ShowBusinessMan [Search results for beauty

  • 'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin

    The Maya are one of the oldest cultures in the world. This exhibition is all about the magnificent artistic forms of expression of the Maya. With a collection of around 300 works of art, including many Mexican national treasures, it displays the fundamental aspects of pre-Hispanic art: the body and the physique are central to this exhibition.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    The Maya present their vision of life using various materials and techniques from their daily life, splendid buildings and works of art. They describe their relationship with gods, their everyday existence, their literature, their astronomy, their music and their dances. What often dominates these works is an idealised notion of humanity, which the Maya retained not only in their conception of humans and the ideal of beauty, but also in the location of mankind in the cosmos.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Carved figure from Monument 114 [Credit: © INAH. Museo Regional de Chiapas, Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas]
    In 2016, Mexico and Germany are organising a joint year of culture. The highlights include this Mayan exhibition with showpieces that are among Mexico’s most precious cultural assets. On the Yucatán Peninsula in the Gulf of Mexico, between 500 B.C. and 1500 A.D., they created a variety of the highest artistic forms in art too, and with reliefs, busts and figures made of stone or clay, they were far ahead of all the contemporary cultures on their continent.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Figure of a young man [Credit: © INAH. Museo Regional de Antropología, Carlos Pellicer Cámara. Villahermosa, Tabasco]
    Religion characterised their culture. To appease the gods, they subjected themselves to various rites, to which the cult of the body was central, as is demonstrated by numerous artefacts.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Ballplayer [Credit: © INAH. Museo Nacional de Antropología, Mexiko]
    To achieve their ideal of beauty, they used the body as a “canvas”. They altered their physical appearance in many ways. This ranged from everyday methods such as hairstyles and skin colour to tooth jewellery, scars, tattoos and artistic modification of the body shape, which changed the appearance for life and stood as a visible expression of cultural identity and social belonging.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Incense burner [Credit: © INAH. Museo Regional de Antropología. Palacio Cantón, Mérida, Yucatán]
    Clothing indicated the social status of a person. The majority of the population dressed simply: women wore a “huipil”, a kind of tunic, and men wore a loincloth. The noble dressed elegantly with artistically worked clothing, accessories such as belts, necklaces, head coverings, and breast and head ornaments set with precious stones and feathers, as can be seen in quite a number of the artefacts.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Architectural element [Credit: © INAH. Museo Nacional de Antropología, Mexiko]
    The Maya regarded the differences between the human and animal kingdoms as part of their world view, which was based on complementary contrasts: life and death, humankind and nature, human and animal. They believed animals possessed supernatural powers and could speak and think. Those who reigned reinforced their power by attributing special abilities to themselves, which enabled them to leave their body at night and move freely in the form of incredible animal-like beings.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Figure of King [Credit: © INAH. Museo Regional de Antropología. Palacio Cantón, Mérida, Yucatán]
    The Maya worshipped many gods and shrines. They believed everything originating from unexplainable and fearsome natural phenomena as well as the material and spiritual were an expression of all existence. The representatives of these deities possessed human characteristics with imaginative components; the overlaying of various gods resulted in contrasting manifestations. Like nature itself, they were able to be male and female, young and old, animal and human, creative and destructive at the same time.

    'The Maya – Language of Beauty' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum, Berlin
    Woman's torso [Credit: © INAH. Museo Regional de Antropología, Palacio Cantón. Mérida, Yucatán]
    The enigmatic writings of the Maya have recently been decrypted, the ruling dynasties are known, number systems and calendar calculations have been investigated, and yet the Mayan Indians, of which eight million remain today, are still shrouded in mystery.

    The exhibition will run until 7 August 2016.

    Source: Martin-Gropius-Bau [July 12, 2016]

  • Emma Watson Is Stunning In "Natural Beauty" By James Houston Trailer

    Emma Watson Is Stunning In "Natural Beauty" By James Houston Trailer

    Photographer James Houston presents "Natural Beauty" a photography book and exhibition series, the stunningly beautiful Emma Watson was the obvious star of the above web film/trailer for the event.

    Celebrity Portraits for Environmental Awareness in Collaboration with Global Green USA and MILK Studios. Renowned New York based photographer and activist James Houston announces his latest project, NATURAL BEAUTY, a stunning photographic book and event series featuring some of the world's most prominent celebrities and top models. In collaboration with MILK Studio, the NATURAL BEAUTY project will raise awareness for the environment and sustainable living with proceeds from book sales and supporting initiatives benefitting Global Green USA.

    The NATURAL BEAUTY book of portraits will be released in late spring of 2013 and will follow with an exhibition in New York City in April. The book includes 120 stunning images of some of the world's leading models and celebrities advocating with Houston for environmental awareness, including Emma Watson, Christy Turlington, Adrian Grenier, Brooke Shields, Arizona Muse, Elle Macpherson and many more. Houston looks towards the beauty of nature as the inspiration for this body of work, incorporating natural elements into many of the images.

