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Films on MUBI in May

MUBI, a beloved streaming service that champions great cinema, has announced their lineup of films for May. The month of May will include films such as La Dolce Vita by the legendary Federico Fellini, The Lunchbox by Ritesh Batra who sadly passed away recently, and Krabi, 2562 by Anocha Suwichakornpong and Ben Rivers which is a MUBI exclusive.

Ema, a film by Pablo Larraín, is available to be streamed for free for 24 hours in over sixty countries. Watch it here.

May on MUBI Listings

01/05/20 – Water Llilies /  Céline Sciamma /  Focus on Céline Sciamma

02/05/20 – Ema / Pablo Larraín / MUBI Release / Free to Stream

03/05/20 – Fedora / Billy Wilder / Perfect Failures

04/05/20 – Diary of A Country Priest / Robert Bresson

05/05/20 – Antigone / Danièle Huillet, Jean-Marie Straub / A Straub-Huillet Retrospective

06/05/20 – The Lunchbox / Ritesh Batra

07/05/20 – Romantic Comedy / Elizabeth Sankey / MUBI Exclusive

08/05/20 – Let the Sunshine In / Claire Denis

09/05/20 – Our Little Sister / Hirokazu Koreeda

10/05/20 – The Fall / Jonathan Glazer

11/05/20 – I Vitelloni / Federico Fellini / Fellini 100*

Our Culture Recommends: Fellini’s I Vitelloni is a brilliant character study of five men at crucial turning points in their lives in a small town in Italy. I Vitelloni explores remarkable autobiographical elements that reflect vital societal transformations in ’50s Italy. The film was rightly nominated for an Academy Award in 1958 for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay.

12/05/20 – Our Daily Bread / Mani Kaul / A Journey Into Indian Cinema

13/05/20 – National Gallery / Frederick Wiseman

14/05/20 – The Orphanage / Shahrbanoo Sadat / The New Auteurs

15/05/20 – Tomboy / Céline Sciamma /  Focus on Céline Sciamma

16/05/20 – 45 Years / Andrew Haigh

Our Culture Recommends: Andrew Haigh’s 45 Years is a beautiful film with two brilliant performances by Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay. The film follows a married couple planning to celebrate their wedding anniversary until they receive terrible news that promise to change the course of their lives permanently.

17/05/20 – TBC

18/05/20 – Cassandro, the Exotico! / Marie Losier / Viewfinder

19/05/20 – Vitalina Varela / Pedro Costa / Straight from Cinemas

20/05/20 – Wajdja / Haifaa Al Mansour

21/05/20 – Take Me Somewhere Nice / Ena Sendijarević / Debuts

22/05/20 – The Past /  Asghar Farhadi

23/05/20 – Frank / Lenny Abrahamson

24/05/20 – Love & Friendship / Whit Stillman

25/05/20 – Dead Souls / Wang Bing

26/05/20 – the Stranger / Satyajit Ray / a Journey Into Indian Cinema

27/05/20 – Mia Madre / Nanni Moretti

28/05/20 – Around the World When You Were My Age / Aya Koretzky / Undiscovered

29/05/20 – Krabi, 2562 /  Anocha Suwichakornpong, Ben Rivers / Mubi Exclusive

30/05/20 – Love / Gaspar Noé

31/05/20 – La Dolce Vita  / Federico Fellini / Fellini 100

Albums Out Today: Car Seat Headrest, Diet Cig, Austra

In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on May 1st, 2020:

Car Seat Headrest, Making a Door Less Open

Car Seat Headrest 'Making A Door Less Open' Review - StereogumCar Seat Headrest have put out a new album titled Making a Door Less Open via Matador. Their first album of material since 2016’s Teens of Denial, the album is described as a collaboration between singer-songwriter Will Toledo and a side project featuring drummer Andrew Katz and Toledo under the moniker ‘Trait’. It was recorded twice, once in a live studio environment (guitars, bass, drums) and once using only MIDI instruments, which were then mixed together. “Each track is the result of an intense battle to bring out its natural colors and transform it into a complete work,” Toledo said in a statement. “The songs contain elements of EDM, hip hop, futurism, doo-wop, soul, and of course rock and roll. But underneath all these things I think these may be folk songs, because they can be played and sung in many different ways, and they’re about things that are important to a lot of people: anger with society, sickness, loneliness, love.”

Diet Cig, Do You Wonder About Me

Diet Cig - Do You Wonder About Me? | Reviews | Clash MagazineDiet Cig have released their sophomore album titled Do You Wonder About Me via Frenchkiss records. The duo, comprised of Alex Luciano and Noah Bowman, recorded the follow-up to 2017’s Swear I’m Good At This after relocating to Richmond, Virginia and worked with producer Chris Daly at Philadelphia’s Headroom Studios and New York’s Salvation Recording. “We spent a lot of time after the first record growing as people, being humans outside of tour for a little bit, and trying to shed the imposter syndrome,” Luciano said in a statement. Do You Wonder About Me features the previously released single ‘Thriving’, which was inspired by the melodrama of reality TV and musical theatre.

