Street Photography

Showing posts with label Marlboro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marlboro. Show all posts

Friday, 16 September 2011

The Rodnik Band

London Fashion Week SS 2012.

Day 1 16th September St Martins Lane hotel.

Dressed in Marlboro Red Pandemonia drops in on The Rodnik Band.

Pandemonia

Combining pop art and fashion, Philip Colbert’s sea world-inspired Spring 2012 The Rodnik Band collection included plenty of fantastically eye-catching garments. While some, like the sequin-made submarine dress and one with a crab peeking up from the top would be fitting for few aside from Lady Gaga, a fan of the brand, others like a mod-ish fish scale-inspired dress and Navy SEAL-inspired separates could easily translate into girl-about-town wardrobes (think Sienna Miller, also a fan of Colbert’s work).

Giving his designs a somewhat political message this season, the designer partnered with the Environmental Justice Foundation to create he says, “A strong message behind the clothes […] they are a leading Environmental charity, and have done amazing work to reduce Pirate fishing, which has greatly affected the worlds fish stocks, causing massive damage to the wider marine ecosystem and the food security and livelihoods of poor coastal communities in developing countries.” Colbert went on to explain that he’s always had an affinity for the aesthetic the sea – “from Fisherman’s outfits to sailors uniforms. ”

Read more: The Rodnik Band Spring 2012 Runway Review |
The Fashion Spot.

Marlboro

Style Brake Down

Hair - Inflatable blonde beehive with low lights
Clothes – Marlboro red Dress.
Shoes – glass slippers
Bag – inflatable Marlboro clutch bag
Accessories - Matching red gloves and black sunglasses

Miss Marlboro

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Vice Style

Pandemonia

When Pandemonia turns up at art openings and fashion shows it’s like Roy Lichtenstein’s blonde caricatures have been brought to life as a 7ft Jeff Koons inflatable...

Full interview on Vice Style.

VICE: Hey, How's it all going? What you wearing right now?

Pandemonia: Hey. I've just flown back from Athens where I was hanging with Charlie Le Mindu and Gareth Pugh at the ARRRGH! Monsters in Fashion exhibition. Right now I’m wearing my Marlboro dress. It's my favorite creation. It sits in a space halfway between reality and advertising. When I wear it I am imbued with the force of nature, the power of the Marlboro mountain symbolizing freedom. The design has an underlying message of purity, strength, and the force of nature. When I wear the Marlboro brand I am tapping into the mythology and psychology of the brand image and the alchemy of advertising.

Yeah? And what does that feel like?


As an artist I try and be a reflection of the world. My existence is unlikely to change anything, but it is likely to make the world more interesting. I'm bringing to life popular myths and aspirations, such as being slim, tall, and glossy. We constantly modify and make nature better than it already is. Plastic surgery and photo manipulation are good examples of the fact that we're all seduced by illusion. The virtual is better than the real. That's why we like films and computer games so much.

Would you say fame was ever a pursuit of yours?

Fame is recognition. Just look at The X Factor. I designed myself as a logo, so I would be instantly recognizable. If you’re putting your ideas out there, fame gets you noticed quicker.

So this counter-person of yours is the celebrity and you’re viewing this elitist celebrity circle from behind a mask.

When I pop up in celebrity circles I can see the mechanism of fame from both the inside and outside. Just as celebrities presented their image to the public, I present the celebrities my image. At least I know I'm acting out celebrity. My dog, Snowy, breaks the ice. People relate to him. Funny how people relate to an inflatable dog, isn’t it?

Does it really suck that much being a celebrity, though?

Fame performs the function of village gossip. Popular media has experienced a great deal of expansion during the last century. As a species we’re moving into a new era - celebrity is only the beginning. At least with celebrity it focuses us on a set number of people, it gives us an anchor. In the future will there be celebrity as it is now or will it become dissipated through endless social networks?

Shit, yeah. So what would you say you personally fear?


Deflation. Luckily there's not much of it around at the moment. These days Inflation is still all the rage. That's good for me, it keeps me buoyant.

Most of your outfits are made out of rubber, would you say there’s a fetish aspect?


We’re all, to some degree, fetishist over commodities, lifestyle, and brands. We are programmed to reach for the unobtainable—which I am—and fetish is that one step further. Rubber in my case is used as a metaphor: it’s elastic like cartoon skin and shiny like a new car or jewelry.

But why was it that you chose to express your work through a female? Was it purely the design side of things or is there an underlying transgender voice to your work?


