The Los Angeles-based photographer is a preserver of the "old", harnessing her arsenal of cameras to document and portray the beauty in old signage, storefronts, buildings, and the people that inhabit the ever-changing landscape of Southern California.
Teague Muir doesn’t claim he’s the best surfer, the best skater, or the best artist, but he manages to stay consistent and committed to all his interests, giving each discipline a shit ton of tender loving care.
Photographer Olivia Jaffe is rock and roll. Not the seemingly glamorous, groupie-love type of rock and roll, but the true guts and grit of rock and roll; the sweaty, bloody, ugly, and yes, at times, hairy, side of rock and roll.
Although this collaboration is their first, Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett seemed innately connected on stage as they traded off gnarled guitar riffs and deadpan deliveries of their stream of consciousness style lyrics at the Orpheum in LA.
While the world is falling apart around us, Sheer Mag is here to act as a beacon of light, to be a voice for those who’ve yet to find theirs, and to bring like-minded people together.
Artist Mario Ayala employs a wide range of specific historical references and cultural expressions in his work, which he talks about in upcoming issue 12.
There’s something off putting about caring too much or trying too hard to create an image, and Froth’s give-no-fucks demeanor is what drew me to them immediately.
Using reality as a springboard, Serge Serum “makes a scene” of the ordinary by distorting peoples’ likenesses, in both his painted portraiture and outrageous photographs.