Model Lauren Wasser is challenging Kylie Jenner's controversial Interview magazine photoshoot.
Wasser recreated Jenner's photo, down to the gold wheelchair, black strapless top and choker necklace. The major difference – Wasser is actually disabled, with a prosthetic leg. And she added a massive pile of Kardashian/Jenner-featured tabloids as a foot rest for good measure.
Wasser captioned the Instagram with a simple "real life."
real life - @theimpossiblemuse
A photo posted by Lauren Wasser (@theimpossiblemuse) on Dec 3, 2015 at 10:24pm Pst
Fellow wheelchair users also posted their own versions of Jenner's pose on Tumblr. Annie Elainey recreated the shot, adding,...
Wasser recreated Jenner's photo, down to the gold wheelchair, black strapless top and choker necklace. The major difference – Wasser is actually disabled, with a prosthetic leg. And she added a massive pile of Kardashian/Jenner-featured tabloids as a foot rest for good measure.
Wasser captioned the Instagram with a simple "real life."
real life - @theimpossiblemuse
A photo posted by Lauren Wasser (@theimpossiblemuse) on Dec 3, 2015 at 10:24pm Pst
Fellow wheelchair users also posted their own versions of Jenner's pose on Tumblr. Annie Elainey recreated the shot, adding,...
- 12/8/2015
- by Julie Mazziotta, @julietmazz
- People.com - TV Watch
Kylie Jenner and Interview magazine are under fire, and not for the images of the reality star in butt-baring leather chaps.
The photoshoot also includes pictures of Jenner posed in a wheelchair, which led to outcries on social media and from disability advocates saying that the images are offensive.
"It's deeply disturbing," Emily Smith Beitiks, associate director of the Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability in San Francisco, told CNN. "People with disabilities are already seen as powerless, and this just reinforces that."
But Interview says the shoot plays with ideas of power and subjectivity, and that it was not intended to be offensive.
The photoshoot also includes pictures of Jenner posed in a wheelchair, which led to outcries on social media and from disability advocates saying that the images are offensive.
"It's deeply disturbing," Emily Smith Beitiks, associate director of the Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability in San Francisco, told CNN. "People with disabilities are already seen as powerless, and this just reinforces that."
But Interview says the shoot plays with ideas of power and subjectivity, and that it was not intended to be offensive.
- 12/2/2015
- by Julie Mazziotta, @julietmazz
- People.com - TV Watch
Continuing her long summer vacation, Kate Moss went to a beach party with husband Jamie Hince hosted by Sir Phillip Green in Saint-Tropez, France on Saturday (August 24).
The British beauty looked gorgeous in a short black and gray one-piece outfit while carrying a white handbag as she strolled along the sand in her bare feet.
She may be 39 years old, but this supermodel still commands an audience as she scored an appearance on the Autumn/Winter cover of Pop magazine.
In the solo shot, Kate dons a bronze bodysuit created by artist Allen Jones, looking just like a department store mannequin.
The British beauty looked gorgeous in a short black and gray one-piece outfit while carrying a white handbag as she strolled along the sand in her bare feet.
She may be 39 years old, but this supermodel still commands an audience as she scored an appearance on the Autumn/Winter cover of Pop magazine.
In the solo shot, Kate dons a bronze bodysuit created by artist Allen Jones, looking just like a department store mannequin.
- 8/24/2013
- GossipCenter
New Delhi, Feb 7: International supermodel Kate Moss is visiting India to be the part of an exhibition titled "The Kate Moss collection" by Gert Elfering.
The exhibition will have around 50 photographs and sculptors of Moss done by some of the famous photographers and artists from around the globe, said a statement.
Some of the works include paintings by Albert Watson, Nick Knight and Mert & Marcus, Allen Jones, Dino and Jake Chapman.
The four-day exhibition will start here April 25 at the Imperial and the after-party will be hosted by Bollywood actor Arjun Rampal at his luxury nightclub Lap.
Moss will attend.
The exhibition will have around 50 photographs and sculptors of Moss done by some of the famous photographers and artists from around the globe, said a statement.
