The premiere of VH1’s new original series Hindsight on Wednesday took viewers on a time-traveling journey – but did you enjoy the trip down ’90s memory lane?
Before you chime in with your thoughts, a recap of the pilot: Becca (White Collar‘s Laura Ramsey) is about to get married for the second time to quintessential nice guy Andy (Super Fun Night’s Nick Clifford). He’s sweet, responsible and thoughtful. “But did he set me on fire? Well, I was warm,” Becca’s voiceover reveals. She finds herself reminiscing about the past, including her hunky, unpredictable ex-husband Sean (Legend of the Seeker...
Before you chime in with your thoughts, a recap of the pilot: Becca (White Collar‘s Laura Ramsey) is about to get married for the second time to quintessential nice guy Andy (Super Fun Night’s Nick Clifford). He’s sweet, responsible and thoughtful. “But did he set me on fire? Well, I was warm,” Becca’s voiceover reveals. She finds herself reminiscing about the past, including her hunky, unpredictable ex-husband Sean (Legend of the Seeker...
- 1/8/2015
- TVLine.com
“It's Thanksgiving again," said the omniscient Gossip Girl at the beginning of last night's episode, prompting us into a fuzzy, non-hd flashblack of all the Thanksgivings we've spent gathered around the table by the window in the van der Bass apartment. Like this one, the holidays of the past began with the same hope: that it would be "the best Thanksgiving ever," and like this one, things took an inevitable turn. There was the Thanksgiving when Blair barfed up her father's pie, the one where Lily commited Serena to rehab, and the one where Serena simpered over her terrible, scruffy-chinned boyfriend Aaron Rose. Thanksgiving on Gossip Girl is always a disaster, but on Gossip Girl, as in life, they keep trying, because what else can they do? So Serena shrugs and, as Blair expects, invites her horrible ex-boyfriend and his bratty teenage daughter to dinner. How bad can it be?...
- 12/4/2012
- by Jessica Pressler
- Vulture
The gossip is out! Monday night’s episode of Gossip Girl unveiled the truth about Nate’s new love, brought back two familiar faces and set up a partnership that could make the Upper East Side crowd very angry. Below, we review the episode’s biggest surprises.
Photos | Gossip Girl Sneak Peek: Will a Last Dance Bring Chuck and Blair Together for Good?
Nate Goes Young… Very Young | The Spectator boss finally finds a love interest closer to his own age. Unfortunately, she’s also underage and the daughter of Serena’s new boyfriend, Steven, who decks Nate. “It’s legal.
Photos | Gossip Girl Sneak Peek: Will a Last Dance Bring Chuck and Blair Together for Good?
Nate Goes Young… Very Young | The Spectator boss finally finds a love interest closer to his own age. Unfortunately, she’s also underage and the daughter of Serena’s new boyfriend, Steven, who decks Nate. “It’s legal.
- 10/16/2012
- by Vlada Gelman
- TVLine.com
In the new March 2012 issue of the Brooklyn Rail, Colin Beckett previews a "five-film retrospective sampler" of work by Hong Sang-soo running at the Museum of the Moving Image from March 17 through 23: "Wherever his characters go, be it Paris or a Korean resort town, they do the same things: arrange themselves in complicated love triangles, treat others poorly, drink too much, then treat each other even worse. His deliberately artificial camera movements — long pans back and forth, and half-motivated zooms, mostly — treat real space the way a camera usually approaches a photograph or a painting: flattening it, drawing horizontal and diagonal lines to map its elements. He is concerned with atmosphere in the literal sense: the particular qualities of light and air in the types of spaces to which he obsessively returns: beaches, restaurants, apartments."
Hong's Tale of Cinema (2005) is not one of the five (which, by the way,...
Hong's Tale of Cinema (2005) is not one of the five (which, by the way,...
- 3/4/2012
- MUBI
Screen Australia has announced six rising Australian producers and one director will take internships with established production companies from around the world.
The placements are through Screen Australia’s Talent Escalator program aims to develop the producer’s development opportunities to enhance their skills.
Screen Australia’s head of development said “These internships are an important part of Screen Australia’s professional development support of filmmakers. Each of these ambitious placements will expose Australian producers or directors to the international production landscape, helping to broaden outlook, hone specific skills and advance marketplace awareness, which will directly benefit the Australian industry more broadly.”
