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#chuck wein
robertocustodioart · 2 years
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Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein by Burt Glinn 1965
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lisamarie-vee · 1 year
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toby-on-drugs · 1 year
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Edie Sedgwick with Andy Warhol, Henry Geldzahler and Chuck Wein, 1965
Photo: Steve Schapiro
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Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein, photographed by Burt Glinn, New York City, 1965🍂🍁
Via @historic_imagery on Instagram🍁
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cultreslut · 3 months
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my hustler (1966) dir. andy warhol & chuck wein on archive.org
"Set on Fire Island, My Hustler depicts competition over the affections of a young male hustler among a straight woman, a former male hustler, and the man who hired the boy’s companionship via a “Dial-A-Hustler” service." synopsis via tmdb
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brokehorrorfan · 11 months
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The Return of Swamp Thing's original motion picture soundtrack is available on vinyl for $32 via Terror Vision Records. The score, composed by Chuck Cirino (Chopping Mall), was pulled from the original tapes and has been remastered.
The album is limited to 1,00 across three color variants: "Genetic Mutation," "Muck Monster," and "Swamp Gas" (pictured below). It's housed in a gatefold jacket designed by Worserbeings with liner notes from director Jim Wynorski and a Swamp Thing bumper sticker.
Shipping will begin on June 25. The Return of Swamp Thing’s soundtrack is also available on cassette, limited to 200, for $13.
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batteredshoes · 1 year
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Burt Glinn | Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein | New York | 1965.
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bookoftheironfist · 2 months
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Today marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of Marvel Premiere #15, which hit shelves on February 19th, 1974! (The cover date of May 15 indicated when the book should be taken off the shelves.) This anthology series served as a testing ground where creative teams tried out new characters and storylines to gauge their appeal. One such character was Iron Fist/Danny Rand, who first appeared in #15 and stuck around for ten more issues until proving popular enough, both here and in his guest appearances in the Deadly Hands of Kung Fu magazine, to earn his own solo comic in 1975.
This was a time when martial arts were exploding in popularity across the U.S., and Marvel leapt onboard the trend with new characters like Shang-Chi/Master of Kung Fu, the Sons of the Tiger, White Tiger (Hector Ayala), and Iron Fist. These characters were a departure from Marvel's standard superhero fare; they were martial arts heroes first and foremost, directly inspired by kung fu films and famous contemporary masters like Bruce Lee, Jim Kelly, and Chuck Norris, and with stories heavily focused on beautiful, thrilling, technically precise fight scenes.
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Caption: "You whirl: one man, still doubled with pain, receives the blow of the hammer...another, already reeling, you dispose of with the monkey blow. The fourth attacker, more cautious than his fellows, only now makes his forward leap..." Marvel Premiere #15 by Roy Thomas, Gil Kane, Glynis Wein, D. Giordano, and L.P. Gregory
This sucker-punch of an introductory issue flips breathlessly back and forth between nineteen-year-old Danny Rand's fight to survive the ritual Challenge of the Many and the One, and his flashbacks to the horrors he experienced as a nine-year-old child when, high in the mountains, he watched his parents die. The issue doesn't have room to introduce the dragon Shou-Lao the Undying (that epicness is saved for Marvel Premiere #16), but it introduces the world of Marvel's K'un-Lun and several of its key players, and teases the core premise by culminating in Danny's first time using the power of the Iron Fist. It's an explosive introduction to a character and corner of the Marvel universe that has only grown richer, larger, and more exciting over the past 50 years.
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Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick et Chuck Wein par Bert Glinn, New York, 1965.
