Celebrity Life
14 Design Exhibitions For An Artsy Summer Experience
Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Minimalist Art, Maximum Emotions
There’s no doubt Alex Lam inherited his musical talent from his parents, his father being Cantopop legend George Lam Chi-Cheung, and his mother, Sally Yeh. Still, the singer-songwriter and actor hasn’t let privilege get to his head — he’s not afraid to explore other paths, from a stint in Los Angeles to discover yoga and becoming a yoga teacher, to dipping his toes in fashion.
Lam met Hiro Yoshikawa, founder and designer of Washi Jeans, a Japanese denim brand, a couple years back and was intrigued by the designer’s backstory. Now based in Hong Kong, Yoshikawa is the 18th generation of a revered sake maker in Okayama, Japan, and the first to leave the family business to pursue his own passion in denim-making. By chance, Yoshikawa had found an old document that charted out his family’s history, written on washi paper. Inspired by this, he developed and patented the Washi No. 6 paper yarn, which he utilizes in his first solo collection launching this month.
Lam, who has always had an eye for detail, quickly became an ambassador and muse for Yoshikawa, and took it upon himself to bring the recognition Yoshikawa deserves by helping him stage his upcoming solo debut.
We sit down with Alex Lam and Hiro Yoshikawa at Washi Jean's studio to talk about style and the upcoming debut of Yoshikawa's solo collection Life on Earth.
Can you describe your style? What are your wardrobe essentials?
AL: My style has always been inspired by musicians. I grew up watching some of my favourite bands like The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, and today, I'm inspired by singers like Drake. For me, my summer essentials include a sleeveless vest, a good multi-functional blazer and a pair of high-quality designer jeans.
Have you always been passionate about fashion and did you want to work in fashion?
AL: I have always cared about how I look and my outfits since I was a kid. I remember there was one time when the collar of my t-shirt wasn't right and I wouldn’t wear it out until my parents fixed it for me. Having friends who are in the fashion industry allows me to execute and experiment my ideas during workshops, like the ‘marshmallow’ colourway of the t-shirt I’m wearing right now.
How did the both of you meet?
AL: I met Hiro-san thought some of our mutual friends.
HY: have been making jeans for other brands for the past 30 years and it has always been my dream to have my own denim brand. I have always hung out with people from the fashion industry, and meeting Alex from the music and acting world has made my life more fun and exciting.
Can you tell us a bit about your project with Hiro-san?
AL: I was hanging out with a group of producers and we often talk about fashion shows, designer brands’ videos, installation art and music. Once we found out Hiro-san wanted to launch his own denim brand this year, we decided to catch this opportunity and put our ideas together. We are organising a VIP launch event with a fashion show on June 11, 2021.
What was the biggest challenge you had to overcome with this project?
AL: I think the rules of the game changed after Covid started last year. We looked at online fashion shows last year, without the tradition styles, and we knew our team needed to do it in a cleverer way. The restriction for event gathering is 30 persons at the moment, so we were not able to invite too many friends and make the event as big as before. Plus the campaign and fashion show video shoot all in one day, that’s the biggest challenge in this project.
HY: We have been staying in our studio almost every day is the past few months, meeting different parties like our PR team, models, videographers and producers.
What else are you up to this year that you can share with us?
AL: I have released a new song and I just finished a music video for another song. I have also been working on my YouTube channel and created a few series, but it’s been slightly slowed down because I was focusing in this project.
Has the pandemic affected the way you work or changed your priorities?
AL: Before Covid, I was busy working with clients, who often prepared everything. With changes and restrictions during this period, I am able to organise and create more content by myself.
What are you currently inspired by?
AL: There are many indie musicians and young kids out there who are doing their music in their unique styles. I admire them a lot as they can release songs as long as they think it sounds good. I used think good music requires the best studio and recording equipment, but turned out a lot of indie musicians are producing high quality songs just by working at home.
