PORE PARTY 2017: AN INSTAGRAM STORY RECAP BY viv_loh

JBB: An Artblog!

ellievsbear
I'd rather be in outer space đž
h

Discoholic đȘ©

Andulka
Acquired Stardust
taylor price

tannertan36
todays bird
hello vonnie

pixel skylines

PR's Tumblrdome
Keni
No title available
No title available
DEAR READER
ojovivo
Jules of Nature
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
seen from United Kingdom

seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Vietnam
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Switzerland
seen from Tunisia
seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
@pearlmedia
PORE PARTY 2017: AN INSTAGRAM STORY RECAP BY viv_loh
PEARLâS BACKâ AND WEâVE GOT FRIENDS!
Pearl Girl Magazine worked together with designer Lisa Leung of Creepyyeha to shoot her latest collection's lookbook. Check it out on our website by clicking here.
Want Pearl to-go? Follow us on Instagram!
~* @pearlgirlmedia *~
An interview with John Yuyi
Where are you from, where are you now, where do you want to be?
Iâm currently based in Taipei, Taiwan; itâs the city where I was born and raised. Iâm still here because Iâm too familiar with this place. Itâs a place where I can do a lot of the things I wanna do. In Taiwan, there are cheaper materials, factories, studio space⊠Itâs the best place for me to create art or my clothing project! I donât worry too much, I just have to remind myself to not get lazy here hahaha but I am planning on moving to New York City very soon! In Taipei, despite the cityâs conveniences, I always end up feeling depressed and sad haha! Probably because the people here are more tradition and narrow-minded. They are quite critical and cynical. You can be yourself, but people wonât like it. Itâs a lot of pressure, so I want to leave here ASAP! Hahaha! I hope to have more opportunities in the future!
What has been the most rewarding experience in your life so far?
I think the most rewarding experience would probably be the release of my âJOHNYUYI SWIMWEAR X CLAY PROJECTâ. It has allowed me to get in touch with a lot of new people, and get interviewed by some online media from different cities. After this experience, Iâve felt more confident and have more courage to do my own thing!
Where were you this time last year, and what were you doing?
I had just gotten back from New York! Though I was quite confused about my future at the time, I got a lot of positive energy from NYC, so I was still optimistic about my life. One year ago, I had just graduated, and was not intent on getting a typical day job, so my friend Estete and I designed temporary tattoo stickers and sold them. It was mostly for fun, and we earned very little money from it. Since I still needed to do some more saving up, I became a figure model for some painting classes. That way, I got the free time to do my projects and do the things I like at the same time! I also started to create multiple miniature clay art installations and photographed them. At the beginning, I started playing with clay to soothe my anxiety. I have some emotional problems. I get nervous really easily. So I made a lot of little clays. The process kept me calm and the colors made me happy, just like seeing a cute puppy or kittyâs pictures. Hahaha!
You work in sculpture, installation, fashion design, photography... What doesn't John Yuyi do?
I donât know, hahaha! I donât know many things, but I will give anything a try if I have a chance to do it! I want to be a doctor or a surgeon. I respect and admire doctors so much, but I think I might not be smart enough hahaha!
Your swimwear collection is really taking off, what were the ups and downs to this project? What inspired you to create a swimwear line?
At the beginning I just thought, âIf people like the swimsuits, I can sell them!â And if they donât, at least itâs a good experience and something Iâd be happy to put into my portfolio. So there was nothing to lose! I just needed to be brave and go for it, not think about whether or not others will like it! Just do it! My original plan was to create a zine based on âClay Projectâ, but during that process, the swimwear idea just appeared! I wanted to do a swimwear collection because I thought people would enjoy trying something more creative and colorful when they are choosing a swimsuit. I love the one-piece silhouette; I personally would love to wear one of my own pieces, too! These swimsuits can be worn not only on the beach or at the pool, but also as everyday-wear on the street!
An interview with Taiwanese artist, John Yuyi, by Vivian Loh and Jessia Ma.
Dress to kill with Digital Girls, a drag & drop dress-up game by girls for girls.
Illustrated by Vivian Loh Coded by Jessia Ma
Play here:Â http://pearlmedia.co/digitalgirls.html
Dress to kill with Digital Girls, a drag & drop dress-up game by girls for girls.
Illustrated by Vivian Loh Coded by Jessia Ma
Play here:Â http://pearlmedia.co/digitalgirls.html
An outtake-turned-GIF from issue 1âs cover shoot.
Model: Katie Han Photographed by Vivian Loh
~ ~ ~ Click below to see the rest of issue 1 ~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html
Outtakes from issue 1's cover shoot.
Model: Katie Han Photographed by Vivian Loh
~ ~ ~ Click below to see the rest of issue 1 ~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html
Some outtakes and originals from issue 1's Dragon Lady Fruit Blossom editorial.
Photographed by Minh Bui
~ ~ ~ Click below to see the rest of issue 1 ~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html
Anime Recommendations
by Jiapei Xi, illustrations by Vivian Loh
All of us read Japanese manga obsessively, and we still remember our favorite series and characters fondly. Adolescent girls are always full of romantic, unrealistic dreamsâmanga creates a world where it seems possible that those dreams might become real. To me, no matter how much the stories varied in genre, style, and setting, or how different their heroines are, their central theme is always the desire to become a better person, a unique and lovable girl. Here were some of my favorites growing up!
