CELEBRATING G-STAR’S CRAFTSMANSHIP WITH THEIR LATEST COLLECTION

It’s something to be noted that a brand as globally big as G-STAR has retained its excellence in precise craftsmanship and unequivocal style. It’s an age old story that has happened to the best of brands, artists and mavericks alike; when you go mainstream, selling out is inevitable – and that once eccentric spirit that was part of your original lore, fades like a long forgotten memory. When G-STAR arrived on the scene in 1989, their promise was to revolutionise denim with innovative and unconventional designs, redefining the way jeans were perceived and worn. Their flag was a shroud of defiant, raw denim; unwashed and untreated, retaining its original indigo dye and stiff texture – a stark contrast to the starching and distressing prized by other brands at the advent of the 1990s. For G-STAR, raw denim’s unique patina faded over time, which meant that their view for denim was always personal, as they hoped each of their wearers would come to develop their own character, literally and figuratively, in a pair of G-STAR denims. Somehow, they’ve gotten this right – every single year over the last 35 years. G-STAR is luxury without being ostentatious, rebellious while being sophisticated. Real, raw — denim experiences. We’re very into it.  

Self-described as an ‘antidote to the generic’, G-STAR’s inventive approach to denim culminated in their development beyond two-dimensional sartorial traditions in fashion. I mean, developing your own approach to the highly mathematically (and frankly incomprehensible) margins of pattern-making is next level — and yet, it worked, with G-STAR’s pioneering 3D denim technique remaining one of the most revolutionary innovations in the denim space, purely from an engineering perspective. Departing from traditional flat patterns, G-STAR’s 3D design approach uses specific engineered cuts, panels and stitching to create an ergonomic fit that contours to the body’s natural shape, resulting in the sculptural and dynamic pieces embedded in the brand’s DNA. G-STAR is observable from a mile away for its holy trinity; that pure raw denim finish, the sculptural fit (even when its relaxed, its intentional) and the display of stitching or hardware to accentuate the finished garment. Crazy. 

So, when we finally put the skinny jeans to rest (I refuse their return, despite what the TikTok girly’s might be saying) – G-STAR was already perfectly positioned to flex the tailoring possibilities of denim. The fabric’s ease of handling, especially in the right hands, allows for exceptional craftsmanship to unfold and denim’s ubiquity as simply and incredibly cool – G-STAR’s latest collection spotlight lights these precise sentiments. With particularly technical focus made to layering techniques in their interpretation of the loose, barrel legged denim trends that have swept the cultural landscape.

G-Star x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Andile Dlamini
G-Star x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Chelsea-Sloane Samuels
G-STAR’s latest collection showcases the brand’s commitment to quality while maintaining its signature DNA. The Men’s Bend 3D features a mid-rise, loose fit with an extra panel inside the leg, embodying that 3D technique and offering a relaxed yet dynamic expression of G-STAR’s design ethos. For women, the Bowey is a low-waisted silhouette designed to be the best boyfriend jeans you’ll ever have, with an artful bow leg. Also for women, the Skater offers a high-waisted, slack-cut silhouette, combining classic tailoring with nuanced seam detailing. Denim, as we know, is one of fashion’s staple paring fabrics. 

G-STAR’s collaborations with artists, designers and musicians have added layers of creativity and innovation to their vision. As a brand, G-STAR has always been dedicated to the cloth, the craft and the culture of denim. In its unique position as a progressive denim brand, the brand has been steadfast in creating the future of denim; driven by creativity, they’re constantly turning ideas into denim, while consistently following their own distinctive path. Recently, their collaboration with Ryan Hing and his EVOLVE team, G-STAR South Africa emphasised its role in the culture of denim through our nation’s lens – with individual expression and creativity as the brand’s guiding principles, front of mind. 

G-Star x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Lethabo Motlatle
G-Star x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Ryan Hing
Whether it’s collaborations with young designers – like with Danish label (di)vision, in which they paid homage to the year 1996 with a release of 96 upcycled archival pieces and 96 custom G-Star Elwood jeans – or their foray into intentional design in cross-brand pollinations with the likes of Land Rover, Leica and Prouvé, these partnerships fuse G-STAR’s denim expertise with unique artistic visions. G-STAR operates worldwide with a focus on the United States, Europe, Japan and South Africa, and has worked throughout decades with true originals such as Pharrell Williams, Marc Newson, Stephen Jones, Burna Boy, Magnus Carlsen, Maarten Baas, Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg, Anton Corbijn, Walter Van Beirendonck, and Rem Koolhaas.

Denim is for the people, and G-STAR’s core principle is denim. A simple modus operandi, with gritty and sublime outcomes. The brand remains as hyped about the fabric’s crafting possibilities as it is about the cultural impact denim has had on the socio-sartorial movements around the world. G-STAR’s indigo-hued universe, denim is a blueprint for living life with an unrestrained freedom — and it’s why, through all the tides and shifts of the last three decades, they’ll never sell out. You can’t make-up that kind of innate spirit; you kinda just have it, and have the pleasure to run with it. As South Africans, we love to see it — how utterly refreshing in 2024.

Shop G-STAR’s latest arrivals HERE

Written by: Holly Beaton
For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

What does the Bratification of 2024 say about our current societal and cultural attitudes?

