Artitude Archives - ZO Magazine https://zomagazine.com/category/artitude/ Mon, 02 Jan 2023 16:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.3 https://i0.wp.com/zomagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Separator-circle-w.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Artitude Archives - ZO Magazine https://zomagazine.com/category/artitude/ 32 32 65979187 ZO Universe Spotify https://zomagazine.com/spotify/ Sat, 23 Jul 2022 18:12:04 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=24589 The post ZO Universe Spotify appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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. . . Everyone at ZO is a serious music consumer. Over the years, we’ve interviewed thousands of artists and are putting together a series of eclectic playlists on Spotify for all of our community. ENJOY!

SUNSET ON SUMMER Curated by Kendra Beltran

CHILL | CLASSICAL MIX — Curated by ZO Creative Team

NEO X-OVER AFRICA 1 — Curated by ZO Creative Team

NEO X-OVER EUROPE 1 — Curated by ZO Creative Team

NEO X-OVER GLOBAL 1 — Curated by ZO Creative Team

NEO X-OVER NORTH AMERICA 1 — Curated by ZO Creative Team

NEO ECLECTIC CROSSOVER — 10 hours of music with all of the ZO Music Community

TIMELESS JOURNEY — Curated by ZO Creative Team

Below are links and information to the various PLAYLISTS ON ZO! To the right (or below if you’re viewing this from your phone) is an alphabetical list of all of the artists associated with the ZO Community (we’re gradually updating it – there’s much more music than here on the playlists … our small staff is working as hard as we can – lol).

NEO ECLECTIC CROSSOVER — Curated by Team ZO — with extreme props to our Music Editor, Kendra Beltran, who did the lion’s share of our music interviews!

NEO X-OVER AFRICA 1 — Curated by River Alexander, Concept Director

NEO X-OVER EUROPE 1 — Curated by River Alexander, Concept Director

NEO X-OVER GLOBAL 1 — Curated by River Alexander, Concept Director

NEO X-OVER NORTH AMERICA 1 — Curated by River Alexander, Concept Director

Photo: Mahdi Moinul – I Play By My Own Rules

NEO X-OVER OCEANIA 1 — Curated by River Alexander, Concept Director

CREATIVITY CAN CHANGE THE WORLD!

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ZO ART CONVERGENCE

SPONSORS, CONTRIBUTORS, and ARTISTS
in all Creative Disciplines.

WINTER HOLIDAY VOYAGE — Curated by ZO Creative Team

Enjoy our special Eclectic Holiday Mix

We’ll continue with special Playlists – next upFor the Lovers of the World” (in sync with Valentine’s Day)

Alphabetical List of Artists and Playlists

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“Music has always been a matter of Energy to me, a question of Fuel. Sentimental people call it Inspiration, but what they really mean is Fuel. I have always needed Fuel. I am a serious consumer.” ― Hunter S. Thompson

Artist (with ZO Interview link) – Song Country Affiliation Playlist  
Aime Simone – Shining Light Germany Neo X-Over Europe 1.
Alex Edwards Band – Candles Australia Neo X-Over Oceania 2.
Alex the Astronaut – I think You’re Great Australia Neo X-Over Oceania 3.
Barbara Panther – Feminine Germany | Africa Neo X-Over Europe 4.
bdRm – Are You Alive? USA- Oregon Neo X-Over North America 5.
Bella B – Light On Australia Neo X-Over Oceania 6.
Bethany Ferrie – This is where I leave You United Kingdom 7.
Carlo Barbagallo – Rust Italy Neo Global 1 8.
Carson Gray – No Joke Canada Neo North America 1 9.
Cedric Noel – Comuu Africa (Niger) Neo X-Over Africa 10.
Cherry Blaster – Licorice Canada 11.
Cherry Dragon – Altar United Kingdom 12.
Claap! & Santana – Dune France 13.
Cloud Cukkoo – The Game Germany 14.
De’Borah Powell & The Benefactors – Echos of Heaven United Kingdom 15.
Dugo – Sol Poniente Japan 16.
Eboni Band – Desire Africa Neo X-Over Africa 17.
El Micheles Affair – C.R.E.A.M. USA- New York 18.
Ellyland – Colorized Germany Neo X-Over Europe 19.
Ephemerals – You Made Us Change United Kingdom 20.
Evvan – I’m Not Done Yet USA- New York 21.
Fantastic Negrito – The Duffer USA- California 22.
Florencia Andrada – Por Amor Argentina 23.
Harrieta – No More Cages Africa | Germany Neo X-Over Africa 24.
Heather Jane Prescott – Blume USA- California 25.
Hidden Places – Mundanity USA- Ohio 26.
Hundreds – Spotless Germany Neo X-Over Europe 27.
Ian Lake – The Bottom USA 28.
Imperial Daze – Always Settling United Kingdom 29.
Ishani – Insomnia United Kingdom 30.
J. Lamotta – Turning Germany Neo X-Over Europe 31.
Jodie Abacus – Meet Me In the Middle United Kingdom 32.
Joel Jerome – Cosmic Dancer USA- California 33.
John Forté, Spills, Five, Miss Brittany Reese – Ready on the One USA- New York 34.
John Tessier – Like the Sun Spain Neo X-Over Europe 35.
Jordan D. Mitchell -Fairest Maiden USA- California 36.
Jordan Mackampa – Care for Your Mother Republic of the Congo 37.
June dARK – Phoenix South Korea / USA- CA 38.
Kellindo – Sugar USA- New York 39.
Kellindo – Sugar USA- New York 40.
Kutiman – INSTR Zeelim Israel Neo Global 1 41.
Leave Nelson B – Indulgence USA- Ohio 42.
Lenka – Steal My Sunshine Australia Neo X-Over Oceania 43.
Lindsey Stirling / Alexander Jean – Stampede USA- California 44.
Lucus M. Walker – Our Constellation Armenia Neo X-Over Europe 45.
Madeleine Rauch – Obsessed Germany Neo X-Over Europe 46.
Malik Polo – Change Egypt- Ireland Neo X-Over Africa 47.
Matt Boroff – Future Crimes Germany Neo X-Over Europe 48.
Meklit – Supernova Ethiopia Neo Global 1 49.
Mindy – Am I Alive? USA- California 50.
Nao Yoshioka – Spark USA- New York 51.
Nari – Pony USA- California 52.
Nefertitti Avani – Oxygen USA- Ohio 53.
Ozark Henry – Mapped Out for Me USA- New York 54.
Paul Cardall ZPM – Time USA 55.
Ponytails – Cherry Pie Canada Neo North America 1 56.
Ravyn Lenae – Recess USA- Illinois 57.
Richard Zeier ZPM – The Journey USA- Wisconsin 58.
Rozie – Brown Sugar Canada 59.
Seba Kaapstad – Thina South Africa Neo X-Over Africa 60.
Tempoh Slow – Leave Me Alone USA- California 61.
The Winachi Tribe – Time for Love United Kingdom 62.
Thievery Corporation ZPM – The Forgotten People USA- Washington, DC 63.
Thomas Bergerson ZPM – Our Destiny — Norway 64.
Tim Ayre – So Long Australia Neo X-Over Oceania 65.
Versus You – Be Better Than Me Germany Neo X-Over Europe 66.
Will Fox – The Days USA- Virginia Neo North America 1 67.

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SkyeChristy the Band — Interview with Ericco Studio https://zomagazine.com/skyechristy-interview/ Fri, 15 Jul 2022 22:21:26 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=24463 The post SkyeChristy the Band — Interview with Ericco Studio appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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SkyeChristy the Band

. . . catching up with SkyeChristy at my Hermosa project — a fun day at the beach — a new look

I’ve looked forward to speaking with this duo for quite some time. We actually go back many years to their childhood, where they were immersed and exposed to quite a unique inside view of the music industry – even then showing an ear for talent, sound, & “style!”