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1965
Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick, and Chuck Wein
New York City
photographed by Burt Glinn
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eucanthos · 4 months
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eucanthos
"after" Bronzino - Gioconda
Bronzino: Portrait of a Lady in Red, 1533
Ingres: Portrait de Madame Gonse (Ingres' Joconde) 1852
Jeff Koons: Balloon Dog, 1994-2000 [bronze mix]
Scarlet Johanson by Craig McLean [eyes]
Catherine Ann Douglas Griffith portrait, 1830-31 [turban]
Sølve Sundsbø: [3D] Head Cape, shot 1998, published Dazed & Confused issue 49, 2018
Jeanloup Sieff: Jarretelles Noires, Paris, 1986
Jeanne Dubois by Jacques Exetier [bare foot]
Anatomic illustration plate by Sigismond Balicki for Laskowski's "Anatomie normale du corps humain" (1894)
Pumps Giuseppe Zanotti [leg]
Sanghyeok Bang [hip]
Burt Glinn: notes from a 1965 portrait of Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein posing in a NY manhole
Armchair: Fauteuil à la reine 1730 / 1740 (2e quart du XVIIIe siècle) Cresson, René, Atelier de
Heart engraving from Physiology for Young People, 1884
jan 8 '24 update
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celaenaeiln · 1 year
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The Batfam creation stories are so interesting and the timelines are mindboggling
Bruce Wayne (25 yrs old): February 1939 by artist Bob Kane and Bill Finger
Batman was created as an antithesis to Superman. After Superman’s smashing success with the audience DC wanted to create a darker “villain” hero. He got a little side kick in his 2-3rd year of being Batman
Dick Grayson (8 yrs old): April 1940 by artist Bob Kane and Bill Finger
Here’s the cool thing. Dick was created by the two because Batman had no one to talk to during his cases so it led to pages of him talking to himself. So Finger wanted a character that would ask the same questions as the reader so Robin was created to embody the younger readers’ views. Interesting fact: people took to Dick Grayson instantly despite being new because they loved the humorous, intelligent, young and charming character type. He was a massive success because he was the ideal of how a young man should be in the 1940s
Jason Todd (13 yrs old): March 1983 by Gerry Conway and Don Newton
By the time Len Wein took over as DC editor in 1982, Dick had been the starring as the leader in Team Titans comics. Because Robin no longer appeared in Batman comics, there was no character that would ask questions to make Batman make sense so Jason Todd was created. Interesting fact: In 1988 Dennis O’Neil held a telephone poll asking if Jason Todd should be killed and the majority responded yes. So that’s his death story
Tim Drake (13 yrs old): 1989 by Marv Wolfman and Pat Broderick
Although Tim Drake was created to quickly replace Jason Todd, his creation story is the most unique because it has the most forethought. At the time the contrast in Dick and Jason’s personality led to the death of Jason Todd by the audience. Jason's rebellious attitude was the reason why readers didn't really warm up to him. According to Marv Wolfman, Batman writer and Tim's co-creator, this may have been because fans in that time period didn't appreciate a "snotty, possibly criminal Robin" tagging along with Batman. Tim Drake had neither Dick’s acrobatic prowess nor Jason’s rough demeanor which cemented his success and made him so popular with the fans. Arguably, he is a creator’s greatest revival story.
Stephanie Brown (18yrs old): June 1992 by Chuck Dixon and Tom Lyle
She was originally created as a plot device to “spoil” her father Cluemaster’s plans. She was well-loved by the audience. Horrifically, Stephanie became Robin because she was set to die. After Tim Drake quit, Batman gave the position to his former robin’s girlfriend - Stephanie. Interesting fact: Leslie Thompkins intentionally let Stephanie die from her wounds to teach Batman a lesson about recruiting children, but it was later retconned that Thompkins instead faked Stephanie's death to get her away from Batman
Damian Wayne (10 yrs old): Created by Grant Morrison and Andy Kubert
Like Stephanie, Damian was created to die. Morrison had planned out his death at the creation of the character. Damian Wayne is important because he was meant to show a character that can age and evolve beyond the usual accepted status quo of superhero comics. Interesting fact: In a interview, when the interviewer said Damian is a character that takes people a little time to warm up to, Morris replied, “Well, people didn’t like him. And obviously, he was created to be kind of unlikable, although I always liked the character…It’s an obvious story to tell of this little bad, aristocratic, stuck-up, arrogant, snot of a kid suddenly realize that, “Wait a minute, part of my genetic heritage is Batman!” and then living up to that.”
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popping-your-culture · 8 months
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Edie Sedgwick, with Andy Warhol and Chuck Wein, photographed by Burt Glinn, circa 1965-66.
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froody · 7 months
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mannymuc · 9 months
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Fab Factory Foursome 
Andy Warhol with Gerard Malanga, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein in 1965, shot by English master photographer David Bailey.
Chuck Wein (right) brought Edie Sedgwick into the Warhol Factory in early 1965
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