It's social media overload when I go back and realize I posted about Unique LA on blogs other than my own.
Here's a throwback of the local DIY arts and crafts fair from December 2011. To read more, click here.
If you missed the last Unique LA event in February, click 'attending' on the July 14-15 2nd Annual Unique LA Summer show event page here.
Let's just say that it's one of those events that I would never mind paying for. I only go to events with no admission, by the way!
Artist, model Dana Boulos advocates for both women and good taste. The 22-year-old is undoubtedly a woman of the world, being a cusp of both a Sagittarius and Scorpio, as well as being fluent in languages from Arabic to French.
Dana Boulos via UO.com
Cubtrina: Where have you lived? How have experiences in these places opened your mind to Los Angeles?
Dana Boulos: I've lived in London, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Hawaii, Paris, Spain and Morocco. I’m currently in LA now. [Living in these places have] taught me to really explore and to appreciate different cultures. The people, for sure, are what I miss from all the crazy places I've lived. Now you understand why I speak so many different languages.
C: When were you first published? Do you have an editorial you're most proud of?
DB: I first got published in VICE for the Photo issue with a female collective group I'm so proud to be apart of called The Ardorous. I'm super excited over my last photo shoot titled "Aliana Il Dolce" with my best friend Aliana Lohan who is from Next models.
C: What's your camera of choice?
DB: I only use Canon. My favorite camera is Canon [PowerShot] G11.
The Ardorous: High School Lover Photo No. 13
C: Since you own and operate online shop Petit Lapin, do you have any favorite online stores yourself?
Truth be told, I've been keeping a close eye on Jon Estwards' polaroid selfies way before John Edwards, of a similar name, was a presidential nominee in 2008. The 22-year-old Aquarian from Montreal, Canada says he is in the process of changing his legal name, in a similar fashion in which he augments reality through his images.
What's your favorite animal?
Oarfish
Describe the style of your photography? What type of camera do you use? Altered reality photography. I'm interested in documenting things that don't exist in the human world. I use a Polaroid camera.
As an artist, do you feel that you are able to tamper with your childhood curiosity and wonder? Yes. I think it's important to retain a lot of the same perspectives from my childhood. I still care about doing the same things I wanted to do artistically when I was a kid. I really don't want to fall into society's traps, and lose track of it all. I'm also still completely confused about the universe and life, and I still have endless curiosity and wonder left. I'm very naïve in a lot of ways.
How do you remain consistent in producing whimsical photos?
I actually don't. I have a limited amount of film and try to be very careful with how I use it, so I don't take photos very often, until I feel like there's enough to work with. I'm currently working on props, sets and costumes to use in photos. Lately when I take a photo, I'm half documenting what I'm working on, but also trying to use them with purpose in every new photo.
Since your name is identical to former presidential candidate John Edwards, do you follow American politics at all? I try not to because it makes me too miserable, but I do know more than I would like to. I actually had to edit my name from Edwards to Estwards because there are too many people with my name that I don't want to be associated with, including other artists. I'm hoping to come up with a full new name in the future because I don't like being called Jon but have nothing else right now, really.
Are you a frequent traveler? Where was the last place you've visited? I'd like to travel more, but I haven't had the opportunity for a while. I visited Nicaragua in 2008.
Do you remember any of your recent dreams? If so, can you tell us a little about it? It was possible to pass through mirrors and walk out of another mirror anywhere in the world if you focus on where you would like to be. I couldn't focus, and I ended up in a strange realm where I was attacked by a giant demon made out of mirrors. I somehow altered its shape, and it became half-trapped in a short, wide mirror. It still was able to claw at and smash the mirror I was trying to escape into. I was trying to pass through the shards of mirror on the ground, but I don't know if I was able to fit through them.
What do you want to ultimately gain from producing photos? Building new realities with more clarity. I also hope it brings more people into my life with similar yearnings. I'm open to working with musicians and other artists on larger projects. I'm interested in making dream dimensions a more present part of the physical world. - - - Check out Jon Estwards' work here and Facebook page here.
And there you have it, a cell vid clip compilation of the incomplete March madness experience from the poseur highbrow to hood violence to animals to infants to the window. See if you can spot yourself.
Upon discovering his soulful music and trippy video for "False Astronomy" yesterday, I wasn't surprised to find that Pitchfork already featured this Mister Lies. I decided to shoot him an email anyway.
The 19-year-old Scorpio, who goes under the moniker Mister Lies, told me he'd rather keep his true identity under wraps until he releases "Hidden Neighbors" this year.
Until then, we can keep fabricating lies about the Chi-Town/New Caanan, Conn. resident, or we can ask the source. I knew he had yoga in his roots!
Screenshot from "False Astronomy," directed and animated by Nick Torres
What genre(s) would you place your music in for the sake of journalism?
