artists through two of our dear friends, the abstract expressionist Syd Solomon and his wife, Annie. We met Philip Guston, Marca-Relli, Chamberlain, Rivers.
INTERVIEWER
The early seventies were charged with feminist consciousness—Toni Morrison, Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch. You didn’t feel a part of that? You mentioned once that you sensed female writers of that time were everywhere and were expected to be engaged and angry but ended up being terribly conformist.
WILLIAMS
God, yes. Back then you had to be a certain type of writer. You had to be one of these women writing the sort of thing that other people could, you know, find a book on.
INTERVIEWER
Speaking of feminism, I found an article from a Sarasota paper reporting on a literary festival sometime in the 1970s, attended by various luminaries. You were unknown. I believe you are described in the article as being the “tanned, leggy companion” of editor Rust Hills.
WILLIAMS
The word you seek is “sinewy.” Rust organized a writers conference at New College, in Sarasota. It was 1977, I believe. Astonishingly, he got William Gaddis and William Gass to come and actually confer with students. The conference was never repeated, and, though a modest success, I think the students were somewhat baffled. Gaddis and Gass—who were Gaddis and Gass? They sounded like a struggling law firm. Rust wasn’t at Esquire when we met, as I said. Gordon Lish was there and published several of my stories. I was not his big success. Ray Carver was his big success. Lish cut one of my stories, “The Lover,” in half and made it a very good story. He didn’t talk a lot about your stories, he didn’t explain what or why, he just cut and cut.
INTERVIEWER
Your second novel, The Changeling, came out the next year. A review in the Times used your book as a springboard to complain about the vague aims and language of the literary avant-garde. Did you think you were avant-garde?
WILLIAMS
Well, The Changeling, as you might know, is about a drunk. I was smitten with all things Lowry at the time, even though Ken Kesey told me quite firmly that Under the Volcano was “junior high.” But avant-garde? Dickinson’s avant-garde. Ashbery. Loplop. I think Don DeLillo’s avant-garde. No one’s caught up with what he’s doing yet. After reading that review, William Gaddis called and said, Oh, Joy, I’m so sorry. I can still hear his voice saying that. I hadn’t even read it yet. It was nasty, and it did succeed in shutting me up for a while. A few years ago that novel was reissued by a tiny press. I like the cover very much, with Goya’s Dog.
Now, wait. Let me ask—what do you think of the state of criticism in this country? Isn’t that a relevant question? There’s James Wood, of course, who deals only with the giants, whom he quietly, sonorously corrects. Other critics seem, I don’t know, to lurch from writer to writer, wanting to crown someone.
INTERVIEWER
I think of the Internet, the sheer volume. Cynthia Ozick wrote recently about the influence of this environment, all those Amazon customer reviews.
WILLIAMS
Who writes those?
INTERVIEWER
Anyone. People who may, in an earlier age, have written letters to the editor.
WILLIAMS
It’s one thing when it’s a restaurant. I mean, they can destroy a restaurant overnight. To do that with books?
INTERVIEWER
Your characters seem to struggle to interpret the world’s detritus, trying to make sense of ominous signs. A window opens for a moment, but then the window is shut. Is that a fair description of the writer’s consciousness as well?
WILLIAMS
I think the writer has to be responsible to signs and dreams. Receptive and responsible. If you don’t do anything with it, you lose it. You stop getting these omens. I love this little church group I go to. The other day we were talking about how God appears or doesn’t appear and how we’re nervous about seeing God, and it was all very interesting, but then somebody piped up, Well, I think God appears often during the day! We just don’t recognize it! For example, I was trying to find my name tag before the ten-thirty service. There I was with all the name tags, I just couldn’t find it, and then I looked down and it had fallen on the floor! I thought, There’s God! Telling me where it was!
You know what I told her? I said that it was really a large name tag. It was. It was huge. How could she misplace it in the first place?
INTERVIEWER
To speak of signs or interpretation suggests, at the very least, that there’s something unknowable at the heart of what you do. I asked you, before we started taping, whether you remember anything of how some of your most famous stories—“Train,” “Escapes,” “Honored Guest”—came to be written, and you looked panicked. You honestly can’t recall?
