What should I get into this spring? Start with these 14 L.A. pop-ups, drops, events – Yahoo News
Posted: April 22, 2022 at 1:48 am
(neonhoney / Los Angeles Times; Marcell Von Berlin, Messika X Smiley, P.E Nation, Fiorucci, Polaroid X Nike SB)
This story is part of Image issue 10, Clarity, a living document of how L.A. radiates in its own way. Read the full issue here.
Italian brand Fiorucci is bringing its SS22 Desert Oasis collection to Fred Segal just in time for Coachella. The pop-up, happening at Fred Segals flagship location on Sunset through April 30, will feature the bucket hats, midi dresses, crocheted knits, slinky silhouettes and more inspired by the brands own 1970s archive. Think palm prints, sunbeams and warm California hues. 8500 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles. fiorucci.com; fredsegal.com
Longtime artist Matthew Thomas has been a spiritual seeker for decades. With his latest show at the California African American Museum, fittingly called Enlightenment, he attempts to move toward the light through sacred geometric patterns that are steeped in a multitude of colors and shapes that mirror life and its elements: earth, fire, water, wind and sky. Part of the work is about giving back to L.A., Thomas says in an interview with CAAM. Theres everything that anyone ever needs in this city. Theres every race, every religion, every form of knowledge is here. All you have to do is desire it. So being here is a miracle. Through Aug. 7. 600 State Drive, Los Angeles. caamuseum.org
Sneakers inspired by your favorite matcha latte in L.A.? Sounds about right. Footwear brand Sorel is collaborating with Alfred Coffee for a takeover of its Melrose Place location, happening this spring, in addition to two new styles of the Kinetic Breakthru Tech Lace Sneakers inspired by Alfreds iced matcha latte and iced vanilla latte, available April 10. See sorel.com for more information.
(Maria Alejandra Cardona/Los Angeles Times)
Glassell Parks lighting and furniture atelier Ravenhill Studio has created a tour of iconic L.A. lights from Chris Burdens Urban Light public sculpture at LACMA to the lights at the Forum to the Wilshire Lanterns that run from MacArthur Park to Fairfax. Spend a day admiring all the things that shine in L.A. by following the tour, available at ravenhillstudio.com/about/la-lights-tour.
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For the 50th anniversary of the ubiquitous Smiley motif, Messika Paris has collaborated with the Smiley Company on a glittering collection that undoubtedly will spark joy. Released on April 10, the three-piece collection includes a standout, massive 7.90-carat Lucky Move Smiley necklace with a pav setting made up of hundreds of yellow and white diamonds. Necklaces are inscribed with a 50 in honor of the anniversary. Available in person at Messika Paris Century City Mall (10250 Santa Monica Blvd.) and at messika.com.
David Kordansky Gallery presents its first solo exhibition by multidisciplinary artist Derek Fordjour, Magic, Mystery and Legerdemain, running through May 7. The show which borrows its name from Black Hermans 1938 autobiography explores magic as it relates to power, race and a myriad of illusions throughout American history, says the gallery. (Visitors can expect performances from internationally acclaimed magician Kenrick ICE McDonald, happening Tuesdays through Saturdays at 2 p.m. during the duration of the show.) 5130 W. Edgewood Place, Los Angeles, davidkordanskygallery.com
On March 30, denim brand G-Star RAW launched its denim art NFT in collaboration with digital marketplace Rarible. The brand has turned its longtime denim rhino mascot, G-NO, into an NFT with 10 available designs all drawing from important moments in the brands history. Get more information at g-star.com/metaverse.
Marcell Von Berlin released the second drop of its Season 1 MWEAR collection, which pays homage to the creative forces and people in L.A. and Berlin resulting in a gender-neutral leisure line infused with techno, grunge and punk subcultures. Shop online or in person at the brands West Hollywood store, which opened a coffee lounge earlier this year. 8619 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, us.marcellvonberlin.com
The campaign for the Nike SB Dunk Low Pro Polaroid features Nike SB skateboarders Sarah Muerle and Brian Anderson. Muerle, a gifted photographer in her own right, and Anderson, a gay skateboarder, explore how their identities intersect with photography and skateboarding. The shoe in a wearable, unique black, orange, teal and white colorway is available on the SNKRS app (and at select retailers) for $144. nike.com; us.polaroid.com
In Missomas new 38-piece collection, iridescent pearls and organic shapes are front and center. The jewelry brand uses recycled metals such as 18-karat gold vermeil, 18-karat gold plating and sterling silver for a new drop, dubbed Molten Pearl, thats both trendy and timeless. Prices range from $46 to $330. missoma.com
Athleisure brand P.E Nation's latest drops are focused on transitional weather pieces in wearable prints and hues. The new P.E Nation Edit pieces are street-style-friendly looks suitable for day and night, while the P.E Nation Mainline drop is dedicated to athletic wear and P.E Nation Swim is, of course, filled with swimwear, just in time to get an early jump on summer. Check it out at us.pe-nation.com.
LaPau Gallery presents the first solo U.S. show from artist Dorian Ulises Lpez Macas with "Hasta Que Te Conoc." A mix of photo essay, video montage, archive and portraiture, the exhibition offers a look into the artists lauded photography series Mexicano, which features images of darker-skinned Mexicans over the last decade. (The exhibition's title pays homage to Juan Gabriel's hit song.) The installation is accompanied by a techno mix, made in collaboration with DJ and producer Regal86, that provides an energetic backdrop to the exhibition. On view through April 16. 3006 W .7th St., Los Angeles, lapaugallery.com
Creative fashion brand TIER is opening its first bricks-and-mortar store in L.A. on April 15 with a three-month pop-up at the Beverly Center. Set to be located on Level 7, close to stores such as Prada, Kenzo and Balenciaga, TIERs 975-square-foot temporary outpost will house the brands beloved staples and a curated selection of in-store products. shoptier.nyc
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What should I get into this spring? Start with these 14 L.A. pop-ups, drops, events - Yahoo News
Tell Better Stories to Win Public Opinion (and Elections) – YES! Magazine
Posted: at 1:48 am
Theres a common complaint in politics: Democrats are really bad at messaging. President Bidens polling is near an all-time low, despite a number of successes on the policy front and todays record-low unemployment numbers and record-high job gains. Sure, hes not getting everything hes promised passed. The intraparty response seems to be fight harder.
Thats a pretty obvious conclusion, and maybe it will work, if by work we mean barely squeeze out a victory that should be a cakewalk. But it sidesteps the issue of why the party is flailing on the message front.
Quite simply, Democrats have forgotten how to tell a good story.
Theres something to the power of a well-told story that grabs the attentionmost of us can point to a book, movie, podcast, or other narrative that changed our life.
