Showing posts with label specific. Show all posts
Showing posts with label specific. Show all posts
SPECIFIC & VITRINE take New York / SOHO
a 4-day presentation of works by artists / designers / architects.











New Yorkers take note: SPECIFIC and VITRINE are coming to SOHO. SPECIFIC will be in the basement of SOHO doing what they do best: bringing art /design / and furniture to us folks who crave it! Brooks Hudson Thomas, owner of SPECIFIC, is not only a good friend, but he has introduced me to so many artists, that it's just ridiculous to mention them all..... Support these artists and designers......



Pop Under Shop - a basement-level pop-up shop hosted by Brooks Hudson Thomas of LA's Specific Merchandise and Blaire Dessent of Paris-based The Vitrine that will run from April 13-17. Please join us for the opening reception on Wednesday, April 13th from 6-9pm.


including:
WORKSTEAD...Dino Sanchez..Amanda Keeley...Andrew Zarou...Fern NYC..
Winter Session...J.P...Thurlow..Morgan Maclean...Jamison Carter....Dina Weiss...
Yahia Ouled Moussa....Rachel Peloquin....Jason Rosenberg....Denyse Schmidt...
Quinnford + Scout.... Tanya AguiƱiga
















tables + chairs of FERN, NYC
read YHBHS interview with FERN here...









here: Fitzroy Gallery Basement, 77 Mercer Street, SOHO
POP UNDER SHOP HOURS:
Thursday, April 14th - Sunday, April 17th, 11-7pm


more info about SPECIFIC....
and VITRINE here.....











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Y H B H S (card catalog) selection 7

Brooks Hudson Thomas of SPECIFIC,
Los Angeles
"Inside that magazine I learned about a world that I instantly recognized as home. I learned about Warhol, New York, and nightclubs, fashion, drugs, sex, drag, etc. Most importantly, I learned about A R T."











Interview Magazine,
the Molly Ringwald Cover



In 1985 I bought my first copy of Interview Magazine. My family was stationed on Guam. I was 14. I am not sure if I knew who Andy Warhol was yet, or if I only bought the magazine because Molly Ringwald was on the cover.

Inside that magazine I learned about a world that I instantly recognized as home. I learned about Warhol, New York, and nightclubs, fashion, drugs, sex, drag, etc. Most importantly, I learned about art. Everything a little queer military brat needed to survive living on a tiny island in the middle of nowhere.

Things work this way: I learn about a new word, idea or paradigm, and suddenly those things manifest themselves all around me. Suddenly, at 14, still on Guam, I found a world that imitated, or at least aspired to the one on the pages of Interview. I had friends who exposed me to good music and we snuck into Japanese tourist nightclubs, smoked clove cigarettes, wore mousse and vintage clothing. Sounds like a cliche but the high-1980's were happening on Guam because my friends and I willed it to. We did the Molly Ringwald dance like there was no tomorrow.



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When you asked me to write on this subject I was out of town. When I got back home and I looked at my books I realized that something that really made an impact was missing and it was that issue of Interview whose cover was graced by Molly Ringwald. I taught myself to draw by copying the images from magazines, like the Matthew Rolston images of Molly Ringwald styled in different 20th C period costumes, and the drawings hung on the walls with the torn out magazine pages. I carried those well loved pages back to California and into adulthood where many of them were destroyed in a flood in my apartment after the Northridge earthquake, and many of the survivors arrived at their final destination in the collages and paintings I made in graduate school at UCLA.



Once again, pulling those old pages back out, nearly 15 years later, something was manifested. I was working on a body of photographic work that I was using in my collages. A friend and neighbor, Raymond Lee, was a photographer and I had heard that he had been a very successful stylist in LA in the 1980's. We were talking and looking at his book, and I was amazed to see those images of Molly Ringwald again. Raymond had done all of the styling for that editorial and many others that I remembered scrutinizing, analyzing for content and trying to glean even a little bit of the magic they possessed.