WILLIAMS
I find it so difficult to talk about what I do. There are those who are unnervingly articulate about what they’re doing and how they’re doing it, which, I suppose, is what this interview is all about. I am not particularly articulate, unnervingly or otherwise. I do believe there is, in fact, a mystery to the whole enterprise that one dares to investigate at peril. The story knows itself better than the writer does at some point, knows what’s being said before the writer figures out how to say it. There’s a word in German, Sehnsucht. No English equivalent, which is often the case. It means the longing for some- thing that cannot be expressed, or inconsolable longing. There’s a word in Welsh, hwyl, for which we also have no match. Again, it is longing, a longing of the spirit. I just think many of my figures seek something that cannot be found.
INTERVIEWER
And the writer? Are you trying to resolve that longing?
WILLIAMS
There’s a story about Jung. He had a dream that puzzled him, but when he tried to go back to sleep a voice said, “You must understand the dream, and must do so at once!” When he still couldn’t comprehend its meaning, the same voice said, “If you do not understand the dream, you must shoot your- self!” Rather violently stated, certainly, but this is how Jung recollected it. He did not resort to the loaded handgun he kept in a drawer of his bedside table—and it is somewhat of a shock to think of Jung armed—but he deciphered the dream to the voice within’s satisfaction, discovering the divine irrationality of the unconscious and his life’s work in the process. The message is work, seek, understand, or you will immolate the true self. The false self doesn’t care. It feels it works quite hard enough just getting us through the day.
INTERVIEWER
Your voice in the early work is lyrical, dense. After your first few books you began to write journalism, and your fictional voice seemed to transform along with it. It became looser, blunter, more comic. Using that voice, you wrote things like “The Killing Game” and “Save the Whales, Screw the Shrimp” for magazines with large, vocal readerships.
WILLIAMS
Those magazine essays did not require any stealth of execution. Unlike with the stories, where my real interest lay in illuminating something beneath or beyond the story itself, I could be forthright, headlong. I could write about real-estate developers, hunting, infertility treatments resulting in zillions of babies. It freed me so much, those nonfiction pieces. After “The Killing Game,” the NRA had everybody write to Esquire. They had a closet full of irate letters about that piece. The next editor was dealing with it years after it appeared. For one of the magazines, I wanted to write about the Unabomber, but I couldn’t get an interview, so I wrote about his cabin, from the cabin’s point of view.
INTERVIEWER
The Unabomber’s cabin, the pink Wagoneer in 99 Stories of God, the wayward fifty-dollar bill in Breaking and Entering.
WILLIAMS
The fifty-dollar bill. Plimpton hated that. I remembered being so pleased with myself, thinking, Boy, I’m really working here, it’s all coming together! He sort of frowned and said, You’re showing off.
INTERVIEWER
Around this time, you became an authority on the Florida Keys.
WILLIAMS
Random House was doing this series—Virginia, the Hamptons, the Keys. The Keys were still kind of strange and unspoiled in the eighties. I went around the state and wrote things down, but nobody talked to me. Nobody! I’d limp into these bed-and-breakfasts and people would snarl at me and not want to talk. I mean, honestly, it was terrible and I had no idea what I was doing. And it wasn’t edited, nobody edited it. Have you seen the afterword, the final edition, when I didn’t want to update it anymore? Here I am, worn out and saying how shitty everything in the Keys has become, and Random House just went ahead and put the afterword in there. Isn’t that amazing? That’s the only book I’ve ever made money from.
INTERVIEWER
Writing this nonfiction, you’d expanded your voice?
WILLIAMS
With the essays, I wanted to say, there was a lot of freedom bestowed. I felt I could address fecklessness, evil, even grief in a much more honest and emotional way than I could in stories. Which is somewhat contrary to my belief that what the short story, as a form, excels in is the depiction of solitude and isolation. Perhaps writing essays made my fictional characters more garrulous, desperate even, desperate to convey. So my stories became tighter and more restrained in style at the same time my characters became talkier, if that’s possible. Maybe it’s not possible. Maybe it’s not even true.