    Launching simultaneously with World Earth Week 2013, NATURAL BEAUTY will debut at MILK Gallery in New York the evening of April 23rd. The exhibition will be open to the public at MILK Gallery until May 5th, 2013 from 11:00am to 7:00pm Monday through Friday and 11:00am to 6:00pm Saturday and Sunday. The exhibit will also be promoted through a web series on 'The Making of the NATURAL BEAUTY Campaign,' which will include interviews with the high-profile figures involved in the NATURAL BEAUTY project and behind-the-scenes footage from the photo shoots. NATURAL BEAUTY the book will be available for sale on www.damianieditore.com, major online retailers like Amazon, and select stores in the U.S. for US$50.00 this spring.

  • Dove Encourages "True Beauty"

    Dove Encourages "True Beauty"

    Toronto creatives at Ogilvy raised the stakes for Dove who have been promoting "Real Beauty" for nearly a decade by going right to the source of those responsible for manipulating our perceptions of said beauty. That's right all you art directors, graphic designers and photo retouchers they are talking to you.

    They encouraged "True Beauty" with a digital activation that tricked retouchers into downloading a "Beautify Action" that, instead of making their pictures glow, made them return to normal again. Copy was added onto the photo that told them to embrace beauty the way it was. The idea is actually good, but lets be honest some retouching is par for the course.

    Credits:
    Agency: Ogilvy, Toronto
    Creative Director: Matt Hassell
    Creative Director: Ian MacKellar
    Art Director: Stefan D'Aversa
    Copywriter: Noah Feferman

  • Let will be mine for ever!

    Let will be mine for ever!
    Prints Neonode N2 maintain one of the most popular images of mobile phones: phone-fetish. Slogan of phones Neonode "Don't think. Feel" urges not to think, feel. The idea of the Swedish founders from Publicis Stockholm which embodies this plain motto, consists that it is not necessary to choose that friends and sellers cellular impose you phone.

    Relic phone

    It is necessary to choose that grasps your feelings. The new model of mobile phone Neonode N2 appears in a role of an amulet habitual for luxury phones, a talisman, an ornament...

    Telephone piercing

    Black beauty

    Call me

    Suntanned man

    On posters the agency has shown the black beauty who uses phone as an ornament, the girl who "has built in" a mobile phone in the hand. Perhaps, the most expressive print is series — a poster with the man which veins, similarly phone set, are stretched from Neonode to ear-phones.

    Related Posts: Beauty

  • Doubtful beauty

    Doubtful beauty
  • The Springtime of the Renaissance. Sculpture and the Arts in Florence 1400-60 at the Palazzo Strozzi

    The Springtime of the Renaissance. Sculpture and the Arts in Florence 1400-60 at the Palazzo Strozzi

    Palazzo Strozzi is presenting The Springtime of the Renaissance. Sculpture and the Arts in Florence, 1400-1460, an exhibition which sets out to illustrate the origin of what is still known today as the “miracle” of the Renaissance in Florence predominantly through masterpieces of sculpture, the form of figurative art in which it was first embodied. Following its debut in Florence, where it is on view from 23 March to 18 August 2013, the exhibition will be shown at the Musée du Louvre in Paris from 26 September 2013 to 6 January 2014.


    The lengthy preparation that has gone into the staging of the exhibition, which is curated by Beatrice Paolozzi Strozzi, director of the Museo Nazionale del Bargello, and Marc Bormand, curator-in-chief of the Département des Sculptures in the Louvre, has been accompanied by an extensive restoration campaign in both Italy and France with joint funding from the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi and the Louvre. Visitors to the exhibition are able to admire many Renaissance masterpieces, including works by Ghiberti, Donatello, Dello Delli, Filippo Lippi, Nanni di Bartolo, Agostino di Duccio, Michelozzo, Francesco di Valdambrino and Mino da Fiesole, in their newly-conserved splendour.

    One of the most significant projects undertaken for this exhibition is the conservation of Donatello’s imposing bronze statue depicting St Louis of Toulouse, 1425, from the Museo dell’Opera di Santa Croce where it has been throughout the restoration in a workshop especially set up in the museum and open to the public. The conservation was entrusted to Ludovica Nicolai, who was responsible for restoring Donatello’s David in the Bargello, with the assistance of the Opificio delle Pietre Dure’s scientific laboratory. The procedure was directed by Brunella Teodori, Soprintendenza Speciale PSAE e per il Polo Museale della città di Firenze.

    The exhibition will be presented in ten theme-based sections.

