Entry tags:
Christopher Breward & James Brook
Christopher Breward is a widely published historian of fashion, interested in its relationship to social and sexual identity, place and concepts of modernity. Born in Bristol in 1965, he took degrees at the Courtauld Institute of Art and the Royal College of Art. He has worked as a lecturer in the History of Art and Design at Manchester Metropolitan University, the Royal College of Art and London College of Fashion and is currently Acting Head of Research at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. He holds Honorary Visiting Professorships at the University of the Arts London, Kingston University and the University of Lincoln. Breward sits on the editorial / advisory boards of the journals Fashion Theory, Journal of Design History, Journal of Visual Culture in Britain and The Happy Hypocrite.Selected Bibliography: The Culture of Fashion (Manchester University Press, 1995), The Hidden Consumer: Masculinities, fashion and city life (Manchester University Press, 1999), Fashion (Oxford University Press, 2003), Fashioning London: Clothing and the Modern Metropolis (Berg, 2004)
James Brook is an artist and graphic designer, based in Edinburgh, specialising in book design and typography. He has an MA in Graphic Design from the London College of Communication, University of the Arts London and a BA (Hons) in Fine Art from the Slade School of Fine Art, University College London. He maintains his own studio practice and has worked extensively in contemporary arts publishing. He also makes electronic music. As a graphic designer with a background in fine art, he is interested in the crossovers between fine art and graphic design practices. He has a particular knowledge of specialist artist's publishing and he is experienced in facilitating artist's ideas within the format of the book. His MA major project largely concentrated on book typography, using extensive research into cook books and the form of the recipe as a starting point to explore the function and functionality of typography and its relationship to a specific audience. His works often combine text with image, examining the slippages of meaning that occur between language and visual communication. A constant preoccupation is the mechanics of seeing and recognition: how images are ‘read’, meanings understood and how the conventions of painting – mark-making and perspective – allow a flat surface to be experienced in three dimensions. Essentially, all of his practice is collage: melding together seemingly disparate fragments from the history of painting; from graphic design and architecture; and from popular culture. This intuitive combining of diverse elements show how creative play can feed the imagination, giving the mind a space in which to soar. As a non-musician, he makes electronic music with these technologies. His ‘songs’ inform – and are informed by – his visual work: the coloured building blocks of musical notation in music-making software programs are echoed in the abstract constructions of his paintings and in the collage method by which they are created.
James Brook was joined in a civil partnership ceremony with Christopher Breward on 18 August 2006. Both wore lounge suits and open-necked shirts, but each chose a different designer to emphasise their individuality, James in Timothy Everest and Christopher in Jasper Conran. They donated the dresses at the Victorian & Albert Museum which exhibited them two times already: for "Unveiled: 200 years of wedding glamour from the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. (Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington 17/12/2011-22/04/2012)" and for "The White Wedding Dress: 200 Years of Wedding Fashions (Bendigo Art Gallery 01/08/2011-06/11/2011)".
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Rumored to be one of the boys in the band since his 2007 debut album, Life in Cartoon Motion, singer Mika finally stepped out of the closet in August, right after the release of his third album, The Origin of Love. "If you ask me am I gay, I say yeah. Are these songs about my relationship with a man? I say yeah. And it’s only through my music that I’ve found the strength to come to terms with my sexuality beyond the context of just my lyrics. This is my real life," he told Instinct magazine.
Murray Moss is an American design entrepreneur and founder of the design art company Moss. He has been called "America's most closely watched purveyor of industrial design" (Washington Post), while his store has been called "the best design store in the world."(International Herald Tribune, July 2007) In an interview he released in 2013, Moss said: "I’ve learned to live better with Parkinson’s and have begun a more advanced treatment, and in December I celebrated with my partner, Franklin Getchell, our 40th anniversary."

Pierre et Gilles, Pierre Commoy and Gilles Blanchard, are French artists and romantic partners. They produce highly stylized photographs, building their own sets and costumes as well as retouching the photographs. Their work often features images from popular culture, gay culture including pornography (especially James Bidgood), and religion. They met in Paris in 1976, at a Kenzo's store inauguration.
I asked to all the authors joining the GayRomLit convention in Atlanta in October (