Miroir Magazine Article: The Magical Interiors of Ericco Studio
L-R Sophie (11) | The Lauren Christy | Georgia (13)


Sisters Georgia Christy Edwards (22) & Sophie Skye Edwards (20)

Ericco Studio: I really love that we’re coming full circle with this interview in a few ways — here we are at an even larger house that I’ve just completed and here you two are and I get to do an article on your new music project.

I really think our first photo shoot with Miroir was kind of prophetic to this moment. I knew you both were talented, but the self-assurance, maturity, poise & professionalism that I saw in our first shoot, have certainly developed well beyond what I even imagined then. 

Ericco Studio: Your transformation is a bit incredible to me, and although I know a lot of your story, would you share some of your early surroundings and background with ZO’s viewers …

SkyeChristy: Well our parents are songwriter/record producers who moved from the UK to LA so they could make it as musicians. We’ve grown up in LA surrounded by music and the artists that they worked with, and with that, you meet all sorts of different and intriguing people. We ended up going to a performing arts school together where our main focus was music. Slowly but surely we began to realize that our music and sound was stronger together rather than apart, so we started writing together.

Ericco Studio: How do you balance being teens in these explosive times? What’s the balance between school, friendships, family, and now as writers & recording artists?

SkyeChristy: Honestly music has taken up way much more of our time than we expected. With the pandemic, school had been online for us for the past few years so it hasn’t really gotten in the way of music. Maintaining friendships and relationships is probably the hardest part. With music you find yourself pretty busy a lot of the time in sessions and performing, and to friends that can feel like you’re just having a fun time without them which sucks. Probably the hardest part about being an artist these days is social media. If you’re a fellow artist you probably know that TikTok is the only way to break into this industry right now, which feels like a bummer sometimes, but it’s also kind of great cause that means everyone’s got a shot.

Article | Photoshoot Producer: Ericco Studio [Art—Home—LifeStyle—CULTURE]
Location: ES Hermosa Beach project interior

Photographers: Suzie Fownes | Tom Delion

CREATIVITY CAN CHANGE THE WORLD!

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ZO ART CONVERGENCE

SPONSORS, CONTRIBUTORS, and ARTISTS
in all Creative Disciplines.

Ericco Studio: Being an artist myself, I’m keenly aware when I’m in the presence of true originators — and these two are The real deal!!! A current buzz-word in life is “authenticity.” What do you two think helps you “keep it real?”

SkyeChristy: With songwriting we’ve tried writing based on things we love to listen to, but we realized that our best music comes through when we’re just writing things we actually feel. We’ll be writing a song and just be like why isn’t this going the way we want it to, then we chuck the whole concept and try and really think about a concept that resonates with the both of us. It makes the song better and it also makes the performance more moving for the audience. Also as sisters we never lie to each other, so we always tell each other if something sounds mediocre.

Ericco Studio: What would you say are some of your most memorable influences and inspirations growing up?

SkyeChristy: When we were really young our parents would play the Corrine Bailey Rae album that came out in 2006 making us just 5 and 6 years old, but we remember hearing her songs clear as day during family gatherings and parties. We still listen to that album all the time. I think she really influenced our taste and style of singing. When we were teenagers we would listen to Eagles and Crosby, Stills & Nash which taught us how to do harmonies and that’s when we realized that’s one of the key elements in what we do.

Ericco Studio: Some of my most vivid memories around your house were the almost weekly gatherings of friends & family – inevitably someone would pick up a guitar or sit at the piano, and some of the amazing impromptu jam sessions that happened were just unbelievable!

What are your current plans & what are you working on musically?

SkyeChristy: We’re trying to release a new song every six weeks along with music videos which we do with our cousin Suzie Fownes. Everything we do is pretty tight with our family since they’re all creatives. We’ve also been doing shows every month gaining confidence in front of crowds which was nerve-wracking at first but now we just look forward to sharing our music with people. We’re planning on releasing our song “Friday Night Thriller” along with a music video very soon 🙂

SkyeChristy – Black Lake

Ericco Studio on ZO 

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Ericco Studio — 6° degrees of separation: Including an Interview with SHY CARTER https://zomagazine.com/shy-carter/ Sun, 21 Jun 2020 13:50:47 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=11391 The post Ericco Studio — 6° degrees of separation: Including an Interview with SHY CARTER appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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Above: Shy Carter | Photo by Greg Noire

ERICCO STUDIO

. . . the intersections of ART always have a 6 Degree Ripple Effect

One of the greatest  gifts in my life has been my work as an artist. When I can successfully  mirror to a client, the God given talents I’ve received . . . the creative journey’s end product is as fulfilling for me as it is for my clients; and if I’m lucky, I get a chance to see the benefit of what’s been created overflow into their lifestyles — and even further — to those around them and beyond.

Ericco Studio — illustration featuring Shy Carter

Shy Carter — “Good Love” out now Warner Music Nashville

Kane Brown“Worldwide Beautiful” — Warner Music Nashville
(music collaboration with Shy Carter)

While  doing a faux finishing project  in Studio City, at the home of award-winning music writer and artist, Lauren Christy (another design story :-)), I crossed paths with Shy Carter. He was collaborating with Lauren on some of her music projects.  She introduced us, and it was an immediate click!

Every  client has a recognizable gift or talent. Its cliche ” ish” . . . but they love what they do, as do I — and this is where I start the creative ideas and bond. I can’t help but to view them as both Artist and “Life Architects” of their homes, careers and businesses. The stories and journeys they share are always the backdrop and inspiration for the designs that flow into my art for them, which in turn touches their life architecture.

These connections and developments are something I’ve pondered for years, and this article with Shy is a beginning way to share my thoughts on our artistic “6 degrees of separation.” The way we live always ripples into other lives, especially on a creative level . . .

After my initial introduction to Shy, and as we connected on a more personal level, I was truly inspired and blessed to be creatively drawn into the impromptu wedding arrangements for he and his soon to be wife, Jennifer. Lauren’s home became the destination and we had only one week to pull it all together between Christmas and January 1, with the wedding to be held on New Year’s Day!

Everyone pitched in and helped one another. It was a unique artistic gathering and one of the most beautiful weddings I’ve ever seen.

So much division is going on right now.  A strong common thread that links me and the client’s I work with has become increasingly evident to me.  These thoughts are very much connected to the work I did with the wedding and is something I think we can all relate too . . .  namely, the shared experiences of LOVE . . . right!

We are all affected and surrounded by the relationships in our lives. Those relationships create common emotions and experiences, be they friends or family.

  • Baby Shower Announcement - Original Art

  • Original Chairs - custom created for Impromptu Wedding

  • Finished Chairs - custom created for Impromptu Wedding

I did a quick sketch that was used for a cover invitation announcing the arrival of Jen &  Shy’s first born – baby boy!!!  It wasn’t much, just a quick little sketch, but made for a lasting precious moment. These moments are those we can all relate to.  With family and client relationships, often my smallest efforts have meant the most.

Another very strong observation I had when thinking about the shared common passions Shy and I have in common is – that of helping others.

Around this same time as the wedding, I was finishing up a faux finishing design project in a 7,500 sq. ft. luxury home in Granada Hills, CA. On my completion in showcasing the home, I was able to combine a fundraiser organized by Shy’s wife Jennifer, that focused on raising money to mentor young girls and also inner city youth.  The program mentored and instilled positive affirmations through a summer camp retreat. We all brought a widely diverse group together for a common cause. It was awesome and beautiful, and certainly rippled through all of our lives, including the youth it benefited.