Some of the works include paintings by Albert Watson, Nick Knight and Mert & Marcus, Allen Jones, Dino and Jake Chapman.
The four-day exhibition will start here April 25 at the Imperial and the after-party will be hosted by Bollywood actor Arjun Rampal at his luxury nightclub Lap.
Moss will attend.
- 2/7/2013
- by Shiva Prakash
- RealBollywood.com
London, June 3: Sculptures by a British artist that cost 1,500 pounds each to make and had provoked a storm of feminist protest when they were first exhibited, have sold for a record 2.6 million pounds.
The sum - almost 30 times the pre-sale estimate - is a record for works by Allen Jones, who was a central figure in the pop-art movement of the Sixties.
The sculptures created in 1969.
The sum - almost 30 times the pre-sale estimate - is a record for works by Allen Jones, who was a central figure in the pop-art movement of the Sixties.
The sculptures created in 1969.
- 6/3/2012
- by Smith Cox
- RealBollywood.com
Sotheby's to auction off trove of art treasures and memorabilia owned by the renowned playboy. Mark Brown, meets his son Rolf
Picture the scene. A ruggedly handsome, impeccably dressed man is enjoying a snack with his superstar wife, Brigitte Bardot, in St Tropez's Gorilla bar in the late spring of 1967. A pale, odd-looking white-haired man with a large entourage notices him and marches straight over, complaining that the Cannes film festival, of all places, has refused to screen his film because of its nudity. The man agrees to see the film, Chelsea Girls, and everyone bundles into speedboats and heads for the Carlton Hotel on La Croisette.
That chance meeting between the millionaire playboy Gunter Sachs and artist Andy Warhol had a profound effect on both men. For Sachs, a serious collector, it led to a sea change in his art buying; for Warhol it marked a vital first foothold in Europe.
Picture the scene. A ruggedly handsome, impeccably dressed man is enjoying a snack with his superstar wife, Brigitte Bardot, in St Tropez's Gorilla bar in the late spring of 1967. A pale, odd-looking white-haired man with a large entourage notices him and marches straight over, complaining that the Cannes film festival, of all places, has refused to screen his film because of its nudity. The man agrees to see the film, Chelsea Girls, and everyone bundles into speedboats and heads for the Carlton Hotel on La Croisette.
That chance meeting between the millionaire playboy Gunter Sachs and artist Andy Warhol had a profound effect on both men. For Sachs, a serious collector, it led to a sea change in his art buying; for Warhol it marked a vital first foothold in Europe.
- 5/7/2012
- by Mark Brown
- The Guardian - Film News
Among 300 works are pieces by Magritte, Dali, Lichtenstein and Warhol screenprint of Sachs' second wife, Brigitte Bardot
Nearly 300 art works belonging to one of the most fun-loving of playboys, the late Gunter Sachs, are to be auctioned in London with a collective asking price of more than £20m.
Sachs was known for his glamorous jet-setting lifestyle but Sotheby's director Cheyenne Westphal, the auction house's chair of contemporary art in Europe, said the works also reveal his "little-known side as one of the most visionary and influential collectors of the 20th century".
It was, she said, "among the most desirable single-owner collections ever to come to market".
The collection includes pop art by Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein; surrealist pieces by René Magritte, Salvador Dalí and Max Ernst; works by Arman and Yves Klein; and furniture by some of the world's most revered cabinet-makers and designers including Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann and Louis Majorelle.
Nearly 300 art works belonging to one of the most fun-loving of playboys, the late Gunter Sachs, are to be auctioned in London with a collective asking price of more than £20m.
Sachs was known for his glamorous jet-setting lifestyle but Sotheby's director Cheyenne Westphal, the auction house's chair of contemporary art in Europe, said the works also reveal his "little-known side as one of the most visionary and influential collectors of the 20th century".
It was, she said, "among the most desirable single-owner collections ever to come to market".
The collection includes pop art by Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein; surrealist pieces by René Magritte, Salvador Dalí and Max Ernst; works by Arman and Yves Klein; and furniture by some of the world's most revered cabinet-makers and designers including Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann and Louis Majorelle.
- 3/13/2012
- by Mark Brown
- The Guardian - Film News
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