It’s been a BRAT GIRL SUMMER in the northern hemisphere — Brat this, Brat that — everywhere we look, BRAT BRAT BRAT. Of course, we know, it was injected into the culture by queer icon and soft techno-pop brat mother, Charli XCX, with her album of the same name. Simple and understated, the movement was seeded in a chlorophyll hued image emblazoned with ‘brat’, lowercase, slightly blurry. Apathetic and raw, Brat evokes a bonafide TikTok-age archetype (to be Brat is to protest conformity, except armed with a great skincare routine). Brat is a mood, and a patronic style snapshot of our current cultural moment. Charli and her team have shown us one thing — from a marketing perspective, you best make sure your album artwork and accompanying assets are memeable. 

When Vice President Kamala Harris found herself as the presidential candidate in July — her team, led by a rumoured cast of ‘gen-z and millennial marketing auterers’ got hold of the moniker to garner support; we witnessed a clashing of worlds that rarely collide. On TikTok, Kamala was hailed as a certified ‘brat’, and her Kamala HQ ran with the Brat movement to contrast the vitality of her persona to the dithering, grotesque and orange mess that is her opposition. Also, New York’s Mayor Eric Adams co-opted the movement, announcing his plans for a brat summer

Virality is vitality in this day and age. 

‘FIRST ROUND’ photographed by Jelly Luise, via Death To Stock

‘FIRST ROUND’ photographed by Jelly Luise, via Death To Stock

Suddenly, the obscure zeitgeists that we consume and mine for as young people on the internet, punctuated by trends and frenzied epitaphs, came head to head with the dry, barren landscape of politics. Fox News was hell bent on understanding ‘brat’, and a host of either politically disenfranchised or indifferent young people entered the political arena in America. Gay folks disseminated ‘kamala’ Brat style merch instantly — and in turn, Kamala was born again, this time as a star. A strange turn of events for an album catered to gals and gays who might spend hours in the que at Berghain, carrying their coke and ket in chrome bullet vials around their necks. 

After all, many of us are a demographic of non-conformists and as young people raised on the novel and inescapable bizarre nature of the digital age — we prize hedonism, and Brat hitting the mainstream is kind of an evolution of the weirdness that continues to pervade our lives spent online. Not that we really care, and as Dazed have declared — Brat Summer Is Already Dead. It has swiftly been replaced with the ‘demure’ trend, created by TikTok beauty influencer Jools Lebron, who announced to the girls that now is the time to be, “demure, cutesy, and mindful” – and the trend has exploded like wildfire. 

That being said, this is about Brat right now – dang, we can’t even catch our breath! 

Content Creator Frankie AKA ‘mediations of the anxious mind’, crafts short-form video essays, exploring topics and ideas in a flat, monotone voice. In between the satirical awkwardness of his productions, his commentary often leads to flat-lining truths of searing proportions. In the video Brat Summer Explained, he had this to say, “in a consumerist society, culture takes on the commodity form. Life is no longer about meaning-making, it’s about buying products and slaying. Brat is a product of consumer behaviour, but more specifically — of audience labour. People undertake the unpaid, leisure-based tasks of posting brat-related content to their social media to accentuate their social status in ways that we can’t fundamentally understand or entirely evade,” and that, “we all claim to have brat summer, but we don’t really know what that means on a molecular level. To be Brat is to be marketed to. Beyond that? Brat remains a cultural moment that’s unsure of itself.”

‘BRAT’ via @charlixcx Instagram

‘EDEN’ photographed by Marlen Stahlhuth via Death To Stock

And there it is — among all the brat-coded verbiage and anecdotes of the year, the movement is ostensibly a dystopian cultural case study on the effects that a very sophisticated and well-oiled marketing campaign can have on the masses. As fashion writer Elliot Hoste so brilliantly said,with Brat, Charli has finally achieved the fully realised version of her XCX-persona: a strung-out, 365 party girl, but one who thinks about stuff a lot and has an insatiable diva complex. Most of this was achieved through the album’s marketing, which positioned itself as an off-the-cuff guerilla campaign of dive-bar drop-ins and random block parties, but was, by Charli’s own admission, meticulously planned,” and that, “Charli knows exactly who her fans are, and the campaign was practically AI-generated in its ability to exploit them.”

Philosopher and thinker, Terence McKenna, believed that our tendency toward greater complexity is evident in the evolution of life, culture, and consciousness as human beings. Seeing this as the driving force in the universe, where nature evolves from simple forms to more intricate and interconnected systems, I imagine McKenna would find Brat as wholly contextual to the way the 21st century is unfolding. The digital age has vastly accelerated the pace at which culture evolves. With the internet and our vast array of digital tools, information spreads rapidly, and trends emerge and dissipate as quickly as they occur; we are shaping complex cultural forms almost instantaneously through memes, viral content, and digital subcultures, and disposing of them even quicker — and trying to define them, is kind of obsolete. 

From the perspective of McKenna’s complexity theory, Kamala HQ co-opting Brat is not unexpected; in fact, it’s right on track with where we are heading as a society pursuing more and more interconnected strands of cultural production. The purpose isn’t necessarily to ‘make meaning’ in the digital age; it’s about capturing the mood of the moment, instead. Meaning becomes an afterthought, a retrospective exercise for anyone who might feel nostalgic. What provides said meaning might be just the mere fact that it was perceived, viewed and enjoyed; the very definition of pop culture is popularity. The more ubiquitous, the more meaningful. 

