Sentences with phrase «by celebrity culture»

Her endearing installation includes a wall of paintings on paper inspired by celebrity culture.

Not exact matches

Owned by Sina Corp., a Yahoo - like web portal that came to prominence in the early day, it's become prominent in Chinese politics, especially around environmental issues, corruption over food safety, disaster response and in Chinese celebrity culture, where a number of actors and singers have gained millions of followers (or «fans» as their called in Weibo lingo).
To those most appalled by the prospect of a President Trump, it's an ugly manifestation of America's bigoted id, or the triumph of celebrity culture over substance, or a product of a broken information ecology in which acceptance of facts is optional.
Breeders, a film by the Center for Ethics and Culture, investigates the growing practice of surrogacy: «Surrogacy is fast becoming one of the major issues of the 21st century — celebrities and everyday people are increasingly using surrogates to build their families.
Because it's a heck of a lot easier to dish it out than it is to eat it up, let me tell you, and I think sometimes we inadvertently perpetuate celebrity culture by railing so loudly against it, by feeding into the caricatures with our derision.
«Feast Your Eyes», starring celebrity chefs Wolfgang Puck, Bricia Lopez and Mr. Chow, and narrated by actress Joely Fisher, explains how food from around the world helps create a unique culture across the country.
However, much of this romanticizing is actually driven by market economy — the wedding industry, the movie industry, the music industry, TV, advertising, celebrity culture (celebrities are often aspirational figures — we want to be like them, look like them, and have what they have), etc..
BabyCenter.com does, and Editor - in - Chief Linda Murray spoke with us about some of them, and how parents are influenced by pop culture, celebrity, and even royalty when it comes to naming the newest members of their family.
A media - centric, consumeristic celebrity culture, the erosion of civic responsibility, & the effectiveness of machine /» gangster» politics on a dynastic scale all contribute in challenging the assumption that a government of the people, by the people, & for the people can sustain itself in the long run.
Hollyhood RadioTV is giving local talent, legacy brands, celebrities, athletes, and aspiring entertainers, a digital voice for relevant issues from all cultures and communities by providing a platform for interactive engagement globally.
In THE BLING RING, Oscar Winning filmmaker Sofia Coppola takes us inside the world of these teens, where their youthful naivete and excitement is amplified by today's culture of celebrity and luxury brand obsession.
A wicked satire of our selfie and Instagram - obsessed culture, «Ingrid» features a knockout performance by indie comedy goddess Plaza as a woman who uses a $ 60,000 inheritance to move to LA and stalk an online celebrity (Olsen) with an equally vacuous existence.
Initially it feels like that's the direction Zoolander 2 is going to go — the conflating of celebrity culture and reality brought on by social media and the digital age.
But so great is this culture's obsession with her that Syd has developed a nice little side - line peddling her infections on the black market to a man who, by day, sells celebrity steaks grown from the cells of the star of your choosing.
Outside of the great script and great acting, I really admire how McKay tells this story by adding in pop culture references, news clips, and various celebrities into the mix.
What made the film so brilliant and compelling despite its theoretically repellent cast of characters is that instead of going for cheap shots or silly attempts at psychological insight, Coppola simply observed them in ways that helped inspire a certain understanding into their mindsets and how they had been shaped and influenced by a celebrity - obsessed culture that overwhelms them on a daily basis.
The truth is, Grafton never had to compete in a market driven by celebrity, pop culture, and social media connections.
Convinced that everyone from his agent, friends, and bums on the street are portrayed by famous actors, Self goes undercover into the dangerous world of celebrity culture.
He's the enthusiastic celebrity who appears in the at the top of this post, and it confirms an observation by the Kindle Culture blog.
Built as an iconic landmark showcasing Arabian culture and hospitality at its finest, Emirates Palace, managed by Kempinski, has created an enviable niche in luxury hospitality, welcoming world leaders, celebrities, global business travellers and leisure guests with a truly memorable and unique experience, luxurious contemporary facilities and amenities in comfortable and traditional Arabian surroundings with personalized world class service.
The Jace Hall Show, which airs on Crackle.com, aims to depict gamer culture by highlighting developers and celebrity gamers.
Modern culture is reflected in his humorous portraits, landscapes and interiors by means of familiar political and celebrity figures, chain restaurants and box stores, and well - known brands.
Meanwhile, other examples of woodblock prints can be seen at Lady Lever Art Gallery in the autumn, where works owned by local collector Frank Milner reveal the celebrities, sports champions, fashion icons and villains of 19th century Japanese culture.
