Stella In Spring (Stop To Smell The Flowers), 2010 - Jeremy Kost
About the Work
About Stella In Spring (Stop To Smell The Flowers)
A tall woman draped in white stops to sweetly smell the flowers while another woman dressed in a little black dress smiles mischievously at the camera. Jeremy Kost visually plays with the age-old myth of the devil and the angel ...Read More
A tall woman draped in white stops to sweetly smell the flowers while another woman dressed in a little black dress smiles mischievously at the camera. Jeremy Kost visually plays with the age-old myth of the devil and the angel in Stella in Spring (Stop and Smell the Flowers). Who would you like to sit on your shoulder?
This is part of a series commissioned by Stella McCartney in celebration of her Spring 2011 Collection for her recently launched iPAD magazine.Read Less
This is part of a series commissioned by Stella McCartney in celebration of her Spring 2011 Collection for her recently launched iPAD magazine.Read Less
About the Artist
About Jeremy Kost
Jeremy Kost is a tireless chronicler of gender, sexuality, and nightlife, and has pioneered virtuosic ways to present Polaroid snapshots. Drawing his inspiration from the ...Read More
Jeremy Kost is a tireless chronicler of gender, sexuality, and nightlife, and has pioneered virtuosic ways to present Polaroid snapshots. Drawing his inspiration from the celebrity nightlife scene, Kost uses his instant film camera to capture the glamour—and the inherent striving—of a downtown scene full of fashion insiders, chic club kids, and flamboyant drag queens, with an eye attuned to uneven luminosity and raw beauty. A self-described "fat kid from Texas," the star transformed his image while living in Washington, DC, from 1999—2003, where he instituted a rigorous workout routine, in part motivated by his fascination with the beautiful bodies of the gay nightclub scene. On subsequent trips to New York, he slowly ingratiated himself with a well-connected, exclusive crowd who allowed him to photograph them intimately, but without pretense. The resulting images, frequently displayed in grids or collages, are reminiscent of works by Nan Goldin and Mark Morrisroe, but they most closely resemble the photographs taken by Andy Warhol in the 1970s.Read Less
Description
Framed unique Polaroid collageAuthentication
Signed by the artist.Shipping
Ships in 2—4 weeks.This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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