    Section I: The Legacy of the Fathers

    The exhibition opens with an intriguing overview of the rediscovery of the classical world with some splendid examples of the 13th and 14th century works by Nicola and Giovanni Pisano, Arnolfo, Giotto, Tino di Camaino and their successors, who also assimilated the expressive richness of the Gothic style, in particular from France.

    Section II: Florence 1401. The Dawn of the Renaissance

    The ‘new era’ coincided with the start of the new century and is represented in the exhibition by two panels depicting the Sacrifice of Isaac by Lorenzo Ghiberti and Filippo Brunelleschi from the Baptistry doors, and Brunelleschi’s model for the cathedral dome. At that time, the writings of the great Humanists, singing the praises of the Florentine Republic’s political achievements, its economic power and its social harmony, were spreading the legend of Florence as heir to the Roman Republic and as a model for other Italian city-states.

    Section III: Civic and Christian Romanitas

    Monumental public sculpture, through the masterpieces of Donatello, Ghiberti, Nanni di Banco and Michelozzo, created for the city’s major construction sites – the Cathedral, the Bell Tower, Orsanmichele – is the first and loftiest expression of the transformation under way and of the triumph of Florence and its civilisation.

    Section IV: “Spirits” Both Sacred and Profane; Section V: The Rebirth of the Condottieri

    The exhibition also sets out to illustrate the other themes of classical antiquity that were assimilated and transformed through sculpture in this new Renaissance language, which lent its voice not only to the city’s creative fervour but also to its spiritual and intellectual mood.

    Section VI: Sculpture in Paint

    Sculpture, and more especially statuary, was thus to have a tremendous impact on the painting of the leading artists of the time, men such as Masaccio, Paolo Uccello, Andrea del Castagno, Filippo Lippi and Piero della Francesca.

    Section VII: History “in Perspective”

    The search for a “rational” space and Brunelleschi’s discovery of perspective were implemented in the most advanced forms in the art of sculpture, in Donatello’s bas-reliefs – for instance in the predella of his St George from the Bargello or in his Herod’s Banquet from the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lille. This echoed well into the middle part of the century in the work of Desiderio da Settignano and Agostino di Duccio in an ongoing dialogue/debate with painting, including that of the classical era.

    Section VIII: The Spread of Beauty

    From the 1420s onwards, the new standards of sculpture perfected by the great masters and illustrated in the exhibition by several masterpieces such as Donatello’s Pazzi Madonna from Bode Museum in Berlin, the Kress Madonna from the National Gallery in Washington, and the Madonna from the Diocesan Museum of Fiesole attributed to Brunelleschi, spread out via a seemingly endless output of bas-reliefs for private devotion (in marble, stucco, polychrome terracotta and glazed or “Della Robbia” terracotta), which fostered the widespread propagation of a taste for the ‘new’ beauty in every level of society.

    Section IX: Beauty and Charity. Hospital, Orphanages and Confraternities

    At the same time, the most prestigious artistic commissions in Florence, which were almost always from public entities, began to focus on venues of solidarity and of prayer (churches, confraternities and hospitals), where sculpture once again played a primary role.

    Section X: From City to Palace. The New Patrons of the Arts

    Thus, arranged around the city’s absolute symbol – the wooden model of Brunelleschi’s Cupola for Santa Maria del Fiore – the exhibition offers a retrospective of themes and types of sculpture that were also to have a crucial impact on the development of the other figurative arts, in a direct debate with their classical predecessors, from the tombs of the Humanists, to the inspiration provided by ancient sarcophagi, to the rebirth of the equestrian monument and the carved portrait. The carved portrait, which became popular towards the middle of the century – in the marble busts of Mino da Fiesole, Desiderio da Settignano, Antonio Rossellino and Verrocchio – heralds the transition from the fiorentina libertas, represented by public patrons, to the private patronage that already bore the mark of the Medici family’s impending hegemony. This transition is effectively captured in the culmination at the end of the exhibition with the Wooden Model of Palazzo Strozzi, the most illustrious private residence of the Renaissance.

    Source: Palazzo Strozzi [March, 2013]

  • Problem?

    Problem?

    Gillette for Men

    Type of entry: Magazine
    Category: Cosmetics & Beauty
    Advertiser: P&G
    Product/Service: GILLETTE ODOR SHIELD ANTI-PERSPIRANT
    Agency: BBDO NEW YORK, USA
    Advertiser P&G
    Product GILLETTE ODOR SHIELD ANTI-PERSPIRANT
    Entrant BBDO NEW YORK, USA
    1 of 3 Campaign
    Category: Cosmetics & Beauty
    Title: DRY ARMPIT INFORMANT
    Advertiser/Client: P&G
    Product/Service: GILLETTE ODOR SHIELD ANTI-PERSPIRANT
    Entrant Company: BBDO NEW YORK, USA
    DM/Advertising Agency: BBDO NEW YORK, USA
  • CRUSH+LAB Presents Hookie: A Short Film for Schön!

