Tag design

Minimalist House, Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

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Minimalist House, 2009, Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

“This building is a courtyard house for a couple in Itoman-shi, Okinawa, Japan. The house is built on a 3M grid module in all XYZ directions, while it is composed of 4 vertical plates as exterior walls and 1 horizontal plate as a roof slab.  A functional layout is created by inserting a void of 3M x 18M which is the courtyard for the house and wall-like furniture into the concrete structure space which dimensions are 3.0M (3×1) high by 9.0M (3×3) wide and by 18.0M (3×6) long.

The space composition is characterized by the division of the house into two areas by a like-wall furniture. The first area is composed of the living room, dining room, and bedroom as an interior space connecting with the exterior courtyard in a linear arrangement, while the other space is composed of the kitchen, powder room, and study room in a succession. The shower room, toilet, small courtyard, and various storages are laid out in this wall-like unit, which also incorporates the services ; all spaces combined together create a lifestyle that minimize the division of the space as much as possible.

With regards of the natural light of Okinawa’s climate, the internal space connecting with the outside is designed with eaves in order to control the amount of direct sunlight coming inside the house. The exterior wall is designed to facilitate maintenance by applying photocatalyst paint. The functional counter unit incorporating the kitchen, powder room, and study room is made of integrally a solid surface “DuPont Corian”. Consequently, this house is creating a habitation space that invites to a minimal and a flexible and various lifestyle” – Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

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All images – Minimalist House, 2009, Shinichi Ogawa & Associates

More information here

Illustrators Australia (IA) 15th Annual 9×5 Exhibition

Online invite

New Craft Made in Victoria, Cumulus Inc. Commission by Ingrid Tufts

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Images (L-R): Cumulus Inc. Porcelain Coffee Cups by Ingrid Tufts. Photography by Kim Brockett and Ingrid Tufts. Hand-made ceramic coffee cups cause a stir at top Melbourne restaurant
Available from Cumulus Inc. 45 Flinders Lane Melbourne.

Widely regarded as one of the best restaurants in Melbourne, Cumulus Inc. is nestled next door to Craft Victoria at the top end of Flinders Lane. The close relationship between the two organisations (founded over regular morning coffee runs) has been formalised with a commission for a takeaway porcelain coffee cup by Craft Victoria member Ingrid Tufts.

“At Cumulus Inc. we pay particular attention to the aesthetic details of the restaurant experience. This is demonstrated through the selection of our tableware, flowers and the artworks in the space. We are also concerned with minimising waste, so started looking around for a takeaway coffee cup concept that met our high standards. We sell 150 takeaway coffees a day, and within a week one in ten of our regular customers had purchased the porcelain cup. It’s been a great success.” -Leeroy Kirk-Walker, Cumulus Inc.

The porcelain cup, featuring the restaurant’s iconic cloud design, was commissioned through New Craft Made in Victoria – a product development service that matches Craft Victoria members with commercial opportunities.
Ingrid Tufts is a Melbourne-based practitioner who works exclusively in hand thrown porcelain. Her work is sold in retailers around the country, including the Donna Hay General Store in Woollahra, Sydney.
Individually hand-thrown and glazed and sized 90mm high x 80mm in diameter, each Cumulus Inc. Porcelain Coffee Cup is unique. The cups retail for $20, and are sold with the first coffee free. Cumulus Inc. is supporting sales of the cup by offering 30 cents off the price of every takeaway coffee sold in a re-usable alternative.

Find out more here

Modern Motor Cycle Company – Poster Series

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Modern Motor Cycle Company, Poster Series 01, © Copyright Modern Motor Cycle Company 2010

To commemorate their new workshop, Modern Motor Cycle Company commissioned a series of three limited edition screen printed posters. These posters are now available through their eBay store and at their new home: The Compound Interest, Centre for the Applied Arts – 15-25 Keele Street Collingwood 3066, Victoria, Australia.

The posters were designed by Chase & Galley, and screen printed in two colours by New Blank Document, both residents of the Compound. The posters are numbered and limited to 100 copies each.

More information here

Semi-Permanent Melbourne 2010 – Launch

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Run in conjunction with Melbourne’s GPO and Ambush Gallery, the Semi-Permanent Launch consists of a popup gallery featuring the work of Beastman & Shannon Crees, an exhibition of Semi-Permanent speaker work, and art created for the launch by the Everfresh Studio crew. There will be bands, DJ’s and plenty of drinks.

Melbourne’s GPO, 350 Bourke St, Melbourne
15 September 2010. 6pm to 10pm. Free.

