Django Django Make Art Out of Buildings in Their 'First Light' Video

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February 25 2015, 9:39 AM ET

Give Django Django points for commitment to and execution of a concept. Their Daniel Swan-directed video for "First Light," the lead single from the upcoming Born Under Saturn, is hardly the most eventful of clips the video is little more than a series of pan-outs on sleek, glass-heavy buildings, which reflect the incoming sunlight and occasionally make visible heat waves but it's certainly one of the more striking visuals you'll see for a song this week, almost Chris Cunningham-esque in its cold, hypnotizing futurism. If nothing else, it proves that old Ron Swanson truism about art: Anything is anything. Watch the video above.

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Django Django Make Art Out of Buildings in Their 'First Light' Video

London Throws Together a Brazen, Exuberant Fashion Week

Leave it toLondon to lovingly exploit an aesthetic.

The quirkiest fashion capital knows how to push atrendas far as possiblethis is why we have the Britsto thank for the birth of the mini-skirt.

This London Fashion Week wasno different.The current 70s craze came through loud and clear, withpunched-up prints, bright florals and a sense of humornot seen in the comparably toned-downNYC collections. Brits also remixed and remastered the50s and 60s with zeal, and even Gareth Pughs menacing all-black collectionhad New Yorks goth obsession almost beat.

As always, London provided a welcomedose ofjoie de vivre,with none of the apologetic restraint so often seen in the department-store-ready New York collections.

On Saturday morning, Emilia Wickstead showed classic 1950s silhouettes, perfect for a woman who is totally modern but still loves a good Hitchcock reference.There were alsoclean pantsuits and red-carpet-ready ball gowns of which Tippi Hedren would approve.

Simone Rocha jolted crowds to attention on Saturday with blown-up rose prints, carpet-like cloaks and even dresses with fur panels down the middle. The eccentric collectionwas united in its exuberant excess.

Providing a quick break from color, Gareth Pugh threwaveritablegoth jamboree (if goths have jamborees) on Saturday night. Known as New Yorkers are for their love of all things black, Mr. Pugh outdid us. There were black feathers, black cloaks, armor-like black chestplates. One model wore a black ballgown and fur hat, perfect for theSuper Sweet Sixteen of a Visigoth warlords daughter. One model was bare-chested, wearing a billowing black skirt and waving a giant red flag like a victorious bride of Dracula.

On Sunday, Preen played with such British classics as cable knits, tartan and lace-up boots, givingthe effect of a technicolor punk-rock garden party. Models sported middle-parted, fluffycurls, like a bad 70s school portrait made chic. The plaids were perfect for your neighborhood Helena Bonham Carter wannabe.

Punk rocks dowager queen, Vivienne Westwood, incorporated every color of her muted ruffians rainbow for her autumn and winter collection. Matchy stripes and plaids, sculptural cloaks and oversize jackets were on offer.

Next, Mary Katrantzou showed a collection that was more 60s than 70sand thank goodness, because not everyone looks model-esque in thelatter decades long, lean lines.Patterns and textures duked it out on shift dresses, collars were pumped up with fur or hardware, and models wore velvet Mary Janes perfect for chasing down cute boys in bands.

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London Throws Together a Brazen, Exuberant Fashion Week

Jupiter Ascending review: Dramatic narrative lost in space

By Jane FreeburyFeb. 20, 2015, 9 p.m.

The Wachowskis' latest sci-fi adventure is a CGI feast, but it lacks compelling ideas.

JUPTER ASCENDING (M) General release

Half an hour in, after several close shaves with evil alien forces, Jupiter Jones (Mila Kunis) arrives at a farmhouse set in peaceful cornfields. The extraterrestrials in hot pursuit arrive soon after, but not before she hears that she is royalty, a challenge to the authority of those who want her dead, and destined for great things. Only the day before she was a cleaner, scrubbing toilets, so it seems there was something in the alignment of planets when she was born after all.

Jupiter Ascending is the latest from the Wachowskis, writer-director-producers Andy and Lana, whose Matrix trilogy was a landmark in its time. The Matrix concept was bold and the look original in a postmodern kind of way. The Wachowskis have the same sort of thing going on visually here, a collision of a high-tech futurism with aspects of our historical and mythological past - but not so much in the way of ideas to pin it all down.

