Saturday 13 August 2011

Chateau Dreams







Agyness Deyn as James Dean, by James Franco Leather jacket, Rebecca Minkoff, $695, visit rebeccaminkoff.com. Stretch cotton-blend T-shirt, Calvin Klein Underwear Body, $25. Jeans, Ralph Lauren. Vintage sunglasses, Oliver Peoples, $400. Alligator-skin watch, March LA.B, $935. Vintage boots, from Confederacy, L.A., $460.



This summer, the dizzyingly prolific James Franco—movie idol, soap star, author, PhD student—is making a splash in contemporary art, debuting a mixed-media bonanza of photos, videos, and installations—at the Venice Biennale, no less. Upending the role that won him a Golden Globe and ignited his film career (as James Dean in TNT’s 2001 biopic), the project mines what Franco calls the “ripples and echoes” that Rebel Without a Cause cast through the American cinemascape, youth culture, and gay iconography.
It all starts here, with gender-bending images Franco shot of model Natalia Bonifacci and model-actress hybrids Imogen Poots and Agyness Deyn. The beauties are dreaming of Dean (and Rebel costar Sal Mineo, about whom Franco will also direct an upcoming biopic) against the backdrop of L.A., in particular Bungalow 2 of the Chateau Marmont, where Rebel director Nicholas Ray lived and held rehearsals during filming in 1955.
The photos offer a taste of Franco’s Biennale show, on which he’s collaborated with a posse of art-world rabble-rousers including shock artist Paul McCarthy, pop art vet Ed Ruscha, and director-provocateur Harmony Korine (Gummo). Each tackles a facet of Rebel, from the director’s paternal and, Franco says, abstract psycho-sexual dynamic with his stars, to the film’s imagined lost scenes. The result incorporates motorcycles, nudity, and “extreme bondage…crazy stuff,” he says.
Of his foray into yet another medium, Franco says, “It’s not about mastering all of them. It’s about using each when appropriate, so that I’m not confined to a traditional approach.”

Under Cover



rihanna 
 Going from the beach to the streets can be as easy as tossing on a mini summer dress or tunic. Go for a bright bold color or something pure and white to accent that new-found summer tan. And keep it light, like Rihanna; cottons, crochet knit and lightweight jersey make ideal cover-up dress styles





Thursday 11 August 2011

Lady Gaga, Rihanna help sell Vogue

Lady Gaga in Sydney






News flash:
Lady Gaga and Rihanna can sell magazines. Their covers appear to be part of the reason that for the first half of this year the only major U.S. fashion magazine with increased sales compared with last year was Vogue, which saw a jump of 12.7% for an average monthly circulation of 360,400. InStyle has a larger circulation (570,000), but dropped 8% compared with last year. Other women's fashion mags experienced an average decrease of 9.2 %, except for Allure, which remained flat.
Hilary Duff, Jenny McCarthy, Padma Lakshmi and Christie Brinkley are featured in new advertising for Danskin that launched Wednesday with the slogan "Move for Change." Besides the usual magazine ads and such, they are featured in videos on danskinmove.com, which will also offer monthly blogs. The four will use their own Twitter accounts to tweet about the campaign, which also involves Danskin making contributions to the celebrities' favorite charities.
More from the weight wars: British authorities ordered the e-commerce website Zazzle to remove T-shirts for children and teens emblazoned with a controversial quote from supermodel Kate Moss: "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels." The British Advertising Standards Authority had received complaints that the slogan could encourage eating disorders.