CREATIVITY CAN CHANGE THE WORLD!

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SPONSORS, CONTRIBUTORS, and ARTISTS
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The “Party With a Purpose” was an opportunity to extend my creativity outside of the home and into LIFEstyles and helping others.

Noted artists from vastly different backgrounds came together to give of themselves and help others. Again, this is an example of the client relationship going deeper and extending out and deeply touching others.  Six degrees of Separation turning into a effective force to channel our common mindset of helping others.

Photo: Party With A Purpose collage. Shy Carter bottom right. What a cool afternoon! There’s nothing better than having fun and helping people at the same time.

The realities of living through a global pandemic, are causing most to stayclose to home. Small gatherings abound and so many businesses have simply had to stop. We’re all communicating more on social media, and talking more on our phones, rather than the quick texts we once relied on since we were so pressed for time.

It was just such a case recently, while I was doing a custom blue finish on a bedroom wall. Shy and I were catching up by phone and found that we were both working while social distancing, etc.  He was finishing up his new release in Nashville and I was working on a project in Hermosa Beach.  I showed him some of the project and commented that it would be a dope look on his new release and it was just that – an instant ripple reality!

Ericco Studio – Hermosa Beach Project

Here’s a photo of one of the walls I was working on.

Though this unique transitional time, I’ve realized how inter-connected and inter-affected we really are.

What happens to one populated group will have a ripple effect . . . which may come sooner or later to other groups, but it will have an effect. I can only do my part, and believe that enhancing the surroundings of others through creativity has a distinct effect all its own.  Art always creates a ripple because it is creation; and bringing imagination into reality is a force.

Many are still feeling the impact of being quarantined.  Everyone needs a little escape from that.

I found the song Shy did with Kane Brown recently did just that for me.  Shy and Kane, both from bi-racial parents, found commonality in their backgrounds, which resulted in a new song released under the Warner Bros. label.  Check it out above. It so strongly speaks to the times we’re living in.

We all enter our zone by doing what we love. Shy Carter’s zone is doing what he does best . . . Entertaining!

Custom T-Shirt for Shy Carter by Ericco Studio

Interview with Shy Carter

ERICCO STUDIO ON ZO

Art and Social Therapy | Underground Interview with TIFFANY TALAVERA
ERICCO STUDIO — ON ZO

ERICCO STUDIO: Developer — Art Spaces: CAb (Crenshaw Artists Building)

ERICCO STUDIO on VIMEO

ERICCO STUDIO: Stylist — Art Direction: THE NARROWCAST/MUSIC ViDEO

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ERICCO STUDIO — ARTFUL Lifestyle https://zomagazine.com/ericcostudio-hermosa-beach/ Tue, 26 May 2020 21:48:50 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=10549 The post ERICCO STUDIO — ARTFUL Lifestyle appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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ERICCO STUDIO

. . . ARTFUL LIFEstyle My Hermosa Beach Project

Blue Planet — Kenneth Hope

Creating ambiance through artistic interior – exterior space and custom wall-finish treatments, is a defining hallmark of my career. Visual enhancement is one goal, but the true uniqueness comes in creating an extension of a client’s distinct and exclusive lifestyle.

… art for LIFEstyles is not only my work, but my passion.

The intersection of art, fashion, music and social interaction is trending like never before. Our circle of social gatherings is becoming smaller, and we stay in our homes – or the homes of those close to us more often. This offers a unique opportunity for us to step up our game in finding new ways to entertain our friends and family, and to reflect and share our LIFEstyles on a more personal and broader level.

That’s what I set out to accomplish in this Southern California, tri-level – 3,500 sq.ft. ($6M) Hermosa Beach home on the Strand.

The Calmness of the ocean, Serenity of the blue sky, the Sense of stability evoked by stone and marble, were all elements that, combined with the Client’s entrepreneurial spirit and passion for the arts, allowed me to successfully create a one-of-a-kind space that is a reflection of the heart of his unique LIFEstyle.

______________________________
Ericco

CREATIVITY CAN CHANGE THE WORLD!

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SPONSORS, CONTRIBUTORS, and ARTISTS
in all Creative Disciplines.

THE STRAND — HERMOSA BEACH, CA

In addition to one of the most spectacular views in southern California, the house is now becoming an artwork in and of itself. The interior walls have become a flowing canvas, blending sea, clouds, sand, marble and textures that could possibly fool a few geologists 🙂

Ericco had to point out that one of the walls he had painted in the 1st floor bath was not stone.

Being the ZO investigators that we are, we then had to feel everything, and even then it was difficult to tell what was art and what was natural stone!

We’re going to start this tour on the main floor central core spiral staircase, and get Ericco to give us some insight to the process.  One word comes to mind, as the tour progresses and that’s . . . “Lit!”

Thanks also to Juli, currently working with Ericco Studio, for being our model.

____________________________
______________________
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ZO: So, it looks like the whole house has literally become your canvas.  How in the world do you plan for that?  Did the concept come all at once or do you start and see what develops?

ERICCO: First we decide on a Color Scheme . . .
each wall and room application, it’s color and the consideration of what is surrounding it, what furniture is surrounding it, and how it looks and coordinates with the whole environment.

ZO: The transformations that we see in these rooms are all as dramatic as night and day . . . Which room or wall did you start on and how do you make that choice, toss a coin 🙂 ?

ERICCO:  My client’s  take these decisions very seriously, as do I. The results of my art finishes, are not generally paint . . but materials, that unlike a painted wall that needs a fresh coat of paint every two years — in 10 years my finishes will look the same — or better.  Clients are generally making choices  that they plan on being as permanent as their LIFEstyles  — so it’s well planned.

ZO: Tell us about the living room and central stair transformation.

ERICCO: The client and I decided  to have the wall finish extend up the entire  stairway and wrap around  the upstairs as well, giving it overall a more expansive feel and immersive tranquility.

ZO: This open floor plan has become more than a great room. The transition from the beach to the living room, through the kitchen, and then into another front room entertainment – kind of begs the question, when is the party?

ERICCO:  lol . . . I’m working and looking forward to that too!! Actually, that’s something I did in the homeowner’s previous home — its 10 years later, and it’s still being talked about. LOL

ZO: Yeah, we were there — like we said, hope our invitation to this one is coming soon!  🙂

The old sliding doors. Wow, such drama now!

ZO: We really love the way the blue and white theme transcends through the entire house. It’s kind of like a continuation of the clouds.  This photo of the moon from the balcony is breathtaking.  Give us some of your thoughts on the cloud themes that seem to be such a part of your work.

Upstairs Cloud Room

ERICCO: This is basically a weekend  getaway  for my clent . . .  shades of blue have a calming effect. It also brings the extraordinary view in and extends and connects the interiors to the exterior panorama.

  • Ericco Studio - Hermosa Beach Project

Upstairs Powder Room (left)

ZO: We’ve seen variations of these interior murals in a few homes you’ve done.  The whimsy of this certainly adds a timeless feel to the bath. Renaissance architecture and styles were filled with this. What a thought provoking space.  Where does this inspiration come from?

ERICCO: I think this is an unexpected  surprise, and a source of uniqueness for visitors. Again, I like the guest to be entertained by the unexpected, and somehow inspired while in the home — but on a personal note. This was a personal request  by the homeowner. I did this same design (this time in blue) as a reminder of when the client made enough money to purchase his first mansion. I did this very same design in it, and he fell in love with it. Its a beautiful  reminder.