You have a YouTube channel, you're into fashion, music as well as classic cars. How did you get into each of those passions and how do you balance it all?
AL: Project by project. I’m now focusing more on quantity over quality and I'll keep learning from the progress and mistakes.
Do you have a motto you live by?
Stay healthy. As I was a yoga teacher, I still practice yoga for two to three hours each day. It’s a good way to reflect on myself and find peace.
The post Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Minimalist Art, Maximum Emotions appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Wallace Chan Exhibits his Titanium Sculptures in Venice
There’s no doubt Alex Lam inherited his musical talent from his parents, his father being Cantopop legend George Lam Chi-Cheung, and his mother, Sally Yeh. Still, the singer-songwriter and actor hasn’t let privilege get to his head — he’s not afraid to explore other paths, from a stint in Los Angeles to discover yoga and becoming a yoga teacher, to dipping his toes in fashion.
Lam met Hiro Yoshikawa, founder and designer of Washi Jeans, a Japanese denim brand, a couple years back and was intrigued by the designer’s backstory. Now based in Hong Kong, Yoshikawa is the 18th generation of a revered sake maker in Okayama, Japan, and the first to leave the family business to pursue his own passion in denim-making. By chance, Yoshikawa had found an old document that charted out his family’s history, written on washi paper. Inspired by this, he developed and patented the Washi No. 6 paper yarn, which he utilizes in his first solo collection launching this month.
Lam, who has always had an eye for detail, quickly became an ambassador and muse for Yoshikawa, and took it upon himself to bring the recognition Yoshikawa deserves by helping him stage his upcoming solo debut.
We sit down with Alex Lam and Hiro Yoshikawa at Washi Jean's studio to talk about style and the upcoming debut of Yoshikawa's solo collection Life on Earth.
Can you describe your style? What are your wardrobe essentials?
AL: My style has always been inspired by musicians. I grew up watching some of my favourite bands like The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, and today, I'm inspired by singers like Drake. For me, my summer essentials include a sleeveless vest, a good multi-functional blazer and a pair of high-quality designer jeans.
Have you always been passionate about fashion and did you want to work in fashion?
AL: I have always cared about how I look and my outfits since I was a kid. I remember there was one time when the collar of my t-shirt wasn't right and I wouldn’t wear it out until my parents fixed it for me. Having friends who are in the fashion industry allows me to execute and experiment my ideas during workshops, like the ‘marshmallow’ colourway of the t-shirt I’m wearing right now.
How did the both of you meet?
AL: I met Hiro-san thought some of our mutual friends.
HY: have been making jeans for other brands for the past 30 years and it has always been my dream to have my own denim brand. I have always hung out with people from the fashion industry, and meeting Alex from the music and acting world has made my life more fun and exciting.
Can you tell us a bit about your project with Hiro-san?
AL: I was hanging out with a group of producers and we often talk about fashion shows, designer brands’ videos, installation art and music. Once we found out Hiro-san wanted to launch his own denim brand this year, we decided to catch this opportunity and put our ideas together. We are organising a VIP launch event with a fashion show on June 11, 2021.
What was the biggest challenge you had to overcome with this project?
AL: I think the rules of the game changed after Covid started last year. We looked at online fashion shows last year, without the tradition styles, and we knew our team needed to do it in a cleverer way. The restriction for event gathering is 30 persons at the moment, so we were not able to invite too many friends and make the event as big as before. Plus the campaign and fashion show video shoot all in one day, that’s the biggest challenge in this project.
HY: We have been staying in our studio almost every day is the past few months, meeting different parties like our PR team, models, videographers and producers.
What else are you up to this year that you can share with us?
AL: I have released a new song and I just finished a music video for another song. I have also been working on my YouTube channel and created a few series, but it’s been slightly slowed down because I was focusing in this project.
Has the pandemic affected the way you work or changed your priorities?
AL: Before Covid, I was busy working with clients, who often prepared everything. With changes and restrictions during this period, I am able to organise and create more content by myself.
