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unwashed denim shirt and pants by Joop! Jeans. Stonewashed shirt by Gap Denim
New Jersey, Photo by Henry Wessel, 1967
In 1985, Hanatarash frontman Yamantaka Eye drove what was reported to be a bulldozer (actually an excavator) into a Tokyo venue, destroying it and cementing the band’s reputation as the most dangerous force in the Japanese noise scene. A set of photographs by Gin Satoh remain the only visual documentation of the event, capturing the moments and aftermath of one of the most infamous performances ever staged by a noise band. Formed by Eye, Hanatarash operated at the extreme edge of Japan’s underground noise movement. Their performances pushed the idea of noise music into something closer to physical spectacle. The band quickly gained notoriety as audiences were required to sign waivers before shows, and performances often involved smashed glass, flying debris, and dangerous stunts. In one incident Eye strapped a circular saw to his back, which slipped loose and nearly severed his leg. The escalation peaked on August 4, 1985, at the Toritsu Kasei Super Loft in Tokyo. After throwing metal objects into the crowd, Eye briefly disappeared from the stage and returned driving an excavator through the venue’s main doors. Despite not knowing how to operate the machine, he smashed equipment and punched a hole through the building’s wall while drummer Ikuo Taketani attempted to continue playing. The excavator eventually tipped, spilling gasoline across the floor. Eye then attempted to ignite it with a Molotov cocktail before venue staff restrained him, ending the show minutes before disaster for the roughly 100 people present. The incident helped cement Hanatarash’s reputation as too dangerous to book. A later performance opening for Psychic TV was stopped by police before it could occur, after it was discovered that Eye planned to blow up the stage using dynamite. Venue bans followed, eventually pushing the group out of the live circuit. Members later shifted toward a new project, Boredoms, which focused more on sound than destruction.
Yamantaka Eye of Hanatarash destroying a venue during a performance in Tokyo, 1985.
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When an abandoned classic car is discovered in a barn or garage, the instinct is usually to restore it to pristine condition. But what if time and wear were collaborators rather than flaws to erase? Oxidation, fading, scratches, and repairs can record decades of use more faithfully than a flawless repaint. American artist Daniel Arsham explored that idea in a project created in collaboration with Porsche. Arsham’s 1955 Porsche 356 Speedster, known as the Porsche 356 Bonsai, looks like a barn find left to oxidize in a coastal garage. In reality, every detail is deliberate. Created in 2022 after two years of work, the car’s body was stripped to bare metal while preserving decades of scratches and wear. The exposed steel was treated with linseed oil to slow corrosion while allowing the patina to continue developing, reflecting the Japanese aesthetic philosophy of wabi-sabi. Despite its weathered appearance, the car is fully functional. Mechanical restoration preserved the original numbered engine and returned it to factory performance standards. Fewer than 4,000 Porsche 356 Speedsters were produced, making surviving examples historically significant. The interior features indigo boro patchwork, sashiko stitching, and Okayama denim, while an oxidized bronze bonsai relief sits in the rear grille beside a vintage New York “Bonsai” plate. Now based in Japan, the car is intended to keep aging through use, allowing its surfaces to continue evolving over time.
The Porsche 356 Bonsai by Daniel Arsham.
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A long-running theory proposes that William Shakespeare experimented with mind-altering substances. The speculation began in 1999 when South African anthropologist Francis Thackeray suggested that phrases in the sonnets, including Sonnet 76’s “invention in a noted weed”, might allude to cannabis-inspired creativity. Thackeray turned from literary clues to physical evidence: two dozen clay pipe fragments excavated from the grounds of Shakespeare’s Stratford-upon-Avon homes, including New Place, where he lived until his death in 1616. Using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry, researchers detected trace compounds associated with cannabis in eight pipes, alongside nicotine and other residues. Four cannabis-positive pipes were found in the garden of New Place. The findings proved little about Shakespeare himself. The pipes date to the early 17th century, but they could have belonged to household occupants, visitors, or later patrons; part of the property became an inn by mid-century. Even Thackeray stressed there was no guarantee the playwright used them. Still, the results offer a glimpse into early modern England. Hemp cultivation was widespread, cannabis had medicinal uses, and imported plants and tobacco were circulating through elite and maritime networks. If cannabis resin reached Stratford, Shakespeare likely knew of it, whether as remedy, curiosity, or rumor. Scholars remain skeptical. Critics note that “weed” commonly referred to clothing, not drugs, and warn against projecting modern habits onto the past. The pipes may reveal a social history of smoking in Shakespeare’s milieu, but they stop short of proving the Bard ever packed a bowl. The endurance of the theory says as much about contemporary fascination with intoxicated creativity as it does about the playwright. For now, the evidence lingers like smoke: suggestive, atmospheric, and ultimately inconclusive.
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On 7 November 1922, the Soviet composer Arseny Avraamov staged one of the most unusual musical events of the twentieth century: the Symphony of Sirens, performed not by an orchestra but by an entire industrial city. The work took place in the port of Baku to mark the fifth anniversary of the October Revolution. From a specially constructed tower overlooking the harbor, Avraamov conducted the city itself, signaling performers with colored flags and field telephones while coordinating a vast network of mechanical and human sound sources. The performance mobilized nearly every noise-producing element of the industrial port. Factory sirens, ship horns, locomotive whistles, artillery batteries, machine-gun units, hydroplanes, and the foghorns of the entire Caspian flotilla were integrated into a coordinated sonic spectacle. Military bands and mass choirs were also included, performing revolutionary songs such as The Internationale, La Marseillaise, and Warszawianka. Cannon shots served as timing signals, triggering different sections of the composition across the city’s factories, docks, railways, and harbor. A central element of the piece was a device invented for the event called the Magistral, an instrument consisting of around fifty steam whistles mounted on pipes and controlled by multiple performers like the keys of a keyboard. Additional ensembles operated locomotive whistles and mechanical horns positioned across the port, turning Baku’s industrial infrastructure into a distributed orchestra. The symphony culminated in a massive collective chord produced by steam whistles, sirens, bells, and artillery fire, echoing across the city and far beyond its harbor. Although Avraamov attempted a second performance in Moscow in 1923, the Baku event remained the most ambitious realization of the concept: a work in which urban machinery, military hardware, and crowds were fused into a single coordinated musical performance.
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NYC, 1981
Photo: Miron Zownir
When ‘Inland Empire’ came out David Lynch shot a fashion story for Purple magazine of Laura Dern as her character from the movie
@amaskdescribingamask
Fate Up against your will
Louise Bourgeois: ‘A prisoner of my memories’
The Art Life, David Lynch, 2016
ana mendieta, untitled works at zapotec tomb, oaxaca, 1976
Sam Szafran (French, 1934-2019), L'atelier de Malakoff avec François Barbâtre et boîtes de pastel [The Malakoff studio with François Barbâtre and boxes of pastels], 1978. Charcoal on paper mounted on cardboard, 31 ½ x 23 in.
glue/dream ii. graphite on paper, 8x10 inches. very limited run of 30 hand-signed and numbered fine art archival prints are up on the site, original is up as well. first one of 2026 welcome to the year of the horse
Mandala (1971) by Akio Jissoji
Eva Besnyö (1910–2002), Untitled, Vertigo #3