When I opened Specific early this year I realized quickly that blogs like yours had the same kind of transformative powers. Daily, and even by the hour, new worlds can be delivered to my laptop. The difference is that now I can reach out an end up in the real life of an artist or designer working on the other side of the world within a matter of minutes, not the 15 years it took for Raymond and I to realize the impact his creative work had on my life. I'm not sure how I landed on John-Paul Thurlow's blog: http://johnpaulthurlow.blogspot.com, but when I saw his project I knew that we needed to get in touch.
























JP writes about his project like this:

"This is an attempt to recreate cover art for every great magazine and record I own.
And with each Cover I take a perfect mass-produced object and turn it into a fucked up one-off, full of my thoughts and feelings."


These are not the serial reproductions that I did as drawing exercises as a teen. With the same tools JP is making something so personal and entirely new. The drawings take my breath away, give me a little bit of wood and make me want to smoke a clove. His Book "Covers" , whose cover is graced by another favorite red-head, Julianne Moore, has just been released in an edition of 100 and I am looking forward to having my copy hand delivered by JP in December.



- Brooks Hudson Thomas.....





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Brooks Hudson Thomas
runs/owns/curates his jam packed gallery / store/ salon on Beverly Boulevard. It's simply fantastic and a completely absorbing place to spend an hour.....

See you at the Holiday Party this weekend, perhaps?



S P E C I F I C Holiday Party
Saturday
December 4th 5-10 PM
7374 Beverly Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90036




















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S P E C I F I C
A place where nobody dared to go
The love that we came to know

They call it X a n a d u!

November 13th – December 24th,
Saturday November 13th 5-8 PM









And now Open your eyes and see
What we have made is real
We are in Xanadu.....!




Yesterday, I stopped into SPECIFIC on Beverly Boulevard here in Los Angeles only to witness Brooks in the midst of setting up XANADU. (Sorry Brooks for chatting your ear off while you were setting up!)
He has gathered 50 artists for his Holiday XANADU show that is opening tonight. From the looks of all the work he showed me, this is a show not to be missed.


S P E C I F I C




Huge new wall installation from Scout Regalia. Personal stockings!
A new designer artist making large felt light pendants. Wow. I need two....

Laurel Broughton of WELCOME!
Work by
Jason Meadows, and Steve Halterman.

Plus so much more that was finding its way to its spot for tonight's event.



S P E C I F I C
is a unique store in Los Angeles, and personally, one of the best. If you haven't been, this is the perfect introduction to Brooks' vision. How he pulls off so much in so little time is beyond me. For those that read YHBHS regularly, I posted images from the SPECIFIC event I attended in Joshua Tree with Von Tundra. For those that missed that event hosted at Andrea Zittel's property two months ago, I'm sorry, b/c it was too fun! You can take a peak here off of her site...

See you there tonight.




Upcoming Events:

Specific Holiday Party &
VITRINE / thevitrine.com in-store launch
& affordable-art sale
Saturday December 4th 5-10 PM

Specific @ Mt. Fuji General Store Pop-UP
at The Ace Palm Springs
December 3rd-5th





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"I think that true freedom is rare
and that you have to hunt for it. "


- Andrea Zittel













Andrea Zittel. These images are a few of the works that
are installed at Andrea Zittel's Joshua Tree home and studio.
(Finally unloading some of the images off my camera from a couple weekends ago.)




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"In the early 1990s, Andrea Zittel began making art in response to her own surroundings and daily routines, creating functional objects that fulfilled the artist’s needs relating to shelter, food, furniture, and clothing. She produced her first “Living Unit”--an experimental structure intended to reduce everything necessary for living into a simple, compact system—as a means of facilitating basic activities within her 200-square-foot Brooklyn storefront apartment.



















"One of the main things that I have been wondering about is how one can actually live a "liberated" life, or if this is even possible. My idea right now is that perhaps the only real way to liberate oneself is to slip in between the cracks of larger authoritative systems. It interests me how often we do this by making smaller, more enclosed systems that are even more restrictive than those in the outside world. You can become so cocooned in these little self-invented structures that you almost believe the larger systems don't actually exist anymore. "
















I wanted to try to remember an Allan Kaprow quote that I read last summer that really stuck with me. It was about how you take art, figure out that rules that make it art, and slowly eliminate them one by one. He was talking about the non art object. It was so interesting to me – I think about what a normal human reaction would be to the eventual creation of non art.