In art, the female form has always being rearranged and reworked—I like to replicate the world’s mechanisms. For example, advertisers use women because it gets the attention of both genders. I am working with symbols and male and female are binary forms. The ability to experience the other, to be able to stand outside yourself creates a different perspective. In using the female form I am undermining the image and pointing to its construction. The very identity of Pandemonia is a fabrication.

Which designers would you say you’re most inspired by?

Rob Janoff's Apple Computers logo and it's biblical connotations. From the apple seed grows the forest, it’s an organic whole, and the logo is so simple yet contains everything. Another favorite is the Nike Swoosh logo by
Carolyn Davidson which infers speed, victory, and the teacher’s tick of approval. It’s universal, people just get it.

So, if you were to have one designer design an outfit for you who would it be?

I met Philip Treacy at Boy George’s party and he wanted to do a collaboration with me. Sometime in the future you might see my blonde locks supporting one of his hats.

Awesome. And let’s say you were to bump into another version of Pandemonia at LFW this September, what would your reaction be?

Pandemonia has to stay unique or she will lose her irony and possibly become fashion.

TEXT: KATIA GANFIELD

Wednesday, 22 June 2011

Life in Plastic

Nouse
Origional articel published Nouse. June 22, 2011
Text: Paris Bennett. Fashion Editor of Nouse
Phototography: Jenny Van Sommers



Pandemonia has the wow factor. Or perhaps Pandemonia is the wow factor. The phenomenon of performance art, has been formulated under the name Pandemonia, into a larger-than-life cartoon character, with the intention of provoking a reaction, whilst at the same time being a reaction. The presence of this doll-like figure certainly commands your attention unlike any regular arty or eccentric character. Indeed, being head to toe in latex, seven feet tall, and all woman is enough to merit interest from those in the industry also trying to create an unusual ‘image’.

In fact, the industry rather like the cartoon created by the post-pop conceptual artist. Pandemonia has been spotted at film premieres, glossy on location photo shoots, and even Boy George's 50th birthday party last week. Her fans and friends include Kanye West's ex Amber Rose, Philip Tracy and Steve Strange. But, standing the challenges facing art and artists du jour, this walking piece of art must also resolve her existential purpose.

As a conceptual artist, the ideas behind the art take precedence over traditional material concerns, yet this does not detract from the aesthetic appreciation of Pandemonia’s silhouette and features. She describes these as quite traditional features. “It’s figurative; it’s concerned with our relationship between identity and the media and who we are in a changing landscape. As a celebrity, albeit an artificial celebrity, I am the glossiest celeb of the glossies. I fit right in.”

Alluding to her image being not merely part of fashion, but of celebrity culture too, it seems ambiguous as to whether she is an item of gossip, an icon, or an imaginary celebrity. But she clarifies that her “ideas come from the mass media so it makes scene to put them back in there. That way I am communicating to a ready audience.”

“The celebrity arena is a platform to exhibit my work. I am inside the idea and have become the medium. Celebrity is the face of the media. As a pseudo-celebrity, I am a construction of media aspirations and dreams – A copy in the world of illusion.” If the birth of an innovative product in an already saturated market, involves the right product, in the right place with the right promotion, then she seems to have got it impressively spot on.

The female form is always being rearranged and re-worked, I am simply working within that time-honoured tradition

Although the conceptual side is important to this walking Barbie, would artistic expression through other mediums such as painting have a bigger impact? “Oh yes, I used to exhibit paintings and drawings in traditional gallery spaces but they always seemed so old fashioned. Our 24-hour media world is a more exciting and modern place to be in. When you watch TV you can’t help but notice that people are only interested in other people, preferably celebrities.”

The value of the character compliments conceptual. The raw appearance of the character seems to juxtapose the female silhouette. But she says, “females are far more alluring. Everyone likes looking at the female form, look at Art, look at advertising. In the West, the female form is always being rearranged and re-worked, I am simply working within that time-honoured tradition.”

Pandemonia is ‘re-working’ the tradition with a re-generation fabric. Latex relates to an industry of latex condoms, rubber playsuits and fetish. But Pandemonia says that she uses it “because it’s shiny. All the best things are shiny – gold, diamonds, cars, magazines, gadgets. Shiny means fresh and new. Almost everything you buy now is wrapped in plastic so it must be good.” She has tapped out human sense of allure being a primitive sensation felt by all. But it’s not just latex that re-works the female form, as she has used denim in the silhouette too. “That material also has lots of conations. It’s mass-produced. It once symbolised the working class and became a fashion statement of the rebel. A symbol of freedom and individuality. Disenfranchised from its roots and re-cut by top fashion labels.”

