Cycle Style vs. Cycle Chic

Two books explore the aesthetics of bike-riding

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The North Atlantic Ocean may take hours to cross by plane but when it comes to the infiltration of bicycle culture—and specifically, the urban cycling aesthetic—the distance ceases to exist. Case in point: as we were busy attending the launch of the new book “Cycle Style” at London’s Look Mum, No Hands, a copy of “Cycle Chic” landed at CH HQ in New York. As we talked across the pond, we soon learned that the common celebration of riding style had been documented from two distinct vantage points.

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The weightier hardcover “Cycle Chic” outnumbers the softcover “Cycle Style” by nearly 100 pages, and the narratives inside each continues to diverge. Shot by acclaimed photographer Horst Friedrichs, “Cycle Style” showcases the 15-year London resident’s love affair with his adopted city from the first page. He dedicates the book to the city and its stylishly eclectic cyclists who reside and ride around it, capturing the essence of their character—from the hip Shoreditch crowd to the perfectly manicured Saville Row riders and everyone in between.

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Friedrichs forgoes action shots for the most part, presenting posed subjects, each of whom is in some way connected to the London cycle scene, from Quoc Pham, who designs cycle shoes, to Sir Paul Smith, who has made the bicycle an integral part of his eponymous fashion brand. The images are left to speak for themselves, some spanning two pages to highlight both the rider’s personal style and their bike’s outstanding details, like vintage leather seats and customized handlebars. Because Friedrichs has left text off the pages, the book includes a complete index listing the name of each individual along with the type of bike they ride, as well as a full directory of cycle-friendly clothing and accessory brands.

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By contrast, “Cycle Chic” has been compiled by Mikael Colville-Andersen, filmmaker, street photographer, urban mobility expert and the man behind popular cycle blogs Copenhagen Cycle Chic and Slow Bicycle Movement. Rather than limiting himself to just one city, Colville-Andersen has created a showcase of snaps from across the globe including Tokyo, London, Copenhagen, Vancouver, Paris and New York.

While Colville-Andersen claims that the photographs are not meant to be viewed solely for the style of their subjects, he focuses primarily on subjects’ fashion in the text throughout the book and begins by say that “…at every opportunity, I will choose style over speed”. The style of his subjects seems less inspired than those captured in “Cycle Styles”, with more of a common, everyday look. As a text devoted to how people utilize their bicycles and the commonalities between cyclists in different nations, it really works, but as a study of aesthetics, “Cycle Chic” focuses more on the broader idea of bike style throughout the world than individual style mavens stopped on two wheels.

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Subjects are mostly shot riding, grouped together by different themes from the color of their outfits and bikes, to the style of their front basket, to their choice of riding companion, whether it be baby or dog. Colville-Andersen takes a heavier-handed approach to introducing themes for each chapter, and keeps a running commentary alongside each photograph that might be better left for readers to deduce themselves. Some of the book’s groupings seem like a bit of a stretch, like winter riders in scarves and women wearing heels while on their bikes, but indicate a close study an impassioned observer.

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Both texts will excite cycle enthusiasts, and both deliver insight into this ever-increasing pastime, but if you have to just buy one, we suggest learning a little more about our London neighbors with “Cycle Style”.

Both “Cycle Style” and “Cycle Chic” are available for purchase on Amazon.


Suspended Fluid Photos

Originaire de Belgrade en Serbie, Luka Klikovac nous dévoile ses photographies de fluides colorés évoluant aléatoirement. Avec des formes étranges prises à part de liquides dans un verre d’eau, le résultat est à découvrir dans une série de visuels.



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Cultural Differences

An artist and a technologist pair up to find the cultural meaning of words through pictures
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Recently presented at Rhizome’s annual Seven on Seven conference, Aaron Swartz and Taryn Simon‘s “Cultural Differences” application culls the top six photos from a Google image search for a specific word in 15 countries, displaying a visual comparison of its meaning among an array of different nations.