I think that the irony is that Allan Kaprow took art to the non art status to such an extreme that he almost eliminated art itself. Ultimately, by eliminating rules he brought up the importance of rules as a form of social consensus. It made me think how rules and structures are ways that we create bonds with other people. They help define communities and identities. Perhaps we should see rules to some extent as creative gestures and not purely as limiting forces.








- Andrea Zittel in conversation with Allan McCollum, here...






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dining in the desert.
portland + los angeles + joshua tree










Does it get better than this?
(dinner in Joshua Tree)



I just returned from a magical event in the desert curated by Brooks Hudson Thomas of SPECIFIC Merchandise. It was a quick trip into sunshine, mountain tops, and two of the best meals I've had in the longest time. The table and chairs above are by Von Tundra, the Portland based design-team and artist-collective including Dan Anderson, Chris Held and Brian Pietrowski. Three guys who are up to some amazing things. (Go here to see some of their work!)

Los Angeles chef Colleen French of the Renegade-Dining-Club and her team cooked two amazing meals. Not sure how you pull off a dinner in the desert, but it was flawless and delicious.....
Andrea Zittel of High Test Desert Sites hosted the dinner event on her property. Her work has inspired me for years, and it was exciting to see it in person out in Joshua Tree. We stayed in a new hotel about to open called the Mojave Sands. Thanks Blake for the tour and the amazing place to sleep and hang out. His attention to detail in this hotel is unbelievable (8 yrs in the making.) Hoping to post some more images of the event in the upcoming week as soon as I dust myself off.









photo via specific.
-------------------------------
We do
what we do
so we can do
more of what
we want to do.

von tundra






portland - joshua tree- los angeles




Slowly getting excited about my upcoming Joshua Tree trip!
SPECIFIC @ Von Tundra at A-Z West for the weekend.
Lots of eating, drinking, desert roaming, & pickling.











SPECIFIC PRESENTS VON TUNDRA AT A-Z WEST AND HDTS


Saturday October 9th and Sunday October 10th

"We do what we do so we can do more of what we want to do. We’re interested in the marriage of art and design, where our approach includes conceptualizing a project to prototyping it to producing it.

We believe good design should have a positive impact on the space it exists in and the people who experience that space. (Von Tundra excerpt from an interview with the Dill Pickle Club) On the weekend of October 9th and 10th SPECIFIC will present Von Tundra, the Portland, based design-team and artist-collective (including Dan Anderson, Chris Held and Brian Pietrowski), who will be loading up their custom-made “Sip-Mobile”, a vintage RV converted into an Organic Food & Juice Truck, with their Rockwell Table and over a dozen Prairie Chairs and heading south to the high desert. "





go here....






We do
what we do
so we can do
more of what
we want to do.


von tundra



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Specific
Los Angeles,
June 5, 2010







PLAY: SUSANNA MAING & TODOSOMETHING
Opening Reception Saturday, June 5, 5-8 PM
Exhibition dates: June 5, 2010 - July 2, 2010

Brooks Hudson Thomas is pleased to announce his second exhibition of new work by emerging artists and designers at his new project space, SPECIFIC. What will become an important new chair design (and dozens of variations of it) by Chad Petersen and Dakota Witzenburg, the team behind TODOSOMETHING, is being shown for the first time with new paintings by Los Angeles artist Susanna Maing.



Susanna Maing, honored with a solo exhibition at Angles Gallery in Santa Monica in 2006, has been in the studio developing her practice and SPECIFIC is proud to be the first to show her new body of work. Maing and TODOSOMETHING are both working hard at play in their endeavors and we think you should keep your eyes on their very bright futures.



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SPECIFIC is the new project space curated by Brooks Hudson Thomas. Operating in the gap that exists between a shop and a gallery, SPECIFIC is passionate about exhibiting contemporary design and contemporary art together in a way that has never been seen in Los Angeles.






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