Tumgik
#agnelic
fashion4standusers · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Ethel Cain for High Snobiety
Dress: Alaïa
Hat: Ronald Van Der Kemp
Jewelry: Alan Crocetti
Gloves: Agnelle
80 notes · View notes
kkking · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
now that it's officially winter... I'm posting the autumn birthday dump. initially i was planning to do that on Sakyo's birthday, but most of these pieces are a painful reminder that i need a new marker set orz
today i finally forced myself to try and edit them so that they look presentable, and while lineart-wise those aren't my faves either, i'm pleasantly surprised that i managed to more or less fix the colors
51 notes · View notes
baabeastings · 13 days
Text
Tumblr media
4/13, splendid! have my trollsona. :3
3 notes · View notes
forcedfemme-me · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Anais Mali for Numero - BCBG leather jacket, Loewe Leather skirt, Agnelle leather gloves
44 notes · View notes
draconic-ichor · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
The Fallen
Some Mohg art based on The Fallen Angel Painting by Alexandre Cabanel
49 notes · View notes
styleofdiamandis · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
                 PHOTOSHOOT: MODZIK MAGAZINE
Modzik is a Paris-based magazine which featured Marina on their June 2019 cover! The photoshoot, which took place at the Hotel Grand Amour, was taken by Enzo Orlando.
Styling by Clélia Cazals, hair by Anita Bujoli and makeup by Helena Henrion, respectively.
Tumblr media
We’re starting off strong with a very hard leather look. The black lambskin bomber jacket with shiny patchwork puff sleeves is from Dutch designer Ronald van der Kemp’s Spring/Summer 2019 Haute Couture collection which was paired with a Louis Vuitton Spring/Summer 2019 paneled leather skirt.
Tumblr media
As in accessories, M rocked a suede version of Agnelle’s leopard print gloves.
Tumblr media
Dutch emerging designer label Ninamounah created Marina's Howling red patent croc-embossed over-the-knee Western boots for their Fall/Winter 2019 "Evolve Around Me" collection!
Tumblr media
Such a dreamy shot! Here, M rocks a Louis Vuitton Spring/Summer 2019 beige cotton zip-up blazer with contrasting white peak lapel.
Her long crystal shoulder duster earrings are part of Vivienne Westwood’s Spring/Summer 2019 lookbook.
Tumblr media
It’s getting wild! Belgian emerging designer label LĒO created Marina’s cropped croc-embossed white patent leather jacket with swinghooks! It’s from their Fall/Winter 2019 collection titled “Trance”.
Both her tiger print silk pencil skirt (pictured in grey)...
Tumblr media
...and leopard print brocade pumps with oversized buckles are from the Rochas Spring/Summer 2019 collection.
Tumblr media
For the penulimate look, Marina lounges in one of the most eye-catching pieces from Fendi’s Spring/Summer 2019 runway show! As worn by Kendall Jenner, it’s the Zucca logo-embossed white leather oversized bomber jacket with large zip side pockets.
Her “Citizen” multi appliqué black lambskin leather gloves are fruit of the collaboration between French menswear designer Louis Gabriel Nouchi and Agnelle.
Tumblr media
A pair of black patent leather ankle boots with round buckle detail and perspex heels from Mulberry's Spring/Summer 2019 collection completed the look!
Tumblr media
And last but not least, Marina poses in the Ninamounah Spring/Summer 2019 Termite grey wool blazer bodysuit with baroque pearl buttons.
The rest of her look is from Dior’s spectacular Spring/Summer 2019 presentation. It includes her pleated ombré organza midi skirt...
Tumblr media
...a single star and faux pearl curved gold-plated brass earring...
Tumblr media
...an elastic polyester J’adior cross-over headband in beige (which she styled into a choker)...
Tumblr media
...this stunning crystal leaf and gold brass logo bracelet...