I put those words in quotes because theyre so commonly used as to be clich, but they point to what is really happening inside our brains: We take new information and adjust our knowledge and opinions to incorporate it. Classics of any genre tend to do this to large numbers of people: George Orwells 1984 and Animal Farm changed the way millions of people thought about totalitarianism, for example.
Stories always have a stronger grip on people than rote facts.
Often, political conflicts are not just bids for power, but also competing narratives. This was painfully apparent during the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, when she was subjected to a constant stream of invective from Republican senators focused on (to be charitable) an extremely bad-faith interpretation of her judicial record. We heard her slandered about pushing critical race theory, her positions on transgender athletes, being weak on crime and child pornography.
The charges are completely bogus, and the Democrats responded by largely ignoring them, as if refusing to address a fabricated charge would make it vanish in its own puff of absurdity. (The notable exception was Sen. Cory Booker.) Instead, they again touted Jacksons multitudinous qualifications for the job.
The truth may be on Jacksons side, but most Americans tuning in to the hearings without having paid attention beforehand would conclude that, even allowing for political grandstanding, there must be at least something sketchy about her that maybe should be looked into
Simply put: Republicans were telling a story, Democrats were making a list. And stories always have a stronger grip on people than rote facts.
Stories, myths, and legends can serve as a binding societal glue that gives people a sense of purpose and belonging. They explained the unexplainable in pre-scientific societiesthunder and lightning can be explained as Thor fighting the great serpent Jormungand, for example, or the nurturing rains in the dry summers of Mesoamerica as a response to sacrifices made to Tlaloc. After the Enlightenment, these stories still can convey a societys desired virtues: strength, bravery, fertility, loyalty, hard work, and so forth. Even if a myth contains a grain of truthJohn Henry probably was a real steel-driving freedman working the railroadsits the larger legendary narrative that persists, because it speaks to how we make sense of the world.
Not all myths are benign, however, and some are inimical. Canny operators throughout history have worked to create myths to support their political, moral, or religious positions.
We need look no further back than the myth of the Lost Cause: the belief that the Confederacys rebellion against the Union was noble, its loss of the war a tragic defeat, and slavery was certainly not the barbaric practice those Northern carpetbaggers made it out to be. This was a gross rewriting of history by the South, often facilitated by the U.S. as a whole in the interest of post-Civil War reconciliationamong White Americans, that is; very few people asked the formerly enslaved Black Americans what they would need in order to reconcile with their former enslavers.
The Lost Cause myth became a cancer on U.S. society that quickly metastasized. Reconstruction was brought to an ignoble end (over a disputed presidential election, no less), freeing the Southern states to reimpose a racial hierarchy. Social-political groups, such as the United Daughters of the Confederacy, seized on the myth of the Lost Cause and erected statues and monuments to Confederate heroes across the entire nation, not just the South. The Confederacy lives on in highways, military bases, state flags, schools, and hundreds of memorials across the country. Its echoes can be heard when former President Donald Trump said, after a White supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, turned to deadly violence, that there were fine people on both sides, or whenever a right-wing politician responds to a Black Lives Matter protest with all lives matter.
Were seeing a lot of mythmaking taking place in front of our eyes in the U.S. today. Its not just the Make America Great Again basket of baloney Trump was selling. Modern conservative nostalgia in general is often rooted in the fiction that there was a period when things were better, explicitly overlooking inconvenient facts like slavery, genocide, segregation, state violence against labor, and so on.
There has been a lot of criticism about the non-factual basis of the talking points on the Right, from the Big Lie of a stolen election to Liberals are putting litter boxes in schools for students who identify as cats. But that critique misses the fact that the lies are the point: The Right is creating its own myths to justify its own means (and ends). These narratives can then be used to provide an explanation for events that adhere to their followers beliefsalternative facts, if you will.
That gets back to messaging and how Democrats often fail at it, allowing bills that probably would be quite popular to fail, and allowing our national politics to be dominated by blatantly false narratives from Republicans, such as the belief that critical race theory is being taught in public schools to make innocent White children hate themselves.
To put it simply, the belief among Democrats seems to be that good policy sells itself. That increasingly looks woefully nave in the face of the Republican war on facts.
Thing is, its a lot easier to understand a story about a hero fighting a climactic battle against evil than the economic impacts of the expiration of the child tax credit expansion. If your story is believable and triggers strong emotions, people will glom on to itwhether its an attempt to recast the Civil War in less Northern terms, or the story of a stolen election, or the story of a mythic, idyllic national past. If your narrative fails to grab the imagination, doesnt tug at the heartstrings, is hard to follow, leaves people uneasy, or is just plain boring, then people will look for a better story.
The real struggle for the future of the U.S. and the world is one between myths in the making. If American Liberals in general, and Democrats in particular, want to make sure Trump not only doesnt return to power, but also doesnt become his own Lost Cause to poison us for generations, they need to make sure theyre telling a better story than he is.
We may think QAnons tale of a spray-tanned action hero battling satanic forces is ridiculous. That doesnt change the storys hold on its fans; it only casts Liberals as elitist snobs who look down on the rubes who consume such garbage entertainmentwhich reinforces the toxic us versus them narrative.
This is a difficult request to make of a political party that has become the epitome of policy wonkishness, grounded in the often-boring minutia of lawmaking. Excitement (as in, drama, engagement, story) has historically come from outside the party mainstream. But those narrative elements can still capture the popular imagination, and they helped change history (and public opinion): John Brown raiding Harpers Ferry, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. marching to Montgomery, Cesar Chavez leading the Delano Grape Strike. Even President Barack Obamas election had elements of a heroic narrativeborn to a single mother, attending Harvard Law School, cutting his teeth as a community activist, then rising to the highest office of the land. Scandal couldnt touch him, because not only did Obama conduct himself with dignity, but we all knew his story, and the Republicans could only fling mud (death panels? The tan suit? Dijon mustard?) and hope in vain that something would stick.
Even today, myths still have the power to capture the attention of our post-Enlightenment brains and take us into the realm of adventure and epic struggle. John Ford, the Hollywood director who more than anyone helped bring the myths of the Wild West to the big screen, emphasized this point in his 1962 movie The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. In the final scene, a journalist (Maxwell Scott, played by Carleton Young) who has been interviewing a senator (Ransom Stoddard, played by James Stewart), comes to realize that the politicians entire life story, his heroic arc from frontiersman to senator of a new state in the Union, is built on the foundation of a single event in his past that turns out to have been an invention. The journalist then destroys his notes. Youre not going to use the story, Mr. Scott? Stoddard asks. No, sir, Scott answers. This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.
That is considered one of the classic lines of Hollywood, and not just because it was good writing. Its because there are no truer words that convey the power that comes from telling a good story.
