FADER TV: Andrew Kuo’s I’m Dyin Over Here
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For his current show, “I’m Dyin Over Here,” erstwhile FADER contributor and current New York Times illustrator, Andrew Kuo, made two paintings of going to a restaurant and seeing his ex-girlfriend on a date. We asked him if this happened twice, he said no. He painted a bunch of 2×4s to represent himself getting dunked on by Michael Jordan, charted all the ways he wasted a day. And every time we see him he’s wearing that same Bone Thug T-shirt (he’s got in on inside out in this video). And he included three separate mentions of three separate cooking shows in three separate pieces of art. That was cool. We visited Taxter & Spengemenn, where his show is up in New York City until May 16th, and had Kuo give us a walk through of his work.
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posted on Apr 22, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags Andrew Kuo, ART-INTERVIEWS
FADER TV: Souleymane Sy Savane of Goodbye Solo
- story THE FADER
Featured in our current issue #60, the film Goodbye Solo now has tentative plans to explode onto the indie scene and warm the hearts of many at SXSW this weekend. But before that happens, here’s our conversation with “Solo” himself, actor Souleymane Sy Savane. Ramin Bahrani’s third feature film, following one of the greatest films of 2008, follows the relationship between an unhappy 70-year-old Southern passenger and his Senegalese taxi driver–played by Savane, who emigrated from the Ivory Coast not long ago to pursue a career in modeling, quickly expanded his horizons to acting, and is now well on his way to changing the world — we think.
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posted on Mar 13, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Goodbye Solo, Ramin Bahrani, Souleymane Si Savane
FADER TV: Pitch Blackness With Hank Willis Thomas
- story THE FADER
In the 30 Americans exhibit and subsequent book, Hank Willis Thomas showed a bunch of old advertisements with black people and made punny titles. For his new exhibit, Pitch Blackness, at Jack Shainman Gallery in New York City, Thomas created some advertisements of his own (but kept the punny titles). We cruised through the show and had Thomas break it down.
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posted on Mar 11, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Hank Willis Thomas
FADER TV: Interview With Filmmaker Josh Fox of Memorial Day
- story THE FADER
Abu Ghraib is scheduled to re-open its doors this month under the name of “Baghdad Central Prison,” and with such regime shifts comes a film that parallels our involvement during wartime with the events of a Memorial Day weekend in Ocean City, Maryland–events such as ice luging and beer bonging and date rape. This film, directed by International WOW Company’s Josh Fox and produced in part by Michael Stipe, is very serious business. Imagine Girls Gone Wild meets 24 with the camera work of Cloverfield. Memorial Day opens today at IFC.
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posted on Feb 4, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Interview, Memorial Day
FADER TV: Poortraits & Landscrapes
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Making art with your significant other is a trepidatious proposition. “Macho Mel” Shimkovitz and Amy Von Harrington, venturers of murky waters, have a show up at Brooklyn’s Capricious Space featuring work they made both together and alone. Shimkovitz paints tie-dye and people-like figures made of tiny particles. Von Harrington makes sand portraits of political figures she does not agree with. She also uses portions of cookbooks as part of her material. And together they make video art. Really weird video art about running over cakes, having a greasy ponytail, being a douchebag, mannequin or pizza eater. We went by the gallery to have them show us around and explicate. See for yourself until Valentine’s Day. The show has a closing party the day before at Capricious, 103 Broadway, just under the Williamsburg Bridge and really close to Peter Luger.
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posted on Feb 3, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags Amy Von Harrington, ART-INTERVIEWS, Melissa Shimkovitz
FADER TV presents Sundance Selects: Big Fan
- story THE FADER
Rob Siegel has a dream career. The former comedy writer left his position as editor-in-chief at The Onion to explore the more serious side of life. In doing so, he was responsible for what might be the best film ever made in the state of New Jersey, The Wrestler, as well as the best use of Guns N’ Roses in a movie soundtrack. Is there an Academy Award for that? The Wrestler is still in our hearts and minds, but new things are on the horizon for Siegel. Big Fan stars Patton Oswalt as a deeply obsessed New York Giants fan who gets beaten up by his favorite player. Set in various strip clubs, sports bars, and mothers’ homes on Staten Island, the film evokes the same classless grit that we loved so much in The Wrestler, and Patton Oswalt is kind of like a young Mickey Rourke with more back fat.
