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Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Jon Schramm
The Bronx
163rd St and Brook Ave
Nov 9, 2009
I'm always interested in signage... is all of the bronx for bloomberg and his new 'improvements' for the city...
Mr. This Is Fine at Venice Biennale- It is good for your portfolio
Video performance for the Czech pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, 2023
Melting Face emoji expresses bitter approval of the life situation in which he finds himself. He is the superhero of hypocrisy, the mascot of sarcasm. It refers to the meltdown, where planet Earth is literally melting, but our collective health, cultural values and solidarity have also melted over the last few years. The planet belongs to a handful of sociopaths and we're pretending to be the dog in the famous "Everything is fine" meme. Business as ussual!
In the first episode, Mr. This Is Fine is invited to represent his country at the Venice Biennale. He has studied at three colleges and has been an active artist for 15 years. He loves his work and hopes to be of good use to the public as well. He is a performer, producer, driver, filmmaker, ditributor, accountant, cleaner, photographer, secretary... But enthusiasm doesn't pay the rent! In the creative industries, most of the players get exploited for a "good cause". Architects and artists shape our cultural landscape and yet only a handful of them receive decent wages. This moment is illustrated by a performance that symbolically took place at the Venice Biennale. Where else do artists' and architects' dreams take shape than at well-known art shows that are good for their portfolios? They compete, they network, they send out portfolios, they endlessly submit opencalls and wait for someone to notice them and pull them into the spotlight. The sarcastic pokerface Mr. This Is Fine refers to precarization, unsustainability, climate change, exploitation, and the elite world they must penetrate to become recognized and dignified.
DoP: Vojtěch Polák
Costume designer and assistant:Mars Industries
Mr. This Is Fine at Venice Biennale- It is good for your portfolio
Video performance for the Czech pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, 2023
Melting Face emoji expresses bitter approval of the life situation in which he finds himself. He is the superhero of hypocrisy, the mascot of sarcasm. It refers to the meltdown, where planet Earth is literally melting, but our collective health, cultural values and solidarity have also melted over the last few years. The planet belongs to a handful of sociopaths and we're pretending to be the dog in the famous "Everything is fine" meme. Business as ussual!
In the first episode, Mr. This Is Fine is invited to represent his country at the Venice Biennale. He has studied at three colleges and has been an active artist for 15 years. He loves his work and hopes to be of good use to the public as well. He is a performer, producer, driver, filmmaker, ditributor, accountant, cleaner, photographer, secretary... But enthusiasm doesn't pay the rent! In the creative industries, most of the players get exploited for a "good cause". Architects and artists shape our cultural landscape and yet only a handful of them receive decent wages. This moment is illustrated by a performance that symbolically took place at the Venice Biennale. Where else do artists' and architects' dreams take shape than at well-known art shows that are good for their portfolios? They compete, they network, they send out portfolios, they endlessly submit opencalls and wait for someone to notice them and pull them into the spotlight. The sarcastic pokerface Mr. This Is Fine refers to precarization, unsustainability, climate change, exploitation, and the elite world they must penetrate to become recognized and dignified.
DoP: Vojtěch Polák
Costume designer and assistant:Mars Industries
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Mr. This Is Fine at Venice Biennale- It is good for your portfolio
Video performance for the Czech pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, 2023
Melting Face emoji expresses bitter approval of the life situation in which he finds himself. He is the superhero of hypocrisy, the mascot of sarcasm. It refers to the meltdown, where planet Earth is literally melting, but our collective health, cultural values and solidarity have also melted over the last few years. The planet belongs to a handful of sociopaths and we're pretending to be the dog in the famous "Everything is fine" meme. Business as ussual!
In the first episode, Mr. This Is Fine is invited to represent his country at the Venice Biennale. He has studied at three colleges and has been an active artist for 15 years. He loves his work and hopes to be of good use to the public as well. He is a performer, producer, driver, filmmaker, ditributor, accountant, cleaner, photographer, secretary... But enthusiasm doesn't pay the rent! In the creative industries, most of the players get exploited for a "good cause". Architects and artists shape our cultural landscape and yet only a handful of them receive decent wages. This moment is illustrated by a performance that symbolically took place at the Venice Biennale. Where else do artists' and architects' dreams take shape than at well-known art shows that are good for their portfolios? They compete, they network, they send out portfolios, they endlessly submit opencalls and wait for someone to notice them and pull them into the spotlight. The sarcastic pokerface Mr. This Is Fine refers to precarization, unsustainability, climate change, exploitation, and the elite world they must penetrate to become recognized and dignified.