Tumblr media
...and, last but not least, beige cotton ankle wrap ballet flats with J’adior lettering.
7 notes · View notes
dustedmagazine · 8 months
Text
Dust Volume Nine, Number Eight
Tumblr media
Spiral Joy Band
The music plays on through the end of the most disastrous summer in living memory, with Maui on fire and Arizona broiled beneath a heat dome and Vermont swept away in a 100- maybe 500-year flood.  And here’s the kicker: next year will likely be worse.  Still by force of habit, we continue on with the daily grind, cooking and mowing lawns and going to shows and listening to records.  This month’s haul includes avant-black metal, turntablism, bass-forward jazz, jolting punk and music made in collaboration with our robot overlords.  Contributors this time include Jonathan Shaw, Bill Meyer, Jim Marks, Jennifer Kelly, Tim Clarke and Bryon Hayes.
夢遊病者 — Skopophoboexoskelett (Sentient Ruin Laboratories)
youtube
In past thinking and writing about this tri-continental, avant-garde, jazz and black metal project (whose name translates to Sleepwalker), your faithful reviewer has made concerted efforts to set aside any references to John Zorn’s Naked City ensemble. This time around, for the project’s Skopophoboexoskelett, such efforts face real challenge holding Naked City tracks like “Saigon Pickup,” “Punk China Doll” or “Razorwire” at any sort of distance. The atmospherics on Sleepwalker’s new LP explode with unpredictable noise, then emanate a patina of Noir-ish style and sleaze, especially the excellent final track “The Bad Luck That Saved You from Worse Luck.” It’s murky like a thick cloud of cigarette smoke, sexy like a stiletto heel dotted with droplets of blood, compelling like those cinematic moments at which Humphrey Bogart (as Philip Marlowe or Glenn Griffin) would grin his mean and tight grin, presaging antic, joyful violence. In spite of that violence, Skopophoboexoskelett may be Sleepwalker’s most listenable record. That could be a good or a bad thing, depending on how much you enjoyed being subsumed in the volatile chaos of their earlier records.
Jonathan Shaw
Agnel / Lanz / Vatcher — Animals (Klanggalerie)
Animals by AGNEL LANZ VATCHER
While the ability of great improvisers to make music out immediate company, available space, and their own personal resources might amaze a listener, after a while, that might become a bit routine. Perhaps that is why French pianist Sophie Agnel and American-born, Netherlands-based drummer Michael Vatcher have sought out the company of turntablist Joke Lanz, AKA Sudden Infant. Lanz’s aesthetics have grown out of punk, noise and actionism. But, being a man of a certain age, he’s been doing what he does for a long time, too, so his onslaught of well-timed body noises, electronic squiggles and good old-fashioned scratching further confounds by evading being confounding. Construction, destruction, mutual disregard and scrupulous attunement all come into play across this album’s 13 short-for-improv episodes of absurd grace. Never mind breaking this stuff down, the players are already doing that even as they make it up.
Bill Meyer
Vicente Archer Trio — Short Stories (Cellar Music Group)
Short Stories by Vicente Archer
Reviewing a release by the Bruce Barth Trio last year, I mentioned wanting to hear more of double bassist Vicente Archer, and my wishes have been answered. Short Stories, with Gerald Clayton on piano and Bill Stewart on drums, demonstrates Archer’s strengths as a musician and composer. The tunes are generally mid-tempo, mid-length, and with a kind of timeless post-bop feel. Three were written by Archer (“Bye Nashville” deserves to become a standard), two by Stewart, and one each by Clayton, Jeremy Pelt, Nicholas Payton and Pat Metheny.
An advantage of bassist-led piano trios is that the piano is usually not allowed to dominate the sound, and Clayton plays his role just right here, taking the occasional solo, as on the bluesy “Round Comes Round,” but giving the others plenty of space. The set includes a brooding solo piece for bass, “Lighthouse,” a playful duo featuring just Archer and Stewart, “It Takes Two to Know One,” and Stewart sitting out while Clayton and Archer recreate “Message to a Friend” by Metheny and Charlie Haden. Short Stories makes clear why Archer has appeared on 50 or more recordings over the past 25 years and makes the case for him as a band leader.