Tomie by Junji Ito
Weâve all heard stories of vengeful girlfriends and the ladies you shouldnât have met. But TomieâTomie is all of that and more. She is beautiful, but hellish. Tomie is selfish, slutty, jealous, materialistic, insatiable, cruel, possessive, and vain. Her insatiable lust keeps her alive, regenerating her despite the best attempts of the men that she seduces, fascinates, and deranges. Men want to possess her so much that they cut her into pieces, like meat foam, but she will come back. She will grow under your carpet, inside a box, or even in cement. She is everywhere and she just doesnât deserve death.Â
The combination of Tomieâs complete beauty and complete evil is monstrous but fascinating. Guys go so crazy for her that they will kill anyone to please her, but they also canât resist the temptation to kill Tomie. Girls want to be her so much that they let Tomie occupy their body. She repulses readers, but sometimes, we secretly want to be just like her.
Nana by Ai Yazawa
Nana is both the title of this stylish, sexy series, and the shared name of its two protagonists. Nana Osaka is the edgy, self-assured vocalist in a punk band; Nana Komatsu is your average charming âhopeless good girl,â attempting to find a perfect romance but and always troubled by boyfriend problems. The girls end up living together in Tokyo, and the series follows the development of their complicated friendship anchored by mutual obsession, sexual interest, and jealousy. Punk Nana is the role model for girls in Asia. She looks indifferent and tough, but her heart is warm and gentle. Cute Nana, on the other hand, is impulsive, spoiled, and aimless, but we all identify with her and her struggles with learning how to grow up. As she learns to take care of others, to live on her own and to find her passion instead of desperately falling in love, so do we. Nana transposes our mundane lives into this glamorous story about sex, fashion, drama and lots of rock ânâ roll, showing us both who we are and who we could be.
Sailor Moon by Naoko Takeuchi
I canât think of another manga that was more contagious than Sailor Moon in the 90s. It chronicles the adventures of a group of pretty 14-year-old magical girls, uniformed in mini skirts and cute boots, as they defend the solar system from evil. The guardians transform into soldiers and go into battle with omnipresent evil forces that attempt to control the earth or the universe.Â
Sailor Moon defined my childhood. I could watch the TV adaptation for hours and pretend to be one of the soldiers. Though I wasnât crazy enough to collect all their spin off stuff, I did make my own wand, hoping secretly that I would discover a hidden super power, become a princess, and have a hopeless romance with a handsome boy like Sailor Moon did. I believe a lot girls hoped the same thing after watching the show because the guardians seemed so relatable. We always remembered that they were schoolgirls like usâtheir uniforms are altered sailor fuku, Japanese school uniforms. Now I think of it as just a silly and funny series, but Sailor Moon and her friends accompanied me through childhood.
Race has always been a painful and complicated issue in America. It is tragic and embarrassing that things need to come to such a point of crisis to create the potential to open such a critical conversation. The Story: Overview http://mashable.com/2014/11/24/darren-wilson-charges-michael-brown-ferguson/?utm_cid=mash-com-fb-main-link
Missouri teen shot dead by police had assaulted officer: police http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/10/us-usa-missouri-shooting-idUSKBN0GA0Q420140810%20 Police Fire Tear Gas Quell Protests Over Michael Browns Death http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/michael-brown-shooting/police-fire-tear-gas-quell-protests-over-michael-browns-death-n178606 Obama Calls Michael Brown Death âHeartbreakingâ http://time.com/3105013/obama-death-of-michael-brown-heartbreaking/ Obama responds to Ferguson decision: http://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000003254144/obama-responds-to-ferguson-decision.html More Links:
NBC Live Video Coverage: http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/michael-brown-shooting/watch-live-continuing-coverage-ferguson-grand-jury-decision-n255161 New York Times Live Coverage: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/25/us/ferguson-darren-wilson-shooting-michael-brown-grand-jury.html Ferguson National Response Network (unaccredited at time of posting tumblr): http://fergusonresponse.tumblr.com/ Transcript of State of Missouri v. Darren Wilson (unaccredited at time of posting): https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/1370494-grand-jury-volume-5.html
Twitter Hashtags: #ferguson, #blacklivesmatter, #noindictment,Â
~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html ~ ~ ~
Outtakes from our interview with lovely lady Yeha. Her 23rd birthday was just yesterday! :)
~ ~ ~ Click below to see her interview, and the rest of issue 1 ~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html