The ephemeral nature of digital production in 2024 also means that everything feels very surface level. Brat feels important, but it’s really just a marketing tactic; designed to capture attention quickly and generate buzz. It’s hot, messy and appealing — and being all those things is not to say it doesn’t matter. Purely because Brat is relatable, makes it a moment in and of itself. But, when we watch a movement arise from one singular person, namely a pop star (and their team), rather than through a grassroots means between communities, this rapid rise and fall of trends can create a sense of superficiality, where the deeper meaning or lasting impact of cultural moments is overshadowed by their transient appeal. 

These are all interesting things to consider, and yet — who really cares? This isn’t about judging whether pop culture is inherently meaningless, because we know it isn’t (just by virtue of the connection and joy it brings people) any less than it is about highlighting just how diametrically opposed politics is from appealing to young people. Cultural phenomena like ‘Brat’ or ‘Demure’ may come to symbolise the broader issue of how our engagement with digital content is often driven by momentary excitement rather than enduring substance, and we are left reminded that trends don’t really represent meaningful shifts in cultural dynamics; instead, we’re simply witnessing yet another batch of commodified experiences and images through our screens. Not to mention how we will consume / purchase from companies who market their products pertaining to such trends. 

The only true sin in life is to become boring, and that’s just not an option. Brat this, Brat that – rat girl summer – or being demure; as long as it’s queer-coded and aesthetically palpable, and we can keep our intellectual wits about us as things get weirder — then, I’m kinda into it. Cig, anyone? 

 

Written by Holly Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

Transmission Towers releases ‘Everything (Gone Crooked) / Go Slow Heart (Beat Crooked)’

Presenting the first digital single, ‘Everything (Gone Crooked) / Go Slow Heart (Beat Crooked)’, from Crooked Man’s forthcoming, future-facing Transmission Towers remix album Crooked Transmissions on Luke Una’s É Soul Cultura label. Remoulding, re-energising and completely reworking tracks from Transmission Towers’ critically acclaimed debut LP, Transmission One, Crooked Man sets forth a whole new album’s worth of transcendental, tripped-out productions.

A key figure in electronic dance music’s history, Sheffield-born Crooked Man aka Richard Barratt released one of bleep techno’s defining records back in ‘89. Landing on Warp, it came under the alias Sweet Exorcist with the late great Richard H. Kirk. Since then, Barratt has put out a slew of exceptional productions under a variety of different monikers from Crooked Man and Parrot, to Earth Angel and Athletes of God. He has released on DFA, delivered countless remixes for Róisín Murphy and reimagined the likes of JIM and Joe Goddard. Every inch of that experience and expertise has been deployed on this Transmission Towers remix release.

‘Everything (Gone Crooked)’ takes the original and contorts it from a post-punk guitar trip into a cybertronic, new beat heater. A percussive state of hypnosis leads the charge, building the tension for a rumbling kick drum and buzzing synth-line to twist their talons into your mind. Eleanor Mante’s vocals take on a new vivacity. Afrofuturist, arresting and perfectly equipped to electrify any waning dancefloor into action.

Next, Crooked Man takes on the emotionally charged ‘Go Slow Heart’, morphing it from a celestial beacon of light into a Balearic, slo-mo, sci-fi tribal march. Tweaking out the synth melodies so they reverberate from ear to ear, Crooked Man’s kick thumps like a heartbeat, as the pads fall backwards into a sonic blackhole. Atop a thundering bassline and theremin-esque soundwaves, Eleanor’s vocal refrain is looped, echoed and imprinted into your consciousness – a cautionary mantra of reason, just as emotion is about to override logic.

Listen to ‘Everything (Gone Crooked) / Go Slow Heart (Beat Crooked)’ here

Press release courtesy of Only Good Stuff

Peacey releases ‘Playground’ featuring Rona Ray (Groove Assassin Remix)

Playground is an infectious and energetic track that has all the right ingredients, combining Peacey’s skills and Rona Ray’s powerful vocals is pure magic, drawing listeners in and keeping them moving. The layered backing vocals add a slick and skilful dimension to the track, making it a stand-out song in its genre. Groove Assassin now takes over for remix duty, and the energy of Playground hits new heights, taking the song to the dance floor and keeping the party going all night long.

Listen to ‘Peacey – Playground (feat. Rona Ray) and Groove Assassin’ here

Press release courtesy of Atjazz Record Company

‘Make The Olympics Sporty Again’ – an ode to the excellence of athleticism and the downside of viral “memability”

The Paris 2024 Opening Ceremony was quintessentially French. Le Papa Smurf’s blue hue created global controversy (equally ridiculous and also unsurprising) and the self-indulgence was palpable (we love to see it). The French committee offered up Revolution-style guillotined heads and metal bands while DJ and producer Barbara Butch (an LGBTQ+ icon) wore a silver headdress that looked like a halo while flanked by drag artists and dancers – we quite frankly vibed in this visual orgy.

However; after the conclusion of that Scorsese-length, in-situ, in-Seine-ity, we sighed a collective sigh — ‘how the f*ck are we going to sustain this sensory, over-stimulation, when the sports haven’t even commenced yet?’  

Sacré bleu!

