DANIEL JAMES THAWLEY

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The black cover of SSAW Magazine N°3 ft. Lisa Verberght photographed by Anuschka Blommers & Niels Schumm and styled by Lotta Volkova. 
The issue features my interviews with Damir Doma, Simone Rocha, Edward Meadham & Benjamin Kirchhoff

The black cover of SSAW Magazine N°3 ft. Lisa Verberght photographed by Anuschka Blommers & Niels Schumm and styled by Lotta Volkova. 

The issue features my interviews with Damir Doma, Simone Rocha, Edward Meadham & Benjamin Kirchhoff

3 days ago  Notes (0)
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The white cover of SSAW Magazine N°3 ft. Magda Laguinge photographed by Arno Frugier and styled by Delphine Danhier. 
The issue features my interviews with Damir Doma, Simone Rocha, Edward Meadham & Benjamin Kirchhoff. 

The white cover of SSAW Magazine N°3 ft. Magda Laguinge photographed by Arno Frugier and styled by Delphine Danhier. 

The issue features my interviews with Damir Doma, Simone Rocha, Edward Meadham & Benjamin Kirchhoff. 

3 days ago  Notes (3)
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Read me on Vogue.com (US) on the new Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne store: http://www.vogue.com/vogue-daily/article/saint-laurents-new-store-hedis-paris-haven

Read me on Vogue.com (US) on the new Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne store: http://www.vogue.com/vogue-daily/article/saint-laurents-new-store-hedis-paris-haven

1 week ago  Notes (4)
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Read me on Vogue.com (US) on the new Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne store: http://www.vogue.com/vogue-daily/article/saint-laurents-new-store-hedis-paris-haven

Read me on Vogue.com (US) on the new Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne store: http://www.vogue.com/vogue-daily/article/saint-laurents-new-store-hedis-paris-haven

1 week ago  Notes (3)
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Read me on Vogue.com (US) on the new Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne store: http://www.vogue.com/vogue-daily/article/saint-laurents-new-store-hedis-paris-haven

“Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne was designed and executed following the pure tradition of French Arts Décoratifs,” Slimane says. “It is also an homage to Yves Saint Laurent’s attraction to French modernism.” Never one to mince words, it’s a timely reference from the designer when one skips across the street to the current exhibition “Dynamo: A Century of Light and Movement in Art,” held at the Grand Palais one hundred years after 1913, crowned the year of French modernism.

Read me on Vogue.com (US) on the new Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne store: http://www.vogue.com/vogue-daily/article/saint-laurents-new-store-hedis-paris-haven

“Saint Laurent Avenue Montaigne was designed and executed following the pure tradition of French Arts Décoratifs,” Slimane says. “It is also an homage to Yves Saint Laurent’s attraction to French modernism.” Never one to mince words, it’s a timely reference from the designer when one skips across the street to the current exhibition “Dynamo: A Century of Light and Movement in Art,” held at the Grand Palais one hundred years after 1913, crowned the year of French modernism.

1 week ago  Notes (0)
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DUST MAGAZINE 
ISSUE #4 
“OUT-OUT” 

STARRING: MARINA ABRAMOVIC & LOUIS WEARING GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI

PHOTOGRAPHY: LUIGI AND LUCA
CREATIVE DIRECTION: LUIGI VITALI AND LUCA GUARINI
ART DIRECTION: MATTEO GIORDANO
STYLIST: DAN THAWLEY
MAKE UP AND HAIR: GILLES DEGIVRY 

SPECIAL THANKS TO GIULIANO ARGENZIANO, SIDNEY RUSSEL AND ALLISON BRAINARD AT ABRAMOVIC LLC

www.dustmagazine.com

DUST MAGAZINE
ISSUE #4 
“OUT-OUT”

STARRING: MARINA ABRAMOVIC & LOUIS WEARING GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI

PHOTOGRAPHY: LUIGI AND LUCA
CREATIVE DIRECTION: LUIGI VITALI AND LUCA GUARINI
ART DIRECTION: MATTEO GIORDANO
STYLIST: DAN THAWLEY
MAKE UP AND HAIR: GILLES DEGIVRY

SPECIAL THANKS TO GIULIANO ARGENZIANO, SIDNEY RUSSEL AND ALLISON BRAINARD AT ABRAMOVIC LLC

www.dustmagazine.com

1 week ago  Notes (5)
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Read me on i-D Online about the 28th edition of the Hyères Festival de Mode & de Photographie in the south of France:

http://i-donline.com/2013/05/creative-encounters-at-hyeres-2013/

Above: “A Screen To The Brain” by Felipe Oliviera Baptista & Bureau Betak

“I Know Simply That The Sky Will Last Longer Than I” by Pierre Debusschere ft. Andrew Westermann (pictured). 

2 weeks ago  Notes (2)
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Drop N°1, the first organic designer fragrance from Austrian designers Wendy&Jim.
Limited edition fox-skull porcelain flask by Augarten Porcelain, Vienna. 

Drop N°1, the first organic designer fragrance from Austrian designers Wendy&Jim.

Limited edition fox-skull porcelain flask by Augarten Porcelain, Vienna. 

1 month ago  Notes (0)
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cosmomacdonald:

’ Time’ Mixed media collage with drawing, A3, 2013

cosmomacdonald:

’ Time’ Mixed media collage with drawing, A3, 2013

1 month ago  Notes (4)
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“You Loved Me Like A Distant Star” - by Tracey Emin for David Bowie (2013)

“You Loved Me Like A Distant Star” - by Tracey Emin for David Bowie (2013)

1 month ago  Notes (6)
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The Original EcoSphere®

The Original EcoSphere®

1 month ago  Notes (3)
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/ Comic Relief

GUEST POST by Dan Thawley

Editor in Chief / A MAGAZINE curated by

t h i s

image

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t h a t

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(Source: melaniecrete)

1 month ago  Notes (7)
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“I Had a Flashback of Something that Never Existed”, no. 18 of 34, from the illustrated book, Ode à l’oubli by Louise Bourgeois (2002). 