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Tell Better Stories to Win Public Opinion (and Elections) - YES! Magazine
Businesspeople Must Reconnect With Nature to Save the Planet – MIT Sloan
Posted: at 1:48 am
The business community is doubling down on its commitment to protect the natural environment. Over a fifth of the worlds 2,000 largest companies have now committed to net-zero targets. Some have even gone a step further: Bayer, Gucci, Nestl, and Starbucks, among others, recently committed to becoming nature positive. Strongly encouraged by the World Economic Forum and the United Nations, nature positivity involves resetting humanitys relationship with nature by radically improving on issues such as biodiversity, land degradation, and climate change. Being nature positive goes far beyond merely protecting ecosystems or even achieving net-zero targets; the ultimate goal is to create more nature by 2030 compared with 2020.
Despite these laudable plans, limited progress is being made to protect the natural environment. Damage to flora and fauna is not slowing down its rapidly increasing. Some argue that business especially large, profit-seeking companies driven by short-term financial results are, by design, not equipped to tackle grand challenges such as climate change and biodiversity loss. These issues require systemic solutions, long-term thinking, and an overall shift away from our economys reliance on fossil fuels.
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Yet there may be a deeper, more fundamental reason why business often falls short on improving its relationship with nature: Businesspeople themselves typically lack an intimate connection to nature. Indeed, businesspeople spend most of their time (COVID-19 permitting) in corporate offices made from concrete and glass, sequestered from what is typically considered natural. Even time spent outside the office is rarely spent in green spaces; Americans today spend 92% of their time indoors. Even in work environments where business activity does come close to nature on an oil rig at sea, for instance there is an implicit sense that humans are somehow above nature.
The idea that humans and nature are separate, or that nature is to be dominated by humans, has been perpetuated for centuries. As Christianity spread during the early Middle Ages, the notion that humans are, in essence, animals was rejected by the church as savage. The Enlightenment period further advanced the distinction between nature and human. Descartes, Newton, Hume, and other Enlightenment thinkers believed that human capacity for reason, science, and order rendered humans clearly superior to wild animals. This history has led to the dawn of the Anthropocene epoch, a period where humanity is now regarded as the single most influential species on the planet.
But the strict separation between humans and nature is a myth. Darwins theory of evolution certainly suggests that we all stem from the same origin. Indeed, despite our intellectual superiority, humans are extremely similar to many of our wild relatives for instance, we share 99% of our DNA with chimpanzees (and even 60% with bananas). We are also made from the same molecules, rely on the same water and air to live, and are all governed by natures rhythms and laws.
Being in harmony instead of in opposition with nature has also been key to our success as a species. Since Homo sapiens first started migrating across Africa and Eurasia over 200,000 years ago, our ability to survive has depended on having intimate knowledge about the landscapes, animals, and habitats that sustain us. These interactions with nature over long periods have established humanitys deep emotional bond with nature.
This unconscious emotional affiliation underscores why humans are instinctually drawn to nature, fascinated by mountain hikes, the sublime deep blue ocean, and animals at the zoo. Likewise, there is ample scientific data supporting the positive mental effects of connecting with nature, including reduced stress (notably technostress, or the stress experienced by regularly using digital platforms), improved focus and attention, lowered risk of psychiatric disorders, and improved ability to empathize and cooperate.
There is also a significant body of research that links ecological sustainability and our connection to nature. Indeed, when an individual lacks connection to nature, they fail to think of themselves as dependent on, or even part of, nature. This dramatically reduces the likelihood that someone would engage in pro-environmental behavior or be concerned about their role in addressing the ecological crisis.
A similar logic can be applied to business contexts: The larger the distance between businesspeople and nature, whether emotionally or physically, the less value is assigned to protecting nature. This perspective is detrimental to advancing a nature-positive economy. So, what can businesses do to connect more with nature, and how could such a connection help both nature and business?
1. Connecting with nature provides a deep sense of purpose. Getting outside of our built environments (houses, cars, subways, and office buildings) is the most simple and effective way to connect with nature. Studies suggest that spending time in green spaces promotes an individuals environmental values, which encourages pro-environmental behavior such as recycling and nature conservation. This has significant business implications: Employees who take pro-environment actions, for instance, are more engaged in corporate-level environmental strategies and are therefore more motivated to execute their organizations plans to address environmental issues.
It is not only important to spend time in nature but to feel nature. The Japanese practice of shinrin-yoku, or forest bathing, utilizes felt senses not the rational brain to experience nature on a bodily level. Forest bathers are invited to see the beauty that the natural world has to offer to pause and find pleasure in sensatory perception. Crucially, all emotions are welcome; for instance, individuals sometimes experience a sense of solastalgia, a profound sadness or even grief associated with the suffering experienced by the Earth.
Within a business setting, this emotional revelation may give businesspeople a deeper ecological purpose or call them to address critical questions, such as Why should I care about the environment? and Why does this matter within the context of my work?
The disconnect between individual employees green values and their employers environmental strategies is a major hurdle for large, publicly listed companies, as former Unilever CEO Paul Polman has suggested. Environmental sustainability may feel somewhat misplaced in daily working life. It is challenging enough to connect to abstract phenomena such as climate change, which for many seems to be a distant global threat rather than a present-day reality. Spending more quality time in nature offers a potential solution, allowing us to truly experience the value of nature, not as a resource to be exploited but as something that has intrinsic meaning for our daily lives, including our work.
2. Nature connects business to place and knowledge. Grounding in nature provides a connection to a specific place. Without this link, businesses may suffer from a situation referred to as placelessness. Placeless businesses are detached from their effects on the natural environment, which is problematic for addressing (or even acknowledging) environmental issues. This affects, for instance, multinational banks, where climate change is merely one element of globalized financial markets. Focusing on these abstracted nonplaces overlooks how businesses are embedded within specific natural systems and locales. Companies far removed from nature can become disconnected from the material realities of current and pressing environmental issues.
True sustainability occurs when a business is deeply connected to nature and thereby shares a close relationship to place. Consider industries that have endured for centuries, producing regional products such as Champagne (France), whisky (Scotland), Parmesan cheese (Italy), and beer (Germany and Belgium), among many others. These industries have a special relationship to their land; their knowledge of fluctuating climates, changes in flora and fauna, and seasonal patterns is all deeply rooted in nature. For these businesses, sustainability is not an add-on. They have no other choice but to profoundly respect nature. Likewise, there are many studies that focus on the relationship between sustainability and indigenous people, who have successfully managed ecosystems for millennia. In their research on Cree tallymen, or beaver trappers, in northern Quebec, Gail Whiteman and colleagues highlight how managers sustainably oversee fragile ecological systems through the ecological embeddedness that occurs when a manager personally identifies with the land and cultivates intricate knowledge about their environment.
Such environmental knowledge can be crucial to businesses becoming resilient to climate threats. For instance, studies of the energy industry demonstrate how employees exposed to natures harshest conditions such as extreme weather events at onsite production facilities take climate issues more seriously compared with employees at corporate offices located in metropolitan cities. Being exposed to nature biting back serves to seriously challenge typical assumptions about ecosystems and scarce resources which, in turn, produces knowledge about local climates that can be incorporated into decision-making.