Melissa Kelly, producer of Wa feature film Blame will be working at Magnolia Pictures in New York for four months. Working closely with the Head of International Sales Kelly will receive insight into the international marketplace.
Benjamin Gilovitz, producer of award winning short film Deeper Than Yesterday will...
The placements are through Screen Australia’s Talent Escalator program aims to develop the producer’s development opportunities to enhance their skills.
Screen Australia’s head of development said “These internships are an important part of Screen Australia’s professional development support of filmmakers. Each of these ambitious placements will expose Australian producers or directors to the international production landscape, helping to broaden outlook, hone specific skills and advance marketplace awareness, which will directly benefit the Australian industry more broadly.”
Melissa Kelly, producer of Wa feature film Blame will be working at Magnolia Pictures in New York for four months. Working closely with the Head of International Sales Kelly will receive insight into the international marketplace.
Benjamin Gilovitz, producer of award winning short film Deeper Than Yesterday will...
- 8/25/2011
- by Colin Delaney
- Encore Magazine
Susan Michals Car by Kenny Scharf from the Art in the Street event.
Who knew Justin Timberlake and Jake Gyllenhaal were such big art fans? Art in the Streets, a history of street art and graffiti, is running at the Geffen Contemporary at Moca in Los Angeles, and recently held a party that featured the two aforementioned actors in tow. The exhibition, brought to you by Moca director Jeffrey Deitch and co-curators Roger Gastman and Aaron Rose, gives viewers a...
Who knew Justin Timberlake and Jake Gyllenhaal were such big art fans? Art in the Streets, a history of street art and graffiti, is running at the Geffen Contemporary at Moca in Los Angeles, and recently held a party that featured the two aforementioned actors in tow. The exhibition, brought to you by Moca director Jeffrey Deitch and co-curators Roger Gastman and Aaron Rose, gives viewers a...
- 4/20/2011
- by Susan Michals
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
Welcome to TV Fanatic's Gossip Girl Round Table, where our illustrious panel gathers to review the events of "Dr. Estrangeloved" and preview developments to come.
DANdy, Gossip Guy and Mister Meester take on last night's top quotes, blown schemes, Jenny's next moves, Lily's "illlness" and puzzling William questions here ...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. What was your favorite Gossip Girl quote last night?
DANdy: I can't choose from all the medically-inspired gems Gossip Girl herself dished out, so I'll go with Blair's mature take on moving on from Chuck: "I'm gonna kiss somebody someday, and when I do, it will be for me."
Gossip Guy: B always knows what to say to make me laugh, like asking if the Ikea art was an Aaron Rose. You gotta love that despite Aaron being such a terrible short-lived character, the show can keep throwing us references.
Mister Meester: Chuck's Step #2: "Get him drunk and take advantage...
DANdy, Gossip Guy and Mister Meester take on last night's top quotes, blown schemes, Jenny's next moves, Lily's "illlness" and puzzling William questions here ...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. What was your favorite Gossip Girl quote last night?
DANdy: I can't choose from all the medically-inspired gems Gossip Girl herself dished out, so I'll go with Blair's mature take on moving on from Chuck: "I'm gonna kiss somebody someday, and when I do, it will be for me."
Gossip Guy: B always knows what to say to make me laugh, like asking if the Ikea art was an Aaron Rose. You gotta love that despite Aaron being such a terrible short-lived character, the show can keep throwing us references.
Mister Meester: Chuck's Step #2: "Get him drunk and take advantage...
- 4/27/2010
- by steve@iscribelimited.com (L.J. Gibbs)
- TVfanatic
Last night's Gossip Girl saw a number of story lines unfold intriguingly, and many a scheme hatched with little success. In short, "Dr. Estrangeloved" was vintage Gg.
As always, Tvf has been compiling memorable lines for the web's biggest and best library of Gossip Girl quotes. Feel free to leave a comment with any we missed!
Here's what we've got so far ...
Jenny: Nate is just a friend and Chuck is harmless unless this place runs out of ice. | permalink Gossip Girl: In case you haven't heard one before, that's the sound of a relationship flatlining. | permalink Blair: I'm gonna kiss somebody someday, and when I do, it will be for me. | permalink Dan: Jenny, please tell me what you're doing here; starting with "dad knows" and ending with "these drinks are not for me." | permalink Chuck: After all these years, you can't see through my smoke screens? I'm not asking for forgiveness,...