First Level Entertainment Room

ZO: Actually, this is my favorite room. What fun! I LOVE the depth . . . it takes me into the wall, kind of like a time portal – LOL

ERICCO: I especially enjoyed creating this wall finish in the entertainment room. The dimensional motif is hand-drawn and the painted design is intentionally meant to entertain visually, even when the TV is off and everyone is just chilling!

First Level Bathroom

ZO: You’ve done several large scale homes like this and projects in Puerto Rico since our last interview. We’re also very excited about the private gallery in NoHo we’re all working on to house some of your art collection and custom projects.  With all that’s affected the whole world this year, where do you see art going?

ERICCO: Art has always been a “personal thing” for me. Given our social environment and new realities, our creative NoHo space will cater to smaller groups and extend a more one-on-one experience — a more intimate, personal approach to an art encounter.

Don’t worry about a thing, ’cause every little thing gonna be all right. — Bob Marley

Ericco Studio has been a partner and advisor to ZO since its inception. We always enjoy the adventure of exploring the many creative spaces he creates magic for! We’re looking forward to updating this page as the work is completed. 

Thanks Ericco for treating us to a breathtakingly beautiful afternoon at the beach and for the pictures.  What a lovely day its been — ZO

ERICCO STUDIO: Developer — Art Spaces: CAb (Crenshaw Artists Building)

ERICCO STUDIO on VIMEO

ERICCO STUDIO: Stylist — Art Direction: THE NARROWCAST/MUSIC ViDEO

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“MINDFULNESS” https://zomagazine.com/mindfulness/ Sat, 25 May 2019 03:00:21 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=5673 The post “MINDFULNESS” appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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“MINDFULNESS” — by Melanie PAUL

World Face

You Can’t Find Peace, It Is Not a Lost Shoe.

The art of losing isn’t hard to master;
so many things seem filled with the intent
to be lost that their loss is no disaster.
Lose something every day. Accept the fluster
of lost door keys, the hour badly spent.
The art of losing isn’t hard to master.
Then practice losing farther, losing faster:
places, and names, and where it was you meant
to travel. None of these will bring disaster.
I lost my mother’s watch. And look! my last, or
next-to-last, of three loved houses went.
The art of losing isn’t hard to master.
I lost two cities, lovely ones. And, vaster,
some realms I owned, two rivers, a continent.
I miss them, but it wasn’t a disaster.
Even losing you (the joking voice, a gesture
I love) I shan’t have lied. It’s evident
the art of losing’s not too hard to master
though it may look like (Write it!) like disaster.

Elizabeth Bishop

___________________________________

I planned a better morning … lost keys, spilled cereal, running late, tears, tears, tears. As the day went on the tornado sat over my house and continued its destruction. By the end of the day, I was in tears as my daughter cried for what she described as “no reason.” My heart sank. I finally got her to bed and sat on my couch between what might have been folded laundry had the one year old not “helped.” I slid off the sofa and into the heap of Legos. I was done. DO YOU HEAR ME, UNIVERSE! Done. I took a deep breath and went somewhere else. It wasn’t a clean house or Hawaii or a meadow filled with flowers. I went in and then came out. I reached over to a stuffed animal that wasn’t supposed to be there and held it to my face. It smelled like Dreft and apple juice. I am HERE! Right HERE, Universe. I laid there for twenty minutes swaying between guilt, anger, depression and fear. And then I prayed. I allowed myself the opportunity to get back to a place where that Lego stuck in my back actually hurt. I looked at the remaining two hundred pieces and made a little house. These annoying little pieces made something …dare I say, cute. I left everything right where it was, showered and went to bed grateful.

The next morning, the seven year old looked worn. I waited until she hugged me and I apologized. I wasn’t specific. It was over but like most tornados, there is a clean-up effort that takes many hands. I had to admit that I wasn’t present, even when I was there. She admitted that arguing with me was the only way to pull me out of whatever I was doing. We both admitted that getting more things was not the solution to getting along. We started giving. We are more excited about trips to donation centers and shelters for the underprivileged and abused than we are about Christmas and birthdays. Together, we reached a place of effectiveness. There is something wonderful that happens when we visit a center and a young lady sits next to me on a bench as our children play. “This is first time in two days that she has let go of my leg.” The wind blows and we both tip our heads back and drink it in. “That feels great,” we both say at the same time. We laugh until we cry. She grabs my hand and our heads touch. The art of losing bags of unused clothes and toys left plenty of room for mindfulness and understanding that went deeper than any feeling of peace that we attempted to conjure up.

Here is just a short list of what the hands, feet and heads do at our house

1. we appreciate our surroundings and acknowledge the beauty.

2. we accept one another as we are today and only today

3. we do not promise anything

4. we operate with trust in God and each other

5. everything we do with our whole heart is a gift, what we do with half our heart is an obligation — we are honest about our intentions

Our little family uses mindfulness practices that work well for us. Watching food coloring as it changes the color of water and being still does NOT work for us. Riding silently in the car does (even with the baby). It doesn’t mean we are angry at each other. It is quite the opposite. She and I are dwelling in the same space together. We are both fully present and aware. We still have less than favorable moments but we refrain from using words like “bad” or “good.” Our experiences are bigger than that. There are fewer apologies, too. When we allow ourselves to be present, active and open. I find that our actions and reactions are deeply rooted in how it will be received both inwardly and outwardly. The extra ten seconds that we take between stimulus and response means that the wheel of consequence makes one full revolution. We directly affect what will happen within our own lives and directly affect what happens in the lives of others. We have eliminated the disconnection that leads us to the idea that this is only happening to me.

Mindfulness isn’t about meditation, converting to a new religion, seeking answers to life’s problems or escaping into a cave of wonder and light where everyone holds hands, and sings Kum-ba-Ya., however nice that may sound. It isn’t about well-behaved children, finding your “soul-mate” or success. I still lose my keys and kick the loudest toy on the floor, waking up the baby when I’m locking up the house for the night. I’m a single mother who still doesn’t know what I want to be when I grow up. I suppose if I were an advice columnist and you wrote me a letter explaining everything that is “wrong” with your situation, my advice would read as follows.

________________________________________

Dear Something is Wrong,

Congratulations on identifying that aspect of your life that has caused you great harm or turmoil. You are now in a unique and amazing place that allows you to be honest and compassionate with yourself. Embrace your mistakes. Do not look for peace. It is not a lost shoe. Peace is within you and around you, running fresh in your veins. Acknowledge only those parts that you are responsible for and accept those little bits of sand as opportunities to foster change. Surround yourself with what is working. Fill the universe with what you already have to offer.

The world says “Thank you.”

________________________________________

Glowing Circle 2x

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2015 Scott Navicky — Reflections on Convergence & Imagereality https://zomagazine.com/s-navicky-convergence-of-birds/ Sat, 11 May 2019 23:23:37 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=5209 The post 2015 Scott Navicky — Reflections on Convergence & Imagereality appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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Convergence of Birds

Yeah nah: Reflections on Convergence & Imagereality

Scott Navicky

“Return to Innocence” – Enigma

Imagereality is a disturbance to convergence

Thus, anyone seeking to understand Imagereality becomes a scholar of the cultural kitchen sink

In the end, what quelled my dissonance was the idea that, since images live in the world, they resemble living organisms; and thus, ZO Magazine’s 2015 Art Exposé was less of a convergence of visual ideas and more of a convergence of, say, birds.

Although it’s been years since I left Aotearoa New Zealand, I still retain a confusing residue of kiwispeak: sweet as, chocka, sparrow’s faaart… y’know, the usual stuff. So when a mate recently asked me if judging ZO Magazine’s 2015 Art Exposé was easy, without thinking I answered: “Yeah nah.” (I never quite understood this kiwi conversational oddity; just because it’s called a “Yes/No Question” doesn’t mean you have to answer with each.)

