Hisao Kawada, from JCA Annual 7 (1987)
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Hisao Kawada, from JCA Annual 7 (1987)
Devo fans in Houston, 1980
C&O T-1 steam locomotive, number 3020, after a boiler explosion in 1943. Located near Chillicothe, Ross County, Ohio. Source
Voguing is the same thing as, like, taking two knives and cutting each other up, but through a dance form. Voguing came from shade, because it was a dance that two people did because they didn’t like each other. Instead of fighting, you would dance it out on the dance floor, and whoever did the better moves was throwing the best shade, basically.
The name was taken from the magazine “Vogue”, because some of the movements of the dance are also the same as the poses inside the magazine. The name is a statement in itself. I mean, you really wouldn’t go to a ball to do the “Mademoiselle”. No way.
Like break dancing, the dance takes from the hieroglyphics of Ancient Egypt. It also takes from some forms of gymnastics. They both strive for perfect lines in the body, awkward positions, but it goes one step further.
It’s starting to make a name for itself, but I want it to be known worldwide, and I wanna be on top of it when it hits.
- Willi Ninja, Paris is Burning (1990) dir. Jennie Livingston
Suede at Edinburgh Venue, 6 October 1992. Photo by Ian T. Tilton for Select magazine (December’92 issue)
Ultravox! (1977 self-titled album) produced by Brian Eno, Steve Lillywhite, and Ultravox! sleeve concept by Dennis Leigh photos by Gered Mankowitz design by Bloomfield/Travis Island Records (ILPS 9449)
I actually do have Gregg Turkington tea. My coworker dated him in the 90s (she saw me watching on cinema during my lunch break once this is the only reason she mentioned this to me) and aparently he gives REALLY good head
Alexander Calder in his home.
Celebrity Homes II, 1981
quilt by Chinami Terai
ivor de wofle, kenneth browne - the university megastructure - the first lady of the spa, civilia, england, 1971
Xfm studio, September/October 1992
Mick Karn photographed with two of his sculptures on June 12th, 1980.
A moment between takes of 1922′s Nosferatu.
Brian Eno, 1974.
From the series Documenting Science, Berenice Abbott’s photograph of a woman wiring an early IBM computer (via here)