• The Scents of the Summer

    Written by Yasmine M

    Looking for a new scent for your summer adventures? Look no further.  We have gathered the perfumes that we think are the summer’s must haves for the sweet and floral day to the more dark and musky night. 

    Marc Jacobs Daisy Eau So Fresh Paradise
    The scent of Daisy has been reimagined several times since the original launch. The signature bottle with the large flowers on it's golden lid makes them absolutly stand out. The newest trio – Daisy Paradise is inspired by lush landscapes, blooming flowers and the colors of sunset. Two of them are the Eau So Fresh and Paradise Love. The 75 ml bottle is the largest with a blend of pink pepper and lavender, with a sweet scent. Followed by the 50 ml Daisy Paradise Love The limited edition of daisy love features a single, large flower on it’s golden lid. It has a creamy fresh scent of iris and patchouli, with a sweet aroma. 

    Burberry Her Elixir, Eau De Parfum
    Burberry Her Elixir de Parfum is a bold and sensual fragrance, in an elegant and minimalistic pink bottle. It is described as a fruity gourmand note alongside a daring explosion of dark red berries, jasmine, rounded off with sensual vanilla and amber. Burberry Her Elixir de Parfum deepens the pink Eau de Parfum bottle and transforms it into an opaque finish that represents the intensity of the fragrance and its confident and sensual nature.

    Giorgio Armani Beauty's My Way Parfum
    If you wish to smell like Euphoria star Sydney Sweeney, this is the one for you. The My Way perfume is a floral, orange blossom, woody, and with a sweet vanilla scent. Not to mention, with sustainably-sourced ingredients in a refillable bottle, to use again and again. The scent is powerful and lasts all day, yet it’s warm and sweet.

    La Vie Est Iris Absolu Lancôme
    Walking the streets of Cannes, France this summer, the city is packed with posters of Julia Roberts showcasing the new La Vie Est Belle Iris Absolu. The new perfume offers a vibrant, strong and multiplied vision of happiness, inviting us to unite our voices around the beauty of life and feel the intensity of togetherness. Encapsulated in a reinvented bottle with an infinite crystal smile.

    Idôle Now, Lancôme
    Another summer release from the french brand is Idôle Now, an Amber Floral fragrance for women. With top note of rose, middle note of orchid and a base note of Vanilla. For a sweet yet powerful scent. Another great thing is the design of the bottle, very thin which makes it easy to bring with you for the summer adventures.

    Tom Ford, Lost Cherry
    The Lost Cherry is not only a treat for the eyes in it's dark cherry-red color. It’s a dark and deep scent, for the summer nights. As the name, it has black cherry as the main focus. With liqueur touched, teasing sweet almond with a Turkish rose and jasmine sambac blend that wakes your senses. It’s perfect for the summer nights, where you want to express yourself more. Tom Ford himself express the scent as a ‘’...a full-bodied journey into the once-forbidden; a tempting dichotomy of playful, candy-like gleam on the outside and luscious flesh on the inside.”. 

    In other news, see the latest Chanel collection straight from Paris, here

  • photo by Daniel Schäfer / Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth © Rashid Johnson.

    'Seven Rooms and a Garden' Explores Rashid Johnson's Conversational Works

    Written by Josie McNeill by Josie McNeill

    The Moderna Museet’s upcoming exhibition, ‘Seven Rooms and a Garden,’ explores the conversational yet confrontational works of artist and filmmaker Rashid Johnson.

    Seven Rooms and a Garden’ is set to be open from September 30, 2023 to September 8, 2024.

    The exhibit, as indicated by its name, will consist of rooms and a garden that explore the artist’s personal, political, and historical relationships through art.

    Johnson is an artist from Chicago known for drawing from his own biography, as well as historical events, to produce photographs, paintings, film, performances, and sculptures that comment on the state of being.

    Johnson, a conceptual post-Black artist, is best known for his “Anxious Men” series in which he etched out faces of Black people in black soap and wax on tile.

  • photographs courtesy of Seezona

    E-commerce Brand Seezona Brings Together Emerging Brands and Unique Pieces

    Written by Josie McNeill by Josie McNeill

    Online shopping for unique, trendy pieces just got a little bit easier with Seezona.

    Seezona, a Stockholm-based e-tailor brand, brings together what it believes to be the best emerging micro-fashion brands for customers to easily browse from.

    With clothing from over 150 international labels for sale on its website, Seezona attracts fashion enthusiasts and everyday customers who want new, note-worthy and creative pieces. Seezona chooses the labels to sell from based on their unique design, craftsmanship, and sustainability.