-
Alex Lam -
Alex Lam with Hiro Yoshikawa at his studio -
A pair of Washi Jeans on display
What are you currently inspired by?
AL: There are many indie musicians and young kids out there who are doing their music in their unique styles. I admire them a lot as they can release songs as long as they think it sounds good. I used think good music requires the best studio and recording equipment, but turned out a lot of indie musicians are producing high quality songs just by working at home.
You have a YouTube channel, you're into fashion, music as well as classic cars. How did you get into each of those passions and how do you balance it all?
AL: Project by project. I’m now focusing more on quantity over quality and I'll keep learning from the progress and mistakes.
Do you have a motto you live by?
Stay healthy. As I was a yoga teacher, I still practice yoga for two to three hours each day. It’s a good way to reflect on myself and find peace.
The post Wallace Chan Exhibits his Titanium Sculptures in Venice appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Art Basel Hong Kong 2021 Brings Out the City’s Art Crowd
There’s no doubt Alex Lam inherited his musical talent from his parents, his father being Cantopop legend George Lam Chi-Cheung, and his mother, Sally Yeh. Still, the singer-songwriter and actor hasn’t let privilege get to his head — he’s not afraid to explore other paths, from a stint in Los Angeles to discover yoga and becoming a yoga teacher, to dipping his toes in fashion.
Lam met Hiro Yoshikawa, founder and designer of Washi Jeans, a Japanese denim brand, a couple years back and was intrigued by the designer’s backstory. Now based in Hong Kong, Yoshikawa is the 18th generation of a revered sake maker in Okayama, Japan, and the first to leave the family business to pursue his own passion in denim-making. By chance, Yoshikawa had found an old document that charted out his family’s history, written on washi paper. Inspired by this, he developed and patented the Washi No. 6 paper yarn, which he utilizes in his first solo collection launching this month.
Lam, who has always had an eye for detail, quickly became an ambassador and muse for Yoshikawa, and took it upon himself to bring the recognition Yoshikawa deserves by helping him stage his upcoming solo debut.
We sit down with Alex Lam and Hiro Yoshikawa at Washi Jean's studio to talk about style and the upcoming debut of Yoshikawa's solo collection Life on Earth.
Can you describe your style? What are your wardrobe essentials?
AL: My style has always been inspired by musicians. I grew up watching some of my favourite bands like The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, and today, I'm inspired by singers like Drake. For me, my summer essentials include a sleeveless vest, a good multi-functional blazer and a pair of high-quality designer jeans.
Have you always been passionate about fashion and did you want to work in fashion?
AL: I have always cared about how I look and my outfits since I was a kid. I remember there was one time when the collar of my t-shirt wasn't right and I wouldn’t wear it out until my parents fixed it for me. Having friends who are in the fashion industry allows me to execute and experiment my ideas during workshops, like the ‘marshmallow’ colourway of the t-shirt I’m wearing right now.
How did the both of you meet?
AL: I met Hiro-san thought some of our mutual friends.
HY: have been making jeans for other brands for the past 30 years and it has always been my dream to have my own denim brand. I have always hung out with people from the fashion industry, and meeting Alex from the music and acting world has made my life more fun and exciting.
Can you tell us a bit about your project with Hiro-san?
AL: I was hanging out with a group of producers and we often talk about fashion shows, designer brands’ videos, installation art and music. Once we found out Hiro-san wanted to launch his own denim brand this year, we decided to catch this opportunity and put our ideas together. We are organising a VIP launch event with a fashion show on June 11, 2021.
What was the biggest challenge you had to overcome with this project?
AL: I think the rules of the game changed after Covid started last year. We looked at online fashion shows last year, without the tradition styles, and we knew our team needed to do it in a cleverer way. The restriction for event gathering is 30 persons at the moment, so we were not able to invite too many friends and make the event as big as before. Plus the campaign and fashion show video shoot all in one day, that’s the biggest challenge in this project.