We live in a society that ‘moves at the speed of culture’ and many of us were left wondering if the pressures of cultural relevance (and the French went to lengths to achieve this) are now prized more than the fortitude of what the Games represent for human athleticism. In this day and age — it seems no matter the event, it better prove meme-worthy for the masses in order to be marketed. Was the Olympics more a feat of ‘shitposting’ than it was of meritocracy in the elite athletics realm? Exhausting the cultural alley-ways and backends of social media platforms, you are probably more familiar with the achievements of a pole vaulting Parisian penis, Noah Lyles claiming Covid and last but not least, Hall of Shame, PhD breaker, who well and truly broke the internet; the street artist formerly known as ‘RayGun’, who made Olympics history by scoring a unanimous ‘0’ for her contentious and let’s face it, extremely silly performance. RayGun alone brought into question the very integrity of the Olympics Games, and what had always been revered as the pinnacle of human achievement seemed to teeter on the edge of becoming just another sideshow for social media consumption.

SA Mens Relay Team sourced via Akani Simbine Instagram

Image sourced via Akani Simbine Instagram

Has the focus on viral moments, whether intentional or not, cast a shadow over the true spirit of the Olympics, where the pursuit of excellence, discipline and sportsmanship should be paramount? As we collectively scroll through highlights and lowlights, have we traded the values of meritocracy and genuine athletic achievement for the fleeting amusement of a meme-able moment?

What of Tatjana Smith – the aquatic artist formerly known as Schoenmaker – becoming the most decorated South African Olympian of all time; a breast-stroking GOAT, who swims off into a Corona-sponsored sunset with two Olympic golds, two silvers and a World Record in her achievements’ column? How about Letsile Tebogo – Botswanian who – as the tweet suggests – created so much wind with his 200m blitz that it gave the favoured Noah Lyles instant Corona (the bat one, not the lime one) and a VIP seat in a wheelchair. Tebogo brought home the first-ever gold medal for our neighbouring country – that’s pretty massive. 

Also, AKANI FINALLY HAS A MEDAL. Simbine with the personality of Disney’s Simba, ran his anchor leg of his team’s 4 x 100m relay sub 9 SECONDS. 8.78 seconds to be exact. Then, there’s Bayanda Walaza – the matric pupil and teammate of Akani- who is currently being welcomed back at his high school hall in Tshwane, as he prepares to write a Trigonometry preliminary examination. Wild, completely wild. 

I was fortunate enough to attend both swimming and athletics fixtures at the Olympics, and the experience was unlike any other major football or rugby fanboy event. The crowd becomes a collective megaphone willing on individual world record breaking performances. The decibels doubled, noticeably, when a Frenchman or woman dons the lycra and circumnavigates the arena. The five rainbow rings symbolising human excellence across speed, strength, stamina, and distance were on display, and yet somehow our greatest innovation has algorithmically stunted our physical progression. Maybe it just feels this way, as those of us who are not competing at the highest levels of sport have more access than ever to extract these moments, as we digest them into the cultural zeitgeist in strange and hilarious ways. Maybe there’s enough room in the cultural milieu for memes AND moments of incomprehensible endurance? If the Olympics showed us one thing, it’s that there better be enough room — because our capacity for collective piss-taking shows absolutely no signs of slowing down. We call it ‘doom-scrolling’ for a reason. 

Image by Xavier Praillet via Unsplash

Image by Bo Zhang via Unsplash

In the world of creativity, advertising is our commercial-art imitating life. It becomes more ineffective each year, as the Cannes Festival of Creativity in 2022 was already reporting that 85% of ads do not work. Also, annually, a new brand will inevitably succumb to being cancelled for, ironically, being tone deaf with its virtue-signalling tactics. We’ve seen billions of dollars wiped off multinational corporations’ bottom lines, and share prices bottoming out because a CMO or agency somewhere, failed to read the room.

Nike, however, whether you pronounce it like ‘Mike’ or ‘Ny-key’ (this is the right way bt dubs) won the communications Olympics by going all-in on victory – the Latin meaning of Nike (by the way) with messages like: ‘Winning isn’t for everyone’, ‘If you don’t want to win, you’ve already lost’, and ‘There’s one souvenir I want from Paris’, were some of the defiant taglines espoused by the sporting behemoth ingeniously cut through category clutter.  

As a father of three small children, wanting to steer my progeny to greatness in their lives and to stand out from the billions of others, it’s hard to find real mentors in our generation. Locally and globally, dads are still absent or non-existent in large droves, our politicians are populist, and/or captured and celebs rarely have any scruples to actually be leaders. In a complex cultural landscape, sports have come to matter more than ever before; just think of what the Boks have done for South Africa. 

Sports stories are the most inspiring. Athletes are our North Star for success and personification of the human spirit. This is why Netflix, Apple, Disney and Showmax are investing billions of dollars in this narrative genre. When AI consumes all of our creative jobs, live sports will always be recession proof — hopefully. Perhaps we’ll reset to factory settings and return to mortal combat in venues such as the Colosseum, people will watch gladiators sever heads (not as art direction, but for real) and other limbs. Until then, we’re going to make the most of the digital age, in which one athlete’s misfortune might be momentary comedic relief.  

Yes, the French did it differently, but merci for magnifying human merits and earthling excellence from the Olympics to the upcoming Paralympics. Your river may be literally shitty, but your sporting showpiece was sensational. It’s not everything but it’s one of the greatest achievements and feelings in the world to WIN!