“il-giocoliere | juggling” © Andrea Giorgi

All of the artwork submitted to the Art Exposé was uniformly strong, and this made my job easy: Il Giocoliere (Juggling) is an instantaneously striking image that possesses subtle undertones of Italian Futurism, a movement of limited importance to the history of art, but fascinating significance to the history of photography; Summer Chaos rewards extended viewing, drawing viewers into a swirling vortex of whimsical figurative recognition mixed with dizzying all-over compositional abstraction; the fictive elements of Lost resemble a movie poster designed to entice and intrigue, while Canvas 79 was yet another reminder that deftly handled abstraction is always enticing and intriguing; and finally, The Convergence of Dust reminds me of Vik Muniz’s work (for example, his unforgettable 2000 exhibition ‘Pictures of Dust’ at the Whitney Museum of American Art in which he recreated photographs of Minimalist and Postminimalist sculptures using dust gathered from the museum’s galleries and offices), while Adam and Eve reminds me of Lewis Carroll’s early illustrations as exhibited in ‘Alice: 150 Years of Wonderland’ currently on-view at the Morgan Library & Museum.

“Summer Chaos” – © Aof Smith

The difficult aspect of judging the Art Exposé was wrestling with the cognitive dissonance generated from marrying the contest’s theme (convergence) with the concept of Imagereality. Normally when judging works of art, the knowledge of particulars–media, size, etc – is essential, but with Imagereality, images are their own total reality. Because of this, Imagereality reverses the usual convergence between viewer and work viewed. Think of sculpture, a medium neglected within the contest: to experience a sculpture, a viewer must enter the sculpture’s locality; in other words, you must go to IT. With Imagereality, IT comes to you. For example, in years past, traveling to Montreal would have been essential to view Alan Avorgbedor’s photography exhibition Intimacy of the Immediate and to read Charissa Von Harringa’s accompanying essay, in which she describes Avorgbedor’s work as “visual archaeologies that capture order and hierarchy in radically subjective space.” But here now: Intimacy of the Immediate.

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“Odd,” Roland Barthes mused in Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, “that no one has thought of the disturbance (to civilization) which this new action [photography] causes.” [1]  Imagereality is a disturbance to convergence; daily avalanches of images have become our reality. Reality, of course, is a drinkwater word. [2] And thus, any offshoot of reality, such as Imagereality, is a tricky concept. A good starting point for wrestling with particulars of Imagereality is Susan Sontag’s observation in On Photography that “the photographer’s insistence that everything is real also implies that the real is not enough.”

C’mon Susan, I think whenever I encounter this quote, when has reality EVER been enough, especially in America? Being American means never having to acknowledge limits: not to appetite, consumption, geography, power, ambition, and especially income. Limitlessness is everywhere in American culture: car commercials, urban sprawl, gentrification, corporations, skyscrapers, the internet. Limitlessness rocketfueled the Space Race, paved the interstates, and underwrote our most cherished cultural clichés: from sea to shining sea, the American Dream, Stars and Stripes Forever. Imagereality promises limitlessness. If the ancient Hebrew Blessing can be translated as “more life into a time without boundaries,” the new blessing offered by Imagereality can be translated as “more images into a time without limits.” If all of this sounds familiar, it should: the myth of limitlessness is life’s sustaining lie. The greatest human universal is the belief that this life–our life–will never end. Forever forwardmoving, a human being’s conception of existence is sheer propulsion; thus Imagereality’s madness is our own.

With this realization, Imagereality spills out from the whitewalled world where traditional art lives (museums, universities, contemporary art centers, etc.) and seeps into the world, our world. Images live in the world. They are everywhere, of everything; wherever images go, imagetheory must follow. Thus, anyone seeking to understand Imagereality becomes a scholar of the cultural kitchen sink, nothing is verboten; kiwispeak, cumbersome portmanteaus, unattended foreign photography exhibitions, snippets from your favorite novelist, magpiethinking, bar napkins scrawlings, everything is permissible under Imagereality’s specular perspectival sun. The convergence associated with Imagereality is less like the union of two disparate entities and more akin to a cascade; it is less like a handshake and more like the Rothkoing of Guinness poured into a pint glass or the kinetic chaos of Democritus’ whirlwind of tumblingtumblingtumblingSWERVING atoms. For any imagethinker, such a realization can easily become overwhelming.

In the end, what quelled my dissonance was the idea that, since images live in the world, they resemble living organisms; and thus, ZO Magazine’s 2015 Art Exposé was less of a convergence of visual ideas and more of a convergence of, say, birds. My old apartment in Brooklyn was on Grand Street between Bedford and Berry; from out of my bedroom window, I could watch one of my neighbors train pigeons from the roof of his building on South 2nd Street. Watching someone training pigeons in an urban environment is surprisingly beautiful.

Is this the perfect metaphor for Imagereality? Yeah nah, but it allows me to end this essay with a slightly altered snippet from A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:

What images were they? He stood on the steps of the library to look at them, leaning wearily on his ashplant. They flew round and round the jutting shoulder of a house in Molesworth Street. The air of the late March evening made clear their flight, their dark darting quivering bodies flying clearly against the sky as against a limp hung cloth of smoky tenuous blue.

He watched their flight; image after image; a dark flash, a swerve, a flutter of pixels. He tried to count them before all their darting quivering bodies passed: Six, ten, eleven: and wondered were they odd or even in number. Twelve, thirteen: for two came wheeling down from the upper sky. They were flying high and low but ever round and round in straight and curving lines and ever flying from left to right, circling about a temple of air.

[1] My current project is a creative misreading of Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography titled 3Essays on Imagereality.
[2] Drinkwater word: (adj) Any word that attempts to describe something so obvious that it renders description impossible.

______________________________________________________

Scott Navicky is the author of Humboldt: Or, The Power of Positive Thinking (Chicago Center for Literature and Photography, 2014). He attended Denison University and the University of Auckland, where he was awarded an Honors Master’s Degree in art history with a focus on photography theory. His work has appeared in Chicago Literati, HYPERtext Magazine, (614) Magazine, Fiction Writers Review, Necessary Fiction, and Chaos + Words. He currently lives in Columbus, Ohio.

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Stuff https://zomagazine.com/rc-stuff/ Sun, 28 Apr 2019 20:11:00 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=4398 The post Stuff appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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“STUFF”

Experiences over things. Expanding perceptions

By Rachael Cadden

Mojave” — Afro Celt Sound System

Happiness is not doing — or having — or stuff. It’s about being. It’s reflective. It’s fluid. It expands our perceptions.

I first realized I didn’t miss my “things” when I accepted a summer job in Alaska some years ago. I was “in between” jobs during the economic slump. I embraced it as an adventure. Traveling and working somewhere I had not been that also provided a 4 1/2 month contractual income.

“Go Outside and Play” – My Mom
Photo © Rachael Cadden

 

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I followed my summer work in Alaska with more travel for 3 months, trekking in Nepal and exploring Thailand and Indonesia. I was excited. I sublet my li’l beach adjacent studio in Venice, California and was on my way.

At the time, I was already downsizing and letting go of possessions little by little, including clothing and extra furniture that I didn’t value or need. I do like nice things and a comfortable environment, but I found I could live with far less over time. Particularly after I came back from working the summer and my travels to find I missed nothing. Those items didn’t define me and I was more happy and satisfied to be my most authentic self without things, schedules and agendas. My simplifying of things, time and stuff, and experiencing more began.