    CRUSH+LAB Presents Hookie: A Short Film for Schön!

    CRUSH+LAB directing trio David Solomini, Alexander Kafi and Paula Tabalipa debut Hookie, a: 165 fashion film that pays homage to the sexy, no-nonsense rebellion of urban youth. Created for Schön!, Hookie upholds the publication’s long-standing traditions of creativity and originality.

    Wardrobe stylist Paula Tabalipa cultivates an air of nonchalant, untouchable beauty, with expertly curated selections from Alexander Wang, American Apparel, Top Shop, and Russ Karablin (COMME DES FUCKDOWN). The cinematography – overseen by Solomini – toys with light, mixing double-exposure with shots in vibrant color and black and white while the darkly ethereal soundtrack evokes a palpable sense of mystique. As a finishing touch, the model’s bold yet natural makeup serves as a reminder of the chemistry created when attitude and sensuality unite.

    Credits:
    Production Company: East Pleasant, and CRUSH+LAB
    Director: David Solomini
    Creative Director: Paula Tabalipa
    Executive Producers: Alexander Kafi, David Solomini
    Story: David Solomini, Alexander Kafi
    DoP: David Solomini
    Second Camera: Alexander Kafi
    Editor: Scott Butzer

    Model: Eyren Powell (Next Models LA)
    Wardrobe Stylist: Paula Tabalipa
    Makeup Artist: Garret Gervais (Opus Beauty)
    Hair Stylist: Mara Schiavetti (Cloutier Remix)
    Fashion: Alexander Wang, American Apparel, Top Shop, Russian Karablin (COMMES des FUCKDOWN)

    Musical Director: Alexander Kafi
    Music: “Searching” by Emika
    via: TrustCollective

  • Once Upon A Dream — Harrods of London Does Disney Princesses

    Once Upon A Dream — Harrods of London Does Disney Princesses

    Aurora from Sleeping Beauty by Elie Saab
    Disney’s most magical fairy-tale princesses have been re-imagined for a new generation, courtesy of fashion’s most romantic designers for the London department store Harrods. Harrods went with magical theme for its Christmas displays this year.

    Ariel from The Little Mermaid by Marchesa

    Belle from Beauty & The Beast by Valentino

    Cinderella by Versace

    Jasmine from Aladdin by Escada

    Mulan by Missoni

    Pocahontas by Roberto Cavalli

    Snow White by Oscar de la Renta

    Tiana from The Princess and the Frog by Ralph & Russo
    The gowns and accessories will be on display at Harrods in the Brompton Road windows, near Door 7.

    Credits:
    Photographer JASON ELL
    Senior Fashion Editor SARAH WEBB
    Hair SIMON IZZARD at Frank Agency
    Make-up and Nails ROZELLE PARRY at DWM
    using Shu Uemura and Essie
    Make-up Assistant GIA MILLS
    Models IVANE G at Profile, DOMINIQUE at Models 1,
    CAROLINE MEAD at IMG, AMBA REOHORN and
    CHARLOTTE P at Select, and JENNIFER at M+P Models
    Deputy Fashion Editor POPPY ROCK
    Photographer’s Assistants MICHAEL FURLONGER,
    LIZ FRANKS, SCOTT ARCHIBALD and ROBERT SELF
    Set Designer CHRISTOPHER WOODS at CLM

  • Meanwhile In India: A Bottle Of Appy Fizz Dances With Saif Ali Khan

    Meanwhile In India: A Bottle Of Appy Fizz Dances With Saif Ali Khan

    This beauty showed up in the Great-Ads inbox today, enjoy: A bottle Appy Fizz steps into Saif Ali Khan's dream in this entertaining new ad from India. As Saif and a group of young ladies dance to a sequence from the Bollywood track ‘Mein Khiladi, tu Anadi’. Midway through the dream when Saif realizes Appy Fizz is in his dream, he is miffed at him. Nonetheless, they continue on to enjoy the limelight together, jumping around doing funky dance moves to the peppy Bollywood track.

    Credits:
    Ad Agency: CreativeLand, Mumbai, India

  • Belair Health Club

    Belair Health Club
    Health club
    Category: Health & Beauty
    Agency: Stark
    Brand: Belair Health Club
    Advertising Agency: Stark Communications, Kerala, India
    Executive Creative Director: Shelton Pinheiro
    Creative Director: Ajith Gopinath
    Art Director: Nidhin Nandakumar
    Copywriter: Ajith Gopinath
    Illustrator: Nidhin Nandakumar
  • 2nd Annual StreetART Toronto Hoping For More Large Scale Projects

    2nd Annual StreetART Toronto Hoping For More Large Scale Projects

    Whether you look to the 80-foot-long mosaic at the Jack Layton Ferry Terminal, the giant white wording ‘You’ve Changed’ on the side of a building near Queen Street West and Ossington Avenue or the Greenwood Village Mural in the Beach, Lilie Zendel said the first year of StreetARToronto (StART) accomplished exactly what the program set out to do.