INTERVIEWER
Writers are desperate to convey their obsessions. They populate the subconscious. Jung and his inexplicable dream, for example.
WILLIAMS
I wonder if understanding the dream is really what must be done. Can we incorporate and treasure and be nourished by that which we do not understand? Of course. Understanding something, especially in these tech times, seems to involve ruthless appropriation and dismantlement and diminishment. I think of something I clipped from the paper and can’t lay my hands on. This peculiar aquatic creature who lives deep within the sea—it looked like a very long eel—came up to the surface, where it was immediately killed and displayed by a dozen or so grinning people on a California beach. Didn’t have a chance to evolve, that one. Curiosity by the nonhuman is not honored in this life. For many people, when confronted with the mysterious, the other, the instinct is to kill it. Then it can be examined.
INTERVIEWER
This might be a good transition into your focus on the natural world, its degradations, the lives of animals. You’ve often quoted Coetzee’s character Elizabeth Costello, who explained that her vegetarianism came out of “a desire to save my soul.” How did this part of your life begin?
WILLIAMS
I’ve been trying to think of this subject, my environmental, moral education. The philosopher Peter Singer’s book on animal rights in 1975 transformed the thinking of many people. Not enough. Now a person with a gluten allergy is honored more than a vegetarian. And these days we continue to suppress, ignore the horror, the cruelty, the evil of the slaughterhouse. Such a simple thing, to not take part in such evil, yet the carnage continues and we find it quite acceptable. We are complicit, materially preoccupied, spiritually impoverished, and technologically possessed. Look what we did to the Earth when it was green and provident. We’ll suck it to the bone with limitation’s necessities. Well, there’s always space. It’s depicted on the endpapers of our U.S. passports.
INTERVIEWER
Do you feel complicit? Do you write out of a sense of guilt?
WILLIAMS
Forgive me for the things I have done and for the things I have left undone. I may very well write out of a sense of guilt. I’ve spent my entire life doing this. Why am I not better at it?
INTERVIEWER
What can writers do, politically?
WILLIAMS
Possibly not much. An environmental writer, Derrick Jensen, says salmon don’t need more books written about them. They need clean, fast water and the dams to be busted up. Anyway, environmentalism has become thoroughly co-opted. Join the big groves and you’ll be gifted with a tote bag to carry and conceal all your good intentions. I wish Earth First! would rise again, but they were branded anarchists and terrorists and harassed by the FBI.
INTERVIEWER
Perhaps only Alice, in The Quick and the Dead, explicitly voices any of your political concerns.
WILLIAMS
Yes, but she’s a crazy girl with a missing front tooth.
INTERVIEWER
How did that novel begin? It stands out from the others. The canvas is bigger, first of all.
WILLIAMS
I wanted to write about someone who cared, and who cared very much about the nonhuman world. Then it seemed right that she should be young, mouthy, and uncharismatic. Of course no one pays her any mind whatsoever, and she’s ultimately outdone by an even younger girl, Emily Bliss Pickless, whose abhorrence of the system allows her to succeed in it, in a peculiar way. I remember looking up something in the dictionary and seeing this word, Corvus, that means raven. It’s also a small constellation. A perfect name. I suppose I did have high-minded objectives. There were lots and lots of characters, living and dead, totem animals, dismemberment, senility, regret, grief, love, all set in the battered, demystified, American desert. It became a rather funny book, finding hidey-holes from complete despair, I guess. It was a journey toward a novel I still hope to write.
INTERVIEWER
How would you describe that novel?