Written by Mike Sharman

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

EVOLVE SPOTLIGHTS THE CREATIVE COMMUNITY WITH THEIR ‘CULTURE IS YOURS’ CAMPAIGN FEATURING G-STAR RAW®

When director and photographer Ryan Hing was approached by G-Star RAW® to showcase their latest collection and celebrate his individual achievements as a South African, multidisciplinary creative — Ryan decided to broaden the accolade, and centre some of the contemporaries within his community that have inspired him over the course of his decade long career. We talk about community endlessly and ceaselessly within the creative industries, always acknowledging its vitality in advancing us forward and yet, it can be difficult to execute when so much of how we interact in the world is predicated on the pursuit of the individual. Challenging these notions, of the power of ‘many’ over the power of ‘one’, paved the foundation for Ryan and his agency, EVOLVE, as they initiated a new vision for G-Star’s latest collection. Thus, ‘Culture IS Yours’ was born; a call to action that seeks to redefine individual expression within the collective. 

This instinctive response forms the central tenet of Ryan’s approach as a creative, which has culminated in the development of EVOLVE, his creative agency and production company. Whenever Ryan speaks, as in our conversation, he refers to his team above all else and it’s clear that Ryan’s acknowledgement of his own success is interdependent on the circle around him, and the quality of skills and commitment behind the EVOLVE family. The proverbial ‘culture’ is a living, evolving entity, only created by the hands and minds that are committed to its continual existence. We can never be separate from the culture in which we reside — it defines us, as we shape its expression in turn. Each of us has a role in preserving, defining and transforming the cultural expression of today, drawn from those who came before us, in order to inspire those who will come after us. In this way, EVOLVE’s manifesto is totally clarified; keep changing, keep growing, and do it in harmony with those around you. This campaign, then, is a visual archive of this deeply powerful sentiment. 

This campaign within a campaign – as it were —is a fitting alignment for G-Star RAW; a brand that has consistently maintained its counter-cultural, outer-edge appeal even as it has grown to be a wildly successful global brand. G-Star RAW has always been at the forefront of denim innovation, renowned for its pioneering use of raw, untreated denim and its commitment to centering originality in all it expresses. Who better to support Ryan’s endeavour to push the boundaries of the personality-led campaigns currently sweeping the global fashion industry? Ryan shares how it feels being in collaboration with such an indomitable brand, “I’m really, really grateful to work with G-Star – it’s huge. My dad is an art director in the advertising industry and when I was younger, I always asked him how he actually ‘got’ clients. It was such a mystery to me. He’s always told me that it’s just about hustling, it’s about being loud and being clear in your vision. This opportunity has made me feel very seen, and by a brand that I respect so much and I have so much synergy with – after ten years, this feels like a very special moment, especially to be trusted in this way to create work like this.”

G-Star RAW x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Andile Dlamini

G-Star RAW x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Ryan Hing

For the campaign, shot by Ryan at EVOLVE’s photographic studio with his team on hand, the campaign was a personal homage to some creatives that have enriched Ryan’s career. For his cast of contemporaries, Ryan selected dancer, DJ and physiotherapist Chelsea-Sloan Samuels, founder and creative director of BROKE, Andile Dlamini, DJ and model Mila Rose and filmmaker and fashion stylist Lethabo Motlatle“the people we worked with for this project all come from different age groups and backgrounds, and they’re each a part of different industries,” Ryan notes, and that “being able to work with people I’ve met along the way, over the last ten years of my career, was really full circle – especially seeing how each of them brought in their own personal style and story.”

Classically G-Star, the star of the show from a stylistic perspective was certainly the denim — perfectly on display and styled, to showcase the versatility of G-Star’s offering through Ryan’s lens as punctuated through the personal energy of each creative. From rugged, raw denim to more refined, tailored pieces, Ryan’s approach centred on minimalism, with a restrained use of props, saying that, “the art direction that my team and I executed was very simple. We just planned it down to the finest detail — I plan and plan, which I think is part of my perfectionism – so that on the day, everything is ready. I am very drawn to minimalism, and as a creative, I take note of details like lines and shapes, drawing on those when I’m thinking about how to compose an image.” This approach is often the hardest to master, as with minimalism – there is nowhere to hide. The details have to be exceptional and that they truly were. “Minimalism seems simplistic on the surface,” Ryan comments, “but there is actually a depth of complexity underneath what appears to be such a ‘clean’ arrangement of elements. I wanted there to be a tension between the simplicity and complexity, and drawing on the attention to detail that is so much part of the G-Star design approach.” With references spanning nautical sailors, y2k nostalgia and sporting sensibilities, ‘Culture IS Yours’ is a distinct expression of finding a cohesive through-line offered up by the nuanced cultural imprints that define the modern era. This allowed Ryan and the EVOLVE team to engender their view that community, in all its varying forms — is the culture itself, and that feeling a part of it is through one’s own ownership of their talent, vision and dedication. 

G-Star RAW x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Chelsea-Sloane Samuels

G-Star RAW x Evolve “Culture IS Yours” featuring Mila Rose

On the words of wisdom that Ryan abides by in both conceptualising this campaign and traversing the landscape of creative expression, Ryan emphasises that “things don’t happen overnight. I wanted to remind all creatives, and especially the next generation, that the culture is yours. It really is – you just have to give it time and commitment towards your art or your pursuits. Live, breathe, sleep and eat your path. Be calm and focused.” 

The path is clearly set out by EVOLVE; it’s all yours for the taking. With the spirit of community in front of mind, Ryan and his team remind us to be guided by one thing; Be Bold, Be You — Be Bold. Yes, please. 

 

Written by Holly Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

ART THEMES || THEME ONE: HIBERNATION

The materia born from artistic landscapes, both present and past, is one of our greatest sources of admiration. ART THEMES is our irreverent tribute to the messaging that lies within these bodies of work. This bi-monthly digital review, curated according to thematic concepts, uses common interests and themes to collate the work of great artists – as we make unusual and intriguing connections across ambiguous and clarified perspectives, literal and figurative alike. 