More information here

AGDA Poster Annual

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Inaugurated in 2009, and open to both professionals and students, the key objective of the AGDA Poster Annual is to promote graphic design to the Australian public as a voice for economic, socio-political and cultural change.

Entrants are asked to respond to a brief demonstrating their creative thinking, contemporary practice, as well as insights to issues or themes identified in the brief. Following a 3-person jury review, 30 finalists will be shortlisted. An additional panel consisting of a wide range of national and international designers and design-related personalities will each select a personal choice, 
and provide a brief rationale for their choice.

This year these 30 posters will form the AGDA Poster Annual Exhibition along Southbank in Brisbane during Icograda Design Week in October.

Competition closes today, however short extensions may be granted by contacting communications@agda.com.au

More info here

Matthew Barney – No Restraint; Louise Bourgeois – The Spider, the Mistress and the Tangerine

No Restraint
Matthew Barney

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A voyage into the imagination of one of the century’s most important artists

How does artist Matthew Barney use 45,000 pounds of petroleum jelly, a factory whaling vessel and traditional Japanese rituals to create his latest art project? 

Barney plowed the waters off the coast of Nagasaki to film his massive endeavor, Drawing Restraint 9. The documentary journeys to Japan with Barney and his collaborator Bjork, as the visual artist creates a ‘narrative sculpture’ telling a fantastical love story of two characters that transform from land mammals into whales.

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Matthew Barney: No Restraint © 2006 Voyeur Films / Love Streams Productions

The Spider, the Mistress and the Tangerine
Louise Bourgeois

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Louise Bourgeois: The Spider, The Mistress and The Tangerine is a film journey inside the life and imagination of an icon of modern art. As a screen presence, Louise Bourgeois is magnetic, mercurial and emotionally raw. She is “the real McCoy,” as Jerry Gorovoy, her assistant of 30 years, puts it. There is no separation between her life as an artist and the memories and emotions that affect her every day. As an artist she has for six decades been at the forefront of successive new developments, but always on her own powerfully inventive and disquieting terms. At the age of 71, in 1982, she became the first woman to be honored with a major retrospective at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. In the decades since, she has created her most powerful and persuasive work. As director/producer Amei Wallach notes: “We filmed intense, and sometimes hilarious, encounters with Louise and her work in both her Brooklyn studio and Manhattan home starting in 1993. We videotaped conversations where she trusted us with the childhood sources of her pain and invited us into the ritualistic process by which her memories become embodied in objects and installations. We filmed her friends and her work here and abroad through the autumn of 2007.” This film is a drama of creativity and revelation. It is an intimate, human engagement with an artist’s world. It builds to a searing climactic scene, then rebounds in joy and reconciliation.

Louise Bourgeouis © 2008 The Art Kaleidoscope Foundation

Both titles available through Madman

Melbourne Spring Fashion Week: Breakfast Series 2010

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Learn the inner workings of retail professionals at MSFW’s Business Breakfast SeriesMelbourne’s retailers, designers, fashion industry leaders and marketers can access a wealth of business expertise at Melbourne Spring Fashion Week’s (MSFW) Business Breakfast Series, proudly presented by the Victorian Government and the City of Melbourne.

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Running from Monday 30 August through to Friday 3 September, the seminars will be based on the “Good Book of Retail”; hosting knowledge-focused, educational forums, drawing together retail experts, brand managers, designers, creative industry business leaders and marketers.Volume 2010 begins with Chapter One which talks about Melbourne as a customer service city and examines how Melbourne ranks in human factors, what dynamics and innovations are changing business outlooks and how consumer driven culture can make a difference to success. Chapter Two focuses on the description of retail, examining consumer changes and new retail models. Chapter Three notes that caring is the latest fashion statement, asking how the new feel good retail hybrid manifests infashion and retail, and what role retail can play in social conscience. Chapter Four invites guests to collaborate, highlighting the benefits of sharing recourses to inspire and offer a different look at retail possibilities. While the final event – Chapter Five – is all about the unexpected, it also discusses the evolution of retail,highlighting the consumer’s power to embrace everything from new innovations to limited edition, bespoke, artisan and handmade products. City of Melbourne Acting Lord Mayor Susan Riley said “Fashion, retail and design are synonymous with Melbourne and its stylish reputation rests on our ability to generate ideas and creative energy.’’The MSFW Business Breakfast Series offers a great opportunity for people to harness our city’s ideas and creative energy and putthem to good use in their own business endeavours.” The events will be hosted by some of the city’s most well respected industry professionals, see the full list here.

