Siouxsie Sioux :: 'Into A Swan' Video

'Into a Swan', the first single release from the new album 'Mantaray' is an anthemic track, with a super-catchy chorus and enough hardness that should ensure Siouxsie Sioux still goes over well with disaffected students.
Other artists with similar longevity might well wince: many could only aspire to the consistency with which Siouxsie has played out her career and how she still looks pretty much the same as in her sexy youth; with a touch less-than-goth make-up on the 'Swan' cover; poured into shiny pants in the video, sporting poison lips, nails and lashes. more...
Stephen Shames :: Interview

In April 1967, Stephen Shames, a college student at the University of California, Berkeley, met the Panthers at a rally to end the war in Vietnam. He was invited to photograph them and continued to do so until 1973. His close friendship with the Black Panthers, and Bobby Seale in particular, gave Shames unusual access to the organization. The immediacy and intimacy of Shames's photographs offer an uncommonly nuanced portrait of this dynamic social movement, during one of the most tumultuous periods in recent U.S. history.' Now nearly forty years later with a book published by Aperture and an Exhibition at the Aperture Foundation's New York Gallery, Stephen Shames talks with ZOOZOOM.more...
Infantjoy Music Video :: Ghosts

Featuring Sarah Nixey, this is the promotional video for Infantjoy's version of Japan's Ghosts. Infantjoy are James Banbury and Paul Morley. It appears on their new album With and is a remix by Populous. Filmed on a rainy night in London and directed by the award winning Andreas Horvath. Watch the video
Sarah Nixey's Music Video :: The Collector

Sarah Nixey (Black Box Recorder) in her promo video for her debut single The Collector. Directed by Edd Royal and Greg Gagol.Watch the video
Deep Dish Television at the 2006 Whitney Biennial

"But is it art?" We gave up on that question when the government gave up on subsidies for the arts because in private hands art is commerce, which makes the Whitney Biennial even more important. There, art does what it's meant to do: be our social conscience and provoke us to thought. This brings us to Deep Dish Television. Simply put, they are every thing FOX isn't - and they're in the Biennial and FOX isn't! Watch the video