Muse Magazine

Monday, May 22, 2006

PALETTE: Skin












So this summer I want to channel Marpessa Dawn in "Black Orpheus," who spent the entire movie running from the grim reaper in Brazil's hot sun without looking oily or bumpy. I'm going to load up on water, vitamin B-6, B-12, and folic acid and then make DDF's glycolic cleanser, dramatic radiance cream and protective eye cream with spf 15, my new best friends. Because it's all about keeping the oil and blackheads away in the hot, hot, heat.

WARDROBE: So, we changed our minds






After I wore them in a game of kickball gone very wrong when I was 9-years-old, I swore I'd never wear jelly sandals again. Just the thought of those little rocks and pebbles that got stuck between my big toe and the plastic shoe (half-melted in the sun, ew) makes me shake my head with resolution to not repeat the same mistakes in my adulthood. But when I see these very cute Marc Jacobs gladiator jellies at an affordable price of $95, I can't help but think that I need to try this trend out again. Minus the kickball though.

Sunday, May 21, 2006

LIFE: On our to-do list this week









(Click on event titles for details)
New York
Wednesday
An Alien Eye: And Other Killah Anthems
The 34-year-old Nairobi, Kenya native, Wangechi Mutu, tackles luxury, mass consumption and the Western world’s obsession with appearance in her latest exhibition. She creates dynamic, brown-skinned, feminine figures through collage using glitter, fur, and cut-out’s from ethnographic magazines among other materials.





New York
Thursday
Jump ‘N’ Funk
This go ‘round, Rich Medina’s monthly sweatbox/Fela Kuti tribute party will feature live music from special guest Franci M’Bappe. Wear comfortable shoes.


New York
Friday
Dance Africa
The dance portion of the 29th annual event will feature performances by the Afro-Peruvian ensemble, Peru Negro, and the Brooklyn-based company, Creative Outlet Dance Theatre.


Los Angeles
Saturday
Fashion Circus
Think of it as like a glorified bazaar only with cooler local artists. The showcase will feature clothing, accessories and works of art by west coast designers.

PALETTE: Let the pedicure season begin



Not to sound totally vapid, but raise your hand if you’ve ever gotten a fresh mani/pedi for a trip to the beach only to have your toenail polish chip after just one day of frolicking in the sand under the hot, hot sun. Sooooo annoying, right? That was my dilemma until a manicurist turned me on to Lippmann collection. Now, I could walk on fire (I wouldn’t recommend it though) and the stuff would still look fresh. I once even went as long as a month without a pedicure (I wouldn’t recommend that either) and my Lippmann dipped toes were still as red as ever. This summer, I’m looking forward to adding the colors No More Drama (a pinkish caramel), Daytripper (a melony peach), and Bitches Brew (a rich mulberry) to my collection.

-Muse
info@musemag.net

LIFE: What's on our collective conscious

SOUNDS: If our life had a soundtrack...




















  1. The opening action sequence (camera pans across bedroom – a half-packed suitcase lies on the floor beside a crumpled dress and heels – before zooming in on protagnist in bed. She wakes up. It’s 6 a.m. Her flight is scheduled to leave at 6:30 a.m. She knew she shouldn’t have stayed out so late the night before):
    "Promiscuous Girl," by Nelly Furtado (Click on song titles to listen)


    Transitional montage (cut to heroine sprinting into cab, cut to her dashing from car to airport terminal and on to gate A):
    “Runnin’” by The Pharcyde


    The comic relief (as she arrives at her gate, 45 minutes late, tears of frustration welling up in her eyes, she realizes her flight is running an hour behind):

    “Everything In Its Right Place,” (remix of Radiohead) by Osunlade and Erro

LIFE: Lists, Part I




Ten Men We’d Take A Cross-Country Road Trip With (for the conversation of course)
In no particular order...

1) Dave Chappelle
2) Prince
3) Andre 3000
4) George Clooney
5) Gabriel Garcia Marquez
6) Don Cheadle
7) Barack Obama
8) Ghostface Killah
9) Seu Jorge
10) Mos Def

Monday, May 15, 2006

WARDROBE: Your boyfriend is the new fashion muse






















I always silently laughed at my man when I'd tag along with him to painfully exclusive sneaker boutiques that featured printed t-shirts displayed on walls like painted canvases and high-end kicks in glass boxes. I mean, how many interpretations can a guy give of that look? Then he pointed out that I should stop hating and try it out myself by wearing a fitted version like the Urban Outfitters one here. Instead of jeans, though, I paired it with a '70's style, high-waisted khaki skirt and loved it. So I guess I played myself. Now if I can just get him to give up those Marc Jacobs Vans.