As the story of Pandemonia unravels, it becomes apparent that her paramount expression and reaction is about self-awareness, which could be argued to characterize the celebrity industry itself. The inflated and fixated hairstyle, pop up chest and attention to details that includes matching shoes, bag and outfit co ordination can relate to any celebrity. But which celebrities in particular have looks which have been borrowed from? “I’m inspired by whoever is in the media at the moment, for a while it was
Paris Hilton. She’s perfect because she’s famous for nothing and she’s blonde. Today we are getting a lot of
Cheryl Cole. I wonder who will be next.”

I’m not sure whether she intends for the stark irony; at London Fashion Week her image bombarded the style pages, finding itself next to the very celebrities she takes inspiration from. She responds “People have interpreted me in all sorts of ways. My presence offers a subtext, a reflection on what is happening.”

But do the celebrities object to her social reflection, view this 3D inflated latex symbol as a mockery of their existence? “They are all receptive to my work, reactions run between amazement and amusement.” This refreshingly seems to epitomize how seriously we take the media, and how light heartedly the celebs categorise themselves

The three way relationship of audience, media and celebrity appears to show the power being dominantly placed at the celebrity’s feet. The inflatable items to the suit, such as the handbag and hairstyle represent the transience of celebrity shelf life. “My head and bags are empty they are only surface. It’s so easy not to look beyond the surface. I have thought about inflating other areas but I think it’s important to stay elegant.

“My Marlboro dress is my favourite creation. It sits in a space halfway between reality and advertising. When I wear it I am imbued with the force of nature, the power of the Marlboro mountain. I am inside the medium. The alchemy of myth and advertising entwine and fuse together around me.”

The consistent focus on a rather brand categorised industry, I find myself trying to remember Pandemonia as ‘artwork’ rather than ‘product’. However, her most profound expression is to view celebrity culture as a market, but rather as an artistic expression. All surface, with hidden substance, in which Pandemonia appears to have created a perfect positioning of herself in our culture.

Friday, 17 June 2011

The STreeT ArT Show

Where: Opera Gallery London
When: 16th June 2011

Paying homage to the street artists, Pandemonia attends private view in Londons west end.
Photo: Nick Harvey

Pandemonia sips champaign in front of Sabers - Abstract flag in pink and purple


Style Brake Down

Hair - Inflatable blonde with low lights
Clothes – Marlboro red Dress.
Shoes – glass slippers
Bag – inflatable Marlboro clutch bag
Accessories - Matching red gloves and black sunglasses

Exhibition of paintings of...

Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Banksy, Blek Le Rat, Seen, Ron English, Logan Hics, Crash, The London Police, Nick Walker, Saber, D'Face, b, Swoon, Kid Zoom, Alexone, Anthony Lister, Alexandros Vasmoulakis, How & Nosm, Mr Jago, Sweet TooF, Rich Simmons.


Pandemonia in 3D
Photo: Anthony O'Neill

OPERA GALLERY LONDON
134 New Bond Street,
London W1S 2TF,
UK

Monday, 15 November 2010

Philip Sallons Birthday

Pandemonia Home House

Arriving by black cab, Pandemonia drops into Home House. Dressed in her Marlboro dress and matching bag. Her Blond hair stood out from the crowed.

Pandemonia

Talking to guests in the sumptuous eighteenth century Robert Adam interiors

Philip Sallon

Philip Sallon it takes allsorts.

pandamonia

Pandemonia gets dazzled by flash

Home House

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Haiti Fundraiser

Pandemonia
Tu Veux Ou Tu Veux Pas?
Pandemonia sings Brigitte Bardot for charity!
10th Febuary Punk Soho.
Shame about the tiny stage. I burst my bubble on the ceiling!

Apparently we raised Twelve hundred ponds!



Johnny Blue Eyes did a great show.

Tuesday, 2 February 2010

Who's Jack

Pandemonia
Who's Jack issue 33
page 65

Baked Beans & Champagne
candidate artist Pandemonia


words: Ruthie Holloway
image: Dafydd Jones

Pandemonia, if you've not met her before, Pandemonia is a life size blow up doll that actually walks and talks. All 7 feet of this inflatable beauty wears PVC head to toe, better than Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman, and all in the name of art. From her blonde plastic locks to her stockings, Pandemonia's plastic facade is, amongst many things an art concept, a disguise and most importantly the key tool she uses to make a statement about popular culture and commercialism as an artist.

