10.20.2011

///BLUE///

for the colder half:
a neutral midnight palette with specks of brass or gold,
as stars in the near-pitch night.
my eyes will shine as they do,
& they'll drip just the same.

almost blue
almost doing things we used to do
there's a girl here & she's almost you
almost
Theyskens' Theory small calf hair messenger bag 845.00
Vlieger & Vandam gun clutch 297.00
Zara leather messenger bag 49.90
Proenza Schouler medium PS1 1595.00
Ixchel Lara
Almost Blue
Chet Baker

10.05.2011

///DESTROYED///

Culver City's art district has accumulated many a white-walled gallery, and among them is Kopeikin. Ascending the humble staircase out front, I leave the rush hour chaos behind and enter a fresh world of photography. I am the only patron at this late afternoon hour on an uneventful weekday, completely unaware that Moby is a photographer, and the exhibit will inevitably open my eyes to this previously enigmatic side of the multitalented artist.
Stepping into the Moby section, I am immediately comforted with a feeling of warm invitation from the crowds congregating across the lengths of the room. The right side is covered with swarms of music fans, split up and clustered into photographs of arbitrary size. The left side comes across as more collected; five pieces lined up horizontally with the centermost being the largest and, employing hierarchy of scale, most important. This particular photograph seems to be the only one in the exhibit that strays from the all-around theme of fervent crowds on tour.
The photographs themselves and the environment they create within the gallery seem to play on competing feelings--togetherness versus loneliness, being attended to versus being unattended, being supported enthusiastically versus being solitarily destroyed--translating precisely the album’s reflections of the strangeness of being on tour but in photographs rather than songs. Full concerts and feelings of disconcertion are juxtaposed. Lonesome me in an empty room with crowds of people around me cheering in unison is comparable to what Moby was trying to achieve: the stark contrast between the barren dressing rooms, hotel rooms, and airports and the energetic, loving, jam-packed crowds seen from onstage.
The album is a defining of Moby's thoughts while on tour aurally, catering to the ears;
while the photography is a defining of those same thoughts visually, catering to the eyes.

10.04.2011

///MISCELLANEA///

1. What I managed to scavenge from the remains of the Missoni x Target collection: makeup bags.
2. Zara satchel + Thelonious Monk vinyl + Lette macarons (La Provence still reigns supreme with its chew factor).
3. Medium-rare steak that Chuck taught me how to cook perfectly over the phone. I was never a fan of steak until I realized I'd been ordering it wrongly well-done my whole life.
4. A Brandon Francis painting I acquired circa 2009. I was pretty wasted when I bought it, but I see how it was relevant: scarved & sickly for the fall, on a tightrope living on the edge, in the sky floating the days away, with baby blue atmospheric conditions. Currently on display in my bedroom, way up high.

Notorious D.O.M.
Dom Kennedy

///WHENSDAY///

Tim handled the camera jubilantly, realizing Downtown details that usually went unnoticed, while Jacqui & I led the way, navigating our way around with my leatherbound GPS & not getting very far at all--from 7th to 12th & Spring to Main adding up to about six blocks at most. The original plan went to rubbish due to my typically horrible time management, having left the tattoo shop much too late to make it to Kopeikin in time & plan B's LACMA apparently is closed every Wednesday. Such convenience. But hey, at least I'm getting this tramp stamp covered up once & for all--it went from tiny to medium & soon to be large. The homie Codak is sketching it out & will be practicing his newfound inking skills on me as well. Hunger struck so we hit up Cole's for some lamb french dips with goat cheese. The juices even trickled down my forearm which I'm assuming is the sign of a proper french dip sandwich. Groundfloor Cafe was the final stop before heading home to my textbooks: decent coffee, spacious layout, modern art & classy decor, iPad cashier, average but aesthetic macarons, plus daily déjeuner specials for early birds. Very possibly a new solitary study spot for me.
Sympathique
Pink Martini