Hayward Hawks Marcus

John & Yoko: A New York Love Story

by Hayward Hawks Marcus
- USA -


For years, many people have painted Yoko Ono as the cold and controlling monster who broke up the Beatles, ran John Lennon’s life, and probably made the pop legend unhappy, even if he himself wasn’t aware of it. Allen Tannenbaum’s new book, a collection of photographs he took of the iconic couple, defies this persistent myth. Springing from many of Tannenbaum’s photos is undeniable visual evidence of John and Yoko truly relating to one another, in a deeply heartfelt and human way not often seen in photos of the famous. One cannot dispute the affection for each other lighting John and Yoko’s eyes when caught by Tannenbaum’s lens. In a starstruck world, where pretty celebs are often seen hanging on each other’s arms like sparkly but soulless Tiffany baubles, images such as these are both rare and refreshing.

Our Bodies, Our Cells: An Interview with Dr. Joyce Whiteley Hawkes
“…a rare combination of rational scientist and enlightened healer”

by Hayward Hawks Marcus
USA



Mast Cells. Photograph by Ed Uthman
Ten thousand could dance on the head of a pin - if they could dance. Invisible to the human naked eye, they are with us from conception, doing their best to protect us from harm and keep us healthy as we focus on the business of our daily lives, largely unconscious of their presence.

No, they’re not angels - at least not in the literal sense. They are our cells, and just like those legendary guardians, they work night and day without rest on our behalf, doing the countless tasks needed for bodily maintenance, including supply, communication, renewal, repair and defense.

Guerrilla Girls: Protesting the Art World With a Primate Punch—Part II

by Hayward Hawks Marcus
USA


Guerrilla Girls: Protesting the Art World With a Primate Punch—Part I

So, after just a little investigation, it seems it’s still mostly a white-man’s art world. Ever the optimist, I wanted to leave with a vision of how this sorry state might change. I ask Guerrilla Girl Frida Kahlo if she thinks the internet might help open some doors for underrepresented artists.

“I certainly hope so,” she replies. “For example, the major art magazines have become trade journals filled with advertising. You can’t tell the adverts from the articles––you can’t even find the articles––and you wonder, doesn’t that compromise the discourse? Whereas the online art mags aren’t that dependent on advertising––I hope. [The internet] is quicker, faster, cheaper and it travels around the world, so let’s hope that it would change it. The internet does break down this idea that art is this single object that can only exist in one place at one time, and that it’s currency that can be traded only among wealthy people. The internet is really redefining media in general. I was wondering how we could create a counter-culture with media the way it was, all being controlled by a small group of people all wanting the same market share. I don’t know if it will change the art world, but I’m hopeful it will create an alternative.”

Guerrilla Girls: Protesting the Art World With a Primate Punch—Part I

by Hayward Hawks Marcus
USA


Who could have predicted that I would one day interview artist Frida Kahlo? Not via Ouija board, mind you, but by telephone. And while I didn’t ask, I doubt she was wearing her gorilla mask.

Before anyone asks, this Frida Kahlo is a founding member of the Guerilla Girls, New York City’s female, gorilla-masked, artist avengers, who lead a perpetual battle for parity within the world of High Art.

Forming in 1985 to protest an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, where the number of male to female artists ran 148 to 17, the Guerrilla Girls referred to themselves as “The Conscience of the Art World.” With pseudonyms of deceased female artists, they cloaked their identities inside gorilla masks to keep the public focused on their actions, not their personalities, to protect their own art careers, and, I suppose, to give their appearance the same humorous slant as their work.

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