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VANE Opens New Space in New York

July 11th, 2011

We had a chance to check out the new VANE concept store on the Lower East Side this weekend and the New York-based label’s latest spot has definitely earned a repeat visit (if not visits) from us in the very near future, for its mix of downtown industrial cool and marine and heritage-inspired prep.

Designed around the theme of their latest collection, “Dark Forest” (a collaboration project with other artists and designers), the shop took over an old building and gut renovated it to create a moody, wilderness-inspired space. Rather than hide the building’s imperfections, we love how the store highlights the raw essence and industrial beauty of the space through the use of concrete and exposing the old brick walls and wood flooring of the original building architecture.

As for the merchandise, expect to see a cross-category offering of VANE’s exclusive apparel, jewelry, and footwear collections, as well as their popular VANE x Sebago shoe line. The VANE merchandise is complemented by a hand-selection of vintage Rolex watches and vintage frames, along with drawers of knick-knacks and accessories (think magazines, old notebooks and Polaroids).

The store is open for an entire year (until its next collaboration takes flight) at 125 Rivington Street on the Lower East Side. Note the hours too: the space is open till 10pm on weekdays and 11pm on weekends to flow with the late night whims of its neighbors and neighborhood.

- TC

PF Flyers x Freemans Sporting Club Collaboration

May 5th, 2011

We had a chance to check out PF Flyers’ latest collaboration last night at a party in New York. The venerable sneaker company has teamed up with Freemans Sporting Club (FSC) to reissue two archival styles from PF Flyers’ 1949 catalog: the Taghkanic and Mohonk.

The Taghkanic (photo at left) is a revised saddle shoe named after Lake Taghkanic, a favorite cooling-off spot located near the Hudson River for members of the FSC (which began as a group of friends who met above Freemans Restaurant on the Lower East Side to organize weekend getaways and outdoor activities). The Mohonk, meantime, is a streamlined version of a charming 1949 PF Flyers canvas rec boot, named for FSC’s picturesque natural escape in the Appalachian Mountains. Both shoes embody the brands’ shared values of classic American style and timeless design, while keeping PF Flyers’ commitment to comfort and ease.

The “PF Flyers 1949 Freemans Sporting Club Editions” are now available at both Freemans Sporting Club locations in New York City, as well as American Rag in Los Angeles, Conveyer at Fred Segal Santa Monica, Local 35 in Portland, Villains in San Francisco, and on RevolveClothing.com. We think it’d make a great summer staple to our wardrobe…do you agree?

Ralph Lauren Dazzles With 4D Show in New York

November 11th, 2010

The sky above the Upper East Side was turned into a stunning visual installation last night as Ralph Lauren celebrated its new store on Madison Avenue and ten years of e-commerce on RalphLauren.com. In what was billed as a “4D light installation,” passersby on the street were invited to experience a montage of larger-than-life sized images, including models and Polo players four stories tall and iconic Ralph Lauren fashion accessories that wrapped the length of the building. The projection was grand in spectacle and stunning in execution, giving the illusion that images were extending beyond the building and floating out into space toward the audience. The light show was complemented with transient sounds of music, illusions of blowing breezes, and even light mists of the new Big Pony Collection Fragrances, that were infused into the night’s air.

Through the use of advanced video mapping technology, this global event (a similar show took place in London) marked a first for the fashion world, and showed the Ralph Lauren brand moving in a more innovative direction, combining art, music and fragrance with its venerable fashion brand.

Find out more about the event and the new Madison Avenue flagship by visiting the store at 888 Madison Avenue in New York. Or head over to RalphLauren.com and the official Big Pony site for details about the new collections.
Check out a clip of the show below:

Big Pony Fragrance Collection in 4-D Ralph Lauren Light Show

Inflatable New York Street Art

March 21st, 2010

We’re not quite sure how we missed this living in New York, but check out this image of artist Joshua Allen Harris’ inflatable street art installations. Harris has fastened regular plastic bags into 3D likenesses of animals and creatures of all shapes and sizes, inflating and deflating atop subway grates as trains pass by underneath. It’s at once whimsical and surprising, whether you’re a passing pedestrian, or just an admirer from online or afar.

Harris has been relatively quiet about his sudden buzz, claiming in interviews that he’s simply using the materials of his environment to create something unique. Many have heralded his ingenuity in taking discarded trash bags and dirty air from the vents, and turning the elements into something beautiful. They have also praised him for adding some life to the monotonous gray cityscape of New York’s sidewalks and alleyways. The project is simple, catchy and undeniably effective. Check out Harris’ latest street-shot video — featuring a giant centaur rising out of the ground — below and click HERE to view all his videos on YouTube.