Postwar celebrity culture only exacerbated matters by convincing people that artists whose work is well known should themselves be well known.
Join the MOCA Contemporaries for a discussion about art and fashion with celebrity stylist and Academy Award - nominated costume designer Arianne Phillips, fashion designer Michael Schmidt, and painter Kimberly Brooks, moderated by fashion and culture writer, curator, consultant, and the former West Coast bureau chief of Women's Wear Daily, Rose Apodaca.
Jon Rafman immerses viewers in environments where gaming landscapes and physical reality fuse as dark, hypnotizing hybrids; Yves Scherer probes celebrity culture and popular media in works that toe the line between critique, satire, and celebration; and Simon Denny examines surveillance and digital subcultures by plumbing the depths of images, information, and communication stored on the internet.
From makeup to celebrity culture, these artists mine «girly» motifs — often ignored or dismissed as flippant and unserious by the art world — to explore issues of gendered expectations and pressures women face through representations of women in the media and culture at large.
Discover how one of the 20th century's most innovative artists forged an indelible legacy as a pioneer by ignoring art - world taboos and incorporating fashion and celebrity culture into his pop art.
Together, this avoidance of the limelight and determinedly independent stance towards the art market have turned him into something of a cult figure — particularly for those of us dismayed by contemporary culture's ceaseless, vapid manufacturing of celebrity.
Painters like Karen Kilimnik made work stemming from the influence of popular culture, creating cursory celebrity portraits, while Elizabeth Peyton took the practice a step further by painting portraits of celebs, musicians, and European monarchs alongside her significant others and members of her social circle, entrenching mass culture's idolization of celebrity in the realm of fine art while at the same time elevating her friends to celebrity status.
For its latest Art Issue, Visionaire, the iconic art and fashion publication that knows how to surprise us with its thematic issues, decided to offer a different perspective on the continuous rise of selfie culture, asking legendary conceptual artist John Baldessari to create a series of artworks inspired by digital celebrity self - portraits.
The Kate Moss story unfolds in 40, a collection of work by Russell Marshall that celebrates one of the most photographed, enigmatic icons of the time and inspires conversation about celebrity culture and Kate Moss - mania.
Although Lowman's work is influenced by such earlier appropriation artists as Andy Warhol, Richard Prince, and Cady Noland, his own brand of image recycling disperses into an unstructured installation - environment in which posters, record jackets and silk - screened imagery create a large - scale narrative that ruminates on specific issues, from American gun culture to celebrity cults.
Nina Chanel Abney's (b. 1982, Chicago) pieces address pop culture and racial conflicts, informed as much by hip - hop culture, animated cartoons, as by celebrity websites and tabloid magazines.
Scott» s 1969 film portrait of Richard Hamilton continued this collaborative formula, with Hamilton musing about cinema, art, and celebrity while images of his works, their original source materials, and related elements from pop culture flash by in rapid succession.
Priced from $ 50,000 to $ 200,000, they riffed on popular culture and art history with paintings depicting celebrity magazine covers and a black - and - white version of Edouard Manet's «Olympia» framed by white neon lights.
Strongly influenced by pop culture, Stikki Peaches combines images of classic films, celebrities, and musical icons into hybrid characters.
Her work is informed by mainstream news media, cartoons, video games, hip - hop culture, celebrity websites and tabloid magazines.
Propelled by explicitly autobiographical works such as Everyone I ever slept with (1995) and My bed (1998), Brit - celebrity «bad girl» Tracey Emin has crossed the boundary from artist to a pop - culture phenomenon.
Abney's works are informed as much by mainstream news media as they are by animated cartoons, video games, hip - hop culture, celebrity websites and tabloid magazines.
These seemingly internecine art world problems are mirrored in culture at large, where branded feminism appears in the guise of once - radical gestures: from Lynda Benglis's phallic woman, to the indiscriminate schlong - wagging of Miley Cyrus; from the mantra «the personal is political,» to countless «lady blogs» microscopping the daily minutiae of celebrities through a «feminist lens»; from the fight for equal pay to the «Lean - In» ideology espoused by Facebook executive and self - styled activist Sheryl Sandberg, which rethinks «revolution» as a greasy ladder that can be scaled through technocratic efficiency and a 24/7 work ethic.
Pop culture rules for this multi-disciplinary artist whose work is inspired by our relationship with celebrity and fame
Over the past decade, celebrity culture has become less dominated by high - class film stars, TV personalities, or musicians and more in favor of a decentralized type of star: Youtube content creators.
It's the latest creation by photographer Alison Jackson, who explores celebrity culture by photographing lookalikes.
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