Enter August’s theme: Hibernation. The sentiment of hibernation is aptly woven together by poet Chen Chen, who gives his take on the notion: “Yes– give yourself the time. To mull things over. Ruminate. To chew, yes. To hibernate, let things sit fallow. To follow intuitions. To study. To read, reread. To experiment wildly, experiment carefully. To care. To care about your mind, heart, belly and your every toe. To care about and for your language. To language your care.”

Each winter seems to have the profound ability to cause a ripple of introspection, to retreat into oneself, to take stock. It is both a physiological response to the change in natural surroundings, but also an emotional and psychological reaction. We are all affected instinctually, saving resources in various silos of our lives. Employing a hibernation tactic, mindset or practice feels unavoidable but is also nothing to deter from – each season has its glory. These artists represent some sort of coming inside, shielding, recovering, going within, cocooning towards what we hope is the warmth we seek, towards the betterment of self through hibernation.

Anico Mostert, “Thinking not Sleeping”, 2023, acrylic on paper.

Anico Mostert’s painting “Thinking not Sleeping” (above) shows the colder, perhaps darker side of hibernation. She is a multidisciplinary artist and printmaker, whose work speaks to the quiet moments of the everyday. Each artwork’s name occurs as Mostert imagines what it would say if it could speak. Not all bedtimes are equal and not all rest comes through being alone, or in a room of one’s own either. Mostert has the ability to evoke the insular, isolated feeling of both overthinking and bouts of insomnia. Strokes of blue and that ever-so-stretched corner of one’s room reflects on the troubles in one’s mind.

Visual activist Zanele Muholi’s large-scale bronze sculpture, “Bambatha I” (below), depicts a monstrous engulfment of the artist’s body, or rather their biologically determined ‘box’ – a term they use to refer to the space encompassing their breasts and vagina. In this queer avatar, Muholi’s figure appears trapped by a strange, amorphous mass around them – a reference to the artist’s struggle with gender dysphoria. The piece is a powerful image of the anxiety and depression which result from incongruence with one’s own body. Muholi’s three-dimensional expansion into bronze honours and commemorates Black women and LGBTQI+ individuals’ contributions to art, politics, medical sciences and culture. This ‘hibernation’ is not always voluntary, nor is the facing of one’s identity a comfortable task.

This artwork is on exhibition with Southern Guild where they are participating at Frieze Sculpture 2024 Edition, which takes place in The Regent’s Park (9-13 October).

Zanele Muholi, “Bambatha 1”, 2023, Bronze. Photographed by Hayden Phipps & Southern Guild.

For Shayna Arvan, a Cape Town-based illustrator and painter, her work is tender, suggesting the softening edges of life with her pencil details, pinks and gestures of romance. Her painting “Grotto” (2024) literally depicts a potential space for hibernation, a cave, the mystery of what waits inside and what will emerge. She shares, “The process of painting this work took many hours, dimples and cracks in the rock, each blade of grass, hints of flowers, wisps of clouds– with this comes hours of unavoidable introspection and solitude.”

Shayna Arvan, “Grotto”, 2024, Oil paint on board (210 x 297mm).

The 2024 FNB Art Prize winner has recently been announced: Gresham Tapiwa Nyaude. About him, the jury shared, “There is a compelling balance between hope and political resistance in Gresham’s work. His adept use of satire allows him to navigate and illuminate complex, often contentious, topics with a nuanced approach that invites viewers to engage critically.” This control over brushwork not only showcases his technical skills but also enhances the expressive power of his work. The way he approaches the canvas with paint continues the reflective, conscious, and delicate legacies that the medium has offered. Defying characterisation, his renders capture a generation’s absurdly relentless drive to attain and maintain dignity and a quality of life that sometimes appears beyond reach. Gresham is a prime example of an artist exploring the chaos of identity and how only through this chaos can there be a new discovery, a new restfulness – a hibernation after the storm.

Gresham Tapiwa Nyaude, “MM”, 2024, Oil on canvas.

Through the medium of felt, Michaela Younge’s work is light-hearted, absurd, whimsical and intimate. She spends countless hours patiently working with loose fibres to piece together intricate narratives, with characters, animals, storylines and embedded theatrics of their own. About Michaela’s latest exhibition “A Tight Squeeze”, at Smac Gallery, Lucienne Bestell shares a note that nods to August’s theme “All things must be left behind – childhood pets, adolescent fancies, claims to glamour, uninvited serenades. Among the thoughts that recur to Younge as she works is a repeated phrase: ‘The moment was gone because he’d waited too long.’ Depicted in this artwork, there is a similar notion of time passing however the seemingly simple act of taking a bath is so much more than just time alone, it’s time carved out for care.

Michaela Younge, “Soap Studs”, 2022, felt.

Lexi Hide is a photographer who, through her cinematic and theatrically positioned subjects, charms the viewer with a sense of gentle naivety in her visual storytelling. With the Cape Creative Collective, she shared that her work has a significant eco-feminist ideology, celebrating the female spirit in the natural world. The world Lexi has created in her photograph “Poison Ivy” showcases a sense of tending to wounds, not just those of our own but those of others as an act of love. There is a poetry in Lexi’s photographs, not only in the subject matter but the fact that her work is never random, but constructed over time with effort and strategy to execute. Lexi’s currently exploring themes of girlhood and memory and describes her work as ‘reality mimicking fiction’, in response to her teenage tendency to model her life after adolescent films such as Palo Alto.