    Seezona also offers emerging designers a platform to get global visibility on their items without inventory requirements, marketing budgets, and capital investments, according to Ulrika Angergård, Head of Marketing at Seezona.

    ’’I love that Seezona helps micro-enterprises reach a global audience, without complicated processes or large investments,” Angergård said in a press release. “Our onboarding process is seamless and allows us to launch a new designer to the platform within just a couple of hours of work, without the brand doing any work. This makes it possible for us to rapidly launch new brands, always offering our customers new up-and-coming brands that they never might have discovered otherwise.’’

  • photograph courtesy of LANVIN

    LANVIN Announces Future as Creative Director For First LANVIN LAB Collection

    Written by Josie McNeill by Josie McNeill

    French fashion company LANVIN announced on June 23 that grammy-winning artist Future will act as creative director for the first LANVIN LAB Collection.

    The upcoming collection will be released August 2023 and will consist of accessories for both men and women.

    According to the press release, LANVIN LAB aims to promote collaboration and cultural dialogue through its designs. LANVIN LAB’s designs will be solely collaborative collections that complement the LANVIN designs of the same season.

    For its first capsule collection, LANVIN LAB partnered with Future to celebrate the artist’s unique vision that bridges the gap between fashion and music. Future is an artist from Atlanta who innovated the rap world with his music and subsequent accolades.

    The founder of the fashion brand, Jeanne Lanvin, was a supporter of the culture. Under her reign, LANVIN became a creative hub for all kinds of artists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. According to the press release, these capsule collections with LANVIN LAB aim to promote the same spirit.

  • photography courtesy of CFHILL

    An Interview with Fredrik Nielsen

    Written by Josie McNeill by Josie McNeill

    Glass art, an industry that Sweden has been a leader in since the mid-17th century, receives a contemporary update with a new group of designers that the CFHILL gallery is calling “Generation Glas” in its new exhibit of the same title. Generation Glas is open from June 9 to August 3 and displays works from artists, such as Fredrik Nielsen, who draw from the history of glassmaking to make their own innovative works of art.

    Nielsen, who is based out of Stockholm, is a glass artist with extensive schooling at Orrefors Glass School and the Royal Institute of Art in Sweden and Pilchuck Glass School in the United States. He has shown his work all over the world in galleries in New York, London, and in cities across Sweden. Now, he has four pieces—Another Excuse 2023, Furniture in the Garage, Magic in the garbage bag, and Thinking of His Lonely Room—on display and for sale at the Generation Glas exhibit.

    According to Nielsen, Generation Glas comes at a time when many of the glassworks in Sweden are closing down, leaving room for glass artists to capitalize on the availability of glass to truly have the space to experiment and grow in their artform.

    Can you start off by telling me how you first discovered glass art and what drew you to it?
    It's a really, really long time ago but I started in ‘98, and I think I started thanks to the film My Life as a Dog. When I saw that film I sort of recognized myself as the character in the movie. Then I really was longing for that process of making glass and later, in arts schools and my school in Seattle called Pilchuck Glass School, that is where I really began.

    Was glass the first medium that you used to experiment with art?
    I think glass was my main and my first. Now it’s my language and I feel really bad doing anything good without glass.

    Can you tell me about some of your pieces in this gallery?
    Another Excuse 2023. I usually show my work how it comes, almost like it’s in transit, on a palette from rock or wood. But it’s kind of ugly to have a really dirty wood palette on display, so this is the first time I’ve covered it in stainless steel. And I think it looks really luxurious. I like the twist where the podium is almost as good as the sculpture. It’s almost like you can throw away the sculpture and use the podium. A piece’s relationship to the stand is something I work with a lot.

    It’s cool how the sculpture is reflected on the podium too.
    It’s almost like you can see other parts of the sculpture through that.

    Is there anything specific that inspired Another Excuse 2023?
    I made one of the pieces on the sculpture, the cross or the plus sign, for the first time in 2021. I was in Holland to see one of my absolute favorite artists, a German girl called Annie Imhof. She’s amazing and she works on a lot of installations. I went to the Rijksmuseum and I actually saw a silver piece that came up from the plate almost like a vase shape. And I thought “I’m really gonna try to do that.” Now you can’t really see it, but the way I work is almost like a painter, building layer on layer, cooling it down and heating it up, building, building, cooling it down, building building. It’s like a plate and it actually has some kind of vase in blue on it and my phone number on the handle. So that’s how it's built up and in the end, I just blew on transparent chalk to create the bubbles on the sides. So it's just a lot of layering.

