Posts Tagged ‘art magazine’

A New Cosplay alternative fashion magazine

February 12, 2015

A friend of mine Jason Paluck has developed a wonderful Cosplay as art magazine called Coswise. It’s available in digital and print editions via MagCloud.

January 1 (Brooklyn, NY) – CosWise, a new cosplay-as-art magazine, has released their first issue. As Brooklyn’s first photo art cosplay publication, they hope to bring the inspiring world of costuming, makeup, props, and performance art to fans around the world. CosWise will change the game by showcasing the art and creativity of cosplayers, including traditional anime, manga, and videogame cosplay. They will also feature steampunk, fantasy, sci-fi, and other original concept characters.

Bonnie-not to be fooled with.

Bonnie-not to be fooled with.

Readers of alternative or costuming magazines might be asking why CosWise won’t include articles, interviews, and how-to’s like other cosplay publications. “In looking to produce a publication of the highest quality photography, we put our energies and focus solely on the creativity and quality of the images,” says Greg Buyalos, CosWise Art Director. Cosplay, once just a burgeoning art form in the districts of Japan, has become pervasive in Western culture with the advent of fan conventions for comics and genre films. It has grown to influence popular culture, disrupting the worlds of TV, film, and publishing.

Ok drop them

Ok drop them

“There is a global disconnect with cosplayers,” says CosWise Graphic Designer Jason Paluck, aka Editing Ninja. “For example, cosplayers and their fans in America may not know about the cosplayers in Australia; those in Australia may not be aware of the cosplayers in France and so on.” In 2013, Paluck, along with partners Buyalos and Jennifer Levine cosplay-as-art magazine, started meeting to discuss ideas for what would become CosWise. “We wanted CosWise to connect cosplayers globally and help them grow their fan base.”

Robin's hood

Robin’s hood

Interested fans and cosplay newcomers can view and purchase the magazine on MagCloud at http://www.magcloud.com/browse/issue/853471. Available in both Digital and Print formats, CosWise is available for consumption on the iPad, as a PDF, or on MagCloud’s WebViewer using the “Read Now” function. The 54-page issue features costumes and props from popular properties such as One Piece, Final Fantasy, and The Legend of Zelda, as well as original characters.

About CosWise

CosWise is an independent cosplay-as-art magazine featuring original & inspired costumes, props and makeup. The art book magazine brings costume photography to an international audience while based in Brooklyn, NY. In addition to an open submission policy, CosWise also produces and shoots with cosplay creatives like models, designers, stylists, make-up artists and more. If you live in, or plan to visit, the NY Metro area, contact CosWise about potential collaborations on your own concept or to be part of an upcoming shoot. Visit www.coswise.com for submission guidelines, advertising and more information.

Contact:

Jennifer Levine, Communications Manager

jennifer@coswise.com

Musée de l’Elysée suspends Prize in wake of censorship of Palestinian artist

December 22, 2011

 

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Photo from an exhibition of works by Larissa Sansour: Ex-Terrestrial, Kulturhuset, Stockholm. 23 October 2010 – 13 February 2011. (http://www.larissasansour.com)

Introduced in 2010 to support young photographers, the prestigious €25,000 Lacoste Elysée Prize is awarded by the Swiss Musée de l’Elysée in Lausanne Switzerland, with sponsorship from Lacoste, the clothing brand.

The Musée de l’Elysée has decided to suspend the organisation of the Lacoste Elysée Prize 2011 in response to the decision of the organizers to exclude the work of Palestinian artist Larissa Sansour’s work.

Sansour was among eight finalists shortlisted for the 2011 prize

Eight nominees for the 2011 prize were selected to take part in the contest, and asked to produce three photographs on the theme la joie de vivre.

With the help of a grant of €4,000, each nominee had “carte blanche” to interpret the theme how they saw fit, whether directly or indirectly. The nominees were free to make a submission based upon their existing work or as an entirely new project.

An expert jury was scheduled to meet at the end of January 2012 to select the winner of the Lacoste Elysée Prize 2011.

Larissa Sansour was among the eight artists shortlisted for the 2011 prize. In December 2011, sponsor Lacoste demanded that Sansour’s nomination be revoked. Lacoste stated their refusal to support Sansour’s work, describing it as “too pro-Palestinian.”

In November 2011, three photos from Sansour’s ‘Nation Estate’ project were accepted, and she was congratulated by the prize administrators for her work and professionalism. Sansour’s name was subsequently included in all literature relating to the prize and on the website as an official nominee. Her name has since been removed, however, and her project was withdrawn from an upcoming issue of contemporary art magazine ArtReview introducing the nominated artists.

Sansour was asked to approve a statement saying that she voluntarily withdrew her nomination “in order to pursue other opportunities.” Sansour refused to agree to such a statement.

Sansour says, “I am very sad and shocked by this development. This year Palestine was officially admitted to UNESCO, yet we are still being silenced. As a politically involved artist I am no stranger to opposition, but never before have I been censored by the very same people who nominated me in the first place. Lacoste’s prejudice and censorship puts a major dent in the idea of corporate involvement in the arts. It is deeply worrying.”

Sansour’s multimedia project ‘Nation Estate’ was “conceived in the wake of the Palestinian bid for UN membership. Nation Estate depicts a science fiction-style Palestinian state in the form of a single skyscraper housing the entire Palestinian population. Inside this new Nation Estate, the residents have recreated their lost cities on separate floors: Jerusalem on 3, Ramallah on 4, Sansour’s own hometown of Bethlehem on 5, etc.

Sansour’s shortlisted work, ‘Nation Estate,’ conceived in the wake of the Palestinian bid for UN membership, is a multimedia science fiction project that imagines a future Palestinian state in the form of a skyscraper. The single skyscraper houses the entire Palestinian population, with residents recreating their lost cities on separate floors.

Sansour from Bethlehem is a prominent Palestinian artist and filmmaker. Her most recent film, ‘A Space Exodus,’ was nominated for the short-film category at the Dubai International Film Festival

The Musée de l’Elysée has announced its suspension of the 2011 Prize and has offered to exhibit ‘Nation Estate’ outside the framework of the prize and Lacoste’s sponsorship.

originally reported in ahramonline

more on Larissa Sansour rejection at Artinfo or see her web site larissasonsour for more info on her.