3. Nature fosters our interconnectedness. Being connected to nature often results in profound realizations of the interdependency between all living things. This interconnectedness between all matter or in business-speak, between all stakeholders is central to the concept of sustainability, highlighted by concepts such as deep ecology or biocentrism. These philosophies stress that no life form is intrinsically worth more or less than any other; human activity is part of natural systems, not a dominant force above other systemic parts (including other humans). Yet, intellectually understanding the idea of interdependency between all things is very different from embodying it, which is essential for a businessperson to act interdependently.
To truly experience a sense of oneness, an individual must connect with nature on a deep level. This can be achieved by, for instance, going on a yatra an ancient practice of walking through nature, often in silence, with the intention to deepen ones relation to the earth. By emphasizing our interconnectedness as part of a wide web of earthly entities, we see both human and nonhuman beings as having inherent value in and of themselves.
A sense of interconnectedness can also be achieved not by going out into nature but by bringing nature inside, with corporate offices designed around or based on the principles of nature. Biophilic design, for instance, highlights how offices can be constructed within natural habitats: building with natural materials, such as wood and earth; cultivating beehives and community gardens on rooftops; and allowing the natural flow of water and air inside, among other possibilities. Embedding natural features in work environments helps office workers connect with nature, which may further a sense of interconnectedness.
Ultimately, for business to back up its bold claims of seriously tackling the ecological crisis, substantive action will be paramount. However, this can only be achieved if businesspeople and, by extension, the organizations they run, foster a deeper connection with nature. As John Muir, Americas most famous naturalist and conservationist, once said, Keep close to Natures heart and break clear away, once in a while, and climb a mountain or spend time in the woods. Wash your spirit clean.
George Ferns (@thisgeorgeferns) is an assistant professor in organization studies and sustainability at Cardiff Business School.
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Businesspeople Must Reconnect With Nature to Save the Planet - MIT Sloan
The warped mind behind Russias war – Spiked
Posted: at 1:48 am
In 2014, a Foreign Affairs article described Russian philosopher Alexander Dugin as Putins brain.
At the time, it seemed a fitting epithet. The then 52-year-old Dugin was championing Russias annexation of Crimea and urging on the further conquest of the Donbas in eastern Ukraine. Superficially, at least, he seemed to be uncannily in tune with the Kremlin.
There were countless other parallels emerging during the mid-2010s between Dugins thought and Russias political trajectory. He had long championed Russia as the leader of a Eurasian bloc, not dissimilar to the actual Eurasian Economic Union which came into being in 2014. He had consistently attacked the moral hegemony of the West, much as Putin started to do from his famous 2007 Munich Security Conference speech onwards. And in his 1997 doorstopper, the Foundations of Geopolitics, which was said to have influenced Russias military leaders, Dugin dismissed Ukraine as a meaningless entity, possessing no cultural or ethnic uniqueness an assertion the Russian army was, by 2014, trying to prove in practice in Crimea and the Donbas.
Moreover, at points it has seemed as if Putin himself was merely echoing the long-bearded thinker, from his Dugin-esque talk of fifth column conspiracies to descriptions of eastern Ukraine as Novorossiya (New Russia).
Since 2014, Dugins influence over the Russian president seems only to have grown. Today he is conjured up as the ideological driving force behind Russias barbaric invasion of Ukraine, the dark Rasputin-like power behind Putins de facto throne. Hes the Russian fascist who helped to convince Putin to invade, the man behind Putin, the thinker who, in the words of the Washington Post, has brought us here, to the brink of another world war.
Not all Western observers are convinced of Dugins importance. They say his influence is vastly overstated, note his frequent criticism of Putin for being too liberal, and point to Putins greater intellectual debt to other (admittedly long-dead) thinkers including religious philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev, ethnologist Lev Gumilev, and all-round reactionary Ivan Ilyin. Dugin, according to this reading, is overhyped, especially over here in the West.
In search of some insight, I spoke to Benjamin Teitelbaum, whose brilliant War for Eternity: The Return of Traditionalism and the Rise of the Populist Right has done so much to illuminate Dugins thought and influence. Its wrong to say hes Putins brain, that hes sitting at the end of these gigantic tables, whispering [in his ear], he tells me. But neither is it true that Dugins a blowhard who managed to beguile academic and journalistic commentators into thinking hes significant when hes really not.
So where exactly does Dugins significance lie? In the realm of narrativising, Teitelbaum says, in the realm of characterisation, and also in the deep intangible influence of literature spread to a large community over a long period of time.
Dugin is significant then. Not because he exerts any direct influence on Putin. And not because well-thumbed Dugin tomes sit on Russian generals bookshelves. But because he has helped forge, as a leading part of an increasingly active nationalist intellectual milieu, something that Russias ruling elite has lacked since the fall of Communism: namely, a sense of national mission, of near spiritual purpose. To use Teitelbaums words, Dugin has narrativised and characterised Russia. Through his books, lectures and media appearances, he has told Russias leaders over and over again what Russia supposedly once was and what it should become again not just a great power, but a spiritual power, a bulwark of tradition against the nihilistic, everything-goes liberalism of the West.
Russian soldiers fly their flag at a Russian army position just outside the town of Gori, Georgia, on 18 August 2008. (Credit: Getty.)
And as Russias relationship with Western powers has deteriorated, its leaders have become increasingly receptive to Dugins message. It has given them an alternative vision of Russias future, in place of the dashed liberal dreams of the 1990s and early 2000s. As Teitelbaum explains, Putin experimented at the beginning of his rule with remaking Russia as a successful liberal, capitalist, pseudo-democratic state, very much following on the heels of Boris Yeltsin. And it didnt work and so he tried something else a conservative Russia that would stand for values, tradition, wholeness, collectivity [and often against] liberalism, change, progress and all these things. And Dugin, as one of the prominent voices in Russia, pushed that idea and it worked.
Tradition, wholeness, collectivity. In many ways, Dugin is an unlikely conduit for such ideas. Born in Moscow in 1962, the descendant of a long line of Russian military officers, Dugin was by all accounts a precocious, rebellious youth, who bristled against the stifling conformity of life in Soviet Russia. The Communist Party owned all of us, he was later to reflect. [It] owned the mind, the spirit, the emotion, the body. Everything was under control, except one thing. The innermost part. (1) Perhaps in an attempt to liberate the innermost part, the young Dugin immersed himself during the 1980s in the dissident bohemia of Moscows notorious Yuzhinsky Circle. They would have wild sex parties, and drinking binges that lasted for multiple days, explains Teitelbaum. Their interests were anything anti-establishment rock music, drugs, alcohol and eventually mysticism was part of that as well.