See more here

2010 Melbourne International Arts Festival

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Sinead O’Connor, John Cale, Robert Lepage, Jack Charles, Hotel Pro Forma, Michael Clark Company, Thomas Adès, Toneelgroep Amsterdam, Akram Khan Company, The Black Arm Band & Beck’s Festival Bar

The 25th Melbourne Festival, and the second under the artistic direction of Brett Sheehy, announces a dynamic and emotive program of work from some of the finest creative minds of our times. Over 16 days, from 8 to 23 October, the Festival presents an unparalleled feast of music, dance, theatre, opera, visual arts, multimedia and outdoor events from renowned and upcoming Australian and international companies and artists.

Festival highlights this year include free outdoor aerial spectacular K@osmos; Hotel Pro Forma’s awe inspiring, large-scale operatic spectacle, Tomorrow, in a year, featuring the groundbreaking music of electro-pop masters The Knife; world renowned recording artists Sinead O’Connor (in her exclusive Australian performance), John Cale and Meshell Ndegeocello; one of Australia’s most highly regarded performers in his one-man show, Jack Charles V The Crown; the residency of British composer, Thomas Adès, the most inventive contemporary composer of his generation. As part of the Melbourne International Arts Festival: Beck’s Festival Bar at the Forum Theatre, will be featuring some intriguing acts: Boredoms (Japan), Low (USA), Ponzu Island (Australia), The Drones (Australia), Dead Meadow (USA) and more.

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Boredoms

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Ponzu Island

The Festival features two Australian premieres. come, been and gone, the bold new dance work from the world renowned Michael Clark Company featuring the music of the legendary David Bowie with Lou Reed, Iggy Pop and Brian Eno and internationally revered director, film maker and actor Robert Lepage’s  magical journey to modern China with The Blue Dragon, a heart-wrenching love story told with Lepage’s trademark striking theatrical vision.

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Come, Been and Gone, Simon Williams, Photography: Jake Walters

The Festival closes with a one-off spectacular finale, Seven Songs to Leave Behind, a unique concert featuring international music legends Sinead O’Connor, John Cale, Meshell Ndegeocello and Rickie Lee Jones, with award winning Indigenous artist Gurrumul Yunupingu and festival favourites Black Arm Band and Orchestra Victoria at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl on Oct 23.

For more info see the festival site here

ACMI: Berlin on Film

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Comrad Couture (2009), ACMI: Berlin on Film 2010

The Australian Centre for the Moving Image, in association with the Goethe-Institut, presents - Berlin on Film
Thursday 4 November – Monday 8 November 2010

To coincide with the Berlin Dayz cultural festival and the twentieth anniversary of the reunification of Germany, the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) presents a program of films devoted to the country’s capital in Berlin on Film this November.

Berlin has a unique rhythm which infuses its architecture, its culture and its citizens. This filmic celebration of the historical city brings together six documentaries; from the challenges of a country divided, to the process of reunification and the infinite possibilities of a Berlin without borders.

ACMI Film Programmer Kristy Matheson, with the assistance of the Goethe-Institut, has composed a program which reminds us of the challenges Berliners overcame and the sense of euphoria of reunification. “With a remarkable and catastrophic history, Berlin has played many roles throughout the 20th century, emerging in the new millennium as one of the world’s most fascinating and enduring cities,” she said.

The program opens with Rhythm Is It (2004), directed by Thomas Grube and Enrique Sánchez Lansch, which intertwines music and contemporary dance in an ambitious project by Conductor Sir Simon Rattle, the Berlin Philharmonic, choreographer Royston Maldoom and 250 young Berliners from disparate ages and backgrounds. Their performance of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring is a joyous and inspired tale of triumph over adversity. The screening precedes the Berlin Philharmonic’s visit to Australia this November.

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Rhythm Is It (2004), ACMI: Berlin on Film 2010

Former East German model turned director Marco Wilms presents an exciting portrait of youth in revolt and subversive creativity in East Berlin in Comrade Couture (2009). Inspired by new wave and punk fashions from the West, East Berliners took to crafting their own fashions – turning their limited materials to an advantage and parading avant-garde creations made from plastic, bed sheets and disused medical supplies. As one of East Germany’s most daring stylists, Frank Schäfer, puts it in the film; “A tiger in a cage is much wilder than a tiger that is free to roam.” Drawing on personal memories, interviews and extensive archival research, Wilms offers a unique view of this heady artistic outpouring under ever watchful Stasi eyes.

Wilms’ earlier Berlin Vortex (2003) taps into the wave of euphoria among youth in the Eastern block prompted by the reunification of Germany in 1989. With the wall down and capitalism still at bay, young Berliners occupied empty residences and began preparing for their futures bringing change through art and social programs. Featuring celebrated choreographer Sasha Waltz, Jochen Sandig, Christian Lorenz of ‘Rammstein’ fame, social workers and still struggling artists, Wilms’ discovery of what became of five citizens and their utopian dreams for the new Berlin is as fascinating and diverse as the city itself.

