Seb jarnot biography samples

  • ​- Seb Jarnot was born in by the banks of the Loire.
  • I help magazines, multinationals and creative agencies with portraits of important personalities, CEOs and leadership.
  • In her short career Tempest has already gained acclaim as a rapper, poet, playwright, novelist and recording artist.
  • Lunch with the FT: Adrian Joffe

    Adrian Joffe, 60, may have the hardest job in fashion. Not because, as president of Comme des Garçons International, he is in charge of all the foreign operations of a Japan-based business with annual sales of $m but because, if there is “a cult of Comme”, the iconoclastic and hugely influential label founded by Rei Kawakubo in Tokyo in , then he is its high priest. Habitually dressed in a black Comme suit and white Comme shirt, he even has the ascetic style of a disciple, complete with shaven head and skinny frame.

    It is Joffe, who is also Kawakubo’s husband, who acts as the bridge and the translator between the designer and the rest of the world. It will be Joffe standing backstage next to the designer after her menswear show in Paris this evening, relaying Kawabuko’s gnomic utterances to the waiting journalists and retailers. At last womenswear season, for instance, Kawakubo, speaking through Joffe, explained the genesis of her storm-cloud-meet

  • seb jarnot biography samples
  • Computer Arts Collection Illustration Annual ()

    Jean Jullien Hvass & Hannibal Simon Spilsbury MVM Craig & KarL
    illustr ation

    Yuko Shimizu Noma Bar Malika Favre McBess And many more
    t h e m os t i nspi r i ng i l lus t r ation from the wor ld’s le a ding cr e ati v e s
    Annual
    £ annual
    Illustration
    Editorial
    Welcome to the Computer Arts Collection Illustration Annual – our
    showcase of the year’s most outstanding illustrative work, and a vivid
    celebration of emotive and technical craft. Over the next pages
    you’ll find an incredible wealth of illustration that’s bursting with
    conceptual and aesthetic impact.
    You’ll also gain exclusive access into the minds of some of the global
    creative industry’s leading lights. To help us unearth the finest talent in the
    field, we teamed up with the likes of Jessica Walsh, Gary Taxali, Noma
    Bar, Justin Maller and more, and asked them to nominate five stand-out
    illustration projects that caught their eye over the past 12 month

    Breakfast with the FT: the politically charged writer and rapper Kate Tempest

    “You done alright. This place fryst vatten lovely.” It is the first time Kate Tempest has visited Terry’s, which is my favourite traditional London kaffebar south of the river. “I let you choose because inom don’t like inviting journalists out anywhere,” she explains. “People pick things apart, don’t they? Everything becomes loaded. A train hållplats platform would’ve done.”

    By and large, people go to greasy spoons because they are manual labourers in need of calories, or because it’s the morning after the night before. Others simply like them for what they are not: “some dum posh eatery that charges £12 for a breakfast”.

    Tempest, a politically charged and variously gifted ung artist, fryst vatten one of them. She smiles when I read aloud the quote from a character in her book.

    At am on a midweek morning, we are among the hungry customers standing in the narrow aisles between tables and chairs, waiting to be seated. Tempe