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Le "Audio Out" Est Arrivé!

Index1The week before last I met Australian music artist Amiel when she was in town with the boys from Head Pictures to shoot a video (Stephen Lance is a Lux Lotus reader; more on that later, perhaps) for her new single. She was so charming and cool in person that I had to track her music down, which was a challenge since her last album came out a couple of years ago and Australian anything is hard to come by in New York.

I finally found a new copy of the Japanese edition of Audio Out on eBay, and last night when I got home I was thrilled to find it in my mailbox, coming from Tokyo by way of Hong Kong it looks like on the postage. I put it on immediately and was thrilled by how deliciously poppy it is without sounding overglossed, esp. Lovesong. Some samples are online here.

A page from the diary

Fashiondiarygreendd0145This week has been slightly busier than most, with long days devoted to work (which I love) and then lots of busy things to do in the evening (which I also adore). Tonight was particularly lovely as fabulous conceptual artist Nancy Hwang invited me to a rooftop screening of Haz Conmigo lo que Quieras (Kill Me Tender) in Chelsea, which was spectacularly fun. From the BYOB policy (Stella Artois, natch) to the pitchers of sangria and bowls of hot, fresh popcorn to the fact that I could smoke (I know, I have been bad lately; Dunhillls are my downfall, y'all) during the film, to the cool evening breeze and 60 or 70 artists and creative types all hanging out, it was a fairly exquisite evening. The film itself is a bitingly funny, slight absurdist and extremely dark comedy that I quite liked a lot, and the fact that director was present made a good time even more enjoyable. Just prior to that, I stopped by a bar in the Village, where the Accidental Southern Belle was having a charming informal soiree with some friends and colleagues in publishing. And last night was great, too: Jennifer van der Kwast's swag-tastic book party (as glowingly reported elsewhere) at Sugar was quite stellar, although I admittedly lingered at the Petite Abeille in Tribeca with a friend and showed up a bit later than I planned, and Jennifer and I had just started swapping Amsterdam stories when I had to head out into the evening and on to the next thing. Tomorrow night, I plan to check out the "Sexual Tension" program of short films at the Latino Film Festival, as the dazzling Ana Asensio will be there to promote one that she starred in, called Julieta y Ramon. And in the "favor for a super-talented friend department," I'm also looking forward to the Paranoid Style Listening Party at Lolita on the 11th, the specific details of which I need to attend to tomorrow; although I can confirm at the moment that it will be oh-so-worth-your-while and then some. Oh, and last but certainly not least, the freakishly with-it Bryan Keefer's media panel at Makor on Tuesday, featuring Mediabistro's Elizabeth Spiers, Gothamist's Jake Dobkin, and Wall Street Journal Online Editor Bill Grueskin  -- not boring at all.

Of What Then, Dark Romances?

The Mysteries of Pittsburgh (by Michael Chabon) is perhaps my favorite novel, certainly if times re-read were the main criterion. I particularly enjoyed reading this passage again (from Ch. 9, "The Heartbreak Thing", p. 96):

I admit I have an ugly fondness for generalizations, so perhaps I may be forgiven when I declare that there is always something weird about a girl who majors in French. She has entered into her course of study, first of all, knowing full well that it can only lead to her becoming a French teacher, a very grim affair, the least of whose evils is poor pay, and the prospect of which should have been sufficient to send her straight into business or public relations. She has been betrayed into the study of French, heedless of the terrible consequences, by her enchantment with this language, which has ruined more young American women than any other foreign tongue.

Second, if her studies were confined simply to grammar and vocabulary, then perhaps the French major would develop no differently from those who study Spanish or German, but the unlucky girl who pursues her studies past the second year comes inevitably and headlong into contact with French Literature, particularly one of the most destructive forces known to mankind; and she begins to relish such previously unglamorous elements of her vocabulary as langueur and funeste, and, speaking English, inverts her adjectives, to let one know she sometimes even thinks in French. The writers she comes to appreciate -- Breton, Baudelaire, Sartre, de Sade, Cocteau -- have an alienating effect, especially on her attitude towards love, and her manner of expressing her emotions becomes difficult and theatrical; while those French writers whose influence might be healthy, such as Stendhal or Flaubert, she dislikes and takes to reading in translation, where their effect on her thought and speech is negligible; or she willfully misreads Madame Bovary and Le Chartreuse, making dark romances of them. I gathered that Phlox, in particular, considered herself "linked by destiny" (liee par le destin) both to Nadja and O. That is how a female French major thinks.

Lux Links (or, Life is Beautiful)

Phone to Heaven [we make money not art]
The History of the Kiss + Seeing Red [via kimsaid]
Blur Building [New Art]
"The Theramin Love Song" [Diane, A Shaded View on Fashion]

I am in love with love!

Everything about the new place (days until move: 6) sends me over the moon, e.g. the Marimekko chairs have arrived.

Welcome to the Human Race

Have you ever been, say, on the telephone with someone and he or she said something to you that was sooo jerky that you were like, "Did I seriously dial numbers in order to have this conversation?" Yes, darling, you did.

It's moments like those (and thankfully they are quite rare) that I theoretically wish I were a mermaid. I mean, I am sure life under the sea would entail all sorts of issues I can't even imagine, but wouldn't this be a much more lovely scenario?

Mermaid_stage

[Illustrations by Wendy Davenport]

Related from the LL Archives:
Mermaids, Gypsies, and a Warrior Queen
All The Pretty Pictures

"Is that even a question in your mind?"

As Hollywood actresses go, I was always vaguely impressed by the-so-not-a-fembot Juliette Lewis, so I guess it's not too surprising then that I am so strangely into Juliette & The Licks. I initially regarded my piqued curiousity with the same suspicion that I reserve for most things very LA -- celebrity-fronted bands being the apex of that genre. This pithy Village Voice review cuts straight to the chase to deftly sum up the appeal of Like A Bolt of Lightning, though. My take: Got Love To Kill. Goddamn, I love that song. And, Q: 20 Year Old Lover? A: This woman is a feminist icon for our time.

Tuesday's Lux-sessions

Makeart

Pretty/Disappointing

That Mapplethorpe & Mannerism show I was looking forward to at the Guggenheim turned out to be a bit of a bust. Although it is visually elegant, it is too conceptually superficial, even for the "stylish style." I wanted to love this show; I really did. Also underwhelming (and overpriced): the new MoMA. Sigh.

The Smart Set: July 25-31

DeneuvebelledujoursmIn this week's edition: girls who are boys who like boys to be girls who do boys like they’re girls who do girls like they’re boys, and, of course, you know, more.

[Image source: here]

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