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Josh first showed his work in a cafe – now, DiCaprio and Stiller are among his fans

Josh first showed his work in a cafe – now, DiCaprio and Stiller are among his fans

The Age17 hours ago

This story is part of the June 14 edition of Good Weekend. See all 14 stories.
Glamorous women and dapper dudes lounge around in exotic locales, at hip parties, in retro clubs, or in drop-dead-cool, mid-century design pads, often accompanied by cats, tikis and cocktails. Welcome to the cool, stylised world of Shag, the US artist whose moniker is a portmanteau of his real name, Josh Agle. Along with his wife and two university-age kids, Agle, 62, divides his time between a house in Southern California 'with a lot of glass and timber and green-shag carpet I put in the sunken living room' and a 'tropical, tiki-vibe' home in Palm Springs, where he also has a gallery and boutique.
'The major visual inspirations for my art are anonymous illustrators and graphic designers from the '50s and '60s,' says Agle. 'But the thematic inspirations are European artists from the late 1800s and early 1900s who were making paintings based on their interests and social life. I think of Renoir painting cafes and dance halls or Picasso painting bullfights in the same way I think of myself painting people enjoying a Mai Tai in a tiki bar.'
Starting out as a musician, commercial artist and graphic designer, he rose to fame after selling out a series of paintings he did for an exhibition in a Santa Monica coffee shop in 1995. Today, his art is highly sought-after and collected by the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio, Whoopi Goldberg, Ben Stiller and Nancy Sinatra.
'I've never really been interested in who was collecting my work, so the galleries that sell my art often don't tell me that a celebrity bought something,' he says. 'And then I find out about it another way. Someone will send me a link to a YouTube video of a celebrity's house, or someone will tell me they went to a party at a movie star's home and they own some of my work. I was at a Hollywood party and the host was introducing me as Shag to some famous people, and most of them said the same thing: ' The Shag?' Which of course, was very flattering.'
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Outside the US, Australia is his biggest market, thanks mainly to Melbourne's Outré Gallery, which has championed his work for almost three decades. In June, Outré presents Lush Life: Recent and Rare Prints by Shag, in Melbourne and Sydney. The artist has created 200 signed, limited-edition serigraph prints called The Lyre Bird for the occasion ($950 unframed; from $1850 framed), featuring Australian flora and fauna and a cheeky reference to Sidney Nolan.
'The landscape and animals of Australia are very distinctive, but I had to be wary of not making it look like an image one might see on a souvenir tea towel,' he says. 'I looked to Australian landscape painters of the early 20th century for inspiration and researched the range of the animals in the print to make sure that such a scene could exist somewhere in Australia.
'I had never heard of a lyrebird until I visited Healesville Sanctuary outside Melbourne a few years ago. I just knew that bird had to be the star of the picture when I decided to make it.'

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He had run out of ideas and was running out of time. So he turned his problems into art
He had run out of ideas and was running out of time. So he turned his problems into art

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

He had run out of ideas and was running out of time. So he turned his problems into art

Stieg Persson had run out of ideas and was quickly running out of time. The accomplished Melbourne-based artist had been offered a show and as he sat, facing the possibility of blank walls and blank canvases, he decided to take his dilemma and flip it on its head. Persson has work held in most of our major galleries as well as the Auckland Art Gallery and Met­ro­pol­i­tan Muse­um of Art in New York. This month, his latest exhibition, Black Swans, opened at Anna Schwartz Gallery – and all of the works come from having absolutely no ideas, he says. 'I'd been out of the studio for a while ... and I'd just lost the rhythm,' he explains. 'For a couple of weeks I had literally no ideas... I just couldn't see it. And then I thought, why don't I make work about having no ideas – deal with the problem.' As he gazed at Post-it notes stuck on the wall – featuring scribbled lines from texts that resonated with him – he realised he was not the first to face this predicament. Having read about 'black swan events' recently, and having painted swans in the past, he decided to get to work and combine the two. Originally used to describe an impossible event – prior to 1697, no European knew black swans existed – the term now refers to a highly improbable event that once it occurs, seems inevitable. Coined in the context of financial markets by US-based former options trader Nassim Taleb in 2007, the term 'black swan event' now has a broader cultural meaning. Persson's series takes quotes from some of our greatest artistic minds and makes them spout from the mouths of black swans. Some of the lines are amusing, some are poignant; all of them ring true. 'Once it happened, it came together rather quickly,' he says. 'I had this one little painting which was an abstract I had done in the '90s, that became the background. I thought about that heraldic space where animals talk, those medieval balloons.' Though most of the paintings were well underway before the second election of Donald Trump, as every day brings new black swan events, the works feel particularly prescient.

Laryngitis forces Kylie to postpone run of tour
Laryngitis forces Kylie to postpone run of tour

The Advertiser

time9 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Laryngitis forces Kylie to postpone run of tour

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I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam. Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. 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In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam. Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box. "Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour", she said. "I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you. "I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam. Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box. "Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour", she said. "I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you. "I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam.