Austra, HiRuDin 

HiRUDiN | AustraToronto-based electronic outfit Austra aka Katie Austra has come through with a new album called HiRuDin out now via Domino Records. Following 2017’s Future Politics, Austra recorded the album in the Spanish countryside, where she took a collage approach to making the record: “I found myself really enjoying the role of producer for this record,” she said, “directing and arranging a very disparate array of parts and people and feeling strong in my own conviction for what I wanted it to sound like.” The record finds her working alongside co-producers for the first time, namely Rodaidh McDonald and Joseph Shabason. “It was incredibly liberating and a huge learning process to work with so many different people,” she says. “I felt completely revitalized.”

Other albums out today:

JoJo, good to know; Kenny Chesney, Here And Now; Ghostpoet, I Grow Tired But Dare Not Fall Asleep. 

New Rose by Jacob van Loon

Jacob van Loon, an Illinois-born visual artist, presented a magnificent series that explores drawn and painted works addressing cacophony of interior design and relation between human and interior/exterior space

Find more work by Jacob van Loon here.

Read of the Week: Bauhaus. Updated Edition by Taschen

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Germany’s Bauhaus School of Art and Design is known to have changed the face of modernity. In this brilliant 400-page book by Taschen, dive into the history of the pioneering school, which we still see a lot of today. Magdalena Droste, an ex-professor of art history at BTU Cottbus and who from the 1980s worked at the Bauhaus-Archiv in Berlin, wrote the book in collaboration with Taschen who are known for their diverse, and open-minded publishing.

The book includes around 575 illustrations, including architectural plans, studies, photographs, sketches, and models.

If you’re a fan of impactful art and the history of Bauhaus, you will love this book.

Hayley Williams Postpones UK and Europe Tour

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Hayley Williams has postponed her upcoming tour dates in Europe and North America until 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic. The Paramore singer announced yesterday (April 28th) that she is officially postponing her 2020 tour, which was set to begin in late May in support of her upcoming debut solo album, Petals for Armor. Tickets will be honoured for the rescheduled dates, which have yet to be announced.

“I’m very sorry we wont see each other in real life soon,” Williams wrote. “Eventually, though.”

Williams has been sharing tracks off Petals for Armor (to be released in full on May 8th) across two EPs, the second of which is out now. It features the recently released single ‘Dead Horse’, produced by Paramore guitarist Taylor York.

Pabst Present Video for New Single ‘Hell’

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Pabst, an exciting band out of Berlin, Germany, presented their latest single Hell just last week. With the song released, they presented a music video which added another dimension to the song.

The song itself confronts the darker emotions within one’s self and is due to be released on the band’s upcoming album Deuce Ex Machina. Drummer of the band, Tore Knipping stated this about the song: “The song Hell is about the darker feelings inside of you, them returning once in a while and sucking you into a hole. It sounds feasible; enlightenment can sometimes only be found through suffering, but sometimes it is so dark down there that you just can’t see whom you’ve made a pact with: “Gave everything to the devil, got nothing in return”.

This depression will make you get stuck and lose the connection to reality – no matter how hard you try to convince yourself that this is only a phase and that you can get out of it. You try to regain control and live a life as they recommend you to, and yet it somehow only feels borrowed and strange. Like a bad comedy show. Even if you manage to get out of it, the fear of entering this zone overcomes you again – a fear of fear.

And then the song is also about friends, acquaintances and the family and how they deal with the situation – when they realize that they just cannot help how they’d like to, they may feel invisible. These people too seem to make an acquaintance with hell.”

Album Tracklist

1. Machina
2. Ibuprofen
3. Useless Scum
4. Legal Tender
5. Skyline
6. Wish.com
7. Fugitive (Another Song About Running Away)
8. Hell
9. Straight Line
10. Up The Heat
11. My Apocalypse

14 Striking Stills from 8½ (1963)

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Federico Fellini’s 8½ is considered to be one of his best. Starring Marcello Mastroianni, Guido Anselmi, and Claudia Cardinale, the film follows Guido Anselmi, a director whose new project is collapsing around him, along with his life. Overcome by all of this, the director withdraws into his thoughts and frequently shifts into fantastical territory. As Anselmi attempts to sort out his many entanglements, Anselmi finds his production growing more autobiographical.

Here are fourteen striking stills from the film and its set.

Gardens in Art

A spell of warm weather, along with a mandatory stay in one’s own home, is a perfect opportunity for would-be artists to head out into the garden and get some inspiration from the sight of flowers and greenery.