It was during this period that Dugin first encountered Traditionalism. This, as political scientist Marlene Laruelle puts it in a 2006 essay on Russias radical right, remains Dugins main intellectual reference point and the basis of his political attitudes as well as his Eurasianism.
Traditionalism is a relatively obscure school of thought that originated in the work of a French intellectual called Ren Gunon (1886-1951). The tradition this thinking refers to consists of supposedly universal truths which are manifest in all the major world religions. It was Gunons contention that man had fallen away from the truths of revealed religion. As he argued in The Crisis of the Modern World (1927), the past three or four hundred years of modernity represented the very opposite of progress. They were a regression, a late stage in the spiralling decline through the Hindu yugas a version of Hesiods ages of gold, silver, copper and iron towards a new dark age. Modern man, committed to rationalism and materialism, and now thoroughly estranged from the spiritual truth, was entirely lost.
Gunons deep disillusionment with modernity was far from unusual during the 1920s. Much of Western high culture at the time, from the modernist avant-garde to the dark imaginings of conservative revolutionaries, was shot through with a shared sense of moral, political and spiritual exhaustion. What perhaps separated Gunon from many of his contemporaries (though not all) was his solution a turn towards non-Western culture, and the religions of the East, which he saw as being closer to tradition and the truth.
Julius Evola, Gunons Italian follower and an unabashed Mussolini supporter, gave Gunons otherwise quietist philosophy a political urgency. Rather than seek solace in religions of the East, Evola called for a restoration of spiritual values in the West and appealed, like many of his fascist contemporaries, to a hierarchical Medieval world as a vision of a future society.
Its clear that the Traditionalist critique of modernity continues to resonate deeply with Dugin. Like Gunon and Evola (whose work Dugin has translated into Russian), Dugin sees the modern world, from the Enlightenment onwards, as a further fall away from the truth, a dark age. But, as Teitelbaum explains, Dugin goes further He adds a geographic element to the temporal distinctions between the ages.
So the dark age [for Dugin] is in the West today, says Teitelbaum. And the opposite of modernity, as tradition, is incubated in the East. Therefore to fight against the dark age, we need to promote, in military, economic and political terms, the Eastern states against the West.
Thats Duginism, says Teitelbaum. Thats Duginist Traditionalism.
During the early 1990s, Dugin was still a relatively obscure figure on the anti-liberal fringes of the Russian political scene. Russias West-leaning politicians were then in the ascendancy, rapidly opening up Russian society and privatising vast swathes of hitherto state-owned industry and enterprise as part of a programme of so-called shock therapy. Dugin, meanwhile, was busy ploughing a quasi-fascist furrow, including a brief involvement in writer Eduard Limonovs National Bolshevik Party a wilfully provocative political grouping which combined Nazi symbolism with economic leftism and, at one point, claimed to have over 30,000 members. Was it a serious political party or a social club? Its hard to say, says Teitelbaum.
Dugin began to be taken much more seriously with the publication of the Foundation of Geopolitics in 1997. Here he argued that the geopolitical forces shaping the world derived from a foundational conflict between Atlanticism (seafaring states and civilisations, such as the US and Britain) and Eurasianism (land-based states and civilisations, such as Eurasia-Russia). He then divided the world into four civilisational zones: the American zone, the Afro-European zone, the Asian-Pacific zone, and the Eurasian zone. It was ethnic Russians destiny as the bearers of a unique civilisation, as Dugin put it to play the leading role in bringing together and constituting Eurasia as a regional hegemon in the coming multipolar world.
To do so, he called for the cultivation and reassertion of Russian nationalism, which should employ cultural-ethnic terminology, with a special emphasis on such categories as Narodnost and Russian Orthodoxy. Indeed, religion, as befitting his Traditionalism, was to the fore in Dugins argument. Russians should realise that they are Orthodox in the first place; [ethnic] Russians in the second place; and only in the third place, people, he wrote. Russian nationalism entailed the churchification of Russians.
There was much that was clearly still Traditionalist in the Foundation of Geopolitics, from the call to Russia to return to its spiritual roots to the presentation of what amounted to an almost Manichean conflict with the Atlanticist West. It was essentially all of the political aspects of his thinking stripped of the weird mysticism, Teitelbaum tells me. And its effect was to outline a vision for Russia.
The nucleus of his significance and influence in the Russian state, Teitelbaum continues, rests on the Foundation of Geopolitics. Indeed, so impressed was Igor Rodionov, a hardline defence minister under then Russian president Boris Yeltsin, that he made it assigned reading at the General Staff Academy the main training institution for Russias military leaders. As Laruelle notes, by 2000, the Foundation of Geopolitics had already been reissued four times, and was recognised as the founding work of the contemporary Russian school of geopolitics.
So, at the end of the 1990s, when Russias post-Cold War relationship with the West began to fray markedly, Dugins star was starting to rise. In 1999, he was named an adviser on geopolitics to Gennadiy Seleznev, the speaker for the Russian State Duma. And, in 2002, he founded his own political party, the Eurasian Party, to promote his distinct geopolitical-cum-spiritual vision.
Alexander Dugin speaking at the New Horizon Conference in Beirut, 2018. (Credit: Mahdieh Gaforian)
In 2008, when the Russian army invaded Georgia, on behalf of Ossetian militants fighting the West-leaning government in Tbilisi, Dugin came into his own. He appeared repeatedly on state TV, speaking sometimes from just within Georgian borders about the war, characterising and shaping its narrative. He would be adding a story and meaning to what was otherwise just a power conflict, a power play between two states, Teitelbaum tells me. And he was doing so according to his own distinct Traditionalist reworking of geopolitics. As Teitelbaum explains in War for Eternity:
Thats why Dugin was [in Georgia]. The conflict in the mountains wasnt one between a state and a restive minority group, but rather between Russia and the West, between rooted Eurasia and the gallivanting Atlantic. Between Tradition and modernity.
Russias war in Georgia in part a response to NATOs flirtation with its president, Mikheil Saakashvili helped consolidate Dugins role as Russias storyteller. It enabled him to play on the growing antagonism between Russia and Western powers, promoting his geopolitical vision of Russia as a source of spiritual renewal, and the West as a source of moral decay. And it was a vision that was becoming ever more attractive to a Kremlin in search of a national purpose.
There have been awkward moments. In 2014, he effectively called for a liquidation of ethnic Ukrainians in the Donbas. Kill, kill and kill, were his exact words, which eventually cost him his job at Moscow State University. But that has done little to diminish the appeal of Dugins thought to sections of the Russian elite. Indeed, such has been his advocacy of Eurasianism over the past decade or so that he has become, in Teitelbaums words, something of a mysterious diplomat, frequently heading to Turkey, Iran and Pakistan, not to mention into the bowels of the European alt- and far-right, to open channels, cultivate relationships and even broker deals as he did between Putin and Erdogan in 2015, after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane along the Syrian border.