WILLIAMS
To return to the idea of the avant-garde, real avant-garde writing today would frame and reflect our misuse of the world, our destruction of its beauties and wonders. Nobody seems to be taking this on in the literary covens. We are all just messing with ourselves, cherishing ourselves. Andrew Solomon wrote a mega-successful nonfiction book titled Far from the Tree in which he ticks off every emotional, physical, mental, social disability you could possibly imagine and yokes them to true tales of actual practitioners or victims—though Solomon would never employ such a word—which he then bathes in a golden humanist light. We are all so special, particularly the very special, whose needs must be met. We are all so different and some of us are even more different, and this difference must be cherished and celebrated. The critics were ecstatic. What a hymn to diversity! No one spoke of how claustrophobic Far from the Tree was, the tree being utterly metaphorical, how narrowly and pridefully focused, how dismissive of a world outside the human. Cultural diversity can never replace biodiversity, though we’re being prompted to think it can. We live and spawn and want—always there is this ghastly wanting—and we have done irredeemable harm to so much. Perhaps the novel will die and even the short story because we’ll become so damn sick of talking about ourselves.
INTERVIEWER
You often seek the remotest solitude to live and work. What are your typical working conditions? Notebooks? Do you pack a typewriter?
WILLIAMS
I currently own seven Smith Corona portables, if that’s at all interesting, which it probably isn’t. My favorite typewriter is a palomino-colored Sterling that Noy Holland gifted me with in Amherst, Massachusetts. At home in Arizona, I don’t have a TV or Internet or air-conditioning. I’ve never even seen how 99 Stories of God appears to others, as Byliner produced them. They are as vapor to me. My old black Bronco has almost three hundred thou- sand miles on it. It’s traversed the country dozens of times. A great vehicle! My other ride is of a much more recent vintage—a 2004 Toyota Tundra with which I have yet to truly bond. I like old things. I almost never buy anything new.
INTERVIEWER
How does writing get done on the road?
WILLIAMS
Here in Wyoming, I sit and work and walk the dogs. I watch the thrilling ravings of Max Keiser on the RT channel. This TV has cable or a satellite, one or the other. I finally saw The Tree of Life through to its end on the Sundance Channel. Have you seen the ending? I did like everyone meeting up on the beach, although the last shot, of the field packed with sunflowers, seemed a little quiet. All I could think when I saw the field was genetically modified. I missed the glory, totally.
INTERVIEWER
What about the act of writing itself? Do you ever enjoy writing?
WILLIAMS
That nice Canadian writer who recently won the Nobel—beloved, admired, prolific. Who would deny it? She said she had a “hellish good time” writing. This could be a subject for many, many panels. Get a herd of writers together and ask them, Do you have a hellish good time writing? Mostly, I believe, the answer would be no. But their going on about it could take some time.
INTERVIEWER
You’re funny. You must know this.
WILLIAMS
Occasionally I can have a little fun or am pleased with an effect. The conversations between Ginger and Carter, for example, in The Quick and the Dead, or the Lord’s interactions with the animals in 99 Stories of God. But then I hear Plimpton again—You’re showing off.
INTERVIEWER
Who are some living writers you admire?
WILLIAMS
DeLillo is first among them. A writer of tremendous integrity and presence. Mao II is an American classic. So, too, is White Noise, though it’s been taught to splinters. His later works are fierce, demanding. His work can be a little cold perhaps. And what’s wrong with that? The cold can teach us many things. Coetzee I admire very much. On a lighter note, the Russians. Vladimir Sorokin and his crazy Ice trilogy. The short-story writer Ludmilla Petrushevskaya.
INTERVIEWER
Jane Bowles seems like a precedent for your voice.
WILLIAMS
Oh, I hope not. Two Serious Ladies is a confounding book. A ridiculous situation, or situations, unbelievable characters. The plot proceeds in the manner of crutches needing tips. She certainly doesn’t write in any “accepted style” of either then or now. Yet it’s a fascinating book, forever gathering up new and enthusiastic readers. It’s an unnerving book. Do we fear for this writer? The exoticism and tragedy of her life? Paul Bowles, Morocco, her unfortunate love interests, her stroke. She seems to know nothing about human nature, which may quite signify she knows a great deal. I find her refreshing, in the way that drinking vinegar is refreshing.
INTERVIEWER
You reviewed a recent Flannery O’Connor biography and noted her habit of reading theology to embolden her work. What’s the connection for you between religious thought and the writing life?