Jim Marks
BEEF — BEEF (Feel It)
BEEF by BEEF
BEEF jolts hard on the four-four, their songs a continuous up-and-down battery of guitar slashes, bass thunks and relentless, manic drums. There is nothing fancy or florid or even fluid about these songs. They rain down like punches, though there’s undeniable glee in the violence. Maybe it’s because the drummer, Takoda Hortenberry, is the main singer and songwriter that the songs take on such a percussive air. He’s not in it by himself, though. His wife Ally pounds the keyboards with equal force, while guitarist Sam Richardson (who also runs Feel It Records) keeps the riffs super short and super explosive. Whatever the secret, this is punk rock that slaps hard and makes you like it.  “I know you want it! BEEF coming,” shouts Hortenberry in the closer, “I Want BEEF,” and the thing is, you do.
Jennifer Kelly
Jaap Blonk / Damon Smith / Ra Kalam Bob Moses — Rune Kitchen (Balance Point Acoustics)
Rune Kitchen by Jaap Blonk / Damon Smith / Ra Kalam Bob Moses
Titles can tell you things, and in this case, the words on the front clue you to the lack of words in the music. Texts have their place in Jaap Blonk’s concrete poetry, but this session is improvisation most pure. It went down in a town near St. Louis during a transitional moment; bassist Damon Smith was ending one short tour with Blonk, and about to begin another with (now Memphis-based) veteran drummer Ra Kalam Bob Moses. Perhaps inspired by anticipation, Smith and Moses lock right in, playing briskly evolving sound configurations that bristle with forthright gesture and woody texture and even confronting the vocalist with swinging, time-keeping grooves near the end. Derek Bailey once opined that there are players, and then there are artists, and Blonk’s extension of century-deep Dada actions has often seemed to put him in the latter camp. But he also has a skilled improviser’s ability to detect prevailing winds and respond with strategic counter-huffs; in the company of two men playing their asses off, he follows suit. Unburdened by pages, he digs deep into the rudiments, growling like a fever dream of throat singing, muttering strings of phonemes, and uttering proclamations that sound so important, he had to invent a new language to convey them.
Bill Meyer
Cloudland Canyon — S-T (Medical)
Cloudland Canyon (MR-091) by Cloudland Canyon
Cloudland Canyon’s Kip Uhlhorn has long favored the non-organic end of the psychedelic experience, with long, wigged out experiments in synth tone like 2008’s “Krautwerk” from Lie in Light or the squiggly fogs of “pinklight/version” from 2011’s Fin Eaves.  For this self-titled album, number four in the Cloudland discography, he engages even more deeply with the machine by tapping AI as a collaborator. The result is blippy, buoyant, denatured dance anthems, like “Internet Dreams” and “Circuit City,” which sound like the mathematical average of 100 other synth popiscles. Still even robots hit the mark occasionally, and “Future Perfect (Bad Decision)” is a woozy, blurred rainbow of psych pop longing, not unlike the work of another recent Uhlhorn collaborator, Sonic Boom.
