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Ontour

tt_news list
18 Jul

What's happening?

Finally, we've found our own spot. Tramstraat Eindhoven will be Ontour Headquarters, Pilot Store and Showroom in one! Something is cooking here and we will be one of the places to wake up the retail market and creative scene in this town. Hahaa, will keep you updated on the growth of this project the coming months. This weekend we received the keys and we worked our ass of the get everything ready for the sales season. Here some early impressions of well...boxes and dirty walls.

21-21 jumpstreet it is.

This is at the beginning of our small street: the Effenaar. Good place to have food, drink and see concerts. I'm afraid this will become our end of the day hangout..

Dope architecture by MVRDV:

More to come soon...and already a big welcome to everybody!

tt_news list
11 Jul

Grandburo Rhode Island

We've got a new US account! Grandburo in Providence, RI just opened its doors. It's a crisp clean gallery/shop with graphic books and some fine labels as Rocksmith, Sixpack, The Quiet Life, Rockwell and Ontour...check the site www.grandburo.com for some picts!

If you're in the area, have a look. More to come from these guys!

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10 Jul

Bread and Butter...

Also I was there last week...the bread and butter circus. This time we didn't show our new collection in a booth but I went there to meet up with friends and do some business. My idea was to go to the fair itself on wednesday and thursday and do some  shop visits and relax a bit on friday. But hell, so much stuff to see and good people to talk to, I ended up not seeing any barca sun, but only spotlights from the fair (and bars ofcourse!)

I'm not going to give a nice summary of all the hot stuff at the fair. All blogs are loaded already with the brands that were taking it to the next level and which ones didn't. I thought the sports and street area was really good this time, so all you digital lazy kids go to see it yourself next time instead of searching all blogs to get a glimps of the goodness.

So, I'll just drop some partypicts of the nice peeps who joined on my trip...

Carrer de Llull, meaning 'Dick Street in Dutch, was the street where our appartment was located. We should have been warned when reading this streetname...cause Dick Street it was...some fuckers broke into our appartment the first day and stole some laptops, bags and clothing...not a good start I would say.

Outside area BBB...hot as hell

Ready to Rock n Roll

At Mama cafe where the good guys from AKA joined, check their dope store: www.alsoknownas.nl

The Lovely Tuna, Moibe and Karin after 3 cans of sangria..

Ouside the 10deep x Crooks party

Jeroen 'Revert' and Jesse 'Freshcotton' happy in the taxi with some 1 euro Sant Miguel! On our way to the Frank151 party...see picts below

Heavy night, good fun till the moment the day after I found out with my hangover our bags were gone...anyways had to make the best out of it and straight to the fair again. As I said before I'm not going to post all the dope brands but this booth was really good I think, with nothing in it. Read what Italian Pig Mag had to say:

Ofcourse we also had some good food and some more beers again...join us next time at B&B! Adios.

tt_news list
10 Jul

Sliced!

Nianga sended us some picts of herself in a Joey Elgersma shoot, rockin our Sliced hoodie...Watch your fingers! Nice one.

tt_news list
01 Jul

Arnhem Fashion Biennale

This weekend we went to see the Fashion Biennale in Arnhem. This was the last weekend of this event with the graduation show of the Arnhem academy, closing party and last chance to see all expos.

So first thing friday evening was the fashion show of this years graduates from Arnhem, one or 'the' best fashion academy from Holland...always nice to see some new ideas and models;)

Overall the show was good, but the afterparty was even better...you know when the crowd exist out of graduates who just did their final show, (wannabe) models and (wannabe) fashion popstars you'll have a laugh...and we did.

 

Okayyyy..

Okayyyyyyyyy...

It was a long night, but the day after we had a full agenda and first went to Arnhem centre to check out Peter from Frisco who is moving and rebuilding his shop. Opening will be coming week, check it out...completely black..looking classy already!

Look out for the opening, some special products will drop! www.friscostore.nl

Then me and my girl went to see the expo in the Steenfabriek, a factory with selected works from different fashion designers. You had to cross a small river with a boat, quite funny.

Overview at the entrance:

Dutch 'And Beyond' stuff:

Some Bernhard Willhelm, fresh as always:

Cassetteplaya in da house!

Cheesy video from Jeremy Scott: a fake 80's soap serie with fake commercials in between, all actors wearing his creations:

Super nice installation from Henrik Vibskov!

And the last picts...some Gareth Pugh stuff and I forgot the name of this one..

tt_news list
26 Jun

24-7 five year anniversary!

Skateshop 24-7 from Nijmegen celibrates its fifth anniversary coming saturday! They will throw a party in Doornroosje with some good hiphop, the 24-7 x Frisco video promo and an indoor mini ramp...