Jupiter learns that the people of Earth are being systematically harvested and liquidated to create a serum in which alien overlords bathe regularly to maintain their smooth and toned youth. Keeping the ravages of age at bay is possible at 14,000 years of age, it seems. The exploitation of the masses, a familiar theme in sci-fi, has a nasty twist here.

That said, there is a wealth of detail in the Wachowskis' backstory, but it adds little persuasive drama to this narrative. A compilation of details that adds little to the eye-candy visuals, however, there are good actors at work here, wrestling with a woeful script.

Eddie Redmayne, so credible in The Theory of Everything and vying for an Oscar next week, may be hoping the judges won't have seen him here before they cast their vote. He has done the only thing he could with his part as Balem, rival to his siblings in the Abrasax royal family, and camped it up.

Terry Gilliam is clearly enjoying himself in his cameo. As Minister of Seals and Signets he is suitably Pythonesque and his scene in Jupiter's journey through bureaucratic absurdity tailor-made for the director of Brazil.

And Channing Tatum, of course. It has to be said that Jupiter is no superwoman. She is important to the future of the human race, but it's ex-military hunter Caine Wise (Tatum), her self-appointed guardian who keeps arriving in the nick of time in his flying boots to save her. His persistence can only be the work of a man in love, and so it is.

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Jupiter Ascending review: Dramatic narrative lost in space

Young people are still frustrated but the genre's revival shows a universal urban discontent.

In the words of Paul Mason, its (still) kicking off everywhere. This frank diagnosis is applicable at every level of British societys layer cake. At the top, in the rarefied atmosphere of pre-election Westminster, the incumbent 2.5 party system has been pulled apart. Electorate faith wanes. And after scandals such as the HSBC tax avoidance debacle, in which a government trade minister appointed in 2010 once headed the bank, it's hardly surprising. The message is clear: politicians play by a different set of rules to everyone else.

From the tabloid press to Russell Brand to Thomas Piketty to everyone on Twitter, people are trying to make sense of our times. But beneath these manifestations of discontent, does the melancholy trickle down into Britains young cultural subterranea?

The reawakened popularity of grime a musical genre born out of the deprived boroughs of east London in the early noughties can offer insight into the mindset of urban young people and their place in the landscape of 21st-century disillusionment.

Grime was conceived shortly after the millennium. The New Labour government had introduced ASBOs and increased CCTV surveillance in its bid to be tough on the causes of crime, while elsewhere embracing big business, preaching a third-way, trickle-down economics. This pairing of policy seen by some as a mix ofharsh panopticism with neoliberal overconfidence resulted in an inequality best symbolised, as Dan Hancox has pointed out, by the juxtaposed architecture of east London: Canary Wharf versus the high-rise council estates of Bow E3.

This claustrophobia incubated the birth of a raw sound. Grime is the reaction of neglected youths peering up at the exclusive, unobtainable futurism of the city from positions of poverty. Doused in anti-establishment slang, typical lyrics relay the gritty aspects of an underclass preoccupied with park bench apathy, gang warfare and drug dealing. It is a middle finger up at disingenuous "hug-a-hoodie"conservatism a patronising philosophy that in essence still plagues politicians in their failed attempts to connect with the sceptical young voter.

Where in 2002/3 it started as an organic social reaction, grimes role as a unified voice of the oppressed became gradually less coherent. Despite a slowly accumulating nucleus of underground loyalists, the commercial success of a few artists brought a softened sound to the mainstream. In this respect, some aspects of the genres evolution are comparable to post-Olympics east London: gentrified and unrecognisable.

And yet last year there were claims of grimes return. It isnt that it went away, but an unprecedented chord of wider media appreciation has now been struck. The sound has spread to Bristol and Birmingham, while a moody instrumental style develops alongside the new generation of angry, punchy MCs. This versatility means music fans at large the technologically empowered Spotify generation are listening,not just the teenagers at the back of the nightbus. Unlike ever before, a Shoreditch art gallery is a reasonable venue for a grime show. The squeezed middle, seeking cultural expression, is starting to understand grimes raw charm.

After all, the coalition governments policy of austerity has affected multiple levels of the electorate. As the 2011 riots hinted, urban young people in particular are still frustrated. Not interested in voting and thus ignored by election manifesto policy; facing housing crises and zero-hour contracts; locked out of the top city jobs and positions of influence in pop culture unless born into the privately schooled 7 per cent: a voice of expression has to come from somewhere. And this time around, with post-financial crisis awareness, more people not solely the black working class of east London share grimes persistent despair about the unjust trappings of British society.