As always, Tvf has been compiling memorable lines for the web's biggest and best library of Gossip Girl quotes. Feel free to leave a comment with any we missed!
Here's what we've got so far ...
Jenny: Nate is just a friend and Chuck is harmless unless this place runs out of ice. | permalink Gossip Girl: In case you haven't heard one before, that's the sound of a relationship flatlining. | permalink Blair: I'm gonna kiss somebody someday, and when I do, it will be for me. | permalink Dan: Jenny, please tell me what you're doing here; starting with "dad knows" and ending with "these drinks are not for me." | permalink Chuck: After all these years, you can't see through my smoke screens? I'm not asking for forgiveness,...
- 4/27/2010
- by steve@iscribelimited.com (L.J. Gibbs)
- TVfanatic
New Moca director Jeffrey Deitch might have just accepted the art world's most controversial position, but if there's one thing everyone can agree he's great at, it's throwing a party. And now, he's got a bright, blank new L.A. canvas to work with. We asked artists, curators and critics to provide some guidance for Deitch's new gig.
Time to pitch a Moca reality show to one of the major networks now that you're in L.A. The concept is your life: "Ack! The economy's gone to shit so now I'm a newbie museum director." During this 13-episode series viewers will watch you navigate museum politics, get lost in L.A. and schmooze with celebrities and art glitterati. Show title: Sink or Swim! The prize: Glory--and the USA's best museum stays open.-Paddy Johnson, Art Fag City
Deitch should expand his plans with James Franco and General Hospital and embrace Los Angeles' soap opera scene.
Time to pitch a Moca reality show to one of the major networks now that you're in L.A. The concept is your life: "Ack! The economy's gone to shit so now I'm a newbie museum director." During this 13-episode series viewers will watch you navigate museum politics, get lost in L.A. and schmooze with celebrities and art glitterati. Show title: Sink or Swim! The prize: Glory--and the USA's best museum stays open.-Paddy Johnson, Art Fag City
Deitch should expand his plans with James Franco and General Hospital and embrace Los Angeles' soap opera scene.
- 1/14/2010
- by Alissa Walker
- Fast Company
Hey, it’s a film festival masquerading as an art gallery show! Or is it an art gallery show masquerading as a film festival? Whatever it is, it’s the Projections Festival of Rare and Hard to See Films curated by Aaron Rose and screening from Jan. 16 to Feb. 20 at the Roberts & Tilton gallery in Los Angeles.
Some of the films screening are short films by popular, indie film directors, such as Spike Jonze, Harmony Korine, Jean-Luc Godard, Miranda July and Roman Coppola. But there are also films by underground filmmakers like Sadie Benning, Matt McCormick, Brian Butler and the king of underground film, Jonas Mekas. And there’s a whole host more, too.
If you look over the schedule, which is posted in its entirety below, you’ll notice that there aren’t a lot of screening times listed. That’s because on each day a film, or a series of films,...
Some of the films screening are short films by popular, indie film directors, such as Spike Jonze, Harmony Korine, Jean-Luc Godard, Miranda July and Roman Coppola. But there are also films by underground filmmakers like Sadie Benning, Matt McCormick, Brian Butler and the king of underground film, Jonas Mekas. And there’s a whole host more, too.
If you look over the schedule, which is posted in its entirety below, you’ll notice that there aren’t a lot of screening times listed. That’s because on each day a film, or a series of films,...
- 1/13/2010
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
All the critics who were hemming and hawing about newly-named Moca director Jeffrey Deitch's ability to direct a non-profit museum versus run a for-profit gallery have less to bitch about. According to the New York Observer, Deitch's gallery Deitch Projects will close by June 1, when he is scheduled to take the oath of office, as it were, in Los Angeles. A press conference this morning at Moca made the announcement official.
Tyler Green at Modern Art Notes has the first interview with Deitch, a massive three-parter published last night, where Deitch reveals that he will provide a list of his entire collection for ethical reasons and does not plan to return to any gallery after his five-year contract is up: "No, I do not intend to go back to art dealing. I've always intended this as a wonderful opportunity, to take on the museum. I always intended to wrap...