We'll be there, so expect some (re)coverage after the weekend!

www.247store.nl/ 

tt_news list
26 Jun

Opening Bend the Void

Last friday Geoff McFetridge opened his solo show in MU gallery Eindhoven. After 3 weeks of hard work, the result was there...check it out...I'll guide you through the expo...

first some sketches, booklets, music artworks, animations and toys:

The 300ft roll of paper with amazing printwork:

Secret door number one!

Inside the tunnel...check out the matching dresses!

The area inside with all superflat handpainted 'posters' on the walls:

Secret door number two!

In the next area the flat graphics start (un)folding into more 3D shapes:

In the last, more open space some complete 3D pieces like this 'trumpetbike":

Some food, drinks and respect for the work:

Hello...Wouter/Ontour and Menno/TShu

Sweetness goes on and on and on:

Four points realizing the absoluteness of their aloneness:

Then one wall covered with sketches, small paintings and doodles...for me this was the best part of the whole show. Some classics over here, Graphic Genius, I would say:

Me shooting papparazi and fulltime blogger, Mr.Twisted Streets, check out his site for more picts of the opening: www.twistedstreets.nl

Evil E's Birthday! Showing his presents: a cosmic egg and labyrinth!

Outside...

Make a wish...to the cosmic egg

After the opening we went to skatepark Area51 to hang around..

And look who's in the bowl...

It's Geoff McFetridge himself!

...Hallo...

Then round 3 o'clock at night my girlfriend took some skateboard lessons...

Here she goes!!

She survived and it was a gooood night. If you happened to be around Eindhoven, go check out the show, cause it's really dope! Bye for now...

tt_news list
21 Jun

Interview with Geoff McFetridge

BEND THE VOID: THE SPACE BETWEEN YEAH AND YES-
GEOFF MCFETRIDGE IN MU GALLERY EINDHOVEN.

This friday Geoff McFetridge will open his first large solo exhibition in the Netherlands, in MU gallery Eindhoven.
He's here now for 3 weeks and a few days ago I met him and we had a nice conversation, while he was in the middle of constructing his show.
We talked about this expo, his studio, the way he works, his thoughts and inspirations and loads of other stuff, while he was busy painting some expo elements.
I really enjoyed his attitude and was inspired by the way he approaches and questions his work.
Now let's try to capture this in this feature...gonna be hard but I'll do my best!

Can you tell me a bit about this exhibition, what's the plan?
The only thing I brought is one big single piece, a paper roll of 300ft and about 20 smaller works.
All the rest I will create here on location. I roughly know how it has to be, but during the weeks I improvise and tailor everything to the environment.
The show has to feel homemade and have a tactile nature. I'm interested in for example painting and taping a line that looks crisp from a distance, but from close
it's different and you see the fingerprints and irregularities.
I like these aspects, layers, sequences. Also in a logo; the first impression, the second meaning and the final experience. An artshow is similar; here I also build
phrases...this show starts superflat, then through a secret door you'll enter a handpainted fake zone and going through another secret door the show will be more 3D and come to life.

What exactly do you want to communicate with the works in this show?
I'm synthesizing all the work I do in a show. So I'll integrate two or more pre-existing elements and this will result in a new creation.
I'm synthesizing to simplification, limiting it...What can I do with only tape, silkscreen and paint without my studio and all equipment?
What can I do in the space with not a lot of production?
I try to push the stuff to be objects.
I question myself: Is a graphic designer real? Is a computer made graphic real? Is a logo real or just a company talking to you?
What if I handprint this logo; does it become alive? Or is a poster printed on wood more real?
In this show I'm exploring these boundaries of graphic design.

What about the title 'Bend the Void, The Space between Yeah and Yes'?
Rhymes, poetry, language are all elements I like to play with.
The difference between somebody saying yeah and yes can be enormous. How would you visualise that?
Another title could have been: 'Where the apple becomes the core'. It's like a riddle; how would you make a poster of this lost zone?
Where language breaks down, graphics can excell. Sometimes graphics can say 10 times more then words and that's the place where I want to be.
The place where graphics are excelling, into the void where ideas are intangible.
I like to mess with universal language and make it unconventional. I give it all a twist and start playing the perception game.
Misshaping language...and when it failed it doesn't matter, cause it's still funny.



How do you use text and fonts in your work?
I love recombining words and forming slogans...turning language into graphics. But I never only use text. Always a combination of text and image and there should be no pauze between text and image, the text should almost function as subtitles.
I try to super simplify text and make it seem found, so it looks like you've seen it before. So it's not my voice.
When I was a magazines art director (Grand Royal!) I never wanted any text on the cover and even wanted to get rid of the barcodes. This wasn't possible ofcourse and now I make the text or a little too small, or too big, anyways not beautiful and imposing itself.