-Muse
mailto:info@musemang.net

FILMS: The Real Reel














"It’s the real reel. Real people play themselves on film. They’re not acting, but ‘acting out.’" That’s how director, David Weisman, described his Edie Sedgwick film "Ciao Manhattan," which chronicled the drug-hazed, dark underside of the excess and celebrity that characterized the ‘60's it girl/Andy Warhol muse’s world. We watched the flick during a DVD marathon night that included "Grey Gardens," "Style Wars," and "The Legend of Leigh Bowery." Weisman’s philosophy bugged us out considering that the actors were actually playing out the real-life tragic events that had happened in the past (shock therapy, rape, amphetamine use, drug smuggling, etc.). It’s sort of like an incredibly dark, psychedelic precursor to reality tv. A particular standout in the film, was Pat Hartley, Andy Warhol’s only African-American superstar that we know of. If only "The Real World" and "Surreal Life" were half as entertaining. Oh, and Betsey Johnson did the costumes. Talk about fashion forward.
-Muse
info@musemag.net

WARDROBE: What We're Sweating Now

Right now I'm having a moment of obsession with uniquely embellished tops. They just seem so easy to work with considering that all you need is a sexy pencil skirt to dress it up or denim short shorts to dress it down. It’s like the anti-“outfit” with minimal coordinating required. These shirts by Chloe, Anna Sui and Antik Batik are a few of my favorites.

-Muse
info@musemag.net









































FILMS: Profile




















Brains and Beauty
Gael Garcia Bernal is pretty on the outside and politically conscious on the inside


This summer, sandwiched between the special affects-driven action flick
franchises and deep-pocketed big studio blockbusters, there will be
small-budgeted indie films with character, artful storytelling and
inspired acting. Gael Garcia Bernal will star in most of them.

In addition to his movie, “The King,” which hits theaters today and
features the 28-year-old as a Navy man on a doomed search for his
father, Bernal also stars in the Michel Gondry directed Sundance Film
Festival hit, “The Science of Sleep,” and “Babel,” which is a contender
for the Palm D’Or at Cannes. “It’s not as if I deliberately decided to
operate outside of the Hollywood machine,” says the guy who broke
Mexico’s box office records twice. “I just want to do the stories that
I’m interested in regardless of what budget they have. I don’t know the
rules of Hollywood so I’m not playing the game, just doing what I
want.”

Coming out of the mouth of anyone else, that quote may sound canned.
But his resume backs it up. “The King” tackles issues of race and
identity through the eyes of a bastard son of a Mexican immigrant and
American evangelist. “The Navy was a vehicle for him to be considered
a part of this country that he was born in. Which is kind of sad,
because I think there’s more ways of doing that than joining the
military. He needed to be accepted legally. His mother wasn’t,” he
explains. As he goes on, it becomes apparent that immigration is a
subject Bernal cares about outside of the movie. “A physical wall
exists between Texas and Mexico and the people south of the border can
see in, but the people north can’t. So there is this ridiculous
division in that once you’re in, everything else becomes invisible. The
division between Mexico and the United States goes deeper than even
that of Palestine and Israel,” he explains.

Like a more political and intellectual Johnny Depp, Bernal started out
as an after school special type teenage heartthrob and has since
progressed to full on act-or through heady roles. His career path is a
stark contrast to that of his best friend and “Y tu mama tambien”
co-star Diego Luna. “Would I have made ‘Dirty Dancing’? No, but that’s
because I don’t dance as well as Diego,” he replies. The two will team
up again next year in the soccer flick, “Toto.”

His next project requires longer hair, today it falls just above his
shoulders. That’s about all he’ll reveal about the movie. But Bernal
will talk a bit more about the hair. “I did have dread locks once and
then cut them all off and wore it really short. This time I have to
grow it until it’s pretty long.” It’s safe to assume an interesting
storyline will come along with that too.

-Muse
info@musemag.net
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