Climbers Memorial – Nepal – Everest Basecamp, Khumbu Valley & Kathmandu

More than ever our lives are consumed and filled with stuff including social media and never ending to do lists. There is nothing wrong with productivity, I love productivity, but it is often just “filler” — and brings about a selective numbness to our true happiness. It takes up space, deprives us of stillness and connection — connection with ourselves and others.

Busy-ness is static in our lives and it drowns out what our true selves long for. We experience others living sometimes scripted lives, through a little screen that robs of us experiencing our own life. It’s time to stop the glorification of busy, get off the roller coaster of extensive productivity and have experiences.

Experiences over things — expands our perceptions.

How do we do this? After all, I like roller coasters. They’re thrilling and fun. Roller coasters are an adrenaline rush and that feeling is explicating. Nothing wrong with exhilaration and fun. Every once in a while.

How do we have more experiences over things? The only way is through our choices. Choices of letting go of stuff — of schedules — of the news media. Let go of others expectations. Let go of people — and listen to that still small voice of your own true desires. One step at a time. As mentioned, it takes courage, personal authenticity, and a willingness to be vulnerable and imperfect. Even fail.

You don’t have to be in the best shape of your life. You don’t have to be financially secure. You don’t have to have every “t” crossed and every “i” dotted. You just have to begin.

I am novice, at best, in my writing career. My grammar, my plurals and my tenses may at times be unpolished. At times I “feel” as though I have no idea what I am doing. But I am doing it. Rustic and uncomfortable as it may be. I have begun.

What I can truly say from experience is, nothing replaces the feeling of truly doing and being what and who you want to be. Be it travel, creating income out of your passion or even just living more simply. One thing I know for sure, it will never be all laid out perfectly, and you will never be perfect. You just have to step out in faith and as you move along, more steps will reveal themselves.

Remember the scene in Indian Jones where he was at the cliff and to get to the other side he had to trust that when he was told to stop that the “bridge stone” would appear. It’s like that. Embrace the scare. And be OK with being and experiencing imperfectly.

Moving towards your most authentic self is inspiring to others. It is also expansive for you. It expands our perceptions. Our view of the world. Our world changes. It expands. We become more connected to ourselves and to others if we do the same.

True connection is what we are wired for. Quieting the static in our lives and experiences will reconnect us. What is it you want to experience? What have you always wanted to do or where have you wanted to go? What would make you most happy and as Marie Kondo inspires, What would “spark joy” for you to experience it. Make a plan, take the steps necessary to execute, then go out and do it. It’s scary, but just start, even if you don’t know what it will look like entirely.

Have more experiences. And evolve into who you truly are. Surprise yourself!

Ocean is my Potion. Ho’onani #gaia #shaka #earthday — at Kilua Kona.

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Writers https://zomagazine.com/writers/ Sat, 27 Apr 2019 21:58:57 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=4331 The post Writers appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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Photo above: © Ralf Poppcke – FOTOGRAFIE … from the series vari-a (R) T-ions

WRITERS CHANGE THINGS

MementoLino Cannavacciuolo

WE LOVE OUR STORYTELLERS . . . whether they speak through photos, written word, music, film, dance or any other creative vehicle!  You need a writer to tell you what happened at the house in the picture above.

ZO IS A DEVELOPMENT SPOTLIGHT.

We believe that creative minds can change the consciousness level of earth and want to expose, support and help our community to develop ways to “follow their passion.” To love what you do and find ways to use, sustain and improve your creative gifts is the beginning of satisfaction. It not only helps you — it will help others. It’s not just about what you do … it’s about WHO YOU ARE — inside and creatively!

In this time where INFORMATION of every kind is almost instantly available, CHANGE is possible on an exponential level. We know that the world is riddled with problems, but there are creative people everywhere that are working to solve those problems. You must get your information from more than one source to be truly informed for next-level consciousness. The next level is up to all of us. Will it be a catastrophic continuation to abusing the resources of the earth until we are all poisoned; will we fight about it until we are all drained, depressed and continue the various US AGAINST THEM syndromes (nations, cultures, religions, race, economic status, etc.) that has manipulated the status quo for eons — or — can we WORK ON CREATIVE SOLUTIONS TO EVERYTHING.

While all of us at ZO love literature, art, music, architecture, design and the creativity in all of life — we do realize that these enjoyments cannot exist if earth as we know it does not exist. These times are tumultuous and our world is on the verge of many catastrophes.  We want to be a voice for a higher human consciousness of the need for nonviolent change. With an increasingly connected global community — we want to help effect this change THROUGH THE ARTS and COMMUNICATION.

The bottom line may be that all of us are either actively being creative or destructive on many levels. We are creating our own destiny or possibly doing things to destroy it; we are creating a better environment for us and others or we are not. Whatever you are doing to others you are doing to yourself – ultimately. If you are improving yourself, making creative choices to work, create and survive – great. If you are harming yourself, your relationships, your neighborhood, the planet … well … just think about it.  It could be as simple as throwing trash out of the window or being careless with a match or you could be cutting down entire rain forests or simply over fishing (to somehow survive).  We are not pointing fingers or judging anyone — we are asking ourselves these questions. These are just conscious observations, as we at ZO try to improve our minds and creative gifts, we are looking for writers and other creative types who are also consciously trying to create a better atmosphere.

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“The purpose of a writer is
to keep civilization from destroying itself.”
― Albert Camus

Yes, it is that important!

Photos below connect to (available) Writer’s media pages

RIVER ALEXANDER
ZO Concept Director

After college, where I studied architectural design and communications, I began a science fiction script that has matured into many volumes of a continuing saga. That adventure is quite an inspiration for the ZO Concept.

ZO Magazine’s unique presentations combine creative unions between a diverse constituency. Our goal is to showcase blended and circular perspectives of life, philosophy, mystery and fantasy through these creative offerings … and touch the world as we do.

I am extremely excited about our fictional documentary – The O.D.D. ROOM  | Other Dimensional Discussion.   Because it had to be invented and not just written, I do believe the alternate universes, dimensional shifts and metaphysically derived global conversations in its structure may serve our  —  different kind of universe concept in very unique ways.

ZERR HER

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. . . bringing out the magic at the LINTON HOME https://zomagazine.com/es-linton-home/ Thu, 25 Apr 2019 23:51:17 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=4202 The post . . . bringing out the magic at the LINTON HOME appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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ERICCO STUDIO

. . . bringing out the MAGIC in the LINTON HOME

-Raccoglici insieme dai 4 angoli del mondo — Allesandra Celletti

ERICCO STUDIOS custom interiors, mixed with the eclectic art and surroundings at the home of Len and Judy Linton certainly created a lot of “artistic magic” — from the purple stone path to the inset leaves on the interior walls. What an exciting “bonus” interview with the Lintons — giving us a little insight into their work in the arts and some backstory to the incredible light-filled home in Thousand Oaks (USA).

The Linton’s considerable involvement with the local arts community is reflected in their selections of art, custom furniture, wall treatments and décor, as well as a vibrant use of color choices and design throughout their home’s incredibly creative living spaces.

ERICCO: You’ve both been involved in the arts for quite some time, would you just give some of the titles you’ve had for the proverbial record 🙂 . . .

LEN: I am the Treasurer of the California Museum of Art, Thousand Oaks and we are both past presidents of the New West Symphony. JUDY: I have been a Cultural Affairs Commissioner for the City of Thousand Oaks for over 5 years and am currently on the Board of the newly formed Thousand Oaks Alliance for the Arts.

LEN & JUDY: We’ve also been involved in other non-profit organizations, such as Rotary International, The Wellness Community (now the Cancer Support Community) and the California State University, Channel Islands Foundation.

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ERICCO: Tell me a bit about your marriage.

LEN & JUDY: We’ve been happily married for 28 years. We realized early on in our relationship that we have similar tastes in art and design.