WILLIAMS
The Bible is constantly making use of image beyond words. A parable pro- vides the imagery by means of words. The meaning, however, does not lie in the words but in the imagery. What is conjured, as it were, transcends words completely and speaks in another language. This is how Kafka wrote, why we are so fascinated by him, why he speaks so universally. On the other hand, there’s Blake, who spoke of the holiness of minute particulars. That is the way as well, to give voice to those particulars. Seek and praise, fear and seek. Don’t be vapid.
INTERVIEWER
Your philosophy, your method, is to seek and praise, fear and seek, and don’t be vapid?
WILLIAMS
You think that’s too vague? Methods limit you as soon as you recognize them. Then you have to find another form to free yourself.
INTERVIEWER
Freedom—you’ve mentioned it several times. Is freedom why you spend so much of your life out in the middle of nowhere?
WILLIAMS
Yes, yes. Freedom is most desirable. Of course none of us are free. Our flaws enslave us, the things we love. And through technology we’re becoming more known to everyone but ourselves. What’s that phrase about certain writers being what the culture needs? Most writers just write about what the culture recognizes.
INTERVIEWER
Your last book, 99 Stories of God, takes the form of parables—koans, vignettes, almost poems, with forays into philosophy and theology. The Lord shows up on Earth a few times to mingle awkwardly. Was this subject or style freeing to you?
WILLIAMS
I’m going to do one more story about God. He’s really going to confide in me. Then I’m done.
https://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/6303/joy-williams-the-art-of-fiction-no-223-joy-williams?utm_source=Jocelyn+K.+Glei%27s+newsletter&utm_campaign=6d1adb27b5-Newsletter_01_05_17&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_0d0c9bd4c2-6d1adb27b5-143326949
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walterfrodriguez · 6 years
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Miami Art Week recapped with 40 Instagram photos
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A Smörgåsbord of Miami Art Week offerings
Miami is a bit quieter today with the 2017 edition of Miami Art Week coming to a close last night.
Among the highlights: a powerful nuclear missile installation in Mana Wynwood, a four-story ice cream museum in Mid-Beach, five magnificent superyachts in town at various marinas, a new version of Wynwood Walls, a light sculpture featuring a 12-foot orgasm in a South Beach hotel lobby, and an autonomous swarm of 300 illuminated drones above the ocean in Faena District mimicking a flock of birds.
There were also a couple of big-time celebrity listings with the former homes of Sammy Sosa and Chris Bosh — they boast fantastic views of the ocean and the bay, respectively — hitting the market.
But not everyone was able to make it out to the wide array of installations, exhibits, and fairs, so we threw together an extensive Instagram roundup showcasing a sliver of what Miami Art Week had to offer.
The real #RemyMVP. #arteverywhere // #artbasel : @remymartin #swishandswing
A post shared by W South Beach (@wsouthbeach) on Dec 8, 2017 at 11:01am PST
Street Art ||| Where's an Alpha when you need 'em? w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel #SkeePhi
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:09am PST
My favorite piece of art at the @reddotmiami and @spectrummiami gallery yesterday. Art by @jwolffstudios, super dope. #miami #artbasel #artbaselmiami #trump #biggie #itwasalladream #art #artwork
A post shared by snapchat: richdarrell1 (@_richdarrell1) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:36am PST