The concept was born to follow the conference’s purpose of pairing a technologist with an artist to see what they can make in a mere 24-hour time frame. “Cultural Differences” highlights the incredibly talented and informed pair’s individual interests while showing where they connect. Swartz, a brilliant programmer and activist played to Simon’s background as a photographer concerned with exposing truths.

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While they’d like to expand the app to cover every country, the duo began with the randomly organized selection of 15 currently shown on the site. The user simply types a word into the search field and hits enter to get a pictorial portrayal of how each culture sees the word. Swartz and Simon pointed out in the presentation that Obama yields a variety of results—while most are classic presidential images, in Syria Obama is linked to Beyonce and North Korea obviously prohibits any images of the American president. For the word “Jew” a variety of images pops up in various countries, but in Germany, the word for “Jew” is “Jude”, bringing up nothing but images of Jude Law with that search.

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All politics aside, the app is a valuable tool for designers, who can immediately see that, for example, in Saudi Arabia, a search for an Eames chair generates few relevant results. By gleaning results from each nation’s local search engine, Swartz and Simon’s app refines results, thus usurping the limited scope of a Google image search.

Conceived and developed in less than a day, “Cultural Differences” marks an impressive concept sure to entertain, enlighten and inspire new ways of visually contrasting cultural conversations through simple technology.


Melanie Willhide

The LA-based photographer talks about her latest show, “To Adrian Rodriguez, with Love”
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Sometimes life, as with art, takes an unforeseen turn down a path we would have never intentionally traveled, forcing us to see things differently. LA-based photographer Melanie Willhide seems to have experienced the phenomenon more often than one may like, but rather than be derailed, Willhide has been inspired. When a fire destroyed many of her belongings some years ago, she created the intensely fragile “Sleeping Beauties” series. Now, her latest body of work is named for the perpetrator that robbed her home. “To Adrian Rodriguez, with Love” is now showing at NYC’s Von Lintel Gallery and, after viewing the exhibition we felt compelled to learn more about the artist’s serendipitous inspiration.

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As it happened, Willhide’s laptop was stolen by a burglar, but then recovered by the police. She struggled to retrieve the wiped contents—two bodies of work, family pictures and her own wedding album—but what files she could save were corrupted. Rather than lament the loss, the artist was intrigued by the fragmented photographs and learned how to replicate the “language” used to distort them. As a result, she was able to generate more using vintage photographs and other sourced material she’d collected for visual reference. She created complementary images, bringing about what Willhide calls a “mish-mashed body of work” that she feels represents what had been stolen from the machine, and even more so, the life affected by the incident.

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The bizarre duplicities and mind-bending effects achieved in “To Adrian Rodriguez, with Love” mark a stylistic departure from Willhide’s earlier work, introducing a theme that is likely to continue. “Utilizing the language of the corrupted files has a lot of potential,” says Willhide. “There’s something really powerful about seeing the delicacy of the digital file.”

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By revealing how she creates the optical illusion in her photographs, Willhide champions the art form of digital photography as it embraces programs like Photoshop in a non-traditional sense. “It requires me to think of Photoshop in terms of how it shouldn’t be used,” says Willhide. Shifting concern from the authenticity of an image’s subject to the image as a whole, she feels, gives photographers an “opportunity to come out against the real”—a sentiment suggesting parallels to surrealist movements across other mediums.

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Melanie Willhide‘s conceptually driven “To Adrian Rodriguez, with Love” will be on show at NYC’s Von Lintel Gallery through 24 March, 2012.


Three New iPhone Photo Apps

Three new applications aim to enhance mobile photography

A slew of photo applications for iPhone have rolled out recently, bringing a bit of competition to the Instagram-dominated scene. From professional features to creative image destruction, the following apps continue to expand the capabilities of smart phone photography.

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Camera Awesome

Focusing on camera and video, this app brings some professional-level options to your touch screen interface. The slickest feature has to be the adjustable focus and exposure selection, which allows you to set each independently as you compose the shot. While shooting video, Camera Awesome will record the five seconds prior to pressing the record button, a clutch feature for capturing fleeting moments.