The director of Comrade Couture and Berlin Vortex, Wilms will be in Melbourne for the season.

Scored by Einstürzende Neubauten and featuring internationally acclaimed architects, Rem Koolhaas, Renzo Piano and I.M. Pei, Berlin Babylon (2001) offers a rare glimpse into an international city, under construction. In a post-wall era, Berlin found itself as a metropolis in great need of physical change to fully realise the promise of reunification and to repair the destruction the 20th century had wreaked upon it. With its astonishing aerial photography and subtle verite style, Hubertus Siegert’s film has a dreamlike quality that allows the viewer to float above and wander through of one of the world’s great cities as it transitions into the future.

A heartfelt declaration of love to a city and its people, In Berlin (2009) traces the changes that have taken place in the twenty years since the demolition of the Berlin Wall. Featuring a vast array of Berliners including, actor Angela Winkler, Alex Hacke of Einstürzende Neubauten, architects, fashion designers, performers and store owners, long term Scorsese cinematographer Michael Ballhaus and co-director Ciro Cappellari have crafted a visually stunning and engaging portrait of one of the world’s most lively and creative hubs.

In Berlin, Rhythm Is It, Berlin Babylon and special guest director Wilms’ films Comrade Couture and Berlin Vortex, will all be introduced by Berlin-based film critic and radio journalist, Carsten Beyer.

The bustling streets of 1920’s Berlin are writ-large in the entrancing Berlin: Symphony of a Great City (Berlin: Die Sinfonie der Grosstadt) (1927). Like other famous ‘city films’ such as Man With the Movie Camera, director Walter Ruttmann’s portrait of Berlin is a dynamic mix of man and machine, social norms and daily life, a captivating vision of Berlin between the wars. This black and white silent treasure will enjoy a free screening on the big screen in Melbourne’s Federation Square.

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Berlin: Symphony of a Great City (Berlin: Die Sinfonie der Grosstadt) (1927), ACMI: Berlin on Film 2010

Berlin on Film is programmed as part of Berlin Dayz, the German-Australian Festival coordinated by the Goethe-Insitut in celebration of the 20th Anniversary of Germany’s reunification. Berlin Dayz events will be held across Australia throughout October and November to coincide with the official Day of German Unity (Tag der Deutschen Einheit) on 3 October, this year being hosted by Bremen in the country’s North West. Operating from its Melbourne base, Berlin Dayz events are designed as a dialogue between two cultural capitals: Berlin and Melbourne.

Berlin on Film will screen at ACMI from Thursday 4 to Monday 8 November, 2010
More here

Semi-Permanent, Melbourne

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Semi‐Permanent a celebration of all things art and design is back in 2010 to inspire Melbourne’s thriving creative community yet again. While some may think it’s the forum where design nerds gather to fight against the evils of Comic Sans, Semi‐Permanent offers an eye‐opening insight into the broad streams of design, and where those varying crafts can take you.
Designed to inspire and educate, renowned artists and specialists in their field will come together at the Melbourne Convention Centre on Friday 17 September and Saturday 18 September to share their knowledge and passion for their work. Semi‐Permanent Melbourne 2010 boasts a line‐up of 12 speakers including newly announced Simon Allen from Academy Award winning animators Pixar, photographer Claire Martin, Art Director for Girl Skateboards Andy Jenkins, UK post production house Framestore, Melbourne based visual artist Leif Podhajsky and creative agency and artists representatives Big Active.

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Buck, Semi-Permanent 2010

Brought to life by Sydney’s Design is Kinky, Semi‐Permanent is a conference which unites exceptionally talented artists and designers to speak at a conference which sits within a broader program of side events including exhibitions, workshops and parties. “It’s not only our speakers that make the event special. It’s the atmosphere and spirit that the audience brings with them,” said Design is Kinky’s Andrew Johnstone. “It’s a casual atmosphere where new friends are made and new colleagues discovered. It’s this that sets Semi‐Permanent apart from other conferences, a shared feeling that you belong to a community.”

Now in its eighth year and with 22 conferences under it’s designer belt, Semi‐Permanent is the internationally acclaimed conference of its kind, year on year, proving an exciting line‐up of talented speakers spanning the art, film, motion graphics, illustration, photography, and visual effects disciplines.