Dugin may have played a significant role in narrativising Russias geopolitical position, playing up its supposed civilisational, ethnic and spiritual uniqueness. Yet what is striking about this intellectual effort is the extent to which its substance and sources are resolutely Western. His geopolitical lodestars are: turn-of-the-20th-century Germans, such as Friedrich Ratzel and Nazi favourite Karl Haushofer; Swedens Rudolf Kjellen; and Britains Sir Halford Mackinder. And then theres Traditionalism itself, which originally flourished, like so much of todays critique of modernity, among Western intellectuals during the cataclysmic interwar years.
Indeed, Traditionalism is perhaps best understood as a particular expression of the broader conservative revolution that erupted in Western Europe after the First World War an intellectual opposition to both an insurgent socialism and a failed liberal capitalism, which in part fuelled fascism. Little wonder, then, that Dugins search for new languages for talking about this deeper anti-modernism, as Teitelbaum puts it, has taken him recently into the work of more mainstream conservative revolutionaries, such as Nazi jurist and poltical theorist Carl Schmitt, and, most notably, the philosopher Martin Heidegger.
Indeed, Dugins 2009 book, The Fourth Political Theory, is effectively an ethno-nationalist tribute to Heidegger, with a few nods to Schmitt thrown in for good measure. Dugin argues that of the three major political theories of modern times fascism, communism and liberalism only the latter is still standing. Liberalism is therefore no longer a political ideology competing among other ideologies; it now appears as the only viable form of politics itself. Liberalism is now simply what is.
But there is an alternative, argues Dugin. He argues that liberalism is the product of a particularly Western way of being, a distinctly Western Dasein, to use Heideggers term. Russian Dasein, as Dugin puts it elsewhere, has a structure that differs from the structure of Western Dasein. And this particularly Russian way of being, this uniquely Russian Dasein spiritual rather than rational, collectivist rather than individualist, strictly hierarchical rather than democratic, etc could provide the ground for the new, fourth political theory that will rival and roll back liberalism. This all depends on whether Russia decides to be true to itself, decides to become authentic, and reject Western values as alien, inauthentic. As Dugin puts it: If Russia chooses to be, then it will automatically bring about the creation of a fourth political theory. He doesnt name this theory, or flesh out its contents beyond grand generalities. But then he doesnt need to for this fourth political theory, this expression of Russias national essence, is, like Heideggers vision of authentic being, essentially a negation of what is: in Dugins case, a negation of the inauthentic West.
So Dugin is writing here, once again, of Russias distinct spiritual and political destiny. Its geopolitical mission. Its potential to offer an alternative to the decadent liberalism of the West. Yet he is doing so in terms of Heidegger, a Western European thinker whose work was shaped by a crisis of Weimar democracy and of liberalism and capitalism more broadly internal to the West. A thinker, that is, whose appeal to authenticity in opposition to the inauthenticity of life in Western society was generated by a sense of moral and ideological exhaustion within the West.
Theres a pattern here. The sources of Dugins critique of Western modernity, his attack on liberalism, rationalism, universalism and the rest, are never Russian. Theyre consistently Western. Theyre drawn from the Romantic reaction against the Enlightenment, from Nietzsches irrationalist assault on socialism and democracy, from the broader Modernist revolt against modernity of Heidegger and countless others. And later still, Dugin draws from postmodernism, and its rejection of universalism and truth. Indeed, as he told BBC Newsnight in 2016, there is no such thing as the truth, only perspectives. Hence he was able to claim that Russia has its own truth, in contrast to the Wests version.
Dugins recourse to Traditionalism or Heidegger or postmodernism shows that the source of Russias supposed opposition to liberalism and even democracy and socialism is not Russian at all. Its a thoroughly Western counter-Enlightenment tradition, which reached its most intense expression during the crisis-ridden interwar years, and which has since taken the form of an ever-developing culture war.
And this reveals something important about not just Dugins thought, but also about the nature of the Russian nationalism he has played such a key role in promoting. In Dugins telling, Russia is fighting on behalf of the East against the West. In Dugins telling, Russia embodies tradition, spiritual truth and order against the soulless materialism, individualism and moral decay of the West. This is about Tradition versus modernity. Security versus danger, as Teitelbaum paraphrases it. That is where Duginism lives.
Yet what Dugin presents as a continuation of a long-running East-West culture war, a battle of ideas between Russia and the West is, it turns out, the product of a battle of ideas, a culture war within the West. Russian nationalism, Dugin-style, draws not on Russian strength, but on the longstanding turn among Western cultural elites against Enlightenment and modernity, from Nietzsches assault on Western nihilism to its latest iteration among the woke.
As Teitelbaum rightly says, that is where Duginism lives in this conflict over, and reaction against, modernity. But it does so not as an expression of some authentic Russian spirit, but as a parasite, feasting on a crisis internal to the West.
Tim Black is a spiked columnist.
(1) Cited in War for Eternity: The Return of Traditionalism and the Rise of the Populist Right, by Benjamin Teitelbaum, Penguin, 2020, p41
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The warped mind behind Russias war - Spiked
UAE’s best universities: Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi – The National
Posted: at 1:48 am
As thousands of final-year students in the UAE submit their applications to local universities, we take a look at some of the best higher education options in the Emirates and what they have to offer
Paris, which is nicknamed the City of Light thanks to its central role in the Age of Enlightenment in the mid-18th century and its early adoption of gas-street lighting.
1257 (parent university); 2006 (Abu Dhabi campus)
Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi was set up as a branch of Pariss College of Sorbonne, which was established in the 13th century by Robert de Sorbon, the chaplain to Louis IX.
While many universities in the UAE focus on business, engineering and other technical subjects, Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi is particularly strong in the arts, humanities and sciences.
It occupies a large, customised campus.
Al Reem Island, Abu Dhabi
Dh48,700 diploma in intensive French (one year)
Dh215,000 all bachelors degrees (three years)
Dh143,400 master in applied sociological research (two years)
Dh166,400 master in international business law (two years)
Bachelors degrees include: applied foreign languages; economics and management; French literature; geography and planning; history; history of art and archaeology; law; mathematics with specialisation in data science for artificial intelligence; philosophy and sociology; physics; and records management and archival science.
Masters degrees include: applied foreign languages; applied sociological research; banking and finance; environment; environmental sustainability law and policies; health economics; history of art and archaeology; history of art and museum studies; international business law; international law; international relations and diplomacy; marketing; management; communication; media; physics; records management and archival studies; teaching French as a foreign language; and urban planning and development.
Accountancy; agriculture; anthropology; biochemistry; biology; chemistry; criminology; dentistry; engineering; filmmaking; geology; journalism; marketing; medicine; music; politics; psychology; sports science; and veterinary medicine.
