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Art and Design

Art & Design | Marlowe by Cindy Hughes

Cat pictures, people. They make the world wide web go round.

This one of shelter kitty Marlowe is part of a project that captures the beautiful, quirky faces of animals in need of homes. When they’re willing to sit for the camera, that is. “We have a lot of photos of cats running away from us,” said Lisa Brideau, the volunteer who started the project. Her hope? That potential adopters will fall in love with the photogenic faces.

If you’re a photographer who wants to get involved, contact Lisa. And if you want to adopt one of the featured animals, contact the shelters. Who wouldn’t want to wake up every morning to a face like this?

[Photo by Cindy Hughes]

Pinstagram | The lion, the loft and the location

Pinstagram is a mashup of Kelsey Dundon’s Pinterest and Instagram feeds. In other words, the dream and the reality.

Sand on sand on sandmy trip to the beach in White Rock, just outside Vancouver (I was location scouting, which technically makes this work).

Smizing with Melissa Knight and Alicia Quan at the London Drugs Fall Beauty Preview + beautiful, beautiful nail polish polka dots.

A stunning all-white loft & lovely letters at Gastown’s new L’Atelier Home (which I wrote about right here).

My friend Nadia’s garden decor (these things really need to make a comeback) & a colourful little planter box.

The king of the jungle & the queen of my house, who just discovered my desk drawers.

A geometric terrarium at Old Faithful Shop & the coolest way to house an air plant.

P.S. Follow Kelsey Dundon on Pinterest and Instagram.

Bookmark | Cinemagraphs

In The Anthology’s Bookmark column we explore some of the most inspiring places on the wild, wild web.

They’re a little creepy, like the portraits in Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion that follow you with their eyes. But they’re also the coolest things ever.

Part picture, part video and all .gif, Cinemagraphs are the brain child of New York-based visual artist Kevin Burg and photographer Jamie Beck.

Their concept spread like wildfire: there’s now a Cinemagr.am app, which, if I wanted to become even more addicted to my iPhone, I would download, and it seems everyone on Tumblr has attempted a version of their own. Still, nobody is doing it as well.

Their fashion editorial portfolio is endlessly inspiring so bookmark Cinemagraphs already. And bookmark The Anthology while you’re at it.

[Images — can I call them that? — from Cinemagraphs, obviously.]

Diary | Glamour Shots

Photographer Mark Leibowitz was in Vancouver a few weeks ago shooting street style for Glamour Magazine. (Can’t wait to see those pictures, these are actually his shots from various fashion weeks.)

The man is a crazy talent — just peep his portfolio — and though he may look Canadian in his Teh Scarf, he’s from the Bay Area.

Photographer Paul Melo of Style Quotient captured much of Mark’s shoot on film (can’t wait to see that video!).

And it was funny to see them compare their photo-taking process. Paul declared himself more of a stay-still-and-set-up-the-shot-carefully kind of guy, whereas Mark and his subjects were moving all over the place.

Will my street style shot make it into the magazine? Who knows.

But thanks to this blog and my creative company Northill I feel like my life is one big photo shoot (see exhibits A, B, C, D and E).

And that’s a beautiful thing.

[Photos by Mark Leibowitz for Glamour Magazine except the one of the photographer himself. I took that.]

P.S. Facebook’s one big photo shoot so like The Anthology.

Home | Milk Glass Flower Pot

Does this count as a DIY? Taking a cute little plant and putting it in an even cuter little pot? I’m going to say yes. It’s a great combo — the ladylike (vintage milk glass) and the lady killer (Venus fly trap).

My grandma gave me dozens of pieces from her milk glass collection and I usually use them for dips, crackers and lime wedges when I throw parties.

But it works well as a flower pot too. I can’t believe milk glass isn’t more of a thing. All the pieces are the same colour so it’s a foolproof way to mix and match cheaply and chicly. Grab some before everyone catches on, there are quite a few on eBay.

The silver potted succulent is from Kermodi.