Just days after the installation of a massive 65,000-pound, 38-year-old kapok tree at the base of Jade Signature in Sunny Isles Beach, the tower and Fortune International Group celebrated the unveiling of “Bonhomme Universe,” their new gemstone snowman, a whimsical piece is by Romania-born artist Daniel Knorr which was commissioned by Fortune International Group President and CEO Edgardo Defortuna. The sculpture will be accessible to the public, a potential future social media icon for Sunny Isles Beach. The unveiling was celebrated with a fashionable beachfront luncheon, guests included Edgardo Defortuna, and his wife, Ana Cristina; the artist himself Daniel Knorr, co-host Sarah Harreslon, founder of CULTURED magazine; Jason Frantzen, partner of Herzog and de Meuron; Raymond Jungles, founder of Raymond Jungles Inc.; Vice Mayor Dana Goldman of the City of Sunny Isles Beach; and former U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios. Defortuna spoke about his passion for art and the ability of sculpture to enliven and embellish outdoor spaces (December 8, 2017). #JadeSignature #SunnyIslesBeach #FortuneInternationalGroup #BonhommeUniverse #DanielKnorr #MiamiRealEstate #PROFILEmiami
A post shared by PROFILEmiami Real Estate (@profilemiami) on Dec 9, 2017 at 11:49am PST
Street Art ||| It's all love, once you peel back.the onion. w/ , #WanderlustPhilly #MuralArts #ArtBasel
A post shared by Wanderlust Philly (@wanderlustphilly) on Dec 9, 2017 at 8:03am PST
Happy Kanye = Happy Monday #happykanye #artbasel #artbaselmiami #artbasel2017 #wynwood #wynwoodart #miami #kanyewest #kanye #yeezy #art
A post shared by Kofi A. Oliver (@kofioliverphoto) on Dec 11, 2017 at 5:00am PST
On to the #MIA #bucketlist #artbasel
A post shared by erikalharris (@erikalharris) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:47pm PST
When Chi-town meets Miami (@ the artist!) #kanyewest #artbasel #graduation #um #art #walkfashionshow @walkfashionshow
A post shared by Erika S ♌ (@am.erikaaa) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:38am PST
Art Basel Miami Beach artist “Crano” photooftheday #20likes #amazing #smile #look #instalike #igers #picoftheday #food #instadaily #instafollow #followme #girl #iphoneonly #instagood #bestoftheday #instacool #instago #all_shots #follow #webstagram #colorful #style
A post shared by MiamiGezisi (@miamigezisi) on Dec 10, 2017 at 12:30am PST
Introducing Kotone , physical music works. Art + Music = happy #miami #artbasel #alamakproject #music #art
A post shared by RSquare (@rsquare_design) on Dec 10, 2017 at 1:55pm PST
A post shared by Alejandra Primavera (@alejandraprimavera) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:34pm PST
Seriously though
A post shared by Taryn (@trnharvey) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:32am PST
A post shared by Matt Paolillo (@m.p.lo) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:40pm PST
@mirusgallery had a lot of sick @okudart pieces at their @scopeartshow booth, this large canvas was my favorite. #Okuda #OkudaSanMiguel #MirusGallery #Scope #ScopeArtShow #scopemiamibeach #scopemiami #artbasel #ArtBaselMadness #baselorbust #streetartspringbreak
A post shared by Daniel Weintraub (@halopigg) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:02am PST
At the booth across from me @formmiami, the stunning ceramic vessels of @ashrafhanna_ceramicsandglass at @thenewcraftsmen from the UK
A post shared by Damon Crain (@culture.object) on Dec 7, 2017 at 12:44pm PST
Alex Gross
A post shared by Joshua Rhodes (@tatshoe) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:05pm PST
Art Basel was fun.
A post shared by Jose Diaz™ (@itsjosebro) on Dec 11, 2017 at 12:46pm PST
Great to see the @artofdavidwalker translate so well from street to studio, and vice versa.
A post shared by Street Art House (@streetarthouse) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:02am PST
A post shared by Nikki Greenberg (@perspectivesbynlg) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:11pm PST
Art Basel Miami Beach at MBCC #truth #voiceshakes The more you're scared, the more it must be said.