Tyler Green at Modern Art Notes has the first interview with Deitch, a massive three-parter published last night, where Deitch reveals that he will provide a list of his entire collection for ethical reasons and does not plan to return to any gallery after his five-year contract is up: "No, I do not intend to go back to art dealing. I've always intended this as a wonderful opportunity, to take on the museum. I always intended to wrap...
- 1/12/2010
- by Alissa Walker
- Fast Company
In lieu of bread crumbs, last night’s Thanksgiving-themed Gossip Girl was stuffed with pregnancies, elevator grab-ass, and a really inappropriate onesie. Still, I’m sure the Pilgrims would have enjoyed this Upper East Side feast; there had to be at least a few teen soap fans on the Mayflower. The big entrée was Serena’s relationship with the most boring man in New York, aka Tripp Vanderbilt. I honestly don’t get why Serena would choose this dude over Nate. He’s a snooze and he has Conan O’Brien hair. Also, is it just me or does it...
- 12/1/2009
- by Tim Stack
- EW.com - PopWatch
Beautiful Losers is released on August 7th in the UK.
Beautiful Losers celebrates the spirit behind one of the most influential cultural moments of a
generation. In the early 1990s a loose-knit group of like-minded outsiders found common ground at a little
NYC storefront gallery. Rooted in the Diy (do-it-yourself) subcultures of skateboarding, surf, punk, hip hop
& graffiti, they made art that reflected the lifestyles they led. Developing their craft with almost no influence
from the “establishment” art world, this group and the subcultures they sprang from have now become a
movement that has been transforming pop culture.
Developing their craft with almost no influence from the “establishment” art world, this group, and the
subcultures they sprang from have now become a movement that has been transforming pop culture.
Starring a selection of artists who are considered leaders within this culture, Beautiful Losers focuses on
the telling of personal stories…...
Beautiful Losers celebrates the spirit behind one of the most influential cultural moments of a
generation. In the early 1990s a loose-knit group of like-minded outsiders found common ground at a little
NYC storefront gallery. Rooted in the Diy (do-it-yourself) subcultures of skateboarding, surf, punk, hip hop
& graffiti, they made art that reflected the lifestyles they led. Developing their craft with almost no influence
from the “establishment” art world, this group and the subcultures they sprang from have now become a
movement that has been transforming pop culture.
Developing their craft with almost no influence from the “establishment” art world, this group, and the
subcultures they sprang from have now become a movement that has been transforming pop culture.
Starring a selection of artists who are considered leaders within this culture, Beautiful Losers focuses on
the telling of personal stories…...
- 8/3/2009
- by Ryan Petty
- The Cinema Post
A remark made in Aaron Rose's art-nerd documentary Beautiful Losers, about humor acting as a sledge hammer, got us thinking about the power of both the comic and the tragic. Not long ago, Karina reviewed a little known documentary called Dear Zachary: A letter to a son about his father. Then the film was played on MSNBC, and her analytical criticisms of the film set off a firestorm of angry comments. We chat about tragedy, context, and the dangers of critiquing non-fiction films as works of ar ...
- 1/9/2009
- by Kevin Buist
- Spout
A remark made in Aaron Rose's art-nerd documentary Beautiful Losers, about humor acting as a sledge hammer, got us thinking about the power of both the comic and the tragic. Not long ago, Karina reviewed a little known documentary called Dear Zachary: A letter to a son about his father. Then the film was played on MSNBC, and her analytical criticisms of the film set off a firestorm of angry comments. We chat about tragedy, context, and the dangers of critiquing non-fiction films as works of art. Ano ...
- 1/9/2009
- by Kevin Buist
- Spout
New York - Beastie Boys rapper Adam Yauch will be introducing some U.S. moviegoers to a different kind of music: African pop.
Yauch's Oscilloscope Laboratories has nabbed domestic rights to the rockumentary "Youssou Ndour: I Bring What I Love," a portrait of the influential Senegalese musician.
Chai Vasarhelyi's film, set for an early Summer 2009 theatrical release in conjunction with Ndour's tour, covers two years in the life of the Muslim musician and controversy surrounding his songs about Islam. Oscilloscope's David Fenkel negotiated the deal with Celluloid Dreams' Bobby Allen and Hengameh Panahi.