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Young people are still frustrated but the genre's revival shows a universal urban discontent.

Florida pastor: VR technology can make church more immersive

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com @BednarChuck

Virtual reality cameras have been used in pornography, at sporting events and in many other ways, but one Florida church is looking at using the technology for a higher calling.

According to Gizmodo reports, Rev. Christopher Benek of the First Presbyterian Church of Ft. Lauderdale is exploring the use of devices like the Oculus Rift as a way to reach members of the congregation who live in remote areas or who cannot leave their homes due to health issues.

As the website points out, some places of worship allow their members to view services online, but Rev. Benek believes that adopting VR technology will make churches more accessible, more immersive, and more attractive to the general public.

Numerous persons and groups have developed churches in the virtual world, mainly Second Life, he said earlier this month in an interview with Hypergrid Business. I would venture to say that most have been less concerned with true evangelical success and more focused on what their technological exploratory experience may yield in the future.

A great asset to the church universal

Essentially, the reverend who is currently working on a Ph.D. in theology with a focus on the intersection of technological futurism and eschatology at Durham University in the UK thinks that most modern virtual churches are experiments, not significant faith-based outreach efforts. However, he believes that this will change as the technology becomes more widespread.

For those of us who tend to be more inclined to the developments of human technology, we are keeping abreast of the important advancements that are occurring in the virtual world, explained Rev. Benek, adding that devices such as Oculus Rift could be a great asset to the church universal, as it will enable the infirm, homebound, and potentially even the poor to participate from afar regardless of their personal mobility or lack of affordable transportation.

He added that there are several ways that churches and other religious groups could benefit from removing physical obstacles to worship. It would allow pastors and congregants to visit and pray with more people more often, he explained, and small worship groups would be able to meet on a more frequent basis, even when they are separated by considerable distances.

The way that we currently do care and discipleship will radically change as will our expectations as to what it means to participate in those aspects of the church, added Rev. Benek. In addition to the physical barriers that virtual reality can help overcome, the technology could help overcome language differences by allowing services to be seamlessly translated.

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Florida pastor: VR technology can make church more immersive

A setback for D.C. arts and culture, years in the making

They had already decided on a Saturday night in mid-September, and they had a tentative program: an evening of George Gershwin, Kurt Weill and Daniel Schnyder, a Swiss composer and saxophonist whose music crosses just about every definable stylistic boundary, from jazz to world music to opera. It was going to be a hard-hat concert, performed in the raw, crumbling space of the 1869 Franklin School. It would showcase the possibilities of the historic structure and generate support for the renovation of the historic building.

It is the kind of edgy, unorthodox artistic event that new generations of Washingtonians, who no longer accept the premise that the nations capital is a cultural backwater, crave. But it wont happen unless the city reverses course on a decision made this week to end an agreement with the Institute for Contemporary Expression, which had partnered with one of the countrys most innovative music groups the Post-Classical Ensemble to present concerts at the long-vacant school at the corner of 13th and K streets NW.

Attracted by the large open spaces of the Franklin School, which would have also hosted art exhibitions, lectures and educational activities, the Post-Classical Ensemble signed on early as a resident ensemble at the proposed arts center. It was excited about finally having a proper home and increased presence in the District, where it hoped to build a new and more diverse audience than it might find at the Kennedy Center or other venues.

D.C. doesnt have a space that has the vibrancy, modernism, futurism, of a place like this, said Chris Denby, board chair of the ensemble.

The decision to scuttle the citys arrangement with ICE remains opaque. The deputy mayors office for planning and economic development first said that it doubted the ability of ICEs visionary founder, Dani Levinas, to raise sufficient funds to cover the costs but then backtracked. It suggested that Levinas planned to charge exorbitant admission fees, even though none of those details had been set in stone. Although it claimed to have conducted a top-to- bottom review of the agreement between ICE and the city, the economic development office never met with Levinas and never asked questions about his fundraising. When asked how long that review took and how many staffers participated in it, a spokesman offered this by e-mail: We took this process seriously and took the time necessary to make a decision that we believe is in the long-term best interest of all District residents.