Jon Naar’s Faith In Graffiti

February 2nd, 2010

When photographer Jon Naar set out to document the graffiti movement in New York circa 1972, the city was a far cry from the artisanal frozen yogurt and ultra-thick gourmet burger hub that it is today. The once mighty metropolis was a collapsing circus tent ripe with financial misery, urban decay, and of course those gawdawful Mets. Union Square–now the centre of kitschy Obama knick knacks and Bobby Flay throwdowns–was an outdoor drug-den, where pushers and poppers replaced the farmers and picklers that make up the square’s current commercial set.

Amidst all the chaos, Naar–a photojournalist who had shot for The New York Times Magazine, Fortune, and IBM–was enlisted by British design firm Pentagram, to capture the rash of graffiti that had exploded across the five boroughs, most noticeably in the subterranean underbelly of New York City’s subway system. That same year, Village Voice reporter Vivian Gornick described the decrepit scene down below:

“The platform was indescribably filthy; the tile walls surrounding the staircases were streaked with years-old dirt and the graffiti of a thousand greasy marker pens: Johnny and Velda, ’69; The Jets Was Here; Lindsay Sucks; Tony and Maureen, ’71; Benny and Concita Forever; Loreen Is a Cunt; The Black Hawks Can Beat the Shit Outta the Silver Eagles Anytime. The floor was littered with the overflow of the trash cans that stood vaguely about: candy wrappers, orange peels, leaky milk cartons, prophylactic wrappers, torn nylon stockings, pellets of chewing gum, discarded junk mail, globbets of spit. The lights in the ceiling were crusted over with webs of dirt that threatened, momentarily, to fall onto the heads of the passengers.”

It was a veritable war zone; on one side the unionized gatekeepers of the MTA, hired by the city to protect whatever integrity their crumbling subway system had left, and on the other, the young generals born of economic strife, leading the charge of what New York Magazine’s Richard Goldstein called “the first genuine teenage street culture since the fifties.” Naar spent ten days on the front lines at the end of 1972, shooting 100 rolls of Kodachrome for a book that would become the seminal document of the graffiti movement: The Faith of Graffiti. With an essay by Norman Mailer providing an intellectual anchor, the reissued tome is now thirty years old and just as relevant.

Mailer’s words helped legitimize the still nascent art form, which was generally frowned upon by the city’s hoi polloi. “Graffiti, the language of the anonymous, provokes and demands that an indifferent world recognize the individuality, talent, and existence of its creators,” wrote Mailer. These creators were generally youth of colour, a distinction that lent itself to the vitriol of New York’s upper crust and authorities. Naar and Mailer’s book helped plant the seeds of change.

While capturing the guerilla artists in action, Naar empathized with his subjects, and even managed to find beauty in their work. “I was essentially non-judgmental. As a photographer my pictures should really speak for themselves. I did have a sympathy for these kids. The majority were black, Puerto Rican, and they were mostly from the ghettos. They worked in gangs, and in groups, and I was excited and still am by this form of outsider art,” he says, over the phone from his home in New Jersey. “I’m a photojournalist. I have to go into a subject with an open mind.”

According to New York’s policy makers, the city was under assault; not by grizzly gangsters with pistols, but by agile kids with spray cans. The back cover of Faith’s reissue (which includes 32 new photos from Naar) features a telling portrait of several taggers, each holding up their respective identities or “tags” wildly scribbled on place cards accompanied by a mischievous smile. “I lived on East 50th street in Manhattan and I took a train to Harlem because I figured that’s where the Graffiti was going to be,” says Naar of the portrait. “The book’s designer and I got out at 155th street station and there on the platform were a bunch of kids. They came up to me because I had two cameras, and as a New Yorker I was hardly threatened at 2 PM by a bunch of kids. They said ‘Hey there nice cameras, what are you doing?’ and I told them, and they started laughing. ‘We are graffiti writers’.”

The next ten days, Naar describes as thrilling. “I was in no great danger because I didn’t really hang around a lot at night, but we were frequently chased and harassed by the MTA police and regular NYC cops,” he says. “These kids took tremendous risks.”

The pivotal taggers from that bygone era are now middle aged men, and Mr. Naar is well into his seventies. Some are eager to distance themselves from their work, while others use it to make a buck, sometimes with Naar’s assistance. Clearly the man has a fondness for the good old days. “Most of the graffiti in New York has been cleaned up but you can still find it. But coming in on the train, the railroad lines are full of the most incredible graffiti. It has evolved dramatically. It’s much more convoluted and baroque. But I personally love the simplicity of the tag. I like retro,” he says. “It captured the zeitgeist of the time. The spirit of the time and place.”

-Daniel Barna

(Photos courtesy of Jon Naar)

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