Jennifer Kelly
Annie Hart — Weight of a Wave (Uninhabitable Mansions)
The Weight of a Wave by Annie Hart
Annie Hart has made four solo albums since her days in Au Revoir Simone, an all-female Brooklyn synth pop trio beloved of David Lynch, but she hasn’t moved too far away. Weight of a Wave floats flickery synth tones over rackety drums, splitting the difference between bedroom pop and strobe lit dance. “Boy You Got Me Good” does the classic girl-group trick of lacing sweet cooing melodies with the bitter taste of arsenic. “Crowded Cloud” rides synthesizer overload like a Pat Benatar anthem, then cuts back to the antsy minimum of drum machine and whispered chants. Yet though the soft-focus, gentle bop sonics haven’t changed much from Hart’s Au Revoir Simone days, time does its work on the mood. “Nothing Makes Me Happy Anymore” layers shadowy doubled vocals over a wheedling Casio riff, as Hart enumerates the people she’s loved in various ways whose phone calls no longer suffice to cheer her up
Jennifer Kelly
Holy Wave — Five of Cups (Suicide Squeeze)
Five of Cups by HOLY WAVE
Austin, Texas quartet Holy Wave have been at it for over a decade now and Five of Cups is their sixth full-length. The band mines a similar seam to Work and Non-Work-eraBroadcast: droning organs, motorik drums heavy on the ride cymbal, spaced-out vocals, jangly guitars. Though there’s nothing inherently off-putting about this 42-minute record, the songs feel listless compared to previous efforts such as Freaks of Nurture. The performances are tight, the production is three-dimensional and the arrangements are woozy and trippy, but it sounds like the last couple of years have knocked the wind out of Holy Wave’s sails. There are some bright moments in the track list, such as the dubby grooves and female vocals of “The Darkest Timeline,” plus late highlight “Nothing in the Dark,” which is a dead ringer for early Tame Impala.
Tim Clarke
Koeosaeme — Beige (Orange Milk)
Beige by koeosaeme
With Beige, sound artist Ryu Yoshizawa throttles down his usual breakneck blipscapes in favor of expressive phrasing and varied tempos. The serial Orange Milk resident allows his compositions to breathe, to hang back and to interject when necessary. His palette remains obviously synthetic: the strings are a touch too sweet, the reeds slightly nasally. Yoshizawa coalesces these inhuman tones into lush dreamscapes, embedded with only the subtlest hint of crackling glitch. He leverages the dynamics of modern classical and musique concrète to achieve a sense of movement and surprise. Coughs, harrumphs and whispers interject at random, but Yoshizawa uses these human elements sparingly. Instead, he relies on the lushness of his (synthetic) instrumentation to set the mood. At times he lets things get a little corny, such as when a Kenny G-like sax periodically slithers into focus, but for the most part Yoshizawa’s futuristic fusion is beguiling. Unlike its neutrally hued namesake, Beige is far from boring.  
Bryon Hayes
Molly Ringworm — Despicable (Self-released)
youtube
This Molly Ringworm comes from Austin, TX, and seeks to do for hardcore what Jane Pain has done for black metal (careful with this link). Yikes. Despicable’ssongs land somewhere between energizing provocation and snotty gross-out, with the occasional nods to street punk and sludge. There’s another punky Molly Ringworm — an indie-twee outfit from Jersey whose music is more compatible with the 1980s cinema of John Hughes, with which actress Molly Ringwald will forever be associated. I prefer this band, with their snarling, trashy anti-aesthetic and their nasty sonic sensibility (which may put you in the mind of Ringwald’s work in Cindy Sherman’s Office Killer). So goes culture. I had a high school girlfriend in the mid-1980s who looked a lot like the actress, and she (the girlfriend) would spit with all the imperiousness and venom that only a 17 year old can summon, “Oh great, another movie with Molly Ring-worm.” Sorry, folks — doesn’t matter to me if you’re filthy, fractious Texas guttersnipes or ironical white kids from New Jersey. Susie E. from Berks County, PA, gets dibs on the name “Molly Ringworm,” now and forever.