ERICCO: You have quite a bit of art! How and when did your interest begin?

LEN & JUDY: We’ve been looking at and buying art since we first met. Our first major art glass piece was from a Seattle gallery. Since then, we have looked for glass and other art pieces wherever and whenever we’ve traveled (including Murano, Italy). We also buy art for our home for every birthday and anniversary.

ERICCO: How much of what you do in the community and arts is connected to your personal lives?

LEN & JUDY: The arts have always been an integral part of our lives. We’re avid symphony subscribers and theater lovers, and we attend and support as many of them as we have time for.

ERICCO: I’m glad you’re so involved and that is what has brought me to your latest home improvement.

I’ll be working on the master bath area. Can you tell me about its design journey? It’s beautiful!

LEN & JUDY: This latest project was brought about after Judy had tremendous difficulty getting in and out of the shower after foot surgery. That served as the impetus to completely redesign our master bath in order to incorporate some unique concepts and offer safe access.

It’s a project we’ve been considering for twenty years, and the period of disability and longing for a soaking tub really motivated us to design something both beautiful and practical. We’ve been extremely fortunate to work with wonderful collaborators who helped us realize our vision, although we worked without a designer or blueprints — it somehow came together beautifully.

detail of wall – inlaid with real leaves

Ericco Studio is noted as the home of elegant faux finishing, and specializes in bringing upscale enhancement to architectural environments.

ERICCO: I love this opportunity to develop your wall treatments. I’ve even given names to the 3 walls in the master bath, “Winter’s Drift” pictured (using real leaves) “Steel Raining” and “Cracks let the light in” — this last one inspired by Leonard Cohen’s poetry.

For more than a decade, Ericco Studio has forged a reputation in design circles as an innovative source for tasteful and refined faux finishing.

We try to support local artists, and we know many of them personally. We love our silly funky kitchen as much as our custom green granite sink in the powder room. It’s just a lot of fun.

ERICCO: I’ve enjoyed working and creating finishes throughout the house. Not only the work I do, but I am constantly inspired by just looking around at everything else you have done. What’s next for you?

LEN & JUDY: We’ll figure that out as we continue to live full lives and discover some new ideas as we go!

ERICCO: The answer to that last question sums up their joyful attitude towards creativity and art. They are always on the lookout for new ideas and approaches, while appreciating and supporting their communities’ artists and designers. Their home is a wonderful reflection of that love and passion.



ZO was extremely excited to start this series of art and interior interviews with our very first Sponsor — Ericco Studio. Ericco has been with our project since its beginning, and was a primary curator for our first fine art presentation at the initial soirée to launch our unique “concept.” Stay tuned for more upcoming . . .

ERICCO STUDIO developed a 10,000 sq.ft. artists’ building near the Los Angeles International Airport — CAb — for several years and sponsored ZO Magazine’s creative space there. In addition to supporting our ongoing film project and collaborating on a project for young artists, we were privileged to be a part of the unique artists gatherings featuring fashion, food and the friendliest people we’ve ever met. We learned so much while working with Ericco and are looking forward to what may come of the next brick & mortar venture that Ericco Studio does!

ERICCO STUDIO: Developer — Art Spaces: CAb (Crenshaw Artists Building)

ERICCO STUDIO on VIMEO

ERICCO STUDIO: Stylist — Art Direction: THE NARROWCAST/Music Video

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FASHION: from Alpha Centauri to Zeta https://zomagazine.com/dcp-fashion-fromalpha-to-zeta/ Thu, 25 Apr 2019 18:04:33 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=4147 The post FASHION: from Alpha Centauri to Zeta appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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FASHION: from Alpha Centauri to Zeta

by DAVID C. POND

“Mojave” — Afro Celt Sound System

A7x9-Fashion
Since the advent of the fig leaf — to Harlem‘s underground vogue clubs of the 1920s & 30s, fashion has done more than just cover bare flesh. The well-trafficked fashion houses of Rome, Paris, Tokyo and New York inspire art, culture and set the tone for the times.

Fashion is much more than what can be stepped into, out of or perched precariously on one’s head. Fashion originates from the mind of its designer and frames the living pages of humanity’s flesh and bone. In this aspect alone, the creative process is indeed “divine.” Fashion challenges and even redefines our personal realities and ideas. From the vantage point of the human psyche, the way we view the world and ourselves is subliminally influenced by how we choose to decorate our bodies.

Painting ANDRE NORMIL Original “Adam & Eve in the Garden of Eden” — available at Worthpoint.com

The way we dress is thought by some to be a reflection of our innate desire to nourish our cultural soul.  The Egyptian as well as many others’ burial rites may hold a clue to this —something to ponder, anyway.

DDior - egyptian_fashion_runwayior’s take on Egypt …

From the inception of civilization “fashion as art” was a hindsight notion and we can only draw from that sight in retrospect. Survival mode cultures designed primarily on a level of warmth and functionality, and decoration was often birthed from a desire to strike fear, awe or control …

It was not until cultures evolved beyond the “survival mode” that the often wonderful creations of primitive societies developed to commercial viability and fashion took on its separate distinction.

WHAT BEAUTIFUL CRETANS WE ARE

Evidence shows that the island of Crete, just off the coast of Greece, was likely inhabited from the sixth millennium B.C.

Crete -- land of antiquities

Crete – land of antiquities

But it wasn’t until probably around the late fourth — early third millennium that immigrants from Asia Minor joined the Minoans, creating what could be thought of as a bona fide civilization. The new immigrants’ technology and organizational flair transformed a people, who at the time were living in caves and dressed in animal skins.

The Minoans became one of the most sophisticated civilizations of the ancient world — and for ancient times — one of the first fashionable ones. Enclosed at the palace at Knossos were weaving and spinning shops. Although no actual examples of clothing are preserved (due to climate issues), artifacts including frescoes and terracotta statuettes show the shape of their dress, decorative forms and colors.

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The most striking feature of these costumes is that they were “fitted,” much like today. At the time other civilizations went more on the arrangement and fold of the fabric than the cut of the garment itself, Minoan statuettes show them to be tailors, conscious of exact form and fit.

Metal Couture by Manuel Albarran

METAL COUTURE BY MANUEL ALBARRAN

The term form follows function is an architectural term, yet fashion’s adherence and/or rebellion to this principle has cleverly excited us through time.

Medieval coats of mail, witchdoctor’s headdresses, décolletage (French term for “low neckline”), mini-skirts, bustles, neckties and wigs have subconsciously affected the psyche of us all throughout the ages and usually without us thinking about it. A great suit can nail the job, a beautiful woman in the right outfit has sent men to war.

Fashion is legislated by choice in many organizations and by force in some societies. All this from that fateful day when they adorned themselves with figs as God asked, “Who told you that you were naked?” (okay, another story). Amazing!

Where was I? Oh yeah, costumes. Where are they going? What will we wear when we finally get off this freakin’ planet and go to say – Alpha Centauri. I thought by now, we’d be wearing the George Jetson look that came out in the 60s at least. If you’re too young to remember and haven’t seen the syndicated reruns – you must find them. I won’t go any further.

Metal Couture by Manuel Albarran

Metal Couture by Manuel Albarran

Incidentally, Alpha Centauri is the star system nearest to our own, and the likeliest to possibly have extra-terrestrial life, even if that is on a different dimensional level. If I ever go and I don’t have to wear some kind of space suit, I’m wearing jeans. I can’t change now. If they had had jeans on Crete in 1600 B.C., I would have worn them. They are the greatest invention fashion ever fashioned. Okay, I digress.

