Art
The LongLocks Lexicon Makes Its Debut on Twitter!
The LongLocks HairSticks Boutique is pleased to present our brand new Twitter e-zine, The LongLocks Lexicon! The LongLocks Lexicon brings all the best tweets and links regarding long hair, hair styling, hair care and salons, all in one daily online resource. You don’t even need a Twitter account to read it, you can read and subscribe to it (for free of course) from the linked title above! Alternately, you can always follow Style & Angst on Twitter, where we’ll be publishing a link to the new issue every day. Check it out, I think you’re gonna like it!
Filed under: Style
Eternal Beauty: Audrey Hepburn and Frida Kahlo
By BarbaraAnne:
In the center of your body,
Energy radiates.
You feel it after aerobic exhaustion –
When you sing, dance, paint,
Write, or love a man.
The world can destroy you;
But only you can destroy your soul.
When the energy glows,
Beauty needs no ornamentation.
Filed under: Style
A Room of One’s Own
By BarbaraAnne:
This is my friend Miriam’s art studio. I see its silent, sunlit beauty. I also see all the gifted women who never had a hope in the world to get a space like this.
Jane Austen wrote in between tasks in her sewing room.
Emily Dickinson became mentally ill, wrote 800 unpublished poems by hand. Then she carefully arranged and hid them in hand-made books, which were only discovered after her death. Men heavily edited Dickinson until Thomas Johnson finally published her work as written in 1955, 109 years later.
Charlotte Bronte first released Jane Eyre under a man’s name.
Mary Ann Evans had to publish under a male pseudonym her entire career.
Emily Bronte could not bear to live, after realizing her philosophy was doomed in the real world.
This picture represents women’s liberation, the revolution realized. And unlike men, our symbol of victory is not a monument to death in “blazing glory,” but a quiet place, where we take the power to make war irrelevant.
Virginia Wolfe’s A Room of One’s Own, because they need to be said — every day.
“Women, then, have not had a dog’s chance of writing poetry. That is why I have laid so much stress on money and a room of one’s own.
“Now and again an Emily Bronte or a Robert Burns blazes out and proves its presence. But certainly it never got itself on to paper. When, however, one reads of a witch being ducked, of a woman possessed by devils, of a wise woman selling herbs, or even of a very remarkable man who had a mother, then I think we are on the track of a lost novelist, a suppressed poet, of some mute and inglorious Jane Austen, some Emily Bronte who dashed her brains out on the moor or mopped and mowed about the highways crazed with the torture that her gift had put her to. Indeed, I would venture to guess that Anon, who wrote so many poems without signing them, was often a woman.
“Without those forerunners, Jane Austen and the Brontes and George Eliot could no more have written than Shakespeare could have written without Marlowe, or Marlowe without Chaucer, or Chaucer without those forgotten poets who paved the ways and tamed the natural savagery of the tongue. For masterpieces are not single and solitary births; they are the outcome of many years of thinking in common, of thinking by the body of the people, so that the experience of the mass is behind the single voice.”
Filed under: Style, Angst
Andy Warhol: Liz #5
By BarbaraAnne:
Andrij Warhola was Rusyn Byzantine Catholic coal miner from Pittsburgh. His son invented pop art and painted the British-born daughter of Americans, who became a movie star. Phillips de Pury & Co. sold Andy Warhol’s “Liz #5″ for $26.9 million. It was one of a series of 13 silkscreens of ink and acrylic on linen, which Warhol did when Liz got $1 million to play Cleopatra. An icon painted an icon, and the world misses them both terribly.
Filed under: Style
Photographing Susan Maxwell Schmidt
By BarbaraAnne:
I am learning and practicing object photography with lights, flash,lenses, oy givalt kill me now… ;-P So here are two photographs I did of the great modern hair jewelry of artist Susan Maxwell Schmidt. Comments welcome.
Filed under: Style
Redon in a Longlocks Bead
By BarbaraAnne:
Ooooo, this one has square beads where the colors mesh into each other. I must have them! Look at the way Susan painted the stick to bring out colors in the bead. I didn’t even notice they were there! *orders* So goes our addiction to the pattern partners, stick and bead, which make up Susan’s art.
As my eyes slumber in Odilon Redon’s abstracts, undreamed-of images arise. After 1890, pastel and oils became his favorite medium. I look at this painting, “Compsition of Flowers,” and see it as a bead on a hair stick as I walk, fully purple, into the morning air.
Filed under: Style
Yves Saint Laurent and Georges Braque
In the April 1988 issue of Vogue, Yves Saint Laurent was inspired by the stark cubist brush strokes of Georges Braque, as well as the artist’s preoccupation with birds. However, Braque drew birds in one freehand motion. Yves combined both ideas in an evening dress collar. The bird had a free-form outline; wings that conformed to Braque’s proportions; and embroidered, beaded pieces that resembled the artist’s brush strokes.
As a work of engineering, the bird drinking water with its beak immersed in fabric connects to its back wing, which winds around the Christy Turlington’s shoulder. It was a revolutionary work of haute couture. As a work of art, it remains unparalleled.
Filed under: Style







