Tag : inspiratie

mb1Moodboard-ul Inspiratiei: Muza

Moodboard-ul Inspiratiei: Muza

dam vina pe ea pentru neputintele noastre. spunem “nu vrea sa vina” cind, de fapt, nu suntem suficient de relaxati ca sa primim ce ne dau ceilalti.

inspiratia e ca un val care se aseaza peste valuri tesute de altii, sau colectate de noi din experiente anterioare.

e ca o pictura care apare dupa ce pinza a fost revopsita in alb ca sa acopere o alta pictura.

nu stiu de ce credem ca inspiratia e femeie – Muza. dar ar putea fi una dintre femeile pictate de Barbara Hangan. femei colaje de stari si emotii, din fotografii de familie sau reviste Vogue. de azi sau de acum 100 de ani.

femei care-ti vorbesc dintre rame, fara sa rosteasca nimic. ca tabloul “Fata care a plecat sa se regaseasca la Buenos Aires”.

Barbara Hangan locuieste in Cluj.

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timp de o luna realizez un moodboard al inspiratiei cu oameni si intimplari care m-au inspirat , parte din proiectul international LiveInspire la care participa bloggeri din intreaga Europa. ma puteti vota aici🙂

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inspirationmoodboardMoodboad-ul Inspiratiei

Moodboad-ul Inspiratiei

in lumea creativilor moodboard-ul e locul acela in care aduni toate lucrurile care te-ar putea inspira pentru proiectul tau: imagini, bucati de material, flori etc.

dar cum arata moodboard-ul care sa defineasca inspiratia?

de miine, toata luna completez acest Moodboard, cu povesti despre ceea ce cred ca inseamna inspiratie;
7 povesti despre oameni pe care i-am intilnit si care sunt o sursa de inspiratie pt mine

moodboard-ul meu este parte dintr-un proiect international – Live Inspire la care Romania mai este reprezentata de Cristi China si Adi Hadean, ne puteti vota pe oricare dintre noi – dupa ce postam pe platforma story-urile noastre – ca sa cistige Romania competitia creativitatii europene.

proiectul este creat de Intesa Sanpaolo Bank.

de miine va stresez sa ma votati. primul post din moodboard-ul inspiratiei va fi despre Povestea muzei:)

P.S. impreuna cu Cristi si Adi am decis ca oricare dintre noi ar fi cistigatorul din dreptul Romaniei, vom dona premiul pentru o cauza caritabila.

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HL_3_helmut langsa-ti distrugi opera ca sa construiesti alta

sa-ti distrugi opera ca sa construiesti alta

“In 2009-2010, I donated a large volume of my body of work in fashion to the most important fashion, design, and contemporary art collections worldwide,” Lang went on. “After a fire in the building where our studio in New York is located, which could have destroyed the rest of the archive, and after going for months through the pieces to see in which condition they are, I slowly became intrigued by the idea of destroying it myself to use it as raw material for my art.”
Helmut Lang, fashion designer

Lang lanseaza astazi o expozitie de sculpturi realizata dintr-un amestec de gips, plastic si schite ale lucrarilor precedente.
o minunata metafora despre a putea sa treci peste ce ai construit, ca sa o iei de la capat.

Imi aminteste de o vorba pe care mi-a spus-o Gigi Caciuleanu “oamenii sunt ca niste cesti de ceai: ca sa putem sa punem lucruri noi in noi, trebuie sa avem exercitiul golirii”.

Make It Hard runs July 22 through August 8, 2011, at The Fireplace Project, 851 Springs Fireplace Road, East Hampton, N.Y., www.thefireplaceproject.com.

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karl_lagerfeld_3acasa la Karl Lagerfeld

acasa la Karl Lagerfeld

newyorker publica un portret foarte frumos al designerului Karl Lagerfeld. jurnalistul John Colapinto a petrecut o zi cu Largerfeld si se foloseste de aceasta “rama” ca sa faca un parcurs impresionant al unei mega cariere.