This artwork is part of Lexi Hide’s show “Sugar for the Pill” exhibited with Everard Read as part of their Cubicle Series currently on show in Cape Town. Cubicle Series is an ongoing platform which gives artists scope to exhibit smaller bodies of work and site specific installations for a two week period.

Lexi Hide, “Poison Ivy” 2023, Photographic print on paper (33 x 41 cm).

While these artworks vary greatly in subject matter and medium, there exists an underlying commonality which we feel can be deeply reflected on in this climate – with the hopes that August brings contemplation through an observation of the world around you and within you (however complex, dark, cold or chaotic it might be) working towards the betterment of both internal and external worlds.

Written by: Grace Crooks

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

‘GRIN AND BEAR IT’ – our chat with South Africa’s Godfather of Ice, Lindo of GSM Custom Grillz

Decorative dental wear goes back a long way. From the Egyptians to the ancient Etruscans – a people who inhabited Italy some 2500 years ago — adorning teeth in gold and precious metals appear to have always been a marker of culture, status and wealth. Curled top lips, bare teeth – when Nelly said, “rob the jewellery store and tell ’em make me a grill,” the art of grills was sanctified in modern lore. There are few things any fucking cooler — and as a white girl writing this, the culture of grills crystalise, to me, the originality and depth encoded within the stylistic sensibilities of Black culture. 

Gold and teeth are biocompatible; with gold as mineral being non-reactive in our mouths, making it a once safe choice for dental restorations in which corrosion and allergic reactions could be avoided. Its durability and malleability also made it ideal for long-lasting fillings, crowns, and bridges that could be precisely shaped to fit the contours of a tooth. After all, no two teeth have and will ever be alike; your teeth are akin to your fingerprints, and the shape inside your mouth is unequivocally yours. An original body part deserves an original accessory. In the 20th century, Black folks in the United States began practising the generally mundane task of filling teeth with gold as a form of self expression — with exposed gold teeth used as a sartorial impulse, signalling social and financial mobility, in a societal context that continued (and continues) to marginalise their experience, safety and dignity. 

By the time the 1980s rolled around, and hip hop was being born into the culture, rapper Slick Rick released his debut album with a smile dripping in diamonds and gold — and the iconic Eddie Plein became New York’s best kept secret for his mastery over the craft of dental adornment. Credited with inventing the technique of creating pull out crowns that could be inserted and taken off, as easily as a chain or a ring, Plein’s ‘mouths full of gold’ are embedded in the thread of sartorial consciousness that permeates from hip hop and American Black culture, influencing almost everything it touches. Today, in South Africa’s enigmatic hip hop scene, Lindo’s GSM Custom Grillz is widely recognised as the embodiment of SA’s alloyed grins — a man of discretion, with a roster of South Africa’s artistic royalty on his logbook, Lindo’s work is as technically finesse as they are majestic. In our conversation, I ask Lindo about being considered an artist – to which he muses, “it took a lot of convincing from my friends and everyone around me to consider myself an artist – I’d never really thought of it like that.”

Lindo was a dental student when his homie, a rap aficionado, urged him to consider grills as subject matter. As he explains, “I got into grillz through dental college, with the encouragement of a friend. It was at a time when grills were mostly happening overseas – especially in America. While I was at dental college, local rappers began rocking grills and I realised that I had the know-how, as a dental student, to work with teeth. I made my own one first, and people started asking where I got it – and I’m like, I made it! It snowballed from there, with people asking me to make grills for them. It started with friends, then friend’s friends – so I started charging for my work and I quickly became the ‘grills guy’ on campus. I haven’t looked back from there.”

 

GSM Custom Grill for @_d.i.ego via GSM Custom Grill’s IG

GSM Custom Grill for Uncle Waffles, featuring nearly 700 small VS diamonds, totalling 6.97 carats, all set in solid 14-carat white gold

“I spent a lot of time at dental labs refining my skill and I think I always approached working with teeth from a different view — I had an instinct for it,” Lindo shares and that, “gold teeth go way back, and coming from a dental background — I’ve always had a problem with gold teeth! Having a permanent gold cap is not good for your gums, and teeth are incredibly precious. Grills are amazing because they’re not permanent, they’re a piece of jewellery, so you get to experience the shine and accessorising without compromising your dental health.”

Lindo’s GSM Custom Grillz is a one stop shop for grills, and it’s a very intimate, one on one experience; with Lindo being both a jewellery designer and a genuine dental practitioner. With a kind of hippocratic ethic that dates back to his days spent in dental labs, Lindo is about ensuring the grills experience is understood for its commitment and the simple fact that it engages one of the most complex parts of our body and the seat of our speech; the mouth. As Lindo explains, “I always tell people that you have to learn to wear grills – it’s like learning to drive a car. Grills can be very bulky and difficult to wear — and I prioritise comfort — I always encourage my clients to go for something very subtle and small for their first set, so they can learn how to wear it in their mouth and get used to speaking with them in. Of course, we want people to be extra, but you really have to learn to have it in your mouth before you go back – otherwise you might be put off by the experience. Rapper Offset is a great example of this – when he blew up, he went straight for ice, and he couldn’t speak properly!” 