I don't really like labeling my own music just because I've done it before, and it can set someone up for artistic failure if you flesh out genre before you actually make your tracks. Because chillwave and post-dubstep are terms that are abused by its listeners, I won't classify my music as such. On Facebook, I label my music “ambient gospel” because my friends have said my music is as soulful as it is atmospheric. I didn't think about that too much, it was just instinctive.
“The music is not the truth.” Explain. I suppose that more often than not in the music industry, there's a lot of nonsense and less honesty flowing around lately. I think that's a testament of focusing all of the artists' energy on their image and not their music. By keeping my identity under wraps, I make it strictly about what's being done sonically. It works better for me than having to be in a sadistic get-up or a dress made of plastic bubbles. Music lies to the people all the time and promotes incessant bullshit behavior. My only hope is that you don't find that with my tracks.
C: Name a seemingly unlikely influence of your current music. Two come to mind. The first is emo/post-hardcore music from the late ‘90s and early 2000s. Brand New, Something Corporate, At The Drive In and Cap'n Jazz are for sure, guilty pleasures. Teenage angst. I was in a ton of punk bands in high school, and I thought I was serious about it, until I found out “punk” and “serious” can't really be used in a mature context. The second could be a little embarrassing: musical theatre. [It] has always been a part of my life in some way or another. My family lived close enough to New York that we got to see a lot of shows. Even now, my sister is a musical theatre major and drags me to shows whenever we get the chance. This weekend when I come home for spring break, I'm seeing the production of "Porgy And Bess" that's being produced right now. It's impossible to escape my family's admiration for broadway. I will include that though they exist, brilliant musicals are hard to find. My sister will kill me for saying this, but it's sort of a dying art form. As far as songwriters go, I especially dig the way Stephen Sondheim writes. His lyrics always hit home, and his melodies are disgustingly catchy.
Halliwell
C: Do you do yoga or meditate?
Definitely. Meditation is recently a huge part of my music these days. It helps clear my head when I get tunnel vision. My mom is also a self-employed yoga teacher and got her masters in spiritual healing. I haven't done yoga in a hot minute, but I'll definitely be jumping on the bandwagon once summer rolls around, and I'm focusing the majority of my summer recording my full-length in Connecticut and Vermont.
Being from Chi-Town, are you going to be at this year's Pitchfork Music Festival? That's one festival I've never attended, but now that I'm local, I'm keeping my fingers crossed that I can make it there this year. I've been itching to see Godspeed You! Black Emperor. Their records got me through high school. I'd also really like to be in Montreal for Osheaga [because] that lineup is also nostalgic and close to my heart. Festivals would be awesome and lovely, but I need to prioritize with my recording.
Who are you currently listening to on your music player? I love the new Evian Christ. His use of hip-hop sampling is unorthodox, and I predict he'll be setting a trend with that. Also, loads of Ryuichi Sakamoto. The ambient work he did with Fennesz is phenomenal. Tons of shameless ‘80s tracks: Peter Gabriel, Phil Collins, Don Henley. Danny Brown's "XXX" is one of the rawest, hard-hitting, hip-hop releases I've heard in a very long time. Also recently, [I] got a hold of a record by The Langley Schools Music Project; a bunch of school children from Canada from the late ‘70s covering David Bowie, The Carpenters and The Beatles. Total flower power shit, but equally as dark and brooding. [I] highly recommend it.
Soundcloud or Bandcamp? Shit, that's a tough decision. Both have advantages. SoundCloud enables your fans to actually interact with your tracks and acts as a fantastic social network. On the other hand, Bandcamp did the whole Radiohead thing by adding a “pay-what-you-wish” option to the site. It's also where the money comes from. I love both, but I'd have to go with SoundCloud. The cash is always nice, but the end of the day, interacting with the listeners means way more to me.
What’s the worst lie you’ve told when you were a kid? It's funny, the irony of my moniker is that I wasn't much of a liar when I was kid. I was too wimpy and wasn't devious enough to get myself into trouble. I was a momma's boy, and to this day, I'm still a momma's boy. But even then, that could be a lie in itself. (laughs)
Will you ever be in California any time soon? Hopefully. As I said, my mind is set on recording for now, but I would love to tour if the opportunity presents itself. The collective I work with, Svengali, is also based in LA, although most of us wolves keep habitat in Chi. Who knows? I might make an appearance sooner than I would've thought.
Is music the field you’ve decided to invest all of your energy in? What's next?
Until I left high school, that was all I wanted to focus on and nothing else. And then when I came to Chicago to start school, I started to get my mind in check, and it sort of just became something I did for the hell of it. I'm studying creative writing and philosophy at Columbia College, and this was what I did with friends on weekends. I never imagined that [my music] would ever become this huge. Is it exciting? Hell yeah, I dreamt of this for so long. Is it overwhelming? Most definitely. Of course, now, there's a change in gear. Who knows where it'll take me? The future is endless at this point.