Pictures can be taken rapid fire, and the app has hundreds of filters and effects ready for application through the “Awesomize” button. Finished images are then shared across multiple social media channels. Not that it affects the app’s performance, but quirky loading phrases like “alchemizing dragon scales” and “grilling unicorn tears” sure make for an entertaining wait time.

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Decim8

The anti-nostalgia attitude of Decim8 turns your photographs into pixelated works of glitch art. This is the third version of Decim8, and the UI has received a complete overhaul, giving you much more control over the final product through customizable presets. Effects can be applied one by one or as a batch effect. Menus and options are accessed through multi-directional gestures, and the focus is found by simply tapping the screen. Since corruption is really the point of Decim8, data is irrecoverable and pixel reconfiguration often renders your images beautifully mangled. Users share photos through social media or Postagram postcards.

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Instamatch

Rather than compete with the popular photo app, Instamatch from Tiny Hearts pulls Instagram photos to create a fun memory game. The app recognizes similar objects and arranges them into themes, also allowing you to create your own categories. For example, a food-themed game would present a series of similar dishes that users will have to flip and match. Scores are determined by the number of tiles and the amount of time it takes to complete them. Multiplayer mode supports two people on the iPhone and four on the iPad.


Different Perspectives

Different Perspectives

Winkler + Noah Photography

Focus sur Winkler+Noah, un couple de photographes reconnus à travers le monde. Basés en Italie, leurs clichés nous révèlent une hyper-réalité cherchant ainsi à donner une ambiance particulière à leur clichés. Une sélection d’images dans la suite de l’article.



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Split Portraits

Rappellant le projet “Back To the Future Series” d’Irina Werning gagnante des Fubiz Awards 2012, Split Portraits de Bobby Neel Adams cherche à reprendre de vieilles photos d’identité et de les coller à des portraits actuelles des personnes, pour donner un contraste saisissant.



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Recoloured Photos from the Past

En utilisant les nouveaux services de retouches photographiques de Photoshop CS5, l’artiste suédoise Sanna Dullaway a choisi des clichés mondialement connus et a décidé de les coloriser. Un rendu intéressant, qui permet de redécouvrir des images qui ont fait le 20ème siècle.



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Photo LA 2012

Cinematic influences pervade the annual photo fair

Photo LA was sprawled across the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium with as much bustle as the city itself. Wandering through the labyrinth of pop-up exhibitors, those that stood out most conveyed a strong cinematic narrative with a sense of humor.

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Pulp Art Book marks a collaboration between photographer Neil Krug and model Joni Harbeck. The collection of serial adventures is set against fictional landscapes of pulp cinema. The primal COYOTE episode chronicles the rugged existence of a hunter in the desert, while BONNIE follows the final minutes of a girl-gone-bad during a shootout.

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In his Skeletons in the Closet Klaus Pichler ameliorates the dusty archives of Vienna’s Museum of Natural History with austere yet personality-loaded behind-the scenes-photographs. The stuffed animals become characters, or as Pichler puts it, “they are full of life, but dead nonetheless.”

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Glen Wexler’s large-format Improbable Realities weave awe-inspiring fantasy narratives. Wexler’s attention to whimsical details is realized by his team of top-notch feature film motion graphics experts.

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Atlantic Garden by Ulu Braun conjures a seemingly infinite, psychedelic video collage. As the camera pans perpetually to the right, Atlantic Garden reveals idyllic scenes from a diverse selection of places and times.

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Maria Luisa Morando’s Silver series reveals a vast triptych of over-exposed beach scenes from Southern France. Tired of details, Morando explains that she seeks simplicity in her images. The moody nostalgia of each landscape flows seamlessly into the next, drawing in viewers to lose themselves in the washed out colors, and identify with the obscure figures of beach-goers during magic hour.