Un bello tutorial para peinarnos chicas 😉
Posted by Kenia en Pulsar 107.3 on Monday, July 13, 2015
- The ultimate man-bun video. [Facebook]
- There’s a secret gallery in Harlem! The not-quite-legal space was “discovered” by Cy Gavin, and if you want to visit, you have to set up a meeting in a McDonald’s around the corner. The Can, as it is known, is presently showing work by ektor garcia and Michael Blake. [ARTnews]
- When visiting the Weather Channel takes too many steps, there’s an even lazier way to check on the weather, the standalone site “Will it rain in …?” only asks for you to type in your city. [Willitrain.in]
- Why are fashion exhibitions at museums more popular than art exhibitions? “The bottom line is that however much we love to look at art, everyone gets dressed in the morning.” [artnet News]
- Bushwick gallery Norte Maar has moved to East New York. Will these pioneers launch a full-on art migration to the more affordable parts of the city? [Bedford and Bowery]
- The Knockdown Center’s latest exhibition is designed to be interacted with—and viewed—via drones. The future is here, and it is fucking weird. [The Wall Street Journal]
- In other news related to viewing artwork through the eyes of technology, here’s yet another article about Instagram’s increasing role in the art world. [The New Yorker]
- The Shaw Festival has a new artistic director: British theatre and opera director Tim Carroll. The Niagara-on-the-Lake theatre festival is the second largest repertory company in North America, but has faced much criticism for its ongoing lack of diverse casting. Best known for his handling of Shakespearean works, Caroll will take over for the 2017 season and be at the helm of a $45 million building project. [The Globe and Mail]
- Clearly, lion cubs give the best hugs ever. [Reddit]
- “Here was something for our kids, all our kids—not just any kids’ show, but the kids’ show, created to give a head start to the kids who needed it the most, advantaged or not, and that was proven to work… And now it was being sold, not just to commercial television, but to hypercommercial television, a gold-plated premium channel that requires either cable or broadband and then a subscription fee on top of that.” No one is happy with Sesame Street’s move to HBO, and with good reason. [Time]
- Berlin is finally getting its much-needed modern art museum. More than filling the need for more institutional exhibition space in the capital, there’s optimism that a new structure can fill in some of the gaps in the Kulturforum. The pretty desolate cultural district was built by West Germany on a site reduced to rubble in World War II to compensate for the loss of the Museumsinsel to the East. [The New York Times]
- Speaking of in-city rivalries, Brooklyn’s booming skyline may soon have its answer to Manhattan’s mega-tower craze. A developer has amassed enough air rights in Downtown Brooklyn to construct a skyscraper on par with the Empire State Building. [Curbed]
- London’s Whitechapel just announced its Music for Museums fall programming, and we’re pretty excited about the line-up: Florian Hecker! Rjoyi Ikeda! Hassan Khan! [Whitechapel Gallery]
- Ethan Chiel talks to Olia Lialina about her ongoing restoration of old Geocities sites. [Fusion]
- For $65, you can see Yoko Ono’s Plastic Ono Band perform at MoMA tonight. It’s one of several art-world activities coming up in the next few days. [Observer]
- Ever wanted to cast your own dildo? A smithing group in Virginia just received a donation of “High quality steel in the form of used casting molds.” It is a giant box of dicks. [Facebook]
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