83rd QS World University Rankings (parent university)
88th Times Higher Education World University Rankings (parent university)
There are 1,065 students, 64 per cent of whom are Emiratis. Overall, there are students from 61 nations.
- Simone de Beauvoir, a French author best known for her book The Second Sex, which was highly influential in the feminist movement.
Famous french writer Simone de Beauvoir attended the parent university in Paris. Photo: AFP
- Enis Batur, a celebrated Turkish author, essayist and poet.
- Christiane Taubira, born in French Guiana. She studied sociology at the Sorbonne and was the French Minister of Justice between 2012 and 2016.
"Sorbonne university Abu Dhabi is a research-led university. We are proud to fulfil our mission by acting as a beacon of knowledge in the Middle East by bringing the expertise in education and academic excellence of Sorbonne University in Paris to the region.
Prof Silvia Serrano, vice chancellor of Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi. Photo: Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi
"Besides awarding our students French degrees that are recognised worldwide, we aim to provide students with world-class education that equips them with the right tools and research methodologies, and develops their critical thinking skills, all of which will enable them to become successful decision-makers and take the lead in knowledge development in the future.
"Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi also offers outstanding students a wide variety of scholarships and preferential rates and presents an overall exceptional university experience.
"In addition, Sorbonne University students and graduates benefit from the universitys strong industry links through internships, career opportunities and professional exposure."
Updated: April 22, 2022, 4:00 AM
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UAE's best universities: Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi - The National
Tickets Alert: Early hours tours of the British Museum – ianVisits
Posted: at 1:48 am
The British Museum opens to the public at 10am, but theyve resumed a little known tour that starts at 9am before the public gets inside.
The tours are themed around five core topics, and you can book for any of the five tours.
They all last around an hour and with the limited number of just twelve people in each group and the galleries empty except for the tour, they cost 33 per person (16.50 for children). After the tour, as youre already in the museum, you can then wander around the rest of the galleries and my tip would be to head to the popular galleries, as theyll take a good half hour or so to full fill up with visitors.
All the tours are here and below.
Uncover the origins of an extraordinary collection as you learn about the beginnings of the British Museum in 1753 and its subsequent development. The Enlightenment gallery (Room 1) focuses on the 18th century, an era of new knowledge, scientific discovery and European colonialism. The Collecting the world gallery (Room 2) focuses on the growth of the collection from the 18th century to the present day.
Galleries on this tour:
Booking details
In the Egyptian sculpture gallery, you can see impressive statues of kings and gods, monumental tomb architecture and ancient tomb reliefs spanning 3,000 years. These include the imposing, colossal bust of Ramesses II, the Gayer-Anderson Cat and the world-famous Rosetta Stone the key to deciphering hieroglyphs. You can learn the importance of large-scale sculpture in ancient Egyptian temples and tombs, and get the perfect introduction to this unmissable collection.
Gallery on this tour:
Booking details
From painted coffins, statues and models of daily life to spectacular wall paintings from the tomb-chapel of the high official Nebamun, investigate what tombs and burial goods tell us about the lives of ancient Egyptian people. The tour will explore the preparation of the deceased for burial, including mummification, and the use of magic to help and protect people on their perilous journey to the afterlife.
Galleries on this tour:
Booking details
In the Sir Joseph Hotung Gallery of China, you will gain an insight into the development of Chinese history and culture from 5000 BC to the present day.
Gallery on this tour:
Booking details
Enjoy some of the highlights of the Museums exceptional collection, including sculptures from the Parthenon and the Mausoleum of Halikarnassos, regarded as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
Galleries on this tour:
Booking details
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Tickets Alert: Early hours tours of the British Museum - ianVisits
Letters to the editor: True freedom does not have loopholes – National Post
Posted: at 1:48 am
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Re: We Are Less Free Today Than 40 Years Ago; The Social Justice Threat To Liberty, Ryan Alford, both, April 16.The United States Bill of Rights is based on enlightenment political theory: the natural rights of John Locke; Jean-Jacques Rousseaus The Social Contract; maybe Immanuel Kants moral principles based on human autonomy. All uphold the principle of inalienable human rights. To suggest a right is granted but can be limited, subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society, is like suggesting one can be a little bit pregnant.
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Rights are generally designed as a buffer against government overreach. When government can override rights with a notwithstanding clause, we have no individual rights. A right is a right, or it isnt. You cant suck and blow at the same time.Larry Sylvester, Acton, Ont.
Kudos to Ryan Alford for nailing the most important constitutional issue of our time: should the government and courts be deciding social justice issues, or should individuals, through their own deliberation, decide for themselves. Liberty and freedom should rest in the peoples hands as was originally conceived by our Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Freedom of speech is the most essential cornerstone of democracy. Trust the people.Patrick Skillings, Victoria.
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Re: Ukraine Burns, Canada Hesitates, John Ivison, April 19.Ukraine needs help now. Canada has a supply of light armoured vehicles in storage, but rather than providing immediate aid to Ukraine by sending them, Defence Minister Anita Anand is thinking about sending new ones for which there hasnt even been a contract awarded to build them. Ukraine needs help now, not months from now.
When first elected, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that Canada is back, yet there has been very little to support this statement. His government should do the humane thing and get those light armoured vehicles out of storage and over to Ukraine as quickly as possible.Barbara Cantlie, Toronto.
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Re: The Problem With Banning Holocaust Denial, Terry Glavin, April 14; Holocaust Denial Ban Likely To Be Pointless, Chris Selley, April 16.A number of National Post columnists have expressed doubts as to the legality and effectiveness of legislation being proposed by the Canadian government, and already adopted by several European countries, to ban Holocaust denial. Although they acknowledge the evils of antisemitism and Holocaust denial, little is offered on how to stem the tide of antisemitism other than public education.
Statistics indicate a troubling rise in antisemitism around the world. It must never be permitted to reach the levels it did in the 1940s. Certainly education is vital, but whose freedom of expression is impeded, other than antisemites, by the proposed language in the budget, condemning those who wilfully promote antisemitism by condoning, denying or downplaying the Holocaust?Sam Mitnick, Cte-Saint-Luc, Que.
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Re: No, Poilievres Populism Isnt Racist, Adam Zivo, April 16.Its early days in the Conservative leadership race, so there is more hype than scrutiny around what Pierre Poilievre has promised at this juncture. His musings about the Bank of Canada and its independence would be a game-changer, and not in a good way. His promise to speed up the accreditation for foreign workers is a non-starter, as the provinces control the accreditation process and it is there for a good reason. There are standards in our various professions and trades, and many immigrants coming in simply dont meet those standards. There is no fast track to becoming qualified in Canada as immigrants must pass the same exams as everyone else.
