FIERTH.com / Douchebag Name Generator
by FIERTH on Feb 01, 2010 | No Comments
Get your Douchebag name [here]
Posted in WTF

M.I.A. Bad Girls ! she get’s down - she can hang -and have you trembling


STUDDING THE INTERN - We were really excited this week when we got a new line of men’s clothing in called Stud Muffin from New York designer Kyle Brincefield. So excited, in fact, that we decided to dress our intern, Tyler, in the studded garb. Tyler is a sweet young gentleman from Kentucky, who just moved here January 1st. So of course we loved seeing him in the studded shorts, vest, and mask. We put him in a pair of patched up underwear by Tom-Tom… just because we could :)
-ALBERT PARIS


Click on the link to preview my brand spankin new photography book WOLFPACK! in it’s entirety. 186 pages, soft cover, 8 x10 color and B&W. Art Direction by Frank Gargiulo. Foreward by Paul Darling & Epilogue by Clint Catalyst. 10 limited edition copies accompanied with a signed 5x7 print will be available at the launch on Friday, February 17 @ Splatterpool Art Space for $150 each and the remaining copies sans print are available to order NOW @ blurb.com for $100 each plus shipping.
http://www.blurb.com/books/2956776Will Spangenberg photographed by Walt Cessna Bklyn 11

what to do, what to do…

“This bold, globe-spanning survey is the first book to thoroughly explore the radical, long-standing interdependence between art and homosexuality. It draws examples from the full range of the Western tradition, including classical, Renaissance, and contemporary art, with special focus on the modern era. It was in the modern period, when arguments about homosexuality and the avant-garde were especially public, that our current conception of the artist and the homosexual began to take shape, and almost as quickly to overlap. Not a chronology of gay or lesbian artists, the book is a fascinating and sophisticated account of the ways two conspicuous identities have fundamentally informed one another.
Art and Homosexuality discusses many of modernism’s canonical figures—painters like Courbet, Picasso, and Pollock; writers like Whitman and Stein—and issues, such as the rise of abstraction, the avant-garde’s relationship to its patrons and the political exploitation of art. It shows that many of the core ideas that define modernism are nearly indecipherable without an understanding of the paired identities of artist and homosexual. Illustrated with over 175 b/w and color images that range from high to popular culture and from Ancient Greece to contemporary America, Art and Homosexuality punctures the platitudes surrounding discussions of both aesthetics and sexual identity and takes our understanding of each in stimulating new directions.”
HOMO MAGAZINE: FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK & TWITTER

“respect”

Amanda Lepore
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