HY: We have been staying in our studio almost every day is the past few months, meeting different parties like our PR team, models, videographers and producers.
What else are you up to this year that you can share with us?
AL: I have released a new song and I just finished a music video for another song. I have also been working on my YouTube channel and created a few series, but it’s been slightly slowed down because I was focusing in this project.
Has the pandemic affected the way you work or changed your priorities?
AL: Before Covid, I was busy working with clients, who often prepared everything. With changes and restrictions during this period, I am able to organise and create more content by myself.
-
Alex Lam -
Alex Lam with Hiro Yoshikawa at his studio -
A pair of Washi Jeans on display
What are you currently inspired by?
AL: There are many indie musicians and young kids out there who are doing their music in their unique styles. I admire them a lot as they can release songs as long as they think it sounds good. I used think good music requires the best studio and recording equipment, but turned out a lot of indie musicians are producing high quality songs just by working at home.
You have a YouTube channel, you're into fashion, music as well as classic cars. How did you get into each of those passions and how do you balance it all?
AL: Project by project. I’m now focusing more on quantity over quality and I'll keep learning from the progress and mistakes.
Do you have a motto you live by?
Stay healthy. As I was a yoga teacher, I still practice yoga for two to three hours each day. It’s a good way to reflect on myself and find peace.
The post Art Basel Hong Kong 2021 Brings Out the City’s Art Crowd appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
The Best Highlights From Frieze New York 2021 – The The First Live Art Fair In A Year
INFLUENCERS: A Special Exhibition Celebrating the Best of European and Southeast Asian Artists
"Our wish is to offer the public the keys to better understand Modern art and contemporary creation."
The post INFLUENCERS: A Special Exhibition Celebrating the Best of European and Southeast Asian Artists appeared first on LUXUO.
6 long-underrated artists get the spotlight
National Gallery's latest socially-conscious exhibition showcases artists who, despite their talents and innovations, are seldom featured.
The post 6 long-underrated artists get the spotlight appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
6 long-underrated artists get the spotlight
National Gallery's latest socially-conscious exhibition showcases artists who, despite their talents and innovations, are seldom featured.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
6 long-underrated artists get the spotlight
National Gallery's latest socially-conscious exhibition showcases artists who, despite their talents and innovations, are seldom featured.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
6 long-underrated artists get the spotlight
National Gallery's latest socially-conscious exhibition showcases artists who, despite their talents and innovations, are seldom featured.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
Lugas Syllabus Wants To Remind Us That Life Still Goes With His Upcoming Solo Exhibition
The revered artist’s thought provoking artworks never fail to address the zeitgeist of the current times.
The post Lugas Syllabus Wants To Remind Us That Life Still Goes With His Upcoming Solo Exhibition appeared first on LUXUO.
LA-based Artist Alex Hubbard on His Mesmerising Paintings and Hong Kong Exhibition
The work of Los Angeles-based artist Alex Hubbard encompasses different media, including video art, painting and sculpture, to explore the boundaries of each through an investigative cross-examination of different practices.
For his second solo exhibition and inaugural presentation at Simon Lee Gallery in Hong Kong, Hubbard has created a series of mesmerising paintings that feature classic and new techniques as well as wide range of materials. One of his latest process, for instance, involves UV printing technology to combine abstraction and figuration in a single canvas.
In his oeuvre, thanks to the use of fast-drying materials, Hubbard embraces chance happenings, revealing the autonomy of his chosen media.
We talked to Alex Hubbard about his Hong Kong exhibition and the meaning behind his art.
Can you tell us about your inaugural presentation in Hong Kong? What can gallery goers expect?
I use a wide variety of materials and techniques to make paintings. They are created from plastics, fiberglass, sprayed automotive paints, oil paint and printed images. The materials and images are layered, building up a surface. In this show, I'm using that process and surface as a springboard to start a painting. Then I paint into the work with traditional oil paint.
