Belkacem | Fontaine | C’est normal

today, i really just need this song. it’s a gloomy passage that’s livened by the pleasure of aresky belkacem and brigitte fontaine’s incredible collaboration. their song c’est normal stands in a class of its own, and, since my earliest memories, has been at my side. je ne connais pas cet homme is an achievement in songwriting, pacing, and a testament to all avant-garde album structure.

it is rue barbette, saturday maybe, and i can see maman spraying a cleaning solution to wipe our parquet down. the name has long since escaped me and i hold the smell tightly against my chest – hoping that it remains mine to keep always. when she is done she’ll also use it to wipe our black lacquered china table with the ivory relief safely protected under a thick glass pane. the apartment is entranced by fontaine and belkacem, and for a few brief moments we both sing along to the burning building leading them to their impending/inevitable/obvious peril. it is death that’s found at the bottom of the rubble. the courtyard in my building is cobblestone. mom has painted her new wall pink. i use papier calque to trace my favorite cassette covers rented from the video store. we do this for years i think, then we move. far away. and now we are here. i am happy that is the case. by lsd

bruno dayan and the elephant paname

if you happen to visit paris soon, drop by elephant paname, an old napoleon III mansion left abandoned for years. it was recently renovated and turned into a 500 sqm multidisciplinary arts center that offers six dance studios, a gallery space, a music scene as well as a gastronomic restaurant… the gallery recently hosted fashion photographer bruno dayan‘s show “a corps perdu”, with a selection of never before seen personal work. the dreamy and sensual shots fit perfectly with the baroque, forgotten space… keep an eye out, bruno dayan’s exhibition just ended at elephant paname in paris, and might be shown soon in new york… by lil

david lynch – behind the scene


david lynch takes us on a tour in the old print shop where he produces all of his lithographs. idem in paris is one of the latest places to print old fashioned work, and seeing the process is quite fascinating (related post on mr lynch’s artwork here).  by pp.