Looking at your recent video animation for The Whitest Boy Alive that has a very hand drawn feeling and comparing this to your other very crisp graphic work, I was wondering what the difference for you is between the 'free' work and the commercial work, crisp versus handmade?Commercial clients, well lets say the artdirectors who select and guide the projects, respond to the really graphic work. They're like: 'you nailed it, it's crisp I like it'.But anything that's that effective can be questioned. With digital media you can have total control, but that's also malleable.That's why I try to push the commercial work hard...showing for example ideas about dreaming, clients respond to.

How did your work change over the years?
Most of my stuff is consistent, but I'm revealing differently. I'm rehashing the same ideas, relationships between people, between objects and the space in between them.
I keep applying this in new versions. At a certain point I was tired of my work, but this viewpoint changed: I embraced it and I'm not afraid to add to it.

I'm getting down to the root: drawing. Forever I'm drawing like that and what if I show the drawing, just show the rough and  explore different routes?
At New Image Gallery (http://www.newimageartgallery.com) I used water colours and painted non conceptual, it was just fun to do. At Yale school of Art recently, I made all the work in one week in the gallery, very graphic but really handdrawn and layered.

I'm ready to do shows now. In the past I approached artshows like a project and came up with a concept. Now it's all one project. I'm just doing this thing and reconnecting with all elements of it. The 'game' of separation between commercial - graphic - art projects wasn't working. Now I'm mixing all up...this artshow could be for a client.



How do you select the projects you're working for?
I go with my instinct, the way you are approached.
I have to be inspired, or challenged or it has to be easy. Like a really graphic project where I can deliver well and I still have a lot of fun doing this.
When it's just more of the same thing, I'm not interested.

Which artists inspire you?
I never had the background in graffiti or streetart, it doesnt interest me. All my creative energy went into graphic practice.
I was part of the Beautiful Losers show and I never worked with these people in the same space before. I was really inspired by Barry McGee, Thomas Campbell and others; They showed me how to approach difficult moments and developing the work I do in an art way. I'm critical about the way I work and when the art work is not supporting itself you can question yourself: is it real or is it not?

All I need is the zeitgeist. Everything is universal, everything we've seen before. I grew up in Canada in the 70's and had the same textbooks as everybody else.
I grew up in skateboards and was mesmorized by graphics of skateboards, surfboards, punk music, for the first time seeing graffiti in California...it hypnotised me.
This language was 'sold' to me, my generation got sold hardcore. It hit youth culture at its hard. I was listening to napalm death, bad brains, the junk culture of today...
We've all become graphic designers and people like me are running companies.

It's different to the generation now, now you already got 10 and the marketeers say: 'lets go to 15'.
If you don't inspire them, they will forget.
We were inspired, it was like: you are a skateboarder; you're creative.
Now it's like: you're a kid; you love sneakers; you're desperate.
I dont participate in mass culture, I am not inspired by it.



Any other interesting projects running at the moment and any dream projects?
At the moment I'm developing the identity for the surfline of outdoor clothing company Patagonia.
It's outdoor gear, all based on ecofriendly technology.
It's not about being cool. Everything is recycled will last for 20 years.

In the future I'd like to do some larger scale things, like a sculpture project or designing a childrens museum.

Thanks Geoff, was great meeting you! Looking forward to the opening coming Friday, so everybody who's around: COME AND HAVE A LOOK IN THE SPACE BETWEEN YEAH AND YES.

More info: www.mu.nl/exhibitions/79-geoff/79-geoff-eng.html

tt_news list
14 Jun

T-Shu party!

Last saturday Eindhovens sneakershop T-Shu celibrated their 2nd anniversary and organised an event together with Run Athletics and Endorsed who are bringing magazine Frank151 to the Netherlands. We had a look and it turned out into a big big night. Inside the space it was tropical hot, so most of the peeps were hanging outside...

Frank151 and beers in the shopwindow..

An inside look...

Etienne and Gio, shop owner of ReIssue Tilburg, represent!

More and more people outside..

The guest of honour himself, Menno T-Shu:

Lijstijl Tjimme, business as usual;)

Eindhoven showing some love..

Party continued at Cafe Puur with Mr.Wix and friends behind the decks...

Things got a little vague for me from here as you can see...So this is a wrap up!!

Thanks every one for the good night, next time I'll stay conscious.

tt_news list
14 Jun

Lfstl site online

Lijfstijl Rotterdam redesigned their website and finally...it's online! Looking good, they added some new sections (bloggiebloggie) and you can see their new gear. Have a look: www.lfstl.nl

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