Of course, plants and flowers are among the first things that many artists learn to draw, and many of history’s most famous painters continued to paint garden scenes throughout their careers. Plants make great subjects, as they’re naturally beautiful, interesting form-wise, and they won’t fidget or wander off when you’re midway through your piece. Provided you’ve got a suitable bench or lounger from which to contemplate your surroundings, the garden is the best place for any artist to be.

But which famous painters took inspiration from their gardens?

Van Gogh

Of course, the Dutch master’s most famous flower paintings were his sunflower series. What’s less well-known is his paintings of the garden of fellow painter, Daubigny. These works were painted in early summer of 1890, just before Van Gogh’s death.

Bonnard

Pierre Bonnard’s garden in northern France was kept deliberately untidy and overgrown, with the artist himself dubbing the style ‘jardin sauvage’ (that’s ‘wild garden’). The result is something that looks a little more like a natural landscape than a garden in the formal sense we might recognise.

Liebermann

Max Liebermann was a German impressionist with another contrasting take on what garden painting should involve. Liebermann, like many of his contemporaries, designed his garden in such a way that it would create motifs that would come through in his paintings, even enlisting gardeners to divide the space up into orderly flower terraces with green space between to break up the view.

Sorolla

Joaquín Sorolla’s house in Madrid had a beautiful garden of its own, which was heavily inspired by Spain’s Islamic gardens, and incorporated decorative tiles and paving as well as the floral elements which make a garden a garden. As such, this space was practical to work in as well as beautiful and inspiring – and much of this comes across in the works produced there.

Munch

This Norwegian painter, most famous for ‘The Scream’, took inspiration from many of the local sights and people near to the fishing village of Åsgårdstrand. Gardens often played a starring role in his works – including in ‘Two Girls Under and Apple Tree in Bloom’. Though the subjects were always very conventional, the execution is unmistakably Munchian.

Caillebotte

Having enjoyed a successful career as a painter of urban landscapes, Gustave Caillebotte made the decision to stop displaying his work publicly, and commence a new career as a landscape gardener. This new direction provided an endless stream of inspiration, made possible by the affordability of greenhouses during the late 19th century. Many of his most vivid paintings can be traced to this era.

Monet

Claude Monet is indisputably history’s greatest practitioner of painting in the garden. He had a level of expertise in horticulture that’s unrivalled in other artists, and this is in particular evidence in his paintings of his gardens at Giverny in Normandy, which was designed and maintained in exacting detail by the man himself. Even as his work made him a very wealthy man, Monet remained in charge of his garden, issuing daily instructions to seven gardeners and overseeing the installation of several lily-ponds, which would become the inspiration for his best-known works. The garden occupied him for some two decades, and inspired him to break new artistic ground that others have since been able to tread.

Sustainable Fashion: 5 Ways to Shop and Dress Sustainable

Consumers are becoming more and more informed about sustainable fashion every day, it has become an essential topic in the world of fashion in the recent years that gets more attention than ever. As consumers, the best thing we could do is get informed about the best options we could take to help sustainable fashion grow. To make this easier, we have compiled a short list of things you could do to help.

Buy long-term clothing

High street stores are mostly all fast fashion, meaning items of clothing come and go quickly when each seasons change. One way you can avoid buying items that fall out of fashion is swapping them for an item that can be worn year in, year out, for example a classic pair of jeans or a simple white t-shirt. This choice will save you money but also reduces the clothing waste that you pile up when you no longer want the item.

Shop second-hand or from sustainable shops

Another option when buying clothes is going to second-hand stores or actively seeking out sustainable stores. Second-hand stores are not always anyone’s first option, but there are good finds and bargains when you look hard enough. Not only is it reducing waste, but it extends the longevity of the item. Sustainable stores, on the other hand, tend to be online based due to the market size for them. By actively seeking these stores and being more aware makes you more informed of how they help the environment and the people they have working with them.

Buy quality

We all love a deal, but that does not mean what we are buying is of high-quality. The best thing you can do for yourself and your pocket is to buy items of good quality, as they won’t have to be replaced as often and most likely won’t be thrown away after a few times of wearing. You can usually judge the quality of the product by touch and trying it on in the fitting rooms. Sometimes you can judge by the price; however, this does not mean expensive items are always best in quality.

Always bring a tote bag

One way you can help the environment when shopping around is bringing a tote bag. Even though some shops give you free, recyclable bags, it still uses up energy to recycle. Tote bags can be inexpensive, and many places produce environmentally friendly tote bags with superb designs.

Look after your clothes

When we say look after your clothes, it means taking a look at the wash label and understanding what each symbol means. Certain items of clothing need specific ways of caring for them. They include items such as delicates, leather jackets and suits. Care helps to extend the longevity of your clothing and saves you money.

South Beach VI by David Behar

David Behar, a previously featured photographer who is known for beautiful eye-pleasing photography, revealed another striking series which focuses on the theme of beaches. Behar’s framing is worthy of recognition; it captures the marvellous colours of the spectacular scenery perfectly.

Find more work by David Behar here.