ADIDAS ORIGINALS “30 YEARS OF TORSION”

Posted on 2019-08-05

For SS19, adidas has made the iconic ZX running shoe series a focal point of its offering, with numerous iterations and updates created both in house and with Consortium partners around the world. These releases also offer up the chance to celebrate the equally enduring adidas Torsion System technology, which first debuted in the ZX range exactly thirty years ago. It is a technology that has continued to play a part in numerous adidas models over the subsequent three decades, appearing across all four models in this release. By using a TPU arch to bridge the heel and forefoot, Torsion allows the front and rear of the foot to operate and adapt to surfaces independently, offering high degrees of support and stability.

The latest models in this celebratory line of releases hark back to four of the original shoes that first made the ZX series so sought after: the ZX 5000 , ZX 6000 , ZX 7000 and ZX 9000 . Each of the original versions were designed to suit slightly different running requirements, catering to all types of runners and ensuring the highest levels of performance no matter what shape the wearer’s run took. Each new iteration stays true to these characteristics, while also utilizing the OG materials and colorways that captured the attention of serious runners and sneakerheads alike. The instantly-recognizable silhouettes and underlying technologies combined with eye-catching palettes that partly signify different elements of the shoe’s performance capabilities: blue for cushioning; green for guidance; yellow for support. The key, contemporary updates come in the form of a new lace jewel and insole, both of which feature special ’30 years of Torsion’ branding.

Release dates below.

ZX 5000 — August 10
ZX 6000 — August 17
ZX 7000 — August 24
ZX 9000 — August 31

www.adidas.co.uk

  

KENZO INKA SNEAKER

Posted on 2019-08-05

The brand’s “Inka” shoe features a chunky, lug-soled bottom and speckled details that play up the neutral colorway.

It’s constructed of leather, mesh and suede paneling along the upper, which is featured in a minimal palette of white and grey. The midsole is accentuated with a splattered black and white design that offers a hit of print. Other highlights include a zig-zag lacekeeper strip with striped laces, a bright red “KENZO” patch on the tongue and a logo-embossed strap at the heel. A black toebox rounds it off with a touch of contrast.

www.kenzo.com

  

ANTHONY HERNANDEZ – L.A. LANDSCAPES

Posted on 2019-08-05

For nearly 50 years, Anthony Hernandez has photographed the social landscape of his native Los Angeles. His pictures convey an abiding human concern for issues of class and race as they impact, and are shaped by, urban environments. The exhibition features selections from several bodies of work made between 1978 and 2012, highlighting Hernandez’s mid-to-late career achievements.

Black and white photographs from the series Automotive Landscapes, Public Transit Areas, Public Use Areas, and Public Fishing Areas focus on the everyday activities of people as they negotiate the unforgiving concrete landscapes that dominate Los Angeles, a city reliant on automotive transport.

Opposite – Public Transit Areas #11, 1979

Exhibition runs through to August 18th, 2019

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
4225 Oak Street
Kansas City
64111 MO

nelson-atkins.org

  

CHRISTINE OSINSKI – SUMMER DAYS STATEN ISLAND

Posted on 2019-08-05

Taken in the “forgotten borough” of Staten Island between 1983 and 1984, Christine Osinski’s photographs create a portrait of working class culture in an often-overlooked section of New York City. Captured on Osinski’s large format 4 x 5 camera as she wandered the island, her candid portraits of strangers, vernacular architecture, and quotidian scenes reveal an invisible landscape within reach of the thriving metropolis of Manhattan. The neighborhoods that Osinski captured are devoid of the skyscrapers, swarms of pedestrians, and choking masses of traffic that are a short ferry ride away. Instead, she photographed kids riding bikes on open, empty streets, suburban homes with neatly tended yards, and the small-town feel of New York’s least populous borough.

Opposite – Neighbors, 1983-84

Exhibition runs through to August 23rd, 2019

Joseph Bellows Gallery
7661 Girard Avenue
La Jolla
92037 CA

www.josephbellows.com

  

LEE FRIEDLANDER – SIGNS

Posted on 2019-08-05

Since the early 1960s, Friedlander has focused on the signs that inscribe the American landscape, from hand-lettered ads to storefront windows to massive billboards.

Made in New York, San Francisco, and dozens of cities and small towns in between, Friedlander’s photographs record milk prices, cola ads, neon lights, road signs, graffiti, and movie marquees. Depicting these texts with precision and sly humor, Friedlander’s approach to America transcribes a sort of found poetry of commerce and desire. A large majority of works in the exhibition will be shown for the first time.

Opposite – New Haven, Connecticut, 1980

Exhibition runs through to August 17th, 2019

Fraenkel Gallery
49 Geary Street
San Francisco
94108 CA

fraenkelgallery.com

  

JUNGLE BROWN – KEEP IT MOVIN

Posted on 2019-08-05

Jungle Brown are set to release their second full-length LP, ‘Full Circle’, on the Mr Bongo label in September 2019.

The first single from this new project, ‘Keep It Movin’, fuses a Tribe Called Quest-esque sound with future rap, adorned with a smooth sax line from UK jazz all-star, Ayo Yung Afrika Pyoneer, and backing vocals from Jungle Brown’s own producer, Tony Bones.

The trio – Ric Flo, MAEAR & Tony Bones – have spent the last two years redefining soulful hip-hop – the sound is bigger, more thought-provoking, and it has matured with a rich soulful underpinning.

junglebrown.bandcamp.com