In our final episode of Sundance Selects, we caught up with Robert Siegel himself, relaxing at the hotel pool in Park City.
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posted on Feb 2, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Sundance Selects
FADER TV presents Sundance Selects: We Live In Public
- story THE FADER
Director Ondi Timoner has a tendency to stumble upon the most batshit crazy people existing in society, and then spends years documenting their lives. Her wildly acclaimed DIG! won the Sundance Grand Jury Award for documentaries in 2004. This year, she was back with another joyous romp (and another Grand Jury winner) through one man’s delirium, and we got to sit down with the documentarian and her subject to find out what We Live In Public was all about.
The film documents internet entrepreneur Josh Harris’s attempt to quote/unquote LIVE IN PUBLIC. 80 million dollars rich off of the late-90’s e-boom, he set out to create a highly-documented underground society in lower Manhattan. The community was busted by FEMA after a month and deemed a “millennial cult.” In the same vein of human experimentation, he then wired his house with cameras and broadcast he and his wife’s own lives online. Now the dude’s living in Ethiopia, on the run from Johnny Law, with very little to vouch for living in public. Let that be a lesson, Twitterers.
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posted on Jan 29, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Sundance Selects
FADER TV presents Sundance Selects: Stingray Sam
- story THE FADER
Back in 2002, a feature film called American Astronaut took the Sundance Film Festival by storm. Seven years later, writer/director Cory McAbee has returned with something a little different — a six-part episodic miniseries formatted for “screens of all sizes” — that doesn’t fail to follow through with the same cult appeal that got him there in the first place.
Stingray Sam is described as a “musical space western that follows two space-convicts as they earn their freedom in exchange for the rescue of a young girl who is being held captive by the genetically designed figurehead of a very wealthy planet.” In our own words, we would sum it up to feel more like eating an acid brownie and playing the electric air guitar in our underwear and a cowboy hat. Everything about this movie is homegrown and completely unique, from the soundtrack written entirely by McAbee’s band, American Astronaut, to the intergalactic locations shot in the greater New York City metropolitan area (Union Pool doubles as an outer-space saloon). In short, Stingray Sam is a treasure, and we are happy to introduce it to you on a screen of our own size.
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posted on Jan 28, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Sundance Selects
FADER TV presents Sundance Selects: Asshole
- story THE FADER
Last week we hit the slopes of Park City, Utah for a Sundance trip full of minor indie celebrity sightings, hot tub ventures and, of course, watching a shit ton of movies. To rest our eyes between full-length features, we check out one of the short film showcases. Sandwiched between six serious short narrative films about AIDS, elementary school shootings and Mormons, Asshole was a nice break from all the seriousness. Directed by two budding comedic filmmakers, Chadd Harbold and Bryan Gaynor (who are barely out of NYU film school), the film stars ex-VICE Magazine co-founder/current Street Boners and TV Carnage captain Gavin McInnes as an asshole who makes a trip to the doctor to figure out what’s wrong with his anus (aka asshole). McInnes improvised almost the whole thing. We sat down with Harbold and Gaynor after a screening to talk about their “process” and how to avoid fart jokes, though we’re not sure why anyone would want to do that.
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posted on Jan 27, 2009 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Asshole, Sundance Selects
FADER TV: Photographer Zoe Strauss Knows a Bunch of Weirdos
- story THE FADER
Philadelphia photographer Zoe Strauss once met a man with a Harley Davidson tattoo on his penis, so she took his photo. Some time later, she ran into him again while he was dressed up for a parade. They talked and he mentioned his other friend, also dressed for the parade, with a tattoo on his penis, too. She took a photo of them together. This was in the middle of the day, kind of near a gas station. The new guy’s kid was egging him on. This is the kind of shit that happens to Strauss a lot and she always takes pictures. We sat down with her for a fireside chat and a tour of her new show “America: We Love Having You Here” opening Saturday at New York’s Silverstein Gallery.
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posted on Nov 21, 2008 in ART + CULTURE CHANNEL, ART + CULTURE INTERVIEWS SHOW tags ART-INTERVIEWS, Zoe Strauss