A post shared by arnelinthesun (@arnelinthesun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 9:54pm PST
Space theme #ArtBasel2017 #ArtMiami
A post shared by Christina Riggs (@improspecta) on Dec 11, 2017 at 9:55am PST
A post shared by Marilia Celin (@marilia_celin) on Dec 9, 2017 at 7:54pm PST
Han Young #hanyoung #artmiami #miami
A post shared by L I S A T Ö R N E R (@lisalinneatorner) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:39am PST
#dance #happy #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Hana Choy (@chewychoy) on Dec 10, 2017 at 7:32pm PST
#miami #miamiartweek #miamiartbasel #artbasel #artbaselmiami #talent #art #artistic #sculpture #color #green #beautiful #travelblogger #travel #traveling #2017 #miamilife #miamibeach #like #fun #lifeofalex #thelifeofalex #theamazinglifeofalex #instapic
A post shared by Alex Page (@alexpage5602) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:22am PST
We ♥️ this new work by #NathanSawaya #legobricks
A post shared by Avant Gallery® Art Is Life™ (@avantgallery) on Dec 1, 2017 at 5:07pm PST
A post shared by Norma Estrada (@sunshinegata) on Dec 10, 2017 at 8:49am PST
Now THIS is art with a great message #happywifehappylife #artbasel #artmiami . . . . . . #miami #miamilife #weekendfun #art #positivevibes #jewelry #jewelrydesigner #jewelryobsessed #sparkle #jewelleryaddict #jewelrybye #wordstoliveby
A post shared by Jewelry by E (@jewelrybye) on Dec 10, 2017 at 5:31pm PST
#artbasel #artbasel2017 #artbaselmiami2017 #artbaselmiami #spectrum #reddotmiami #scopemiami #scopemiamibeach #scopeartshow #untitled #art #scope #bestweekever #miamiink #contextartmiami #artmiami #wynwood #wynwoodwalls #wynwoodartdistrict
A post shared by LOLA (@lola_in_the_city) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:58am PST
Art Basel in the sky #droneshow #faenaart @faena
A post shared by Eric Lopez (@ericanthonylopez) on Dec 6, 2017 at 7:49pm PST
Art Africa!!!! #internationalreviewofafricanamericanart #hamptonartlovers #artbasel #artafricamiami
A post shared by Hampton Art Lovers (@hamptonartlovers) on Dec 8, 2017 at 4:43pm PST
Art I’m sad I missed (1 of 2). Problem with working on an event during Basel is you don’t get to go see all the shows. Missed #pulseartfair #artlexing’s booth with #typoe’s colorful installation. Thank goodness there’s Instagram stalking though.
A post shared by Daughter of Design (@daughterodesign) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:09am PST
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. #artbasel #miamibeachedition
A post shared by Steven Rojas (@stevenrojas) on Dec 11, 2017 at 11:08am PST
Spotted at Untitled Exhibition #artbaselmiami
A post shared by Joy (@maccaholic) on Dec 6, 2017 at 5:46am PST
I can feel. Best part of Basel. I want this in my house . . . . . . . #feminism #feminist #feministart #girlpower #grlpwr #sexposi #bodyposi #yoni #yonipower #pussypower #sexed #sexeducation #sexpositive #bodypositive #sexology #womenrun #womenled #womenfounders #pussyart #vaginaart #witch #pussygrabsback #p2p #powertothepussy #vulvaart #vulvapride #bopo
A post shared by Madison (@we_badison) on Dec 11, 2017 at 7:55am PST
Don’t it taste like #holywater? #artbasel #blessed #neonbible #jesuslikesarttoo #jesusdiedforyouandstuff #godwashere #sayurprayers #thankgoditssunday #aintnobodyprayinforme
A post shared by Princess Kitty Kat (@anasunbun) on Dec 10, 2017 at 11:17pm PST
The architecture of art, and vice versa @maxmakewell #basel #art #architecture #edenroc #scope #pulse
A post shared by Christopher (@christopherdaish_nycrealestate) on Dec 11, 2017 at 10:16am PST
Casa Cor Miami • Amei o projeto da Arquiteta e Designer @su_chitra. A Indiana ousou no ambiente “The Conversation” com varias peças de design e o grafismo bem colorido! ♥️
A post shared by Jeh Adan, São Paulo, SP (@decorechic) on Dec 11, 2017 at 6:27am PST
A post shared by A1 Everything..... (@indian_papi) on Dec 11, 2017 at 8:53am PST
from The Real Deal Miami & Real Estate News News | & Curbed Miami - All https://miami.curbed.com/2017/12/11/16763242/miami-art-week-instagram-photos via IFTTT
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