“I go to Colette,” he says, referring to the eclectic boutique on the Rue Saint-Honoré. “I buy all the new things, I buy all the music magazines, listen to new music.” (Last year, Lagerfeld released “My Favorite Songs,” a two-disk CD that included selections by hipster artists like Devendra Banhart, LCD Soundsystem, Super Furry Animals, the Fiery Furnaces, and Stereolab, as well as by the punk band Siouxsie and the Banshees, the bandleader Xavier Cugat, and Igor Stravinsky.) Famous among his friends for his capacity to absorb information, Lagerfeld is also renowned for his ability to translate what he consumes into fashion. “Karl reads everything, looks at everything,” the Paris fashion stylist Camille Bidault-Waddington says. “He’s permanently filling himself with independent culture and establishment culture, so basically he knows everything, and he’s like a sampling machine.” Lady Amanda Harlech, Lagerfeld’s “muse,” concurs. “He said to me once, almost in a worried way, that he has to find out everything there is to know, read everything,” she says. “The curiosity is ceaseless.”
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Lagerfeld spoke like this, almost without interruption, for nearly two hours. He then nodded discreetly to his hovering manservant, who vanished, then quickly reappeared with a silver salver upon which sat a pitcher of water, an empty glass, a foil envelope, and a spoon. Lagerfeld sprinkled brown powder from the envelope into the glass, added just enough water to wet the granules, then used the spoon to stir the mixture into a thick paste that resembled chocolate pudding but was, he said, protein. He spooned the substance into his mouth without relish, swallowed it, and was soon speaking again, about his plans to reprint the work of a once-popular poet named Anna de Noailles—“who was born Anna de Brancovan, and was of Romanian descent, and who was one of the first women elected to the Académie in Belgium—not in France, because she died in 1933—and her poetry is stunning.…”

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He spends most of his time in a thousand-square-foot room, at the center of which sat a modern fourposter bed. The posts were made of fluorescent bulbs, and a sable bedspread was strewn with paperbacks and magazines and more iPods. Lagerfeld says that he sleeps seven hours a night in this bed; he also spends considerable time lounging on it during his waking hours, reading and drawing. There was a large desk a few feet away, piled with papers, sketchbooks, magazines, books, newspapers, and art supplies. Lagerfeld complains that his desk kept getting “buried.” To deal with the problem, he recently bought four more desks. They got buried, too. A Mac G5 computer was visible among the messy stacks of books and papers on a long table at the foot of his bed, but Lagerfeld insists that he rarely uses it and does not surf the Internet—partly because he is fearful of how it might compromise his privacy. “I don’t want to be on the Internet,” he said. “I hardly use a credit card—everything where you can be fixed. I’m floating. Nobody can catch me, mmm?”

In the now.
Where Karl Lagerfeld lives.

aceste doua fotografii nu sunt publicate in newyorker, ele fac parte dintr-o sedinta foto de anul trecut, dar mie imi plac foarte mult pentru ca arata cit de pasionat de informatie e Lagerfeld si ca partea aia cu creatia care tine de inspiratie, care vine din neant, nu e chiar asa: e nevoie de o baza solida de informatie ca sta stea bine “muza” si sa si ramina pe linga tine

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clarcklucruri s!mpa care sa va inspire

lucruri s!mpa care sa va inspire

George Lois unul dintre cei mai mari art directori din lume, intr-un interviu inspirational care va aparea in nr 6 al revistei It’s nice that

On the power of art“Art is the most important thing in my life. I go to MoMA every Sunday, religiously. There’s an epiphany in every room. There’s probably 20 epiphanies in every room. Understanding the history of art, understanding the history of culture and movies—old black and white movies—and ballet and sports and all these things in the world is so incredibly important. It allows us to truly understand the culture, the zeitgeist of the time. Not only does it allow us to understand it, to report on it, but it allows us to be ahead of it. To literally be ahead.”

On clarity of vision“In my first year at the High School of Music and Art [New York] we had a poster class in which we had to do a poster for a country. I think I had Switzerland, so I got a photograph of the Alps—two, three, four beautiful mountains, one after the other, an aerial view. I put big type on the bottom that said‚ ‘Switzerland,’ and then I separated two of the mountains with a gigantic hunk of Swiss cheese. I had this design sense, a sense more to do with design than art, from the time I was very young. I understood that to do a poster you have to include an element of surprise. My teacher didn’t get it. She said‚ ‘George, the Swiss cheese is so out of proportion to the mountains.’ I think I said something like, ‘No shit!’”

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iata citeva coperte simpa, de peste tot din lume

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