Category Archives: ARCHIVE BLOGGERY

Bizarre Ball 2010

Having performed at the Bizarre Ball in the past, I’ll be spending the evening as a civilian this time, so do come over and say hello if you see me.

From the Bizarre Magazine website:

“The Bizarre Ball – the greatest show on earth! – returns to London on June 5th 2010. And this year is going to blow your mind…

The final line-up is now confirmed and performing for your pleasure we have the jaw-droppingly awesome GALLOWS on the main stage, as well as THE HORRORS performing a raucous rock punk DJ set, JODIE HARSH will be hosting the dance-lounge and playing your all-time party favourites. If this wasn’t enough we have the gypsy blues masters URBAN VOODOO MACHINE, the mighty rock gods DIRTY DC, guitar driven garage soul from THE CLOWNS, the macabre masters of the big top the CIRCUS OF HORRORS and if you still want more we have Joe Black, Ryan Styles, Missy Malone, Come Into My Parlour, Chrysalis, Jason Atomic as well as some very special guests including the stunning MASUIMI MAX.

Hosted by our very own ALIX FOX and DESMOND O’CONNOR – this will be the ultimate party of the summer so get your ticket now…

Venue: The Coronet Theatre, 28 New Kent Road, London SE1 6TJ

Date: Saturday 5 June 2010″

Louise Borgeois, RIP.

From Artsbeat in the New York Times:

“Louise Bourgeois, the French-born American artist who gained fame only late in a long career, when her psychologically charged abstract sculptures, drawings and prints had a galvanizing effect on younger artists, particularly women, died on Monday at the Beth Israel Medical Center in Manhattan. She was 98.

The death was reported by Wendy Williams, the managing director of the Louise Bourgeois Studio.

Ms. Bourgeois’s sculptures in wood, steel, stone and cast rubber, often organic in form and sexually explicit, emotionally aggressive yet witty, covered many stylistic bases. But from first to last they shared a set of repeated themes, centered on the human body and its need for nurture and protection in a frightening world.

Among her most familiar sculptures was the much exhibited “Nature Study” (1984), a headless sphinx with powerful claws and multiple breasts. Perhaps the most provocative was “Fillette” (1968), a large detached latex phallus. Ms. Bourgeois can be seen carrying this object, nonchalantly tucked under one arm, in a portrait by the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe taken for the catalog of her 1982 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. (In the catalog, the Mapplethorpe picture is cropped to show only the artist’s smiling face.)”

Original article here.