An interview with Jacqueline Lin Footage of an asian girlâs eyes slowly engorging plays alongside a female narrator explaining and defending her desire to undergo Blepharoplasty (eye surgery). The narrator is matter of fact about the issues surrounding having Epicanthic fold eyelids, and explains with a clarity the logic behind her desire. Itâs the only voice of the 5 in Record Recreate which isnât drenched in apology or self-deprecation. But even that voice, like the others, recognizes a distance between self-perception and the body. Girls talk about their physical features and future selves with the same kind of language of desire one might use to talk about wanting an upgraded version of your old iPhone. An attitude of being able to pick, choose and upgrade, to question the quality of characteristics about yourself and be open to the pursuit of something, if not better, then different. This attitude towards identity reappears frequently in Jacqueline Linâs work. Everywhere from the sacrosanct image of the buddha dissolving into cut-up pieces of itself in Machina Buddha, to the âChoose your own adventureâ style of Oriental Battle, to the changing traditional Chinese Opera makeup masks in Bian Lian. Identity, costume and desire are intertwined, with the body as the ultimate canvas for a fluid social negotiation of the self. The subject of Linâs videos demand us to ask questions about ideals and quest for self-satisfaction, as well as provoking us to stop and consider where the logic of these superficial pursuits originate. We decided to turn the camera around, and ask these questions of the lady behind the lens. What is your background and how has it influenced the way you see the world?
I spent my childhood growing up in Jeddah and Cairo, and then moved to Taiwan in 8th grade and went to high school there. Living in these different countries made it a little difficult for me to really find my own identity. I never thought I could completely relate to my friends from the Middle East because of social and lingual barriers, and when I went back to Taiwan I found that I didnât truly understand the Taiwanese culture either because I attended an International school where we were taught in English, and influenced by Western culture. However, I never thought about this as something negative and I feel so blessed to have been able to learn from the Islamic, Chinese and Western culture. I think of myself as a mix of all these influences that have turned me into who I am today. Having experienced ethnically being in both the minority and the majority, I feel more culturally aware and appreciative of everyoneâs views.
Though you work in a variety of mediums, video seems to be your go-to. What was your first experience with video? What do you feel is the future potential of the moving image?Â
I used to create short movies and ask my sisters to act for me - the movies were really silly though! I was around 12 when I directed my first video about this ballerina who hates going to ballet class and accidentally knocks over her teacher while pirouettingâŠseemed funny at the time! But what hooked me in was being able to immediately cut and edit within video camcorder â I would storyboard my shots to make sure I knew what to film first and last, and plan when to cut into close-ups of the characters or their actions. Nowadays video comes in all forms and is so easily accessible. I am always recording videos on my phone of things I come across that I find visually captivating â whether itâs the people, the shadows cast on walls, or the patterns created by reflections. I think that moving images donât have to always be viewed on a screen, and I am more interested in video in other forms such as projected onto surfaces, or how video can change environments that we live in.
One of the primary focuses in your work is the character of an asian girl. Is there something specific you are trying to communicate? What kind of a portrait are you trying to paint?
I find myself returning back to this character of an Asian girl all the time because I draw my inspiration from my experiences of being one. I am constantly thinking about the social norms of being an Asian female specifically and how often they become categorized as one idea when really, each Asian female has her own identity that is completely unique. There are many assumptions about Asian females because of popular media that has given a lot of Westerners certain ideas about us. I am both poking fun at these categorizations because I completely disagree with them, and am exploring ways in which Asian girls identify themselves.
Outside of the asian girl, I also feel like you are constructing an entire body of work based off of a language of personal symbolism- hair buns, masks, nostalgic Chinese music⊠what do these ideas mean to you when you incorporated them into your works?
The symbolism comes from my curiosity to know more about Asian practices - the traditional Chinese performances or instruments like the Gu-Zheng and learn more about them because I myself am not entirely familiar with it. And honestly, the symbolism I incorporate in my works come from what I am obsessed with at the time of making those projects. For instance, the hair buns came from seeing some friends at RISD do their hair up that way â and I loved the way they looked so decided to create a character inspired by them!
You are now a senior in college, what was the worst moment in your college experience and how did you overcome it? What was your best experience?
If I had to pick out something I didnât enjoy these past three years it would probably be times when I am assigned a project to work on and canât generate any ideas for it. I dislike jumping into an idea that I am not happy about and creating something I donât feel is very me. Sometimes it doesnât work out and I am not proud of my work, and sometimes it surprises me because a project might take on a different direction and turn out great! My best experience is being able to work with others, collaborating with them, and asking them to be part of my projects. In art school, I am constantly surrounded by people I can share my work with and in turn see their work too. We are always giving each other feedback and sharing our love for art, and that is what I am truly enjoying the most about being here.
An interview with Taiwanese-American video artist, Jacqueline Lin, by Vivian Loh and Jessia Ma.
Paddle, a collaborative series of works by Kaita Niwa and Cherry Lau
~ ~ ~ Click below to see the rest of issue 1 ~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html
Some originals and outtakes from issue 1's THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU editorial. Model: Lucy Chen Photographed by Vivian Loh
~ ~ ~ Click below to see the rest of issue 1 ~ ~ ~ http://pearlmedia.co/issue1.html