Strangely, that decision was made almost simultaneously with the announcement of a new venture by the citys Commission on the Arts and Humanities, a Start Fresh innovation grant for up $100,000. This is designed to aid organizations that are creative, innovative and groundbreaking, with multi-disciplinary and multi-platform initiatives. In other words, organizations that plan to do what ICE was already gearing up to do. The coincidence of these two decisions, one forward, the other several steps back, suggests that not only does the new administration lack a coherent cultural program, there isnt even basic communication between its various offices.

This kind of fiasco is all too familiar to longtime observers of the citys cultural scene, and to people who live near the Franklin School and who have watched the city try for years to develop a coherent plan for it. Local advisory neighborhood commissioner Kevin Deeley, whose district includes the Franklin School, wasnt in office when Mayor Vincent C. Grays administration chose the proposal by ICE over three others (including a boutique hotel with rooftop restaurant, a technology center and a live/work space for tech entrepreneurs). But he likes the idea because the institute would be open to the public, increase foot traffic at night and weekends and offer cultural amenities in downtown Washington.

But it is the possibility of yet more years of delay, with the historic structure moldering yet further, that really frustrates him and his neighbors. There is no continuity between administrations, he says, and the result is a wasted resource.

Another administration comes along and the whole process starts again, and now were looking at maybe two more years before they can break ground, says Deeley. He is sending a letter on behalf of his constituents to Mayor Muriel E. Bowser, asking her to reconsider her decision. Other letters have come from the American Alliance of Museums (It is hard to imagine any better or higher use of this historic building than the one that Mr. Levinas has proposed, said Ford Bell, the groups president) and from civic groups. Dorothy Kosinski, who as head of the Phillips Collection knows a thing or too about the fundraising climate in Washington, said, I was disappointed to hear of the projects cancellation this week and lamented the loss of an organization that would demonstrate how contemporary art is a vital part of our economy and cultural ecosystem.

The school has been empty for seven years. In 2010, when Adrian Fenty was mayor, the city held a hearing to determine whether the school should be declared surplus and thus open for private development. A transcript of that meeting is telling. While there wasnt an agreement about exactly what the school should become, there was overwhelming sentiment that as a historic building with a long history of public service to the citizens of Washington, it most certainly should not be given up for commercial development.

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A setback for D.C. arts and culture, years in the making

Erasure: R. Phillips’s "PREDICTIVE CODING" + "BLACK QUANTUM FUTURISM" | _METROPOLARITY at AUX pt11 – Video


Erasure: R. Phillips #39;s "PREDICTIVE CODING" + "BLACK QUANTUM FUTURISM" | _METROPOLARITY at AUX pt11
RASHEEDAH PHILLIPS #39;s from her TIME TRAVEL EXPERIMENTS zine, piece "PREDICTIVE CODING", and introductory essay from upcoming book BLACK QUANTUM FUTURISM: THEO...

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Erasure: R. Phillips's "PREDICTIVE CODING" + "BLACK QUANTUM FUTURISM" | _METROPOLARITY at AUX pt11 - Video

Black Beauty -"Absolute Zero Infinity" Federal Futurism Fantasy (alien angels) Valentine’s Day 2015 – Video


Black Beauty -"Absolute Zero Infinity" Federal Futurism Fantasy (alien angels) Valentine #39;s Day 2015
InI eternal energy Directed: Phabric Banton Awesome artists always ascend angelic! Blessed Bredrens has Black Beauty and big boy business Consciousness creator loves light and life! Peace and ...

By: Conspiracy Astral Majesty

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Black Beauty -"Absolute Zero Infinity" Federal Futurism Fantasy (alien angels) Valentine's Day 2015 - Video

Seizing a Super Bowl moment, Missy Elliott announces that shes working on new music with Timbaland

Its been more than a week since Missy Elliott became the breakout star of the Super Bowl, her old hits burning up the Spotify and iTunes charts, and shes still riding a wave of reignited stardom. After the performance, she said, she was getting offers to tour. Dont get your hopes up just yet she didnt actually confirm that shes going, but it appears new workis on the horizon.

On Tuesday, Elliott posted a picture of herself in a recording studio with Timbaland on Twitter.Timbalands the chief songwriter and producer for the FOX series Empire. Its possible that Elliott could have been recording a song for the show she missed the Grammys to work with Tim in the studio.

Katy Perry gave a colorful performance on the big stage during the Super Bowl halftime show. Rock star Lenny Kravitz and rapper Missy Elliott also performed. (AP)

Could something more be afoot? In a recent interview with Sirius XMs Sway in the Morning, Elliott was pretty cagey.