Additionally, Regent Releasing hopes to sell audiences the the secret to happiness for just "$9.99." The distributor picked up North American rights to Tatia Rosenthal's stop-motion animated comedy. Geoffrey Rush and Anthony Lapaglia are among the voices who'll be heard when "$9.99," based on Etgar Keret's short stories, hits select U.S. theaters next spring. Regent's Mark Reinhart...
Yauch's Oscilloscope Laboratories has nabbed domestic rights to the rockumentary "Youssou Ndour: I Bring What I Love," a portrait of the influential Senegalese musician.
Chai Vasarhelyi's film, set for an early Summer 2009 theatrical release in conjunction with Ndour's tour, covers two years in the life of the Muslim musician and controversy surrounding his songs about Islam. Oscilloscope's David Fenkel negotiated the deal with Celluloid Dreams' Bobby Allen and Hengameh Panahi.
Additionally, Regent Releasing hopes to sell audiences the the secret to happiness for just "$9.99." The distributor picked up North American rights to Tatia Rosenthal's stop-motion animated comedy. Geoffrey Rush and Anthony Lapaglia are among the voices who'll be heard when "$9.99," based on Etgar Keret's short stories, hits select U.S. theaters next spring. Regent's Mark Reinhart...
- 9/26/2008
- by By Gregg Goldstein
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The pied piper of Manhattan's 1990s Lower East Side artist's movement, Aaron Rose breaks into film this year with his documentary, Beautiful Losers. The movie, which features interviews with the people behind the "Beautiful Losers" traveling exhibition—among them Mike Mills, (Thumbsucker) and Harmony Korine (Kids, Mister Lonely)—was six years in the making. Rose, who had previously worked in short form video, recently spoke with Mm about putting together this feature project, how he struggled staying true to the art of it and what is on tap for the future.
- 8/8/2008
- MovieMaker.com
Once upon a time - the 1990s, to be exact - there existed on Manhattan's Lower East Side a storefront gallery populated by young street artists.
Or, as one of the artists says in "Beautiful Losers," Aaron Rose's documentary look back at the gallery he ran for 10 years, "It wasn't really a gallery. It was more of a party space . . . for rich bored kids."
Rose catches up with 11 of the gallery's alumni and alumnae - punk rockers, hip-hoppers, graffiti artists, skateboarders - who have gone on to bigger and better things.
Best...
Or, as one of the artists says in "Beautiful Losers," Aaron Rose's documentary look back at the gallery he ran for 10 years, "It wasn't really a gallery. It was more of a party space . . . for rich bored kids."
Rose catches up with 11 of the gallery's alumni and alumnae - punk rockers, hip-hoppers, graffiti artists, skateboarders - who have gone on to bigger and better things.
Best...
- 8/8/2008
- by By V.A. MUSETTO
- NYPost.com
So: Sidetrack Films, the producers of Aaron Rose and Joshua Leonard's doc Beautiful Losers (see our SXSW coverage here), have signed a deal with Nike to sponsor the film's release in five cities, starting with its New York premiere this Friday. Like Mark Rabinowitz, who wrote a post on indieWIRE's new Docsider blog pondering What This All Means in relation to the state of documentary film distribution, I have mixed feelings about this. The most obvious, knee-jerk response is, of course, something about how big bad co ...
- 8/6/2008
- by Karina Longworth
- Spout
Aaron Rose never set out to be a filmmaker. An artist and writer, he is also the founder of New York's Alleged Gallery, where he served as curator for 10 years. He co-curated the large-scale museum exhibition "Beautiful Losers: Contemporary Art and Street Culture," which led to a book of the same name. And now he is the co-director (with Joshua Leonard) of the documentary Beautiful Losers, opening in New York Aug. 8. The film shines a light on the craft and inspiration of some of the most creative and influential artists of the last 20 years--including Harmony Korine, Ed Templeton, and the late Margaret Kilgallen. Rose, who now resides in Los Angeles, spoke to Back Stage about the origin and future of his moviemaking career. On picking the artists featured in the film: "We interviewed 70 people for the film, and only 12 made it in. We created a character profile for everybody.
- 8/6/2008
- by Jenelle Riley
- backstage.com
By Neil Pedley
This week's delectable delights include, amongst other things, such highbrow morsels as a gallery retrospective on D.I.Y. art and a crash course in the history of the California vineyards. If that's not your cup of proverbial tea, there's always psychotic bikers and the ballad of two stoned losers on the run from gangsters and the police.
