Art and Music
Tapes’n’Tales: HuskMitNavn

Over the years, Copenhagen-based illustrator and street artist HuskMitNavn (RememberMyName in Danish) has focused on the dynamic interplay between western culture, technology and contemporary society as refracted through the lens of everyday life. “I have worked full time as an artist for the past 12 years”, the artist tells us when asked about his personal experience growing up in Copenhagen. “Most of my childhood I sat and drew in my room in the house in the suburb where I grew up. I began painting graffiti in 1993 at the age of 17 and against all odds I made an art career out of it, simply by having fun with it and working my butt off”. Read the rest of this entry »
Tapes’n’Tales: Emiliano Ponzi

“It’s possible, in a poem or short story, to write about commonplace things and objects using commonplace but precise language to endow those things – a chair, a window curtain, a fork, a stone, a woman’s earring – with immense, even startling power […]”(Raymond Carver, A Storyteller’s Shoptalk, 1981). An artistic oeuvre that can be interpreted as the expression of a stylistic research that aims to explore the complex and stratified field of everyday life through the use of an ordinary language that is essentially plain and devoid of any visual-narrative frills. Qualities like linearity, humour and a refined unpredictability mark the work of the already well-known Italian artist and illustrator Emiliano Ponzi. Read the rest of this entry »
Graham Nash: Life on the Road

Showing through May 26th at Proud Camden, Life on the Road is a stunning photographic collection of personal and intimate portraits taken by internationally renowned English singer-songwriter and political activist Graham Nash, founding member of the Hollies and Crosby, Stills & Nash. This photographic series, spanning from 1969 to 2003, showcases a unique selection of street photographs and portraits of family and friends featuring Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, David Crosby and other legendary musicians of the 1970s. Read the rest of this entry »
Brooklyn Gang, Summer 1959: BRUCE DAVIDSON

“You’re the only love I’ve ever known, just as long as you stay with me, the whole world is my throne” (Bob Dylan, Beyond Here Lies Nothin’). Columbia Records released Bob Dylan’s thirty-third studio album “Together Through Life” on April 28, 2009. A black-and-white picture portraying a couple of young lovers in the backseat of a car graces its front cover and there’s no need to add anything else. It’s startlingly intimate. It’s authentic. It’s compelling. It’s perfect. It’s so perfect it almost hurts if we consider the original story that inspired it. Read the rest of this entry »
Tapes’n’Tales: SHARMILA BANERJEE

The fresh cartoon-style of Berlin-based illustrator Sharmila Banerjee plays with an unconventional and psychedelically-structured observation of our own individual personalities in the natural environment. As demonstrated in the evocatively titled “Human Nature” – the artist’s new solo exhibition currently showing at Inuit Bookshop as part of the Seventh edition of the BilBOlbul International Comics Festival in Bologna – Sharmila Banerjee’s work encourages both reflection and examination of humans’ complex and powerful behavioural dynamics. Read the rest of this entry »
Death Disco: New Works by Dave Muller

Currently showing at The Approach in London is a new solo from Los Angeles-based artist, musician, DJ and record collector Dave Muller. Entitled Death Disco, “the exhibition expands upon several familiar and more recent threads of the artist’s musically obsessed and multivalent art practice, namely death and celebration. Muller addresses feelings of loss and excess, reveling in a sort of joyful morbidity. Read the rest of this entry »



























The Future Is Bright: THE FRESH & ONLYS 




Better Than Something: Interview with Ian Markiewicz and Alex Hammond 

Filming The Music: AG ROJAS 
Coyotes in My Backyard: TRAVIS MILLARD
The Alchemy of Love and Fire: NEIL KRUG 

Drenched in The Rain of Dreams: Dimitri Drjuchin
I CAN SEE FOR MILES: The Art of Jacob Escobedo 