Jonathan Shaw
Matt Robidoux — Music For Aluminum Corn (Crash Symbols)
music for aluminum corn by matt robidoux
Mills College may be shuttered, but its students carry on.  Matt Robidoux combines symbolic and social action with accessible invention on Music For Aluminum Corn. The title derives from an instrument that the Mills graduate devised in homage to an early Buchla synthesizer that was kept at Mills. Essentially, they wired up an aluminum casting of two corn cobs to make a touch and movement-activated electronic instrument, and then called upon their fellow graduates to help him take it for a drive. A string quartet, a reed ensemble and the other instruments in Robidoux’s studio round out the sound palette, which is applied to a series of themes which, depending on their arrangement, sound like 1970s TV show themes, syndrum exotica and texture-oriented investigations. Robidoux’s electronic instrument proves more versatile than its novelty packaging might success, and the assembled crew play with a commitment to the endeavor that signals this heartening piece of news; while Mills College isn’t around anymore, the artistic community it fostered caries on.
Bill Meyer 
Spiral Joy Band — Elvehjem (Feeding Tube)
Elvehjem by Spiral Joy Band
Without Saturn, you got no rings, right? It’s easy to see Spiral Joy Band as a similarly orbital entity, forever existing in relation to its parent band, Pelt. But, just as all those hunks of space rock would feel equally substantial if your rocket ship hit them whilst circling a planet or floating on their own through the galaxy, Spiral Joy Band has demonstrated on the recent archival recordings culled from its Wisconsin sojourn in the early 2010s, it has been its own thing, and that thing is pretty solid. Elvehjem is another album-length excerpt from Patrick Best, Mikel Dimmick and Troy Schafer’s trove of basement jams, and on this one, they assert an identity separate from Pelt. Sure, there’s plenty of long bell and gong tones, but there’s also some guitar and amp activity that’ll singe your whiskers with sheer crackle action.
Bill Meyer
Heleen Van Haegenborgh — Squaring The Circle (El Negocito)
Squaring the Circle by Heleen Van Haegenborgh
Sometimes, awareness of an artist’s inspiration will help you grasp their work. With Squaring The Circle, that’ll only get you so far. Squaring The Circle is Belgian composer Heleen Van Haegenborgh’s response to Johan De Widle’s Pi — Fugue pour les survivants, a graphic piece representing the number pi which is extended each year by its maker. While the mathematic foundation of this CD-length piece’s contents are hard to discern, their sounds just might give you a glimpse into the infinite. Performed by the composer and GAME, a percussion quartet, it combines the reverberant tones of drums, vibraphones, bells and other strikable metal objects with close-up, voltage-derived zaps. Even coming out of a home hi-fi, it creates a sense of ever-expanding space.
Bill Meyer
2 notes · View notes
neri-ink · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Angel
17 notes · View notes
greencheekconure27 · 1 year
Text
"Puncha Puncha "
Angelique Ionathos
youtube
@tuulikki
4 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
"Taharqa et la Nuit #1 (Tombos)" de Juliette Agnel (2019) à l'exposition "Pharaon des Deux Terres. L'Epopée Africaine des Rois de Napata" au Louvre, juillet 2022.
8 notes · View notes
the-evil-weevil · 1 month
Text
0 notes
Text
Nous, laminaires...
Nous, laminaires...
A l’occasion de la célébration des 110 ans de la naissance d’Aimé Césaire et des quarante ans de son dernier recueil “moi, laminaire…”, Captures présente une exposition collective, imaginée par Colette Césaire et soutenue par la Fondation Clément de Martinique. La poésie césairienne est mise en dialogue avec les œuvres de trois artistes photographes contemporains, Juliette Agnel, Nicolas Derné…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
aliciaandcompany · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Al pascolo con le mie amiche lanose :-)
0 notes
sivatherium · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
restwaerme · 1 year
Video
youtube
great live set
0 notes
articlesminer · 2 years
Text
Today in History: July 29, Charles marries Diana
Today in History: July 29, Charles marries Diana
Today in History Today is Friday, July 29, the 210th day of 2022. There are 155 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On July 29, 1981, Britain’s Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer in a glittering ceremony at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. (The couple divorced in 1996.) On this date: In 1890, artist Vincent van Gogh, 37, died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound in…
View On WordPress
0 notes