DoP: Vojtěch Polák
Costume designer and assistant:Mars Industries
Fotos da exposición «Coleção Encontros da imagem. Open Call 2017» título que engloba 4 ensaios fotográficos de: John Paul Evans, Maria Sturm, Antonio Guerra e Pawel Starzec. E tamén «Reactions» de Dafna Tal
+info: www.outonofotografico.com/blog/vitornieves/cinco-exposici...
Fotos de Soraya SVS
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Fotos da exposición «Coleção Encontros da imagem. Open Call 2017» título que engloba 4 ensaios fotográficos de: John Paul Evans, Maria Sturm, Antonio Guerra e Pawel Starzec. E tamén «Reactions» de Dafna Tal
+info: www.outonofotografico.com/blog/vitornieves/cinco-exposici...
Fotos de Soraya SVS
Mr. This Is Fine at Venice Biennale- It is good for your portfolio
Video performance for the Czech pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, 2023
Melting Face emoji expresses bitter approval of the life situation in which he finds himself. He is the superhero of hypocrisy, the mascot of sarcasm. It refers to the meltdown, where planet Earth is literally melting, but our collective health, cultural values and solidarity have also melted over the last few years. The planet belongs to a handful of sociopaths and we're pretending to be the dog in the famous "Everything is fine" meme. Business as ussual!
In the first episode, Mr. This Is Fine is invited to represent his country at the Venice Biennale. He has studied at three colleges and has been an active artist for 15 years. He loves his work and hopes to be of good use to the public as well. He is a performer, producer, driver, filmmaker, ditributor, accountant, cleaner, photographer, secretary... But enthusiasm doesn't pay the rent! In the creative industries, most of the players get exploited for a "good cause". Architects and artists shape our cultural landscape and yet only a handful of them receive decent wages. This moment is illustrated by a performance that symbolically took place at the Venice Biennale. Where else do artists' and architects' dreams take shape than at well-known art shows that are good for their portfolios? They compete, they network, they send out portfolios, they endlessly submit opencalls and wait for someone to notice them and pull them into the spotlight. The sarcastic pokerface Mr. This Is Fine refers to precarization, unsustainability, climate change, exploitation, and the elite world they must penetrate to become recognized and dignified.
DoP: Vojtěch Polák
Costume designer and assistant:Mars Industries
Queer AF XXIII is put on by Love Your Labels, a nonprofit organization based in Worcester, MA supporting LGBTQ+ youth through art, fashion, and design, and working with families and communities to create inclusive and loving space everywhere. (Photo/Matt Wright)
Mr. This Is Fine at Venice Biennale- It is good for your portfolio
Video performance for the Czech pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, 2023
Melting Face emoji expresses bitter approval of the life situation in which he finds himself. He is the superhero of hypocrisy, the mascot of sarcasm. It refers to the meltdown, where planet Earth is literally melting, but our collective health, cultural values and solidarity have also melted over the last few years. The planet belongs to a handful of sociopaths and we're pretending to be the dog in the famous "Everything is fine" meme. Business as ussual!
In the first episode, Mr. This Is Fine is invited to represent his country at the Venice Biennale. He has studied at three colleges and has been an active artist for 15 years. He loves his work and hopes to be of good use to the public as well. He is a performer, producer, driver, filmmaker, ditributor, accountant, cleaner, photographer, secretary... But enthusiasm doesn't pay the rent! In the creative industries, most of the players get exploited for a "good cause". Architects and artists shape our cultural landscape and yet only a handful of them receive decent wages. This moment is illustrated by a performance that symbolically took place at the Venice Biennale. Where else do artists' and architects' dreams take shape than at well-known art shows that are good for their portfolios? They compete, they network, they send out portfolios, they endlessly submit opencalls and wait for someone to notice them and pull them into the spotlight. The sarcastic pokerface Mr. This Is Fine refers to precarization, unsustainability, climate change, exploitation, and the elite world they must penetrate to become recognized and dignified.
DoP: Vojtěch Polák
Costume designer and assistant:Mars Industries