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Framestore, Semi-Permanent 2010

Semi‐Permanent is on at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on Friday 17 September and Saturday 18 September 2010. The official program is yet to be released but for regular updates and tickets check here

Eric Yahnker

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Cheddar Jalapeno Cheetos with Geraldo Features, colored pencil on paper, 30 x 22 in.  (76 x 56 cm.), 2009

Eric Yahnker was born in Torrance, California. He received his B.F.A. in animation from the California Institute Of Arts and studied journalism at University of Southern California.  Recent solo exhibitions include Nervous Surf, Galerie Jeanroch Dard, Paris, Naughty Teens/Garbanzo Beans, Ambach & Rice, Seattle, Piano Man (For Guitar), Jack the Pelican Presents, Brooklyn, and Dolly Parton Behind A Tree, Kim Light Gallery, Los Angeles.  His next solo exhibition will be at Kunsthalle L.A., Los Angeles, January 2011.  He currently works and resides in Los Angeles, California.

See more of Eric Yahker’s work here

Data Flow 2

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International interest in the sophisticated and aesthetic visualization of complex information made Data Flow a bestseller. Today, more and more graphic designers, advertising agencies, motion designers, and artists work in this area. New techniques and forms of expression are being developed. Consequently, the demand for information on this topic has grown enormously.

Data Flow 2 expands the definition of contemporary information graphics. The book features new possibilities for diagrams, maps, and charts. It investigates the visual and intuitive presentation of processes, data, and information. Concrete examples of research and art projects as well as commercial work illuminate how techniques such as simplification, abstraction, metaphor, and dramatization function. The book also includes interviews with experts such as The New York Times’s Steve Duenes, Infosthetics’s Andrew Vande Moere, Visualcomplexity’s Manuel Lima, ART+COM’s Joachim Sauter, and passionate cartographer Menno-Jan Kraak as well as text features by Johannes Schardt about the challenges in creating effective information graphics and about the relationship between complexity, clarity, content, and innovation.

Offering practical advice, background information, case studies, and inspiration, Data Flow 2 is a valuable reference for anyone working with or interested in information graphics.

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See more at Gestalten

No Vacancy: Planetes – New Works by Acorn

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The word “planetes” is Greek for “wanderers,” just as planets wander across the sky. The drawings presented in this show portray nomadic peoples roaming, gathering, and socializing in a seemingly endless forest where all possibilities are considered. Drawings from the forest series are an ongoing project, and they themselves are always expanding, evolving and changing with experience and time. “Embracing a new, folksy, semi-spiritualist aesthetic, Acorn’s show is an obsessively drawn world of beings who are roaming, gathering and socialising in a seemingly endless forest where all possibilities are considered. Here modern tribalism is evoked and the force of folk art mixes with hyper-detailed penmanship.” Gemma Jones, The Vine

Originally from the west coast of North America, acorn has been working and living in Melbourne for more than two years. With a focus on traditional mediums he has spent most of his drawing time developing his craft with an ensemble of pens and inks. The characters and patterns in his work stem from no single culture or religion, but are part of an ongoing focus for creating something unique all together. An endless task.

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Planetes, Acorn
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Planetes, Acorn

No Vacancy Gallery
34-40 Jane Bell Lane, QV, Melbourne
Opening night: Thursday 12th August: 6:00pm ‐ 9:00pm
Exhibition Runs Untill: 12th – 22nd August
Trading Hours:
Monday: Gallery Closed
Tuesday – Friday: 11:00am – 5:00pm
Saturday: 11:00am – 5:00pm
Sunday: 12:00am – 5:00pm

Go Font Ur Self #5

The next installment of Australia’s typography exhibition GO FONT UR SELF* takes place on Thursday 19th August at new space LO-FI Collective, Taylor Square, Sydney from 6pm.

Proudly presented by Kirin© GO FONT UR SELF* is back for another round with Chapter 5. The touring exhibition, which is a calendar event in the wonderful world of type, brings you 13 artworks from the world’s most critically acclaimed typographers, illustrators and graffiti writers.

FEATURING:
MORNING BREATH / WE BUY YOUR KIDS / GARY/ FIODOR SUMKIN / MICHAEL DORET / TWO ONE / JEREMYVILLE / ALEJANDRO PAUL / MAURO GATTI / OKAY /AMUSE SWB / FRIENDS OF TYPE
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We Buy Your Kids, Go Font Ur Self* Chapter 5
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Morning Breath, Go Font Ur Self* Chapter 5
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Mauro Gatti, Go Font Ur Self* Chapter 5

LO-FI COLLECTIVE
THUR 19.08.10
LV 3, 383 BOURKE ST, TAYLOR SQUARE, 6PM (ENTRANCE UPSTAIRS ABOVE KINSELAS HOTEL)
See more
here