Meeting Pandemonia, in a fantastical sense, is not far off the feeling you might get if you ever got the chance to enter a real cartoon world of fairytale kingdom. In an artistic sense it is intended that you are confronted by a parody of popular culture – plastic artificiality up close. “You are all surface and no substance,” she was once told. As As opposed to performance art, Pandemonia is the embodiment of her own art concept (a contemporary for Grayson Perry perhaps), as well as being a mobile advertisement for her own artistic statement: a reflection of a culture obsessed by celebrity and image.

So from whence did she come and when? Pandemonia appeared in London a few years ago and has been frequenting various art viewings, fashion shows and other events, where she will be noticed on the London scene. mixed reviews occur when people come across Pandemonia. “Every body I meet has a firm opinion of what I am and I can tell you, all their opinions are quite different,” she says. At a Damien Hurst private viewing, fashion designer Pam Hogg once remarked, “ At last! Someone is giving me some competition for my yellow hair!” whilst another onlooker commented that she “must be wearing a thin suit.” Now that would be an invention!” Pandemonia exclaims (And a very lucrative one were it to evolve I'm sure), Reflecting a satirical take on commercialism and a “paradox of fame and anonymity”, artist Pandemonia, is a most unforgettable, not to mention ageless sight to behold. Perhaps you think she is making a satirical comment about society obsessed with fame and image, or perhaps you think she is in fact, an ambassador for such a society. Either way, one thing is certain: if you ever get a glimpse of her, she will leave you with a lasting impression.

A fer Q and A's with Pandemonia:

What have been your most successful appearances or experiences?

Getting put into print. And putting Marlboro back in the Independent!

What is difficult about being Pandemonia?

Going through doors

What is your biggest ambition?

I want to do a floating sculpture show over Oxford Street as a temple of commercialism.

What do people say when they get to see the person behind the PVC-ness?

A lot of rumours get circulated about who Pandemonia is. In truth we all live behind masks and identities. Pandemonia is just the embodiment of an ideal. I could be any one.

www.pandemonia99.com

Who's Jack

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Met Bar, Space Oddity

2010: A Space Oddity
Pandemonia went to the Met Bar members party, 2010: A Space Oddity. 28th January 2010

Met up with Boy George, Philip Salon and Johnny Blue Eyes.

One couple I met enquired whether I had prosthetic legs and wanted to buy them, well I cant reveal that kind of information. You'll have to make up your own mind viewers.

Pandemonia
www.metbar.co.uk

Wednesday, 27 January 2010

Pandemonia at Matthew Barney exhibition

27th January 2010

I dropped into Matthew Barney's private view at Sadie Coles HQ.

Here's a photo of Pandemonia posing on Daisy Delaney's Liverpool Biennial car.

Pandemonia

Sadie Coles Gallery


Keep on sending in those photos.

Monday, 25 January 2010

Kate Garner


Pandemonia
On Thursday 21st Jan. Pandemonia , Went to the private view of Kate Garner and Marchella De Angelis Jolly Darkness exhibition at the Future Gallery this week. It was a great mix of art, fashion and music with a private gig from Boy George thrown in for good measure. For those of you that don't know, Kate was one of the members of 80's new wave pop group Hayzi Fantayzee along with now super DJ Jeremy Healy . Kate is now an acclaimed artist and photographer whose work has included portraits of David Bowie and Kate Moss. Met lots of Interesting people. Including Jerry, in the pix, Pam Hogg and Boy George to name only a few.


www.futuregallery.co.uk


Hope you don't mind me nicking your pix of Facebook Jerry!


Lee Brooms Jolly Darkness article Lee Broom

Later at the after party Jackie Chan Drew my portrait! Which I coloured in on the computer when i got home. Hope you like it Jackie. There's more of my work on my website

http://www.pandemonia99.com/

.

Monday, 21 December 2009

iD 2009

Pandemonia
Pandemonia
Pandemonia
Was interviewed by Holly Shackleton in The Flesh and Blood Issueof iD magazine 2009

, pages 24 - 26 Winter 2009.

Photos taken by Peter Ashworth . The Marlboro image "IN" was taken outside a Texaco Petrol Garage in North London.

Transcript of the iD interview

Text: Holly Shackleton
Photography: Peter Ashworth


PANDEMONIA Is an Inflatable beauty queen challenging our perception of beauty and the female form.


