Untitled (How Does It Feel)

I am an Aboriginal artist of Haida and Québécois descent based in Vancouver, BC. Examples of my work can be seen at Catriona Jeffries Gallery
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Nam June Paik, Magnet TV, 1965  

    Nam June Paik, Magnet TV, 1965  

    (via megasloth)

    Source: free-parking
    • 12 hours ago
    • 2239 notes
    • #Nam June Paik
    • #art
  • orgalleryis30:

Work by James Nizam from 2006 group exhibition “Why I’m So Unhappy”

    orgalleryis30:

    Work by James Nizam from 2006 group exhibition “Why I’m So Unhappy”

    Source: orgallery.org
    • 19 hours ago
    • 2 notes
    • #art
  • billboardingparty:

November 15, 1975

    billboardingparty:

    November 15, 1975

    (via pitchfork)

    Source: billboardingparty
    • 2 days ago
    • 676 notes
  • pitchfork:

    Listen to Katie Crutchfield (Waxahatchee) and her twin sister Allison’s garage-rocking cover of Grimes’ “Oblivion”, via Rookie.

    Source: SoundCloud / ROOKIEMAG
    • 3 days ago
    • 225 notes
  • who-wore-it-better:

Jesse Burke Beeramid II  ::  Rob Pruitt & Walter Early Sculpture for Teenage Boys (Miller Pyramid, 13 high)

    who-wore-it-better:

    Jesse Burke Beeramid II  ::  Rob Pruitt & Walter Early Sculpture for Teenage Boys (Miller Pyramid, 13 high)

    Source: who-wore-it-better
    • 6 days ago
    • 8 notes
    • #beer
    • #art
  • “The more they told me: you’re a girl, you can’t paint graffiti, you can’t go to subways, because you’re a girl, you’re a mere female; I had to stand up and just shut them up.” —Lady Pink

    (via nitanahkohe)

    • 1 week ago
    • 8406 notes
  • newyorker:

A cartoon by Matthew Diffee. For more cartoons from the issue: http://nyr.kr/166DD1i

    newyorker:

    A cartoon by Matthew Diffee. For more cartoons from the issue: http://nyr.kr/166DD1i

    Source: newyorker
    • 1 week ago
    • 176 notes
  • orgalleryis30:

Brian JungenShapeshifter September 9 - October 14, 2000
 

    orgalleryis30:

    Brian Jungen
    Shapeshifter 
    September 9 - October 14, 2000

     
    Source: orgalleryis30
    • 1 week ago
    • 1 notes
  • who-wore-it-better:

Kelly Mark The Kiss  ::  James Clar The Difference Between Me and You

    who-wore-it-better:

    Kelly Mark The Kiss  ::  James Clar The Difference Between Me and You

    Source: who-wore-it-better
    • 1 week ago
    • 34 notes
  • markrichardson:

    Sheila E doing “Glamorous Life” at the American Music Awards in 1985. This performance is bonkers. For the first third she sings lead while standing and also playing the lead percussion part. Then she takes the mic and dances around. And then the lights on stage go dark and she solos on drums in the dark with glow-in-the-dark sticks. 

    Two things occur to me watching this, and recently revisiting Sheila E’s first two albums. One, Prince in the 1980s was the kind of pop genius that comes along every 20-30 years, maybe. The amount of brilliant, boundary-pushing, but still accessible music he was responsible for, as both a solo performer or, as with this song, as a writer/producer, is simply astonishing.  It’s honestly like talking about Albert Einstein in 1905, that’s how in the zone he was. It was a decade of a true and lasting genius by an artist at the height of his powers who was given all kinds of resources. A rare thing.

    The second thing is what a talent Sheila E was (and probably still is, though I haven’t heard anything she’s done in some time). She had a few big hits, two good records, and came from a remarkable family of musicians (she had several first-call percussionists of note in her family). In the late 1980s she was Prince’s live drummer and also was also the leader of his backing band (you can see her considerable skills behind a proper kit in the Sign O the Times film). Imagine what it takes to be Prince’s musical director in those years, for him to hand over the keys.

    Source: markrichardson
    • 1 week ago
    • 220 notes
    • #Prince
    • #Sheila E
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