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I am just your average student, working in a coffee roastery, studying Politics Honours and expanding my world.

Wednesday 25 May 2011

This is Blythe.

Three years ago, when I first arrived at Rhodes, one of the first friends I made was Siobhan from Scotland. She had these amazing postcards of Blythe dolls. Weird and yet starangely wonderful photos of dolls in cute clothes and posing in front of New York cabs and walking miniature dogs. Later, I realised Blythe dolls and variations of them are regular fixtures in photography, fashion and film and there is a huge niche market for them.
Blythe was born in 1972 and created by Alison Katzman. She was then discontinued for being a little too freaky and kooky. Katzman was influenced by Margaret Keane’s Twiggy/Mary Quant sixties paintings of large doe eyes, eyelashes and round heads. Blythe was revived by Gina Garan, who had taken to the doll’s big eyes and massive head as a young girl and started a huge personal collection as a woman. She started to take photographs of her Blythes in various clothes and backgrounds. Her book This Is Blythe has sold over 100, 000 copies. Since 2000, the Blythe doll has made reappearances in different mediums. In addition to Garan’s photography, the Ashton-Drake Galleries were given permission to sell US replicas of the doll, selling to adults as collectables and becoming a cult favourite.
The fashion industry has taken to Blythe and made her a regular fixture. In 2009, the late and very great Alexander McQueen used Blythe dolls in his campaign for Target featuring Blythes of all different ethnicities and with a 21st century look. Every year there is a Blythe fashion show in Tokyo where dolls are dressed in designs by names like Miuccia Prada, Gucci and Vivienne Westwood.
My interest in Blythe comes from her uncharacteristic look, almost like a caricature of Christina Ricci, the actress and the way she can be evolved and used in all mediums. My favourite inspiration that has resulted from Blythe is definitely Coraline from the book and film of the same name. It is a definite must-see!


Blythe Doll for Alexander McQueen Target Campaign, 2009



Coraline from the film Coraline directed by Henry Selick (2009) and based on the book by Neil Gaiman.



Postcard by Gina Garan


Rocks and Mountains

Everyone I know is involved in photography and in order to make this blog more visually pleasing, I decided to take a crack at it. Here are some photos I took at my dad’s house in Franschhoek. Let me know what you think!








Thursday 19 May 2011

The Beauty of Franschhoek

By now, you may have guessed I spent last weekend in Franschhoek. That place is like crack for photographers, food-lovers, wine-lovers, general purveyors of le good life. So very glad my dad is too anti-social to live in Cape Town proper (note: I am not). I had a great getaway, saw my sister whom I hardly ever get to see and who is a genius student at UCT. We went to the FLF and then had crepes- chocolate ganache, ice-cream and cinnamon sugar. Indulgence! I am guessing I am now more of a savoury food lover as I honestly could not finish it. Those crepes were not messing around.










Wednesday 18 May 2011

More Talent



Here are the some more of the CIBA exhibit. Tamlyn Young's "Tree" series is just too amazing. Her website http://justam.withtank.com/ has more of her multimedia work and rationale.






"The Curiostree"







"The Possibilitree"

"Tea Tree"

"Observatree"

Homegrown Talent



While at the Franschhoek Literary Festival last weekend, the definite standout exhibit came from the illustrative side of the spectrum. The illustrations on display were the final pieces of book art done by the 2010 Honours class at CIBA- the Centre for Comic, Illustrative and Book Arts at Stellenbosch. CIBA is based in Stellenbosch’s Department of Visual Arts in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Its main aim is to promote and teach about these dimensions of art through being visible within the arts community.
Showcased at FLF were illustrated handmade books by Pienette Laubser, Carla Kreuser, Tamlyn Young, Carla Visser, Lucy Stuart-Clark, Janneke de Kock, Helene van Answegen and Kirsten Hartley. Pienette Laubser was at the exhibit. Her creation was Becky’s Room- a tale of a little girl’s messy room. Children’s whimsical tales accompanied beautifully creative and imaginative illustrations from Lucy Stuart- Clark. Conceptual illustration was seen in Carla Visser’s Utopia and Dystopia and Tamlyn Young’s edgy, blurred images in The Silence. Young also had illustrated mini-stories about the “Observatree,” “Possibilitree” and the “Tea Tree” all with their own history and accompanying character.
It was great to see how much talent there is within the arts community in such a lesser-known medium. The illustrations were phenomenal and sadly, definitely not for sale given the painstaking effort that has gone into them.
If you are interested in CIBA at all as something you might be into take a look at their Facebook page.



























"The Silence"


Monday 16 May 2011

Technologically Challenged

Helllooooo!


Hope you enjoyed the pretty pics of FLF. If anyone has any tips for the blog or suggestions, please feel free to email me! Your help is appreciated as I am quite new to this.


x


Kezia

Some More Snaps From FLF







Sash and Jordan- posing with "Oom Jan" whoever he may be.


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