I dont want to say too much cause in this day and time, you say too much, boy, you say something, they will come back two weeks later like, Uhhh, where your album at? Elliott said. Okay, fine. But its worth noting that Timbaland and ASAP Ferg both posted new pictures on Instagram early Thursday morningwith Elliott in the studio.

In the late 90s, wewere obsessed with futurism just look at the videos for No Scrubs, 808, or Missys own song, The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly). Everything was forward-looking, but its rare to find work that can realistically make the leap to 2015 and still hang. Missys Super Bowl performance resurfaced that work, and evidenced just how forward-thinking she and Tim were. Work It and Get Ur Freak On still sound distinctive and modern. Years before natural hair took off as a major trend, Elliott had hairdressers sporting enormous fros in the background of the video for Work It, a song about female sex positivity in which Elliott is unambiguously pro-sex worker. Girls, girls, get that cash, if its nine-to-five or shaking your a, she rapped. Aint no shame, ladies do yo thang. Just make sure you ahead of the game.

Aside from her rapping and producing, Missy Elliotts calling cards were her customized track suits and her high-energy, complicateddance routines, which is why it might surprise you to see her rocking a goldlam Elizabethan gown, complete with high collar, in the video for Beep Me 911. Lady Gaga wore something similar crafted from red PVC to meet the queen of England both mixed elements of Elizabethan and Victorian-era costuming. Get a good look at Elliotts pink surrounds and the Barbie-like backup dancers. Who else spies a heavy visual influence on early Nicki Minaj?

And has anyone noticed the shocking similarity between the logo on the space suit Elliott rocks in Sock It 2 Me and the Gmail icon? Sock It 2 Me came out in 1997. Gmail lauched in 2004.

Hopefully her performance at the Super Bowl with Katy Perry is a signal that shes been able to overcome or at least manage her symptoms resulting fromGraves disease, anautoimmune disorder that affects the thyroid gland. Elliott was diagnosed with the disorder in 2008, and revealed that she experienced hair loss and mood swings as a result. At one point, she said in the Guardian, I couldnt write because my nervous system was so bad.

Its been 10 years since Elliott dropped her last studio album, The Cookbook.

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Seizing a Super Bowl moment, Missy Elliott announces that shes working on new music with Timbaland

Black Radical Imagination II: Screening, Talk, & Reception

Black Radical Imagination II: Screening, Talk, & Reception Tuesday, Feb. 10, 6:30-8:30pm Community Folk Art Center (CFAC) 805 East Genesee St., Syracuse, NY

Black Radical Imagination I & II is a two-part screening of experimental film and video curated byErin ChristovaleandAmir Georgeexploring the aesthetics of afro-futurism and afro-surrealism. Both programs feature different line-ups, and are followed by a discussion with the curators. The conversation following Black Radical Imagination II will also include artists Ephraim Asili and Lewis Vaughn.

This touring program has visited many prestigious academic institutions, cutting edge film festivals, and contemporary art venues. This event marks the first time this program has been screened in Central New York. Featured artists include Cauleen Smith, Jacolby Satterwhite, and Cristina de Middel (BRI I); and Terence Nance and Sanford Biggers, Lauren Kelley, and Jeannette Ehlers (BRI II), among others.

Erin Cristovale is a curator based in Los Angeles focusing on film/video within the African Diaspora. She graduated with a B.A. from the USC School of Cinematic Arts. Cristovales exhibition,a/wake in the water: Meditations on Disaster, iscurrently on view at the MoCADA Museum.She also works with the Native Thinghood collective, which promotes emerging artists of color.

Amir Georgeis a motion picture artist and film curator from Chicago. His video work and curated programs have been screened in festivals and galleries across the US, Canada, and Europe. In addition to founding The Cinema Culture, a grassroots film programming organization; Amir was founding programmer of Black Cinema House, a residential cinema space on Chicagos south side. Amir currently teaches and produces media with youth throughout Chicago.

Black Radical Imagination I & II is presented in conjunction with the exhibition of Jeannette Ehlers: Black Bullets at UVPs Everson Museum of Art venue and the exhibition of Cristina de Middels The Afronauts at CFAC. For more information and the complete program for each screening, please go tourbanvideoproject.com.

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Black Radical Imagination II: Screening, Talk, & Reception