BABYLON, A MOTHER OF FASHION

Much more “modern” than the Minoans, the Babylonian Empire was at its height around 550 B.C. a Wonder of the Ancient World — most famous for its “hanging gardens.” Babylon was a “melting pot,” much like the U.S. is today. The Babylonian Empire extended from Turkey to Iran, down through the now-contested Israel-Palestine territories into Egypt and the borders of Saudi Arabia. Babylon often took prisoners of conquered nations, carrying away the wealthy, the educated and highborn to their capital city, as “show-trophies” and to enhance their cultural diversity and prominence.

Though now a hot spot in the “war on terrorism” and civil unrest, it is considered one of the birthplaces of modern civilization, in fact, the “cradle of civilization” as a whole. Much of today’s ideology and ideas about commerce, religion and family structures (even math) had its origin in Babylonian territory, and of course there’s the “fashion and art”, striking then and striking now.Fashion A to Z

For most of the Western world, the ancient Babylonian-styled fashions probably most commonly resemble the Christmas card guys. That’s what it looked like (to me). Everybody dressed like the “wise men” from the East and whether you like it or not, that is one of the most powerful images in the world. Three wise men going to visit the baby Jesus, usually with a camel or two in tow, or riding them, and a few boxes of gold and frankincense and myrrh. What a powerful fashion statement. It has lasted and been popular for not centuries – millennia. That is great design! Actually, there are traditionalists who still dress like that. So, fashion even in our modern holiday art looks like ancient Iraqis and the cultures they influenced. Makes me say–, along with the mechanical singing-children in Anaheim, CA, Orlando, FL, and Tokyo, Japan, (wherever Disney’s “Magic Kingdom” is found)– “It’s a small world after all.”

VIKINGS AND VAMPIRES

The often stereotyped, yet usually aptly described “testosterone-based” Vikings don’t usually bring to mind “high fashion.” But these men were quite the fashion hogs (as opposed to divas) if you look a little closer; and the creative side of their ire is rather admirable. Sure they had the generic trousers, stockings, undertunic, overtunic, coat and cloak, but “oh — those accessories…” (We will go into this more in future articles … I’m drooling just thinking of it . . .)

Vampires? (Someone might be asking, “do we even have to “go there”.) “Definitely” if we’re talking “fashion influence.” Bella Lugosi’s “Dracula” — Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt’s portrayal of “Lestat” and “Louis” — Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire — modern Goth — all have this certain dark romanticism and like them or not, you definitely look twice — there is definitely a certain fashionista power. The ones we see portrayed have this curiously juxtaposed sense of integration and myopic balance that somehow translates into an evocative taste for refinement, culture and grace, however garish or potentially grotesque the ends may be. (To the reader: Should one use the word “taste” in the same sentence as “vampire”? Just curious.)

YOU CAN’T LEAVE OUT THE FRENCH

Where would fashion be without those over-the-top frilly and sometimes silly-looking cuffs? Fashion for men would have been forever boring. (Look at some of the English costuming of the same time period. Egad! Boring. Just like tea and crumpets. Drab. And they had to get the tea from the East Indians just to have that! I have an English grandmother; it’s ok.) Back to the French—begs the question … “What would “Prince” have worn during this era?” And somehow Marie Antoinette being French with all of those gaudy gowns makes the whole “let them eat cake” and guillotine bit a smidgen less distasteful. O.K., I’m overstating it a bit; but we would not be making movies about it, if she had worn a simple black dress. No, humanity is a complicated, very surface-oriented lot that can be wooed by outside appearances all too easily. Let’s face it – we really do need a Savior. Or not – our choice – right? (okay, I digress).

Then there’s New Orleans. Can you imagine New Orleans or Mardis Gras without French influence? And it’s amazing how predominately French-speaking and culturally influenced – Haiti can have some of the poorest people on the planet, yet most of them seem to dress well and have a supreme sense of fashion. No doubt, partially due to the French influence, aside from the fact that Haiti’s predominate population are descendant from African immigrants, which also definitely has some input on the “fashion sense.” This brings us to another interesting part of the fashion equation.

AFRICA

Africa’s fashion and its co-equal passion – art – has been a fascination and rich resource for the world’s cultural fascination, from the days of colonization forward. Prior to the blight of imperialism, Africa enjoyed a multitude of cultural expressions and inter-tribal exchanges that up to this day has both confounded and amazed outsiders. Perhaps like no other continent and people, next to Mesopotamia’s influence, Africa has contributed to the rich heritage of music, art and fashion of the modern era like no other. Runway modeling and many of the “severe” beyond-modern-reality fashion “looks” are embedded with the heart of the African continent’s expression of unique abundance.

Wodaabe

Where else do you find diamonds, sahara, rhinos, giraffes, lions, tigers and zebras all on one stage? Africa is continental haute couture!

WHERE ARE WE NOW?

The discussion of fashion as art would be incomplete without mentioning the underground “Vogue-houses” of Harlem, originating during the early 20th Century’s “Harlem Renaissance.” Voguing as a dance, combined poses “struck” by fashion models with acrobatic dips and spins. Vogue balls were centered in pithy social commentary decades before the infamous protests of the 60’s. It is believed the phenomenon originated when fashion oriented-houses developed as an alternative to gangs. They competed for fashion élan — not turf. (Perhaps we should revisit!)

THE E-GOWN

We have arrived. It’s a small world after all and thanks to the advances of computer science, i.e. the  “Internet,” consumers can purchase everything from handbags to wedding gowns from Algeria to Zaire. The E-Gown is the quick internet way to find a prom dress or wedding gown at websites with such likely domain names as egown.net. You’ve heard of Ross Dress-for-Less — now, you can “cross-dress” for less. (O.K., that you can and must edit out, just some humor as this is my last paragraph. Reader: This is a real note from the writer but I will not edit it out, I think it’s funny. Editor)

TO “WRAP-IT-ALL-UP”

In this “time machine” view of talking about “fashion”, there is one idea that I think defines FASHION ITSELF. “Wrapping!” Fashion is the wrapping of the body. So, let’s not forget the “wrapping” when we give. It’s one of the most important elements to gift giving. Think of all the ribbons, bows and boxes that our favorite fashions are delivered in. Then there are the padded pink-flowered silk covered hangers that fine attire is draped on in “fine closets everywhere.” That’s art. I know someone who spends minutes at a time tediously curling individual split strands of “ribbon” that wrap a Kenneth Cole, DKNY, or other high-end gift package.

Forrest Gump had it right when he saiA7-Fashion Riverd, “Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re going to get.” But I also like to think– “Life is like a box at Macys.” (Or in my case, it’s American Eagle, or American Outfitters.)—You don’t know what you’re gonna get, but usually there’s an exchange policy. But if you can’t return it, then like life, you can accept it with gratitude and learn to enjoy the intricacies of pattern, textile, color and form knowing that like life, fashion is an ever-evolving, though sometimes challenging quest. It is exactly for that reason that fashion and art are “challenging” and to create and maintain one’s sense of it, requires nothing less than a “quest” mode.

It is an accomplishment to create an artful place of existence and form —an experience to be en-joy-able for a time. It is an act of love really – for its recipient and those gifted to share its vibrancy. Both fashion and life exist to challenge boundaries, expand and embrace cultures and times and peoples in a burst of creative energy and a zeal that made the whole project worthwhile.

Regardless of your fashion choices, be sure to allow for clothing the thoughts of your mind – with spirit, consciousness, information, awareness and hopefully an increasing wisdom … for the times they are a changing.

David C. Pond is a free-lance writer currently working to create a social enterprise benefiting the “working poor.”

Sources include: www.fashion.about.com, www.costumes.org, www.fashion-era.com, www.netcontrol.net

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