I'll be supporting Andria and John Falcon,the owners of Salon Novo , “Sonoma’s first eco friendly Salon” and sporting their hairy creation down the catwalk.

http://www.salonnovo.com/about.php



The
Canadian
beatboxer has been writing songs since she “was a fetus” and her dedication has apparently payed off. A 17 year old Julia won the 2009 Online Beatboxing World Championship and since then has been mentioned by Pop big names like Justin Timberlake and Ashton Kutcher, made an appearance on Alexa Chung’s MTV show and become quite the online sensation via her beatboxing YouTube vids and she did all this before she could legally buy a pitcher, crazy eh?
AM: SO.. life was pretty epic before you turned 18 ...
What have you been doing since you won the beatboxing world championship??
JD: Since the contest I went to university and am now taking time off
school to record some of my own original songs.
AM:It seems like you completely dominated the beat off with Rahzel. Were you nervous when he came out on the show??
JD: I was too ridiculously excited to think about being nervous, and I
definitely didn't dominate him he was scratching to compliment the
song I was covering. It wasn't a battle, he was just giving me the
gift of beatboxing alongside him.
AM: How did you get into beatboxing?
JD: I got into beatboxing when I was a little kid because my tennis
instructor could do it and I realized I could make a bunch of weird noises
too and then I became obsessed.
AM: How long does it usually take you to learn a new sound/beat?
JD: It doesn't take long to learn a new sound, its more just mental and
trying to figure out exactly which tiny muscles to use and often I
stumble on sounds accidentally.
AM: music mentors?
JD: My beatbox mentor was Chris Perry. My beatbox idols are Beardyman and Rahzel.
AM: other interests?
JD: playing Squash!
AM: Where do you see yourself in ten years?
JD:I would love to be a professional musician in ten years but if not
then probably in another field of communications

As a new addition to TROOP(read details below about website coming soon!) I will run an artist profile at least once a month. The first AP features good friend and wickedly talented artist, Sacha Penn who let me show off her painting which is the first of, I hope, many in a series of anatomic splendor in which Sacha dives beneath the surface of the human skin and makes even a mass of fibrous connective tissue curiously beautiful.
I'm excited to brag that I will be posing for the ocular muscle next week when I head down to visit her in Southern California and I can't wait to see the finished painting!
Sacha's Tools:
Paintbrushes - mostly sable, sold by the mysterious brush lady. "It's best not to question where or how she gets her brushes."
Shin Han Watercolor paint - sold in China Town in LA. Bad part of town, great paints.
Arches watercolor paper - ridiculously expensive paper found online or at art supply warehouse in westminster. It smells really bad. When I have time I'll make my own paper and not be poor.
Palette - can be anything, but I like to use something white and big.
I also spend a lot of time studying anatomy books and drawing the human figure so that I can understand how the muscles and bones relate to a specific pose.
AM:I see you have an interest in anatomy, is this a theme which carries through most of your artwork?
S:Unfortunately it isn't a constant theme. I am fascinated by human anatomy but it is rare that I get to indulge in it. If I had it my way all my work would in some way revolve around the intricacies and beauty of the human body inside and out - but a girl's gotta eat!
AM:Any artists that have inspired you? Mentors?
S:
Jenny Saville
Sam Webber
Vincent Van Gogh
William Wendt
Andrew Wyeth
Gustav Klimt
John Daugherty
and my mentors:
Peter Zokosky
Yu Ji
George Zebot
AM:What other interests do you have ( besides art)?
S: I have so many! Metalworking, baking, flying, nursing, farming, sewing, running, jumping and falling. I just love learning and working with my hands.
AM:Where do you see yourself in ten years?
S: I hope in ten years to be splitting my time between doctors without borders (as a biomedical illustrator/RN) and my ranch in Montana.
Finally, If you had to paint using only food items/ingredients what would your canvas taste like???
S: It would taste like the air on the first truly warm summer day after a long winter... and mangos





Say Yes to Carrots(or Tomato or Cucumber): The Israeli based skin-care line which promotes “ healthy eating for the skin” can be found at Target. It’s cheap( like $8-$12 a bottle) and paraben free although their ingredients do include chemicals like propanediol and benzyl alcohol in their formulations so if that bothers you then walk two feet to the left and pick up some Weleda also found at Target though for a much higher price per ounce.
Raw Local Honey
That unheated, pure, unpasteurized, unprocessed goodness, that concentrated nectar of flowers is not only tasty but can provide all 22 minerals and enzymes the human body needs to sustain life. An alkaline forming food, raw honey contains ingredients similar to those found in fruits, which become alkaline in the digestive system. It doesn’t ferment in the stomach and it can be used to counteract acid indigestion. Most honeys found in the supermarket are not raw honey but “commercial" honey, which has been heated and filtered so that it looks cleaner and smoother, more appealing on the shelf, and easier to handle and package. When honey is heated, its delicate aromas, yeast and enzymes which are responsible for activating vitamins and minerals in the body system are partially destroyed. Hence, such honey is not as nutritious as raw honey. I purchase my honey at a market just outside of Napa for about $12 a jar. Why buy local? Well first off it benefits your local economy but also local honey contains the immune stimulating properties needed for your body to adapt to its environment.
It’s unbelievable that at 24 I’m just getting into this wonkey-eyed punk goddess but she’s great, I love her and she’s one of the last bad-ass old school rock mamas still playing live shows. I think she plays the Bowery in New York a few times in the next couple months. Even one more reason to move back to the city.


In keeping with the theme of photography, I’d like to make a quick mention of a totally brilliant weirdo named Justin Quinnell who’s body of work includes a series of film shot with a pinhole camera positioned on the inside of his mouth. Admittedly, I found him while trying to think of clever ways to make my own pinhole camera. I tinkered with the idea of a beer-can-cam but then after finding Justin’s site I think I’m more qualified to just drink a beer and look through this guy’s pictures instead.
Dang is that a safety pin through Bert's nose?