    What inspired the name of your sculpture?
    I thought producing stuff is almost like an excuse and then a lot of my titles come from stuff I listen to and things I read. Music is very much important to me while I’m working and getting inspiration. You can listen to a song that you like and think the song is catchy, or you can kind of inject music like injecting heroin. Injecting music or poetry like that could be like you listen to it so much until the lyrics and the songs can go into your system. The thing you work on for that certain couple of months might reflect the title in the end. For me, it's more important that the title is not the description of the piece. It’s almost like a clue into the piece. To read Another Excuse 2023 and the year is actually in the title might lead the viewer to reflect on themself. I like the title to be more confusing than helping to try to open up something.

    Do you remember what you were listening to when you were making this sculpture?
    A lot of different stuff. I listened to a lot of Justice, I listened to a lot of Lou Reed, I listened to a lot of CCS. I listen to a lot of music all the time.

    How long did that take for you to put together?
    I've been working on it since 2021 so I guess it's a two year process. Everything that I make, the blue handle, the gold one right here, especially with making sculpture with glass, it’s so easy to make something. An hour later and it’s done. But it’s very easy to get really superficial doing that. It’s like maybe one piece works for you, but then maybe you make 25 pieces before that and then the difference with me may be that I save all the 25 f— ups and use that as actual layering, almost like paint. I like to compare it to if I’m a painter, when you see a really nice Picasso painting, a really nice Basquiat painting, a really nice Lee Krasner painting, it’s almost like 16 paintings underneath that we don’t see but that actually builds up the value of the engagement in the actual paintings.

    How has your artistic vision changed since the beginning of your career?
    I think what’s different is the scale. In the beginning, you feel very much making small pieces. 25 years later, you don’t feel anything making the small sculptures. You almost need to reach that volume to kind of feel alive again. It’s almost like a search and an excavation everyday.

    On your website it says you are particularly inspired by graffiti and pop culture…
    Yes, that's the writer that wrote about me in 2009 like I’m the poster boy of “cool rebellion” or something. Now I'm like 46. But, I mean, when I create a room for a palette, it’s almost like a space for that thing. Before, I was pretty bad at doing anything in glass, and so I painted a lot of my corridors, almost like an environment experience, in places that I show. I’m not a graffiti artist, but I like to create that space for the pieces. In the end, when you create a space like that, it’s almost unnecessary to move in the sculpture when it is as good as it is just with the numbers—that’s my phone number. I can paint elephants, I can paint sails, I can paint any flowers as good as my phone number, so it's almost like creating your own home, more or less.

    Other artists that inspire you?
    Annie Imhof is the main. She's one of the world’s greatest artists right now. I like a lot of painters. Like everyone I like Basquiat. Who doesn’t like Lee Krasner? I think now it’s also a special interesting time. This time with Instagram and everything, I’ve become friends with a lot of musicians and I think that inspires you even more sometimes. To be inspired by something else, poets and musicians, instead of other glass artists because we’re all friends.

    What direction do you see your art going in for future projects?
    Even deeper into room installations. I mean I’ve always been inspired by trying to create my own space, and I think it goes toward that but maybe the more artists there are, you are always insecure and feel naked when you show yourself. But I can feel that, more or less, I might grow up a bit from this and I might rely more on the actual objects and having a room atmosphere. It might be cleaner, or it might be more like an autopsy, but it's always some kind of situation where I like the viewer to kind of be able to reflect on themselves inside the space and feel something.

    What do you think of the glass art scene around Sweden?
    As you can see here, I think it’s really cooking, and I think it's actually really interesting that all the factories have gone to hell more or less. So now it’s all independence, independence, independence.

    Glass is the fastest material in the world to make sculptures. It’s important for the people like myself, artists working in it, to challenge themselves, and to treat it as clay. It’s really expensive, but you need to treat it as something not as expensive. I have a painter friend in the United States that says “nothing holds color and space like glass.” And if you look at me, I don’t think like that. I just want to make another object. But a painter, they think about paint so the canvas disappears. But glass holds color and space like no other material. This is what's interesting about this material. If people understand that they can make stuff that you can’t make up. For me it's become like everything you can paint on paper, don’t do it in glass. It’s almost like the material can make stuff up for you as you go.

    photography courtesy of CFHILL
    photography courtesy of CFHILL

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