"Beautiful Losers"
More than 15 years after founding the hugely influential Alleged Gallery in New York, the freelance curator Aaron Rose continues to serve as a cornerstone of the now-global D.I.Y. art scene. Here he teams with "Blair Witch" actor-turned-director Joshua Leonard to chart the evolution and subsequent commercialization of a movement whose genesis was found in a group of outcasts, slackers and misfits from the fringes of subculture. Emerging from the dirty little worlds of surfing, skateboarding and street graffiti, a group of artists including the likes of Harmony Korine,...
This week's delectable delights include, amongst other things, such highbrow morsels as a gallery retrospective on D.I.Y. art and a crash course in the history of the California vineyards. If that's not your cup of proverbial tea, there's always psychotic bikers and the ballad of two stoned losers on the run from gangsters and the police.
"Beautiful Losers"
More than 15 years after founding the hugely influential Alleged Gallery in New York, the freelance curator Aaron Rose continues to serve as a cornerstone of the now-global D.I.Y. art scene. Here he teams with "Blair Witch" actor-turned-director Joshua Leonard to chart the evolution and subsequent commercialization of a movement whose genesis was found in a group of outcasts, slackers and misfits from the fringes of subculture. Emerging from the dirty little worlds of surfing, skateboarding and street graffiti, a group of artists including the likes of Harmony Korine,...
- 8/4/2008
- by Neil Pedley
- ifc.com
By Aaron Hillis
He's designed scarves for Marc Jacobs and the iconic cover of Air's "Moon Safari" album, directed music videos for Moby, Pulp and Blonde Redhead, helmed two features to date (the Sundance hit "Thumbsucker" and the SXSW doc "Does Your Soul Have a Cold?"), had graphic art exhibitions and commissioned ad campaigns all around the globe, and played with members of Cibo Matto and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion in the short-lived '90s East Village supergroup Butter 08. If people still confuse prolific artist-filmmaker Mike Mills with the R.E.M. bassist of the same name, it's because it's easy to believe the same man could've done it all.
Mills features prominently in NYC gallery curator-turned-director Aaron Rose's "Beautiful Losers," an entertaining doc celebration of the D.I.Y. talent (Shepard Fairey, Harmony Korine, Ed Templeton, the late Margaret Kilgallen, et al.) who took part in Rose's titular museum exhibition.
He's designed scarves for Marc Jacobs and the iconic cover of Air's "Moon Safari" album, directed music videos for Moby, Pulp and Blonde Redhead, helmed two features to date (the Sundance hit "Thumbsucker" and the SXSW doc "Does Your Soul Have a Cold?"), had graphic art exhibitions and commissioned ad campaigns all around the globe, and played with members of Cibo Matto and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion in the short-lived '90s East Village supergroup Butter 08. If people still confuse prolific artist-filmmaker Mike Mills with the R.E.M. bassist of the same name, it's because it's easy to believe the same man could've done it all.
Mills features prominently in NYC gallery curator-turned-director Aaron Rose's "Beautiful Losers," an entertaining doc celebration of the D.I.Y. talent (Shepard Fairey, Harmony Korine, Ed Templeton, the late Margaret Kilgallen, et al.) who took part in Rose's titular museum exhibition.
- 7/30/2008
- by Aaron Hillis
- ifc.com
- Anarchists of the traditional art form, I'm looking forward to catching this docu: an in-depth look into (just under a baker's dozen or so of) artists that remain, for the most part, incognito from the mass recognition/acclaim. Not surprisingly, I'm only familiar with a trio of names (those associated for their contributions to the film world), but I'm sure this grouping of social misfits, who made the stomping grounds of the urban jungle their own canvases will incite plenty of interest. Jeez, I regret not spending more time developing a certain side of my brain. Beautiful Losers follows a loose-knit group of likeminded and creative outsiders in the 1990s who found common ground at a little NYC storefront art gallery. Rooted in the Diy (do-it-yourself) subcultures of skateboarding, surf, punk, hip hop & graffiti, these individuals created art that reflected the lifestyles they led. Featuring Shepard Fairey, Margaret Kilgallen,
- 6/18/2008
- IONCINEMA.com
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