    “(StART) was created last year as part of the graffiti management program to support and celebrate permitted graffiti and street art,” said Zendel, manager of the City of Toronto program.

    StART is administered by the Public Realm Section of the Transportation Services Division at the City of Toronto and aims to develop, support, promote and increase awareness of street art and its role in adding beauty and character to neighbourhoods across Toronto.

    StART hosted a meeting at MOCCA in West Queen West on Jan. 21 to wrap up their inaugural year and share details of this year’s program.
    In 2012 StART partnered with 20 Toronto organizations to create 48 murals across the city, on walls, fences, underpasses, benches and pavement, particularly in areas that are targeted by graffiti.

    The creation of these murals assisted in cleaning up 1,300 pieces of ‘tagging’. More than 60 artists were involved in the projects.

    The challenges that program participants faced in the first year, Zendel said, was finding the funds to match StART grants, which is a criteria of the program, finding walls to use in the city, and managing complaints from building owners, artists, non-profits and Business Improvement Areas.

    The other big issue is maintaining the murals and preventing vandalism. “We certainly want to expand as much as we can in a geographic sense,” Zendel said. In 2013 StART will continue with its Partnership Program and its Diversion Program, which involves at-risk youth. Although StART aims to support artists it does not fund artists directly, but funds projects through organizations.
    Applications for murals to be painted this year are due by April 15 and they can be made through the StART website at http://www.toronto.ca/streetart/
    Applications have to be made by incorporated non-profit or charitable organizations and must operate in Toronto.

    “I personally would like to see some really large-scale projects this year,” Zendel said, adding the maximum funding for the partnership program has been increased to $30,000.

    The StART contribution cannot exceed 70 per cent of the cost of the mural and of that remaining 30 per cent the partner organization must raise at least 15 per cent in cash.

    By the spring of 2013 Zendel said they hope to launch a user-friendly map, which gives the details of the 585 murals and street art pieces found in Toronto. The map would include information about the artists and their inspiration for the work.

    Story by Erin Hatfield via: York Guardian To learn more about the City of Toronto program that aims to beautify communities across the city through street art and wall murals visit http://www.facebook.com/StreetARToronto

  • Ancient fighting single combat

    Ancient fighting single combat
    Sumo
    Ancient Japanese fighting arts riveted attention of enormous number of people worldwide still long since. The beauty, a height, an aesthetics, spirituality are peculiar to all ancient oriental combat sports. It they strikingly differ from other fighting arts, and it they are fine. Still for a long time Japanese together with force of a human body brought up also strength of mind, and to strength of mind paid special attention.

    Strength of mind allows the person to carry out the full control over itself. «Behind a side permitted» to operate the body, and even the opponent. A single combat vivid example which wins the strongest and the cleverest is sumo. It is very ancient version of traditional Japanese struggle. Historians cannot answer a question with reliability: whether there was a struggle sumo in Japan or this ancient single combat was is brought from other continent.

    The Japanese struggle sumo has no analogues in the world.

    Japan — the recognised centre sumo and one in own way the country in which there are competitions on professional sumo. In other world compete only in amateur sumo.

    The ritual component of the Japanese struggle sumo has long since remained. The scenario of preparation for a duel does not change centuries, and it helps to keep atmosphere of ancient Japanese struggle.

    Related Posts: Asia

  • Delta Faucet “HappiMess” Campaign Embraces Life’s Messy Moments

    Delta Faucet “HappiMess” Campaign Embraces Life’s Messy Moments

    The new Delta Faucet “HappiMess” campaign embraces life’s messy moments. When Delta innovations make getting clean just as beautiful as getting dirty, that’s “HappiMess.” Created by Leo Burnett Chicago, “HappiMess” is about living every day to its messiest. It allows people to see the beauty in the mess and remember that with messes come accomplishments, memories and fun. As a kid, there’s nothing better than digging around the backyard or making a mess in the kitchen getting covered with flour. Or as an adult, getting sweaty after a good run or muddy hike in the woods.

    Consumers will have the opportunity to share their own messy moments through a Delta #HappiMess social media sweepstakes, which was kicked off August 11. The user-generated content will be aggregated and showcased at delta.com/happimess. The contest will also be supported in a dedicated digital campaign, featuring banners that will play :15 second “HappiMess” vignettes lifted from the main TV spot.

