couture naturelle

[for AnOther, 23/4/18]

People will always be drawn to the superficial, however ‘problematic’ they’re told it’s become; fashion is only a consequence of caring what others think.

roy oxlade, 'works from the 80s & 90s'

[for Frieze, 12/3/18]

Oxlade's critical essays, written throughout his career, consistently sent the 20th century to the wall. ‘Shakespeare’, he wrote in 2005, ‘was onto people like Marcel Duchamp.’ He threw out Amedeo Modigliani, Henry Moore, all pop art. Only a few escaped.

jeremy gavron, 'felix culpa'

[for the Telegraph, 3/3/18]

This is a genre that hangs on blanks and lacunae, the things that people don’t yet know. (If Philip Marlowe could just interview God, Chandler novels would be short.) In that sense, they’re stories of trying to listen: the investigator strains to pick out a clue, match his account to hers, track down a dingy address based on a name half-heard in a bar.