How would you describe your artistic style?
I'm not restless, but I do love to explore new materials, new methods. Vito Acconci would speak about his process. It was always the problem, the resolution of that problem in a work and then the problem with that. All to create the next problem and series of problems. It's less explicit in what I make but there is an underlying dialectic approach to materials and medium.
What are the many themes of your work?
I'm often using very common objects from the studio to create imagery. I'm filming chairs, buckets, tools, ladders. I'm painting gloves, caster wheels and printing pictures of wheelbarrows and dollys. The work is very process based. I want it to have life. Getting there is hard, and it takes planning and labor. That's the contradiction for me, I make things that look like an accident - it takes so much time to properly plan an accident.
How did you become an artist?
It was the only thing I was any good at. My mom is an artist, but it wasn't her profession. I never imagined people did it as a profession. I grew up in a rural coastal area in Oregon. I knew an older figurative painter who drank vodka from teacups and lived in a shack next to the ocean. When I attended college, my second college of many, I met other young people who were more familiar with contemporary art. They were going to be artists. I guess that was my introduction. Several colleges later I moved to New York and attended the Whitney Independent Study Program then worked for Christopher Wool in his studio.
Did the challenges of 2020 inspire your work in any way? How?
I don't know if inspiration is the word I would use - but a certain sense of liberation brought on by the isolation of Covid. So much of being a contemporary artist is being a part of a general dialogue or rejecting the dialogue - a syntax formed through the public presentation of different ideas and techniques. The exchange that takes place through normal exhibitions, the exchange between artists drinking at a bar together, or studio visits with collectors - all that stopped, and my schedule stopped. Everything was cancelled initially, and it was hard to work. No deadlines, no shows to look at, just the books in the studio and time. I drew a lot at first - I think that's some of what this show comes out of.
Has art been personally helping you to get through the pandemic?
I'm very much a studio artist and I love to work, getting completely consumed in work is a great escape.
You use a lot of mixed media and technology in your works. Can you tell us more about that?
I love problem solving. I love to see how different artists are working through materials and compositions. Good painting can be a window into an artist's internal chain of thought, an unfolding or a record of intelligent ideas and similar to a visualization of good music. I see the materials and technologies I use in the same way. The idea is to always push it, to create something that hasn't been done or seen. I like to present myself with a challenge or puzzle and try to solve it in a graceful and interesting way. I see people make the same painting for like ten years and I just have no idea how they can stand to do it. I would just feel like I was pantomiming myself. I love a good studio disaster, then trying to get out of it.
What is like to be a contemporary artist in LA?
LA has its moments. I have an incredible studio. Los Angeles has great light and the environmental conditions for using so many of the materials I use are perfect. Low humidity and high temperature is how things dry and cure. A good deal of the materials I use overlap with Hollywood, car culture and even aerospace as so many of the chemicals found in my work are manufactured here. There's a tradition of the Light and Space artists using these materials, that thinking is part of the landscape here. There is also the performative history here of Mike Kelley, Paul McCarthy and Guy de Cointet. The humor and irony of the Los Angeles masters like Ruscha. There are also hidden masters in the hills like John Knight and Richard Hawkins. I've been here 7 years, but I still feel like a visitor. Like everywhere, the pandemic has been hard on Los Angeles. Many of the great old bars and restaurants are closing, they are some of the better attributes of the city.
What artistic movement of the past inspires you or inspired you the most?
When I started out it was Fluxus, the intelligence and comedy and light heartedness. We could use a dose of that right now. For the show in Hong Kong, I was looking at Picabia and Duchamp's machine drawings. Inspiration changes a lot, we kind of pull in what we need from history when we need it.
The exhibition will run until March 13, 2021 at Simon Lee Gallery
The post LA-based Artist Alex Hubbard on His Mesmerising Paintings and Hong Kong Exhibition appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
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