    Credits
    Client: Delta Faucet
    Agency: Leo Burnett Chicago
    Campaign: HappiMess
    TV Spot: HappiMess Anthem
    Chief Creative Officer: Susan Credle
    Executive Creative Director: Charley Wickman
    VP Creative Director: Jo Shoesmith
    Associate Creative Director: Greg Nobles
    Associate Creative Director: Brooke Anderson
    Executive Producer: Tom Kerimidas
    Producer: Rena Dusenbury
    Production Company: Furlined
    Director: Yael Staav
    VFX/SPX: The Mill
    Editorial: White House Post
    Editor: David Cea
    Music Track – ‘We Belong’ performed by RAC featuring Katie Herzig
    Music Editorial – Yessian Music
    Director of Photography: Max Goldman

  • M&M's Ms. Brown Sets Up Red In "Devour" Spot

    M&M's Ms. Brown Sets Up Red In "Devour" Spot

    M&M's newest commercial gets a little dangerous as Ms. Brown introduces Red to a chocolate loving beauty, things quickly get ugly as the red headed woman wants to "Devour" our little funny loving red M&M as she drives off with him.

    Credits:
    Ad Agency: BBDO, New York.

    M&M's 2013 Super Bowl Ad Watch News:

    Today Mars Chocolate North America introduced M&M'S® Brand's new integrated marketing campaign called 'Better With M™,' which includes a new 30 second television commercial that will air during the first quarter of Super Bowl XLVII.

    "'Better With M' showcases how M&M'S irresistible chocolate makes moments more fun and delicious," said Roy Benin, Chief Consumer Officer, Mars Chocolate North America. "The 'Better With M' story is delivered through our colorful spokescandies, whose irresistible chocolate always makes moments even better – be they watching the Super Bowl, baking cookies, gathering the family together for a movie or even tailgating."
    In addition to the Super Bowl ad, which was created by BBDO New York, highlights of the year-long 'Better With M' campaign include multiple English and Spanish television, print and digital ads, in-store displays, consumer promotions and multiple social initiatives focused on Facebook and the hashtag, #betterwithmms. The first television ad from the new campaign – starring Ms. Brown – will being airing today.

    A cornerstone of the campaign is a new cause-related marketing effort designed to make 'America Better With M' by funding the construction of Habitat for Humanity homes across the nation. As part of the initiative, M&M'S is also encouraging, as well as incentivizing fans to help 'M-Prove America' by volunteering at Habitat job sites nationwide.
    "'Better With M' represents one of the largest marketing efforts in M&M'S history," added Benin. "We're confident our full range of communications and activities will excite consumers from the Super Bowl all the way through next winter's holiday season."
    via: PR Newswire (http://s.tt/1ypL6)

  • My Lovely Hollywood Star

    My Lovely Hollywood Star

    Show Business Star

    The Showbiz Goddess

    Adv agency «Fred & Farid» has created a new adv print for «Schweppes» within the limits of adv campaign "What did you expect?". The show business star is an embodiment of bright charisma and extravagant style.

    Isn't Your Business!

    The Hollywood Star

    The 41-year-old Hollywood Star Uma Thurman became the new heroine of the Schweppes. The author of this advertising the ingenious photographer David LaChapelle. He loves provocative poses and crazy brightness of photos. So, Uma Thurman appears in photos of the master as the magnificent star arguing about the Schweppes.

    The Schweppes News: Beauty & Genius

    Magnificent star

  • Croatia Fashion Week: Schwarzkopf Cro A Porter "Departure" Ad

    Croatia Fashion Week: Schwarzkopf Cro A Porter "Departure" Ad

    The most eminent fashion week in Croatia is coming this October, from the 1st to the 4th and to promote the week Cro A Porter released this tantalizing commercial entitled "Departure".