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Poilievre has to get through the leadership election in September, and then spend three years or less trying to convince voters to choose the Conservatives next time out. This will be a big ask, as the more right-wing element of the party that former prime minister Stephen Harper spent 10 years keeping power away from will most definitely be a part of Poilivres cabinet if he succeeds at defeating the Liberals. It would seem unlikely that voters would consider a party that would have anti-abortionist, anti-vaccine and pro-gun advocates in its cabinet.Jeff Spooner, Kinburn, Ont.
Re: Sweden, Finland Edge Closer To Joining NATO, April 14.Russia has threatened to move its nukes and hypersonic missiles closer to Europe if Sweden and Finland join NATO. But arent these the same missiles that can easily cover long distances? Having Russian missiles on Europes doorstep, rather than many kilometres away, is a distinction without a difference. The question is: will Russia ever deploy them?
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Russian President Vladimir Putin knows that NATO has no offensive designs over Russian territory and is no threat to Russia, per se. The present madness stems from the realization that NATO on Russias doorstep means its doorstep will stay right where it is.Mike McCrodan, Langley, B.C.
Re: 40,000 Deported By Force, Says Mariupol Mayor, April 19.The city of Mariupol, Ukraine, has reportedly been almost completely destroyed by the invading Russians.
There is a town in France, Oradour-sur-Glane, that is the site of a Nazi atrocity during the Second World War. In 1944, the retreating Nazis herded the population into the towns church, barred the doors and set it on fire. Then they razed the village to the ground. After the war, the French left the destroyed village at it was, never to be rebuilt. Now it stands as a memorial to those killed by Nazi atrocities.
When all of this is over, and Ukraine has survived, something like that should be done with at least a section of Mariupol: a memorial to the insanity, and the victims, of Vladimir Putin. Never to be forgotten.Murray Bowman, Vancouver.
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Letters to the editor: True freedom does not have loopholes - National Post
Evolution Mining Limited (CAHPF) Management on Q3 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript – Seeking Alpha
Posted: at 1:47 am
Evolution Mining Limited. (OTCPK:CAHPF) Q3 2022 Earnings Conference Call April 20, 2022 9:00 PM ET
Company Participants
Jake Klein - Executive Chairman
Lawrie Conway - Chief Financial Officer & Finance Director
Glen Masterman - Vice President, Discovery & Business Development
John Penhall - General Manager Cowal Operations
Conference Call Participants
Matt Greene - Credit Suisse
Mitch Ryan - Jefferies
David Radclyffe - Global Mining Research
Al Harvey - JPMorgan
Daniel Morgan - Barrenjoey
Alex Barkley - RBC
Andrew Bowler - Macquarie
Matthew Collings - Morgans
Kate McCutcheon - Citi
Stuart McKinnon - The West Australian
Michael Bennett - AFR
Operator
Thank you for standing by and welcome to the Evolution Mining March 2022 Quarter Results Conference Call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. There will be a presentation followed by a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]
I would like to now hand the conference over to Jake Klein, Executive Chairman. Please go ahead.
Jake Klein
Thanks Omni. Good morning. Welcome to the call and thank you for joining us. We do appreciate it. Bob Fulker, our Chief Operating Officer is taking a well-in break from todays call, so Im joined by our Finance Director and CFO, Lawrie Conway and our VP Discovery and Business Development Glen Masterman.
At a macro level, this quarter inflation in the U.S. rose to 8.5% its highest level in 41 years, while unemployment rates in the U.S. and Australia are at historic lows. Russia's invasion of Ukraine is now entering its third month, with the conflict showing no signs of reducing, and COVID continues to wreak havoc on people's health, workforce availability and supply chains.
Closer to home in February and March, the Australian East Coast was battered by heavy rainfall and flooding that tragically killed 21 people and required thousands of people to evacuate their homes. Against this backdrop, gold has been fulfilling its traditional role as the best hedge against inflation and geopolitical uncertainty. Regrettably for the world, I expect these issues to continue.
Turning to Evolutions quarterly reports and our performance and starting on slide three of the presentation. There are many highlights in today's report, but three are clear standouts for me. Firstly, our portfolio has been transformed into one which is amongst the highest quality, lowest cost cash generative, growth oriented portfolios in the gold sector. 148,000 ounces of gold produced an all in sustaining cost of A$990 an ounce was US$770 an ounce is a 27% reduction quarter-in-quarter and makes us very close to being the lowest cost gold producer of scale on the planet.
Operating mine cash flow increased 33% to $269 million. Net mine cash flow increased 135% to $124 million, but the bulk of the $144 million of capital being spent on our most important organic growth opportunities at Cowal and Red Lake. We paid our 18th consecutive dividend of $55 million bringing total dividends paid to shareholders to $1 billion.
Secondly, the impact of 100% ownership of Ernest Henry and the transformation at Red Lake. In the last quarterly report conference call three months ago, I said that I was confident that by securing 100% of Ernest Henry, we had concluded what is likely to prove to be one of the most transformative deals in Evolutions short history. Today's quarterly report is proof of this. The numbers speak for themselves.
Copper production more than tripled to over 13,000 tonnes resulting in an all in sustaining cost of negative $2,000 an ounce and the mine generated $185 million in operating cash flow. Gold sales were higher than production at 39,000 ounces due to an additional 20,000 ounces of gold that was sold to the to -- due to the cancellation of the previous economic interest.
Excluding the impact of those sales, operating cash flow for the quarter would have been $137 million and all-in sustaining costs would have been negative $4,200 per ounce. The transformation at Red Lake gained very important traction this quarter with a 67% increase in production to 33,000 ounces. We expect to improve this to over 40,000 ounces in the June quarter. It is testament to the significant efforts of our people at Red Lake and the operations team under Bob's leadership. We still have lots of work to do, but we are making tangible progress in creating value in this operation.
Thirdly, I was proud of the resilience our teams demonstrated. As mentioned a few moments ago, COVID and rain events caused problems across the country during the quarter and we were also affected. Over 25% of our workforce at Calow tested positive for COVID during the quarter, which amounted to 199 people. Fortunately, everyone is recovering. This of course excludes the impact of those named needing to isolate as a result of being deemed close contacts. Despite this, not only were we able to deliver a robust quarter at Calow, but the team was able to plan and execute a very logistically challenging seven day Mills shutdown, which required a multitude of contractors around 300 people to assemble on sites. With very strict protocols in place not one person involved in the shutdown tested positive.
The unprecedented East Coast rainfall in the quarter impacted both Calow and mount Rawdon. Cowal managed through it but at Mount Rawdon it did result in some instability in the north wall of the open pit. Although this is being managed, it has had and continues to have an impact on our ability to access higher grade oil from the open pit and also required the crusher to be shut down for nine days.
As you all know, the underperformance of Red Lake in the first six months of the year left us with very little runway on our original guidance and taking these new factors into accounts, we have reduced our FY 22 Production guidance by 20,000 ounces, or 3% from the lower end to around 650,000 ounces. We're expecting a strong fourth quarter with an increase in production of around 22%. There is no change to our sector leