New York Times best-selling author Emily Ratajkowski has established herself as a multifaceted talent: entrepreneur, writer, actress, model and activist.
Over the past few years, she has appeared on the covers of dozens of major fashion magazines and is currently the face of L’Oréal’s hair care line Kerastase as well as multiple other fashion companies. As an actress, she has appeared in films such as David Fincher’s 'Gone Girl' and Amy Schumer’s 'I Feel Pretty.' Next up, she will be seen in the Lena Dunham helmed Netflix comedy series 'Too Much.'
Her debut essay collection 'My Body' was released by Metropolitan Books on November 9, 2021, becoming an instant New York Times Best Seller. 'My Body' is a profoundly personal exploration of feminism, sexuality, and power, of men’s treatment of women and women’s rationalizations for accepting that treatment. The essays chronicle moments from Ratajkowski’s life while investigating the culture’s fetishization of girls and female beauty, its obsession with and contempt for women’s sexuality, the perverse dynamics of the fashion and film industries, and the gray area between consent and abuse. Her book deal was solidified by her New York Magazine essay – the magazine’s most read story of 2020 – entitled 'Buying Myself Back', which led to widespread discourse around copyright and image ownership. Following the essay, in April 2021, she created a conceptual art piece and NFT that was sold via Christie’s auction, continuing to raise questions about the nature of authorship while returning an appropriated Instagram post to its digitally native terrain.
In 2023, she hosted an original podcast titled 'High Low with EmRata,' which married highbrow and lowbrow topics, exploring whatever was on her mind from politics, philosophy and feminism, to sex, pop culture, and beyond; the podcast was somewhat of an extension of her social media presence and exemplified the way she has captivated an audience online, which sh
Photographer Richard Bush collaborates with Document creative director Sarah Richardson on this Burberry special for our Fall/Winter 2019 issue.
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Pop Art is one of the most popular visual art forms of the Modern Era. The movement started as a rebellion against the Abstract Expressionists, which were considered to be pretentious and over-intense. It was born in Britain in the mid 1950s and aims to emphasize the banal or kitschy elements of any given culture. This art derives its style from the visual activities and pleasures of people by using bright colors, and reecognizable flat imagery influenced by comic books and newspaper photographs.
“Pop Art looks out into the world. It doesn’t look like a painting of something, it looks like the thing itself.” – Roy Lichtenstein
Pop Art still stands as inspiration for artists today. Whether we’re talking about art, graphic design, web design , fashion, photography or other creative fields . Unlike other art forms, pop art is always current, because the popular culture is always changing, and since it’s based on modern popular culture and the mass media, pop art keeps up with the society. Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein’s works have inspired many contemporary artworks.
Pop Art Today
The Saatchi Online offers a diverse and unique collection of pop art prints by talented emerging artists.
Pure Evil from the United Kingdom, explores the darker side of the wreckage of Utopian dreams and the myth of the Apocalypse, a belief in the life-changing event that brings history with all its conflicts to an end. His’nightmare’ is a kind of ‘copy village’ celebrating the dark side of celebrity worship.
Styles may change, but what he brings is more than style – it’s art. In the high fashion hair game for more than 30 years, Jurnjack has had his hands on all the great manes that have graced the pages of the world’s most well-known fashion magazines the pages of the world’s most well-known fashion magazines.
Born in Marseille in the South of France, Jurnjack landed his first styling opportunity – with French Elle no less, which ignited a passion to learn, and launched an extensive career. Jurnjack relocated to a tiny basement flat in Paris and surrounded himself with magazine clippings and plastic heads. (A striking visual, no?). The result of all this private work was a vision and style that was uniquely his own.
Talent like this is not for 2D alone. Designers have put their runway models’ heads in Jurnjack’s hands. The freedom of working for such stunning talent gave Jurnjack the platform for some of his most iconic and memorable looks: from hair styled into bird cages, to abstract expressionism for McQueen’s show It’s a Jungle Out There , to the elaborate- minimalism of Japanese Geisha hair for Givenchy’s Eclect Dissect. These looks and more for Prêt-à-Porter and Haute Couture lines have been broadcast around the world during Fashion Week in Paris, Milan, New York, Tokyo, London, Sao Paulo and Berlin. His work has been internationally recognized, nominated and awarded many prizes. His work has been exhibited in the Carrousel de Louvre for the International Festival of Fashion.
And now? Talent like this is no longer for the elite alone. Three decades of experience at the top of his profession have given Jurnjack the desire to share his knowledge and expertise with a wider audience. From the very start, he’s had a passion for education & products – from bottle design to styling innovations to tutorials – and as his career has proven, when Jurnj