“Grills have to be approached correctly and as a process with someone who can guide you through the different stages of learning how to wear them,” Lindo emphasises, and that he sees his role with GSM Custom Grillz as a vessel to instil the correct path to exploring the possibilities for tooth adornment. Lindo’s role to his clients is a guide and an artist, “everyday I’m just trying to improve my skills, no matter what case lands on my desk, and my direction now is very much creating grills as an artform. It’s not just about getting ‘gold teeth’, and I don’t make them just for the sake of it – there’s always a story behind each pair, and I work closely with my clients to find out what they want to express with their grills,” and in terms of his process, “my initial work with a client is to get an understanding for their vibe and their intentions. — it’s a uniquely custom process because no set of teeth are alike and as a result, no grills can be alike. They have to be functional as much as they need to look good.”

GSM Custom Grill

GSM Custom Grill for @mikhale_jones via GSM Custom Grill’s IG

I ask Lindo what grills mean to him, to which he notes that their vital place in for young people, and that “grills are a form of expression, and I think they’re as powerful as tattoos in terms of allowing people to show who they are, what they stand for – especially for creatives and artists. It’s an incredible time for the whole culture. We have doctors and lawyers as clients, too! So grills are becoming mainstream – and I love that. I really love seeing it become understood as a form of jewellery. I love the direction grills are taking in South Africa, I think it’s a sign of a mainstream culture becoming open-minded.”

As for what’s next for SA’s Godfather of Grillz, Lindo and GSM are set to expand their offering, I’m currently working on a broader jewellery collection to life which will be part of the GSM offering. It’s been at the back of my mind for a long time, and that’s going to be the next chapter — I want the grills to work alongside a collection that brings something to the culture of things that I like and have been inspired by.” Lindo is an artist at the intersection of fashion and culture, and we can’t wait to witness the extension of his influence, and the continued celebration of grinning  and bearing — as RZA rapped in Rollin’ Platinum grill, reinforced solid steel. Superstar engine, force of an eighteen wheel.”

 

Written by: Holly Beaton

For more news, visit the Connect Everything Collective homepage www.ceconline.co.za

SOUTH AFRICAN ARTIST STRONZA RELEASES HER NEW VIDEO FOR LATEST SINGLE “BURNING UP” – A SYNTHPOP ODE TO UNREQUITED CRUSHES

South African artist STRONZA releases her new single “Burning Up”, the synthpop single that we didn’t know we needed which serves as an ode to the unrequited crush (we’ve all been there, babes)  

This single follows STRONZA’s synthpop celebration of early 2000’s indie influences, referencing Bat For Lashes, Desire and Caroline Polachek as references. The video is directed by South African filmmaker Royd Ringdahl, best known for his celebrated work for Internet Girl’s music videos (amongst others).  

The video explores a friendly camping trip gone awry amidst romantic tensions and miscommunications. With hints of a lesbian Brokeback Mountain, STRONZA and her friends pine after their unavailable love interest. The battle for her affections takes form in a surreal fencing sequence which reveals that all is not what it seems and everyone is doomed for disappointment in the end – sounds about right, when does unrequited love ever end well?  

Hailing from Johannesburg, STRONZA aka Kelly Fulton’s sexy, dark, pop music is geared for sex jam playlists, late night drives and bedroom dance-floors everywhere! 

Watch the full video below:

Stream “Burning Up” here

 

Starring: 

Kelly Fulton

Caris Jane 

Sam Hale 

Skyla Francis 

 

Director: Royd Ringhdal 

Producer: Raphael Blue 

Director of Photography: Ruan Kotze 

Focus Puller: Teega Michl 

Gaffer: Neil Bedeker

Color Grade: Daniel De Villiers 

Spark: Steven Beavers 

Art Director: Gala Winkler 

H&MU: Giovanna Seale 

VFX: Liana Colvin & Scumboy 

Creative Research/Production Assistant: Eden King 

Press release courtesy of STRONZA

PDSTRN and Sholz Narrate Nigerian Boss Life in “IDAN”

Rising Nigerian rap sensation PDSTRN releases his latest single “IDAN,” featuring renowned producer Sholz. Born Bennett Obeya, PDSTRN (pronounced Pedestrian) first caught the nation’s attention when he clinched the top spot in the fiercely competitive Hennessy Artistry VS Class 2022.

“IDAN,” a title that translates to “BOSS” in Yoruba, is a fusion of rap and Afrobeats that showcases PDSTRN at his most uncompromising and vibrant. The song vividly explores the Nigerian boss lifestyle, where business acumen and playful extravagance intertwine. With a runtime of over three minutes, PDSTRN dissects themes of lust, thrill, ego, and bravado. It paints a portrait of street credibility that’s alluring and cautionary.

What sets “IDAN” apart is its unapologetic bravado. PDSTRN’s world is rendered in high definition, each bar a brushstroke in a larger-than-life self-portrait. The track culminates in a haunting Yoruba ballad that loosely translates to “Money is the head over the problem, when it gets to the mouth of the problem…problem is satisfied.” This powerful ending, featuring guest vocalists, adds depth and cultural resonance to an already rich sonic experience.

The creation of “IDAN” was as gritty and real as the song itself. Born in a three-week creative crucible in an Ikoyi apartment, the track emerged amidst power outages, equipment failures, and noise complaints from disgruntled neighbours. “Every second and minute we spent working on this song and the project as a whole played a huge part in the composition,” PDSTRN reflects, “and I don’t think I would have added or taken anything away from the experience.”

Listen to “IDAN” here

Press release courtesy of Sheila Afari PR