DESTINY TOASTER

Posted on 2021-06-21

In June 2020, the Destiny Community raised more than $800,000 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital during Bungie’s livestream supporting Gaming Community Expo (GCX). During the livestream, Bungie announced that if they hit $777,777.77, they would look into offering an Official Destiny Toaster.

10% of Profits from sales of the Destiny Toaster will go to St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital (R)

Free Sandwich Holder with Purchase!

Pre-orders will instantly receive a free Destiny 2 In-game emblem “Burnt Edges”

Expected Ship Date: December 2021-January 2022

bungiestore.com

  

NADIA STRUIWIGH – PAX AURORA

Posted on 2021-06-21

All music written and produced by Nadia Struiwigh.
Artwork by Yan Cook.

nousklaer.bandcamp.com

  

NEVERMEN – TREAT EM RIGHT (BOARDS OF CANADA REMIX)

Posted on 2021-06-21

Lex is 20 years old. To them process all their memories, they have commissioned remixes of key tracks in their catalogue and they will be releasing one every couple of weeks this year. So far released this year, King Krule’s remix of Eyedress and Actress’ remix of Kaleida.

lexrecords.com

  

LES FILLES DE ILLIGHADAD AT PIONEER WORKS

Posted on 2021-06-21

Les Filles de Illighadad are a Tuareg band, formed in the southern region of Niger. At Pioneer Works is their highly anticipated new album, which was recorded in Brooklyn following a whirlwind 2 year touring period. Combining the folklore and native syncopation of their Tuareg heritage with electric guitars and bass, it feels like a neatly polished snapshot of the nomadic life and sounds of their people. Meditative in its circular melodies and soft refrains and transportative with their lulling group vocals sung in their native language, At Pioneer Works colourfully flaunts a strikingly unique and lesser known culture’s voice.

sahelsounds.com

  

CHANTAL JOFFE – STORY

Posted on 2021-06-21

Joffe’s paintings of the artist’s mother, Daryll, are part of an ongoing series that the artist began some three decades ago. These new works, some painted from family photographs, others from life, range back and forth in time. There are depictions of Joffe and her siblings with their mother as children – on a sofa, on a train, on holiday, as newborns and, in the case of Train to Vermont, which shows Daryll pregnant with Chantal, as not-yet-born. As Joffe explains, ‘I suddenly thought, but nobody in their seventies is just that – they’re not just an older person who’s lonely, or isolated, or has health issues… Everybody is the whole life that went before that. So, I started looking at all our family photos and thinking about my mum and all the things she’d done in her life and how she seemed to me when I was a child…’

The Story of the exhibition title refers to a painting depicting the artist and her two older sisters as children in the early 1970s, snuggled up on a sofa with their mother as they share a bedtime story. In the accompanying publication, Olivia Laing writes, ‘What’s remarkable about Joffe’s picture is that she’s managed to plug into a universal current, to capture and convey not just her own childhood, but mine and perhaps yours too.’

Opposite – Me, Em and Nat, 2020

Exhibition runs through to July 31st, 2021

Victoria Miro
16 Wharf Road
N1 7RW
London

www.victoria-miro.com

  

THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING – A CELEBRATION IN PHOTOGRAPHS

Posted on 2021-06-21

After demolishing the famous original Waldorf Astoria Hotel on Fifth Avenue in 1929, the Bethlehem Engineering Corporation took on the world’s most ambitious building project to date: the construction of the Empire State Building, the first 100+ story building. The Chrysler Building, with 77 stories, briefly held the title of the world’s tallest building before being unseated by the Empire State a mere 11 months later. Dwarfing all surrounding buildings, the Empire State stands at 1,454 feet tall. Construction began on March 17th, 1930 and was completed in record time, opening on May 1, 1931. As a tourist attraction, the site found immediate success, collecting a ten-cent fee for a bird’s eye view of New York City from telescopes atop the observatory.

Opposite – Kimberly Ducoté, Empire State Building, 1990

Exhibition runs through to August 13th, 2021

Keith de Lellis Gallery
41 East 57th Street
New York
NY 10022

www.keithdelellisgallery.com