The House Next Door

Archive: Photos

Photos: Destroyer @ Webster Hall

Destroyer

In support of January's resplendent Kaputt, the eight-piece Destroyer landed in New York City's Webster Hall on Sunday night. Unkempt and charismatic, yet pensive and hardly the most adventurous of singers, Dan Bejar demands a strong supporting band, which he certainly has in the robust lineup of dual guitars, bass, trumpet, saxophone, keys, and drums. Most of the set tapped songs from the band's latest album, a delicately understated record, convicted in its balance of sound and style. Continue Reading »




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4th Wall

Love

Blooming




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Ryan McGinley Madness at Team Gallery

Ryan McGinleyMarch 18th, at 5:55pm or so, there was already a sizable group of people waiting to get into Ryan McGinley's new show of black and white photographic portraits at Team Gallery, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (through April 17). Mainly they were young people, and some of them were the subjects of the nude photos themselves.

Some of them even shyly stood next to their nudes, but a few of them looked sweetly skittish when anyone asked them to pose with their portrait. McGinley is known for his nude subjects, but he skirts all obvious sexual appeal; he likes physical awkwardness, and if this awkwardness is erotic, it's disarming, pimply, bad breath eroticism, the kind that emerges from low expectations, good weed and the ability to laugh at practically anything.

McGinley achieves his distinctive romanticism in a roundabout way that depends on killing any idealized ideas about people and their skin and the images they present the world. I was born in 1977, the same year as McGinley, and I spent my early twenties hanging out in New Jersey, so I feel like the world of most of his photos is a world I know and love. What sets his work apart is the little stab at utopia that McGinley is trying to provide, the kind of utopia where we don't care if we're gay or straight or beautiful or homely but we all dissolve into each other as a group of arms and legs and blissfully stoned minds. At his best, his work reminds me of the films of Jacques Demy, another gay dreamer who did his best work in praise of heterosexual love fantasies of both triumph (Lola, 1961) and defeat (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, 1964).




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Image of the Decade: Osama and the Towers

Osama bin Laden

To read the eleventh and final installment in a series of countdown essays written for Salon.com about the most important directors of the decade, click here.




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Because I Must…

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US Airways Flight 1549

US Airways Flight 1549

View of US Airways Flight 1549 from Slant Magazine Office [PHOTO: ED GONZALEZ]




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My Three-Year Old Could Shoot That: The Early Photographs of James Seitz

By Matt Zoller Seitz
[A Contribution to The Totally Unrelated Blog-a-thon] Continue Reading »

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Kelly Clarkson's Big Cover-Up

Anyone who's heard Kelly Clarkson's new album, My December, or has read the pre-release interviews (basically, everyone except my grandma), knows that the singer is having a very public conflict with a certain man in her life. No, I'm not talking about the allegedly golden-eared Clive Davis, who, for the record, isn't among the many people thanked in the album's liner notes (even God himself is mentioned multiple times), but former Evanescence member David Hodges, who co-wrote and produced Clarkson's hit "Because Of You" and was reportedly the inspiration for much of her prickly new album, including the single "Never Again." Judging by the photographs in the CD booklet for My December, it seems Hodges (who posted and then removed a rebuttal to Clarkson's single that was called "Just A Little Girl" and included lyrics like "You could never understand the demons that I face/So go ahead and bat your eyes and lie right to the world" and "Decembers were never meant to be our graves") may have done more damage to his ex than simply break her heart. No less than half of the pictures find Clarkson covering or grasping her…lady parts. Now, I'm not accusing anyone of date rape or anything, but take a look for yourself: Continue Reading »




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Smashing Cover Art

I have to admit that I was less than enthused at the news of what seems like a premature Smashing Pumpkins reunion, particularly since bassist D'arcy Wretzky won't be part of the lineup. But the newly unveiled cover art for Zeitgeist, due in July, is truly…smashing. It was designed by graphic artist Shepard Fairey, famous for his Warhol-esque use of simple, solid colors. I can't remember the last time a cover was enough to get me interested in an album, but this one is a metaphorical smorgasbord, evoking global warming, our country's drowning civil liberties (in the blood of the fallen, no less), and renewed hope (though Lady Liberty faces southeast, which means that could be a sunset and not a sunrise). Speaking of hope, with any luck the album will be just as bold as its iconic artwork promises: Continue Reading »




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