Dressed head -to-toe in Latex with big luscious locks of inflatable hair, Pandemonia is one part Barbie doll and the other part a prophetic vision of cosmetic surgery in the future. Concocted on a drawing board, the inflatable beauty queen sprung to life to challenge our preconceptions of female beauty. As the skinny fat debate continues to rage war on the International media, Pandmonia stands loud and proud as a latex clad pastiche of the “ideal” woman. Shiny and Hyper-real, she describes herself as “ a social parody, packaging artificiality and lack of content”, her killer body appearing airbrushed or digitally enhanced. 2009 a lone has seen Pandemonia take stage at The Royal Opera House for Bistroteque Annual Drag Ball, display her art at the Vyner Street Gallery openings and the Tracy Emin exhibition at White Cube . We caught up with the luscious lady to find out more.


Hi Pandemonia. Why do you do what you do?

I couldn't possibly do anything else. I have to express my self. Questioning contemporary culture and advertising, reworking modern myths, visually challenging my audience (or whoever I come into contact with) and creating a state of awareness.


What is your favorite outfit?

The Marlboro girl because she's so strong, the Dizzy Blond because her speech bubble says it all and the windswept Redhead for her wonderful spiraling twisting curves that are so elegant.


If you could be a cartoon character, who would you be and why?

I am a cartoon character! Duh!


Who are your favorite designers?

Elsa Schiaparelli , Jean Cocteau , Surrealism and Zaha Hadid for her 3D form.


You're inspired by fairytale, what is your favorite and why?

I am interested in fairy tales because they are organic stories about archetypes that are possibly thousands of years old. They all have similar motifs; stepmothers, ugly sisters, dark forests.... Fairytales are still relevant in the modern world: their motives just exist I different forms. Instead of the dark forest we have a concrete jungle and now the Internet. Our world is changing faster than ever and we don't know where we are going, so our myths are being remade.


In what way
Nike was originally the Goddess of Victory now she is the swoosh sign and the embodiment of the athlete and the Olympian ideal. Nike has probably soled more shoes than people have hears about Nike the goddess over two and a half thousand years, so which is more valid?

Father Christmas used to be red and green, but Coca Cola re-branded him and now he is widely accepted as red and white, a myth remade by an advert.


What makes you feel sexy?

Elastic.... I like it for its plastic and metaphorical qualities; it's like a cartoon skin,


Other than fashion what do you love most in life?

Snowy, my dog.


Describe your personal style....

Larger than life.


What music do you listen to?

The clicking of cameras.


What's your vice?

The paparazzi.


How do you keep your fantastic figure?

Sauna.


What/s your beauty secret?

A little polish creates a flawless complexion.


What are you vital ingredients for a good night out?

A red carpet.


Describe your daily routine...

The usual... Yawn, stretch, get out of bed, do my hair etc....


What's your favorite food?

Candy Floss.


What star sign are you?

The biggest one... Leo!


Tell us a secret?

Pandemonia does not do secrets. My visual appearance tells you all there is to know – everything is clearly displayed on the outside.


What are your hopes and aspirations?

To be a household name and to win the Turner Prize, causing pandemonium in the art world.


Describe yourself....

Dizzy blond with an inflated ego.


What are you working on at the moment?

That's a secret! How indiscreet you are! Well there is that show of prints I'm doing....


Where do you see yourself in 5 years time?

In the future I see myself doing a sculpture show of large inflatables, which I will fly over Oxford Street as a temple to Commercialism.

pandemonia99.com

Peter Ashworth

iD magazine

Friday, 11 December 2009

Tuesday, 24 November 2009

Damien Hirst, Nothing Matters

Had a nice chat with Peter Blake, Pam Hogg , Robert and Marcus. Such a shame Roberts Dog couldn't come into the exhibition, it was so cold outside.

I found some photos from the night.Pandemonia and Lily Cole and
Amy Sacco attend the private view of Damien Hirst's latest exhibition 'Nothing Matters'', at the White Cube Gallery on November 24, 2009

Amy Sacco
Lily Cole

Pandemonia chatting to Lily Cole

Pandemonia and Amy Sacco

Shot by shooter

Pandemonia
Pandemonia was "shot by shooter" at the Damien Hurst opening. Dressed her Marlboro dress, matching inflatable bag and trade mark inflatable yellow hair.


Have a look at more of shooters candid camera grabs on his blog


http://www.pandemonia99.com/