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Caryn Ganz "Rufus Wainwright has penned love songs about boys and he's revived the manic spirit of Judy Garland. How do you follow those acts? Maybe you write an opera. About opera. In French". Interview. FindArticles.com. 05 Dec, 2009. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1285/is_5_39/ai_n31909606/
Interview
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Articles in June-July, 2009 issue of Interview
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Consume consummately
by Lucy Silberman; Fan Zhong; Christopher Bollen; Lucy Madison -
Agnes Varda was a pioneer of the nouvelle vague, a daring cinematic politico, and graced the first cover of Interview way back in 1969. In her latest masterpiece, she literally sets sail through the story of her life
by Liza Bear -
Rufus Wainwright has penned love songs about boys and he's revived the manic spirit of Judy Garland. How do you follow those acts? Maybe you write an opera. About opera. In French
by Caryn Ganz -
Hot and cold is cool
by Stephen Rose -
Bjork doesn't just make artshe lives it
by Mathias Augustyniak; Michael Amzalag -
Maurizio Cattelan knows that it's better to be the class clown than the class nerd. But just because a lot of his art productions are outrageous, and oftentimes hilarious, doesn't mean the Italian artist isn't serious about starting a revolution
by Michele Robecchi -
John Currin stirs people up. He makes pictures that look a lot like what pictures used to look like. Is he against modernism or what? And why are his paintings so damn well made?
by Glenn O'Brien -
Rachel Feinstein is a singular artist as well as famous muse to her painter husband. She seems almost a traveler through time with her heirloom beauty and her throwback bohemian charm
by Glenn O'Brien -
Liam Gillick lives near the United Nations, which might explain why an Englishman who calls New York home is representing Germany at this year's Venice Biennale. Gillick's art is universal
by Matthew Brannon -
Wade Guyton has been heralded as the artistic hope of his generation. The tireless young artist will probably fulfill his destiny, as long as they never stop making Epson desktop printer ink
by David Armstrong -
Glenn Ligon doesn't make work for easy reading. Whether they're quotes on canvas or a film piece modeled on Uncle Tom's Cabin, his tricky translations are about getting lost and getting found
by Jason Moran -
Elizabeth Neel is a New York painter, like her famous grandmother, Alice, who gave her a first set of paints. She's grown up a lot since that day. Her gestural abstract canvases leave the family tree far behind
by Michel Auder -
Philip Taaffe makes art the old-fashioned way: with paint. And his paintings are as complex and alive as they are beautiful. In an age of market-driven, hog-wild modernism, that ain't easy
by Diego Cortez -
Donatella Versace loves talking about the past, but she won't mix her fashion up with it. She steering her house into the future. But no matter what Donatella designs, she manages to make it sexy. We shot her Fall collection on some Versace fans off the N
by Lenny Kravitz -
Jarvis Cocker, preeminent rock-star showman and bard of the English common life, on the making of his new album, the joys of Wikipedia, the perils of young lust, and the crises of middle age
by Wes Anderson -
Jim Jarmusch was the prime auteur of New York new-wave cinema, and his eccentric, beautiful films are still setting a new standard for cinematic independence
by Glenn O'Brien -
Remember when New York City was a place where the hopeful the talented, and the lost came to get found, live cheaply, and become great artists? Well, it hasn't seemed like that kind of place for a while, but a new young art scene is emerging in all the b
by Alex Gartenfeld -
Glossolalia: speaking in tongues
by Jeffrey Slonim - The Beastie Boys hit the cultural reset button in 1986, mixing punk and rap and taking the urban thing to a whole new level
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Daniel Pinchbeck, along with a growing number of new New Agers, believes that December 21, will mark the end of the worldat least, as we know it. Will it be all-out Armageddon? Or a psychedelic, polyamorous, transformative moment in human consciousn
by Stephen Mooallem -
June view tears of knowledge rolling on the edge of the real world: Interview's editorial director and editor in chief discuss the issue
by Christopher Bollen - In the making
- Greenhouses
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Nathalie love tends bar, assists cool godmother, might leave Brooklyn, won't go Hollywood, could end up star
by Lucy Madison - Where is Paige Powell going in that cart? Why is Nate Lowman hugging that guy? what is Steven Tyler wearing? It's another round of photos sent in from friends the world over
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Aaron Johnson doesn't have to dream the dreamhe's living it, playing every teen girl's fantasies, from comics superhero to a young John Lennon
by Kaleem Aftab -
Melanie Laurent is Quentin Tarantino's latest ingenue, but the French actress may also have an intriguing future directing haute porn
by Kaleem Aftab - Kelly Slater on the high-riding acrobatic stylings of new-wave surfer Dane Reynolds
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Ann Demeulemeester has been rocking menswear for more than 13 years, and for most of that time, model and musician Jamie del Moon has been walking her runway. The two friends remember their decade-plus of dressing to the music
by Jamie del Moon -
Ben Esser has the biggest quiff in British music since Morrissey. His electro-pop career getting pretty big too
by Alex Needham -
Dave Eggers & Vendela Vida have written books and reared children. Now they put both experiences to use in their first joint screenplay, a road-trip comedy for the very pregnant and the totally lost
by Nathan Englander -
Chantal Joffe paints friends and fashion models in a provocative, unsettling manner. She isn't being cruel. She's actually very much in love with them
by Stella McCartney - Cartier celebrates 100 years in America this year. Pierre Rainero, its director of heritage, talks about how the Paris company invented modern luxury, and how that idea spread around the world
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Florence and the machine is fronted by a lady who sings the bluesbut this Londoner is art-schooled, so her blues likely have shades of azure, cerulean, sapphire, and ultramarine
by Alex Needham
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