“I Had a Flashback of Something that Never Existed”, no. 18 of 34, from the illustrated book, Ode à l’oubli by Louise Bourgeois (2002). 

1 month ago  Notes (39)
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Read me in Dapper Dan Magazine Issue 07 “Our Lady of Antwerp” on Page 9, Opinions & Inspirations about Ann Demeulemeester

Read me in Dapper Dan Magazine Issue 07 

“Our Lady of Antwerp” on Page 9, Opinions & Inspirations about Ann Demeulemeester

1 month ago  Notes (1)
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Read me on Interview Magazine in conversation with the Belgian designer Cedric Charlier before his Autumn Winter 2013-14 show in Paris.

It’s the day before the third Paris show for his namesake collection, and Belgian designer Cédric Charlier is more than calm, reviewing the 30-odd silhouettes he will parade at the Palais de Tokyo on Tuesday afternoon. At Charlier’s side is his friend and mentor Tony Delcampe, director of La Cambre fashion academy in Brussels, who counts not only Charlier but also Anthony Vaccarello and Theory’s Olivier Theyskens amongst his school’s alumni. Together the pair watches as a hairstylist crafts a meticulous swept-back beehive, a key reference for tomorrow’s show that will traverse, in Charlier’s own words, “a contemporary mediaeval. It’s about the sophistication and purity of illuminated manuscript.”But you can put to rest any unwanted visions of chainmail straitjacket hybrids or gold leaf. Charlier is a subtle guy, and his heroine an unlikely candidate for excess—however, fur and embroidery do make their first appearance in his lineup for Fall/Winter 2013. The translation lies more in the precision of the medieval calligraphy against the unbridled emotion of the outsider art movement—a box-pleated collar peeking out from a paint-splattered perfecto, for example.Perhaps it’s a freedom from the tunnel vision of a “house heritage,” yet since his exit from Cacharel in 2011, Charlier’s work has flourished. Deconstruction, a somewhat constant obsession of the Belgians, is given an uptown polish under his deft hand. “It’s about the ‘truth’of the body, but at the same time, an enveloping architecture. The attitude is sophisticated but subversive,” he explains, fondling the inverted piping that trails down the spine of a sleek waistcoat dress. This ‘polish’ has not gone unnoticed this past year, with major retailers including Barneys, Fred Segal, and The Webster Miami quickly snapping up both runway and pre-collections—clothes that stem from myriad eferences without ever quite straying into the avant-garde.“A feminine allure is integral to my work,” says Charlier, “and the first season was about the dress, the jacket, the coat. After three seasons, now I can work deeper with the opposition of materials, with overlay and a study of matte and shine.” He’ll play out that research tomorrow to a soundscape of ambient noise and ’70s glam rock, in yet another riff on his calm-versus-chaotic agenda—one that should leave both editors and retailers more than happy amidst these final days of a long, snowy fashion month.

Read me on Interview Magazine in conversation with the Belgian designer Cedric Charlier before his Autumn Winter 2013-14 show in Paris.

It’s the day before the third Paris show for his namesake collection, and Belgian designer Cédric Charlier is more than calm, reviewing the 30-odd silhouettes he will parade at the Palais de Tokyo on Tuesday afternoon. At Charlier’s side is his friend and mentor Tony Delcampe, director of La Cambre fashion academy in Brussels, who counts not only Charlier but also Anthony Vaccarello and Theory’s Olivier Theyskens amongst his school’s alumni. Together the pair watches as a hairstylist crafts a meticulous swept-back beehive, a key reference for tomorrow’s show that will traverse, in Charlier’s own words, “a contemporary mediaeval. It’s about the sophistication and purity of illuminated manuscript.”

But you can put to rest any unwanted visions of chainmail straitjacket hybrids or gold leaf. Charlier is a subtle guy, and his heroine an unlikely candidate for excess—however, fur and embroidery do make their first appearance in his lineup for Fall/Winter 2013. The translation lies more in the precision of the medieval calligraphy against the unbridled emotion of the outsider art movement—a box-pleated collar peeking out from a paint-splattered perfecto, for example.

Perhaps it’s a freedom from the tunnel vision of a “house heritage,” yet since his exit from Cacharel in 2011, Charlier’s work has flourished. Deconstruction, a somewhat constant obsession of the Belgians, is given an uptown polish under his deft hand. “It’s about the ‘truth’of the body, but at the same time, an enveloping architecture. The attitude is sophisticated but subversive,” he explains, fondling the inverted piping that trails down the spine of a sleek waistcoat dress. This ‘polish’ has not gone unnoticed this past year, with major retailers including Barneys, Fred Segal, and The Webster Miami quickly snapping up both runway and pre-collections—clothes that stem from myriad eferences without ever quite straying into the avant-garde.

“A feminine allure is integral to my work,” says Charlier, “and the first season was about the dress, the jacket, the coat. After three seasons, now I can work deeper with the opposition of materials, with overlay and a study of matte and shine.” He’ll play out that research tomorrow to a soundscape of ambient noise and ’70s glam rock, in yet another riff on his calm-versus-chaotic agenda—one that should leave both editors and retailers more than happy amidst these final days of a long, snowy fashion month.

2 months ago  Notes (0)
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