    Meet the new edition of the most important domestic fashion project Schwarzkopf Cro A Porter , which gathers most eminent list of local designers in their ranks, we present the SCHWARZKOPF CRO A PORTER DEPARTURE .
    Visitors used to uniquely fashion and Production excitement even this time will not be deprived of a superb experience !
    First time for this project , in collaboration with the national carrier, Croatia Airlines , those with the most happiness will enter the space previously inaccessible to the public.
    Runway will become a fashion , and an airplane hangar location of events, which will be strictly limited input and controlled.
    Inspired by travel , flight and erasing borders, organizers announce perhaps the most sophisticated edition of the project to date .
    " Indescribable , we are proud that we were chosen for Croatia Airlines partners in this project and provided the opportunity to jointly organize the event, which will undoubtedly push the envelope . This is a unique opportunity and honor. Precision , professionalism , safety and sophisticated design are characteristics which can be described and Croatia Airlines and Cro a Porter , both brand of great national importance . This is a great example of cooperation , which should work on all levels. " ( VD)
    Request for participation , accreditation certificate and confirmation of this will at times be conducted in the strictest controls as required by air transport . So hurry to your booking, because late check in is not possible!
    Glossy Mladen Saric is returning as the author photo announcement campaign DEPARTURE with a series of attractive photos taken in an airplane hangar and a beautiful Ana Laura Kapitanović in the lead role .
    Blonde Ana Laura , with her iconic beauty , dressed only in elements that are associated with travel : Hard case, bar codes to label luggage, foil wrapping luggage and covered transit cancels, embodies almost couture glamor trip !
    Make up : Tena Basic, Hair Salon ROSE
    Schwarzkopf Cro a Porter DEPARTURE are scheduled from 02 4/10/2014
    Talented Francis Matkovic for the first time in the role of photographers campaign for Schwarzkopf Cro A Porter , in a part of the project called AVANT GARDE , brings a series of photographs great atmosphere behind the scenes in the so-called . backstage. Sophisticated styling stillness and Mary Vijačkića and Antonia Solar ( Thalia ) as models , were recorded during Photo Days in Rovinj and , as such, and the winning design workshops EMOTIONS IN FASHION .
    Make-up : John Bilanđija for Illamasqua , hair Nikola Blažinčić
    Schwarzkopf Cro A Porter AVANT GARDE is scheduled for 01.10.2014 via: http://www.cro-a-porter.hr/

  • CyberPunk 2077 Trailer

    CyberPunk 2077 Trailer

    Platige Image’s game division, led by Director Tomek Bagiński, follows the success of their epic The Witcher 2 cinematic with a stunning game teaser for CD Projekt RED’s Cyberpunk 2077, a follow up to Mike Pondsmith’s successful Cyberpunk 2020 games of the 1990s. A showcase of Platige Image’s design and execution capabilities, the snapshot of a violent far-future dystopia is building enormous momentum for the game’s September release, earning a Silver CLIO and nearly six million hits on YouTube.

    That the cinematic scooped up a Silver CLIO is just the latest positive development for Warsaw based Platige Image, which recently opened a new branch in New York. “This CLIO is a testament to the skill set that defines Platige Image’s team, especially with such fierce competition from the best studios out there,” noted Platige Image NY Managing Director Julian Cdae. “We are revved up to serve the US market with similar projects built with our ingenuity, technical innovation and competitive rates covering all aspects of postproduction.”

    The cinematic, which Platige not only created but helped to write, is a compelling masterpiece of the slow reveal, set in a still-framed world that at first shows only what appears to be a woman’s face, then a bullet smashing to bits upon impact with her cheeks as police fire at her, followed by progressive frames that reveal her to be a killer cyborg surrounded by piles of dead bodies. News cameras hover over the violent scene, evoking the 24-hour channels of today in order to create a visceral connection between the viewer and the futuristic footage.

    In a departure from the formulaic videogame heroines so commonly cobbled together from banal component parts, Platige Image built their character from an actress captured on IR’s 72×18 megapixel camera system, a state-of-the-art setup that captures 1.27 gigapixels of 3D color data from 360 degrees in a single shot. So vivid were the images that only the actress’ scanned hair follicles had to be recreated from scratch.

    “Ever since we set out to create it, we knew the promo would work only if the female protagonist engendered a serious emotional response in the viewers and pushed the boundaries of the typical female videogame form,” notes Bagiński. “The ability to work with a real actress and Platige Image’s access to IR’s outstanding camera thoroughly transformed the film, as the scanning enabled us to capture this fleeting element of authenticity, to use the beauty of a real person.”

    Platige Image faced considerable challenges in creating the cinematic, setting to work on the project while CD Projekt RED was still in the game’s core development stages. As Platige Image sketched out dozens of ideas for the teaser, the game developer honed the concept, style, look and feel of the game itself. Each influenced the other in a highly productive creative seesaw. “Developing the game and promo simultaneously made the film a logistical and organizational challenge, but it also imbued it with much more spontaneity and creativity,” notes Bagiński.

    Credits:
    Director / Story: Tomek Bagiński
    CG Supervisor / Animation Director: Maciej Jackiewicz
    Executive Producers: MarcinKobylecki, Jarosław Sawko, Piotr Sikora
    Producer: Marta Staniszewska
    Concept Artists: Damian Bajowski, Jakub Jabłoński, Maciej Kuciara, Maciej Rębisz
    Additional Concept Artists: Jakub Bogaczyński, Adam Trędowski, Rafał WojtunikCD PROJEKT RED
    Concept Artist: Robert Adler

  • Sofia Vergara stars in New CoverGirl TV Spot

    New York-based Charlex and Grey, long-time collaborators for make-up and beauty work, have joined forces yet again to produce a gorgeous COVERGIRL spot starring actress Sofia Vergara of Modern Family fame. Sofia features beautiful CG and a unique overall look crafted by a Charlex team led by Producer Corey Budro and CD Will Kim.