What happened to Harold Holt? A new novel puts his widow in the spotlight
What happened to Harold Holt? A new novel puts his widow in the spotlight

Sydney Morning Herald

time9 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

What happened to Harold Holt? A new novel puts his widow in the spotlight

Kim Wilkins' eyes mist up suddenly. 'I'm going to get a little teary. It's just, Harold Holt's been a bit of a punchline. 'So when I read Zara's memoir, and she talks about the day that he disappears, I finally got that this was a real human being with children, grandchildren and a wife who had loved him for 40 years.' Dame Zara Holt's memoir, My Life and Harry, came out in the wake of the 1967 disappearance of Australia's 17th prime minister while he was swimming at Cheviot Beach in Portsea, Victoria. Toowong-based novelist Wilkins read it after a friend in publishing told her about Zara during a discussion of overlooked women in Australian history. 'This woman was incredible, and I barely knew about her,' Wilkins says. 'She was clever and entrepreneurial, and a really talented designer. She was 19 when she started her first fashion house with her best friend. 'I read her memoir and I thought, oh, there's a novel in this.' That novel is The Secret Year of Zara Holt, Wilkins' new book under her nom de plume, Kimberley Freeman. Wilkins – let's call her Freeman for clarity – is a University of Queensland academic who has somehow found the time to publish more than 30 novels under two names. Her new book covers the life of Zara, nee Dickins, from the night she met Holt at a college dance in Melbourne in 1927 until his fateful swim 40 years later. Speculation about Holt's fate has ranged from a Chinese spy submarine supposedly plucking him from Bass Strait to assassination by the CIA. Some believe he faked his death. Freeman weaves her own theory into her novel, based on what she learned about Zara and Harry's personalities and marriage. 'Harry obviously had commitment issues, and it's well known that he had multiple affairs, even after he and Zara were married. 'He was with his long-term mistress on the beach that day, but he was seeing many other women. No wonder he and [US president Lyndon B. Johnson] got on so well, because LBJ was exactly the same.' Magg, Zara's fashion boutique with friend Betty James, showcased a prodigious talent for design – a collection of her outfits is held at the National Gallery of Victoria. She also contributed to the war effort with innovative ideas while working for her father's food manufacturing business. She had three children before finally marrying Holt, then a rising star in Robert Menzies' cabinet. Zara would bring style to the role of prime minister's wife in the same way Jackie Kennedy added stardust to JFK's White House. Ultimately, she cut an equally tragic figure. Holt came to power when Menzies retired, won the 1966 election and governed for 22 months. His much-reviled 'all the way with LBJ' line outraged Australia's anti-Vietnam War movement. Still, Freeman did not expect to admire Holt's political career as much as she did. 'I'm a member of the Labor Party. And reading about Holt and Menzies blew my mind. That's not the Liberal Party that I see today. 'Holt got through things like the referendum for citizenship for Aboriginal people. He started to dismantle the White Australia policy. And the Child Endowment [Act] – Zara was so proud of that. Politics was very different back then.' Freeman was born in Lewisham, a notoriously rough part of South London that birthed the likes of Alexander McQueen and Sid Vicious. Another Lewisham native, Kate Bush, comes to mind when meeting Freeman, whose witchy sense of personal style features a lot of black. Her New Zealand dad and Papua New Guinea-born mum moved to Redcliffe when she was a toddler. Flunking out of high school to work at Big Rooster and sing in a covers band, she came into academia late after a stint in the public service. Her first tutorial in Elizabethan literature 'took the top of my head off'. 'I did a double major in medieval and early modern literature. The medieval literature has really stuck with me. That's the stuff that really makes my engines run.' She published her first Kim Wilkins novel in 1997 as an undergraduate. The Infernal, a reincarnation drama with witches, found an audience with the Anne Rice-Stephenie Meyer set. 'Under my own name, the books I write inevitably have something supernatural and dark and Gothic about them,' she explains. 'The Kimberley Freeman books, they're like adventure stories for women, and they're historical. They indulge my love of fashion from different periods, which is why I was so drawn to write about Zara.' As Freeman, her 2008 book Wildflower Hill, a multi-era novel in the mould of A.S. Byatt's Possession, almost broke her big, with translations into 20 different languages. 'I used to write like a book a year, and now that I've slowed down a bit, I'm enjoying it much more.' In writing about Zara's first marriage to a British army colonel, she had to invent most details as information was scarce. Zara's final marriage, to Macarthur MP Jeff Bate, is left offstage. As for Harold Holt, Freeman believes the PM was caught up in his 'own mystique'. 'There was that famous photo of him with his daughters-in-law – they were all in bikinis, and he was in a wetsuit going spear fishing. And he looked like James Bond.' As Freeman writes about them, the Holts are Australia's great prime ministerial love story. 'It's clear there were sexual fireworks, because they kept coming back together.' They had a sentimental attachment to Bingil Bay, North Queensland, where artist friends John and Alison Busst lived, and where they eventually owned a holiday house. Freeman admits her depiction of the Holts smoking marijuana there is sheer speculation. 'We don't know that the Holts smoked weed, but it was the '60s and I inferred that from the people that they were hanging around with. I just can't imagine that they didn't.'

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