1.23.2014

Skication + Gucci + Beyonce = Bye for Now, K?

TALK SOON. K? #skicationtime
image via
I am going to sign off for a bit and enjoy my vacation at chateau bailÄ“ (aka my parents house). In the meantime, I have to share two things with you: 1) this Gucci purse I am totally obsessing over because that purple in the sky in the above image is nearly an exact match. Not the most practical purchase, but the fringe is very on trend, you know. Let's just say that if I won money in Vegas on my birthday I would def buy it? 2) Two songs I cannot get enough of that are on two totally different ends of the musical spectrum: Partition by Beyonce (Queen B! her tumblr is the most.) and Thunder Clatter by Nashville-based Wild Cub.  Over and out. 
<3 To die for! SS Gucci 2014 Purple Fringe Bag on thewellset.com
image via

1.21.2014

Art Talk: This is Your Brain and This is Your Brain on Drugs

Sarah Schofield's Work: All You Can Feel on TheWellSet.com
Caffeine
Sarah Schofield's Work: All You Can Feel on TheWellSet.com
Crystal Meth
Sarah Schofield's Work: All You Can Feel on TheWellSet.com
Cocaine
Sarah Schofield's Work: All You Can Feel on TheWellSet.com
Heroine
Sarah Schofield's Work: All You Can Feel on TheWellSet.com
Adrenaline
Sarah Schofield's Work: All You Can Feel on TheWellSet.com
Speed
Artist Sarah Schoenfield was privy to the extremes of drug culture when she worked in a Berlin nightclub. Soon after she changed her photo studio into a laboratory and exposed a variety of legal and illegal drugs to film negatives and then magnified the results to comprise her section of work titled All You Can Feel

Depending on if you are a user of illicit substances or not you definitely have some expectations and presuppositions of what those drugs do to you because of your exposure to the media's portrayal in films, music, and TV. Sarah Schoenfield's work is interesting because it examines drugs on a different level entirely: it's not what it makes you do, but what it is does to you - specifically your brain cells and blood stream. 

To me these images are a reflection into what the chemical nature of these drugs do to your insides. Plus, even more hauntingly, they all seem to reflect how I would draw or paint the way they make people feel. Kind of like doing your moods on a color scale. Not a scientific portrayal, but a visceral one... It is as if they are all exactly what I would expect to see: as they truly are on a molecular-emotional-basis. Cool, huh?

{See all of her work hereImages via here.}