    Credits:
    Client: COVERGIRL
    Spot Title: Sofia
    Agency: Grey
    CD: Mark Fina
    AD: Sandrine Amar
    Producer: Topher Lorette
    CG & FX: Charlex
    CD: Will Kim
    Senior Producer: Corey Budro
    Designer: Jun Lee
    Flame Retouch: Alan Neidorf, Burtis Scott, Marc Goldfine
    Flame Design: Kyle Derleth
    Lead Modeler: Alex Cheparev
    Additional Modeler: Hung Ma
    Lead Rigger: Steve Mann
    Additional Rigger: Andre Stuppert
    Lead Animator: Tony Tabtong
    Lead Lighter: James Fisher
    Additional Lighters: Frank Grecco, John Volny, Salar Saleh, Will Atkin
    Executive Producer: Meredith Machial
    Executive Creative Director: Alex Weil
    Production Company: a WHITELABEL product
    Director: Stephane Sednaoui
    Edit House: Union Editorial
    Editor: Laura Milstein

  • The myth of Cleopatra at Pinacotheque de Paris

    The myth of Cleopatra at Pinacotheque de Paris

    Cleopatra is without a doubt one of the most famed historical personalities in History’s pantheon, alongside Caesar, Charlemagne, Napoleon or De Gaulle.

    The myth of Cleopatra at Pinacotheque de Paris
    On the purely archaeological level, many pieces have been destroyed. On the historical level, the accounts and opinions are still widely debated. All that is left of her is the notion of an outstanding beauty, of fantastical love affairs with the two most powerful men in the world at that time, an image that was created during her lifetime and that took on an unimaginable scale as soon as she vanished, to be transformed into an ancestral myth, which never ceased to be taken up in all its forms and in all periods.

    No Queen throughout time has remained more famous in the world than Cleopatra even though we still do not know exactly what she looked like. She was shown as Egyptian, obviously, but also as Nubian or African and black, never as the Greek she was in fact. Imagined as irresistible, she is even shown as having been the most beautiful women in the world whose nose remains famous thanks to Pascal’s phrase: “Had Cleopatra’s nose been shorter, the face of the earth would have been changed.”

    The myth of Cleopatra at Pinacotheque de Paris
    The head of a statue depicting Cleopatra (69-30BC), the last active pharaoh of Ancient Egypt,
    is displayed as part of the exhibition entitled "the myth of Cleopatra" on April 9, 2014
    at the Pinacotheque in Paris [Credit: AFP/Eric Feferberg]
    She was a young Greek queen, 18 years old – descendant of Ptolemy the First, son of Lagos, general of Alexander the Great, who was endowed with Egypt at the Emperor’s death and who became Pharaoh in order to emphasize his power and to govern that province. After her death, she became one of the most enduring myths in the history of mankind.

    Throughout the centuries she became the most representative image of an Egypt that has in fact absolutely nothing to do with what was the Ancient Egypt of the Pharaohs, Memphis or Tutankhamen.

    From the genuine Cleopatra to all her most famous incarnations, from Sarah Bernhardt to Liz Taylor and Monica Bellucci, it's all an attempt to tell who that young queen was and how that woman’s myth took hold of her own life, so as to turn it into an authentic living legend, which none of us, old or young, wherever we are on this earth, can ignore.

    The myth of Cleopatra at Pinacotheque de Paris
    People look at the head of a statue depicting Julius Caesar (100-44BC) as they visit the exhibition entitled "the myth of Cleopatra" on April 9, 2014 at the
    Pinacotheque in Paris [Credit: AFP/Eric Feferberg]
    Everything is regarding Cleopatra. From the soap we use every day, stamped with her profile, or the glue, up to the merest fancy dress party where Cleopatra’s clothes and her famous headdress are seen and are often the most noticed.

    The supposed romance she entertained with Caesar then with Mark Anthony, she became all by herself, through her own death, one of the most classical images of her character.

    The exhibition was made possible, due to the complicity with Italian partner Arthemisia and with Mrs. Iole Siena and her team that enabled its first presentation in Rome. It is also due to the outstanding work carried out by the exhibition’s curator, Giovanni Gentili that this show has managed to take on this depth and this importance in the Pinacotheque de Paris.

    It also due to the presence of the foremost specialists of each of the experts fascinated by Cleopatra’s myth, that this exhibition is so all-encompassing.

    Source: Beyluxe [April 11, 2014]