Art & Design | Jason Young’s 2054

Artist Jason Young’s vision of the future is idyllic: no wars, no global warming, just peace, love and curling. Yes, curling. The kicker? He envisions this utopia in the not-so-distant future; the year 2054 to be exact.

“People feel it’s a little ambitious – that we would so soon have evolved so far,” says the Vancouver-born, New York-based painter and performance artist. “But we’re being asked to sacrifice so many things for our future and yet there’s no positive vision being provided — it’s always drowning polar bears and doom and gloom. Enough with the stick, what about the carrot?”

The carrot is Young’s ‘2054’, a performance that resembles a curling match played by actors on the roof of Soho House (which many non-New Yorkers will remember from the Sex and the City episode in which Samantha impersonates a club member to gain access to the rooftop pool).

Instead of playing the game to win, the teams played to paint. Each illuminated stone was filled with coloured resin so it left streaks of colour as it glided across the “sheet,” which was actually a 50-foot lightbox that would later be divided into ten pieces and parcelled off for collectors.

This short film shows how it all went down.

So why, of all sports, did Young chose curling as the one played in his utopian future? Well, he’s Canadian. But there’s more to it than that; Young chose the game of stones partly because it’s built on collaboration and communication, partly because of its visual interest, and partly because of its obscurity.

“In the States people don’t really know the rules so it gives me a lot of artistic license. If I were to try doing this with baseball or football people would be up in arms,” he says.

Instead, they embraced it. Now there’s talk of taking ‘2054’ to cities like Sao Paolo and London and maybe, possibly, hopefully one day in the not-so-distant future, Vancouver.

[Supplied photos]

Beauty | AG Hair

What do these images have to do with hair? (Aside from that mermaid’s sick Marge Simpson ‘do?) They inspire my favourite kind of hairstyle: go to the beach, let your salty hair air dry into messy sea witch locks. And then put on tons of jewelry to distract people.

Also, they’re part of AG Hair’s feature on yours truly. You’ll find it, along with a few confessions about my high school crush, addictions and desire to time travel, riiiiiight here.

Thanks for having me, AG!

Bookmark | An Apple a Day

In The Anthology’s Bookmark column we explore some of the most inspiring places on the wild, wild web. 

I’ll be the first to admit it: I am a creative creep. And by that I don’t mean that I find creative new ways to creep on people, I mean that I like to creep creative people. And one of those people is Amy Merrick.

The Brooklyn-based floral stylist’s blog is stunningly beautiful in a “makes me wish I kept fresh-cut flowers on my desk” sort of way.

Her photos are quiet, somehow calming.

They make me want to become a better photographer. Or at least a photographer.

If you like pretty things, and I have a feeling you do, then bookmark An Apple a Day. And bookmark The Anthology while you’re at it.

[Images from An Apple a Day, obviously.]

Art & Design | Angela Grossmann’s The Future is Female

When I reached Angela Grossmann in her studio to interview her for a piece in Vitamin Daily she apologized for putting me on hold while she removed her gloves.

“I’m always working,” she said.

The prolific Vancouver-based painter’s latest show The Future is Female is a study in being studied. It captures – in soft-coloured pieces and more aggressive-looking collages – women in private, sometimes awkward moments.

“We are always being looked at,” she said of the fairer sex. “We can’t see ourselves outside of the influences of being looked at our whole lives, even when we’re alone.”

The Future is Female finds beauty in less-than-glamourous moments like getting dressed. In it, Grossmann uses the female form as subject matter in a way that only a woman could.

“I feel tectonic plates shifting in the art world. Some of the best artists right now are women.” Among them are Marina Abramović and Cindy Sherman, whom Grossmann says “Mark a real movement towards women-centred ideas.” Funny, I’d say the same about her.

The Future is Female is at Vancouver’s Winsor Gallery until May 6, 2012.

[Image: Angela Grossmann’s Cinnabar Twist from Winsor Gallery.]