How Coco Chanel got the idea for the iconic Chanel blazer. “Reincarnation” is the new short film created and directed by Karl Lagerfeld to accompany the CHANEL Paris-Salzburg 2014/15 Métiers d’art collection shown on December 2nd, 2014 in Salzburg. This new short film was the perfect opportunity for Karl Lagerfeld to develop an artistic collaboration with Pharrell Williams, a close friend of the House and personal friend of the designer. In fact, the artist composed and wrote the lyrics to “CC The World,” the original soundtrack for Reincarnation, and he also plays one of the lead roles and will be, along with Cara Delevingne, the face of the upcoming campaign…
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Paintings by artist Antoine Cordet
Paris-based artist Antoine Cordet creates portraits that feel both familiar and elusive. His work abstracts figures with fog-like details, blending clarity and obscurity to produce images that hover between reality and imagination.
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Pink Series by photographer Prue Stent
Prue Stent’s Pink Series explores sexuality, magic, and femininity through a single, powerful lens: the color pink. The Australian-based photographer uses hue as narrative, tying mood, character, and emotion together in images that feel both playful and provocative.
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Illustrations by Louise Zergaeng Pomeroy
London-based artist Louise Zergaeng Pomeroy creates pen and ink illustrations that are both strange and captivating. Her work features unusual portraits filled with tattoos, lip gauges, and other bold body modifications, turning each piece into a study of individuality and unconventional beauty.
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Vogue China December 2014 by Tim Walker
Tim Walker brings his signature sense of fantasy and drama to Vogue China December 2014. The editorial unfolds like a lavish dream, filled with theatrical poses, rich styling, and an undercurrent of luxurious mystery that keeps the viewer hooked from the first image.
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Carmen Dell’Orefice Returns to the St. Regis
Carmen Dell’Orefice returns to the St. Regis with the kind of elegance that only decades of fashion history can deliver. Nearly seventy years after being drawn by Salvador Dalí in the same hotel, the icon revisits the space to be captured once again, this time by illustrator David Downton for Vanity Fair. The moment feels poetic, intentional, and deeply chic
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Abstract Paintings by Gus Hughes
Gus Hughes creates abstract paintings that feel dense, physical, and quietly emotional. Heavy layers of paint build the surface, pulling the viewer in before revealing occasional familiar shapes that hint at portraiture. You start looking for faces. Sometimes you find them. Sometimes you do not.
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Destructive in Art by Valerie Hegarty
Valerie Hegarty has a talent for making art history deeply uncomfortable, and that is precisely the point. In her sculptural works, well known paintings and iconic imagery are not preserved or revered. They are attacked. Chewed up. Broken down by the imagined forces of nature, time, and entropy. This is destruction as transformation, not vandalism. And it is fascinating to look at.
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Illustrated Portraits by Sofia Bonati
Sofia Bonati’s illustrated portraits feel like conversations you want to stay in a little longer. Based in the UK, the artist creates character driven illustrations that are stylish, intimate, and subtly playful, capturing not just how someone looks, but how they might feel. At first glance, the portraits are polished and composed. The figures are often posed with intention, styled carefully, and framed in ways that feel editorial. But linger for a moment and the personality begins to surface. A knowing expression. A slightly exaggerated gesture. A quiet sense of humor.
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Paint Forms by artist Kim Keever
There is something wonderfully liberating about Kim Keever’s process. Based in New York City, the artist creates abstract works by dropping paint into water filled aquariums and letting physics take over. No sketches. No strict plans. Just color, movement, and chance. The results feel playful and unpredictable, which is exactly the point. Each piece captures a fleeting moment that can never be repeated. Paint blooms, sinks, spreads, and dissolves in real time, forming shapes that feel both organic and otherworldly. What you see is not designed in the traditional sense. It is discovered.
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Portrait Forms by Bryan Christie
Bryan Christie’s Portrait Forms turns the gaze inward. These portraits explore anatomy, biology, and the inner workings of the human body, focusing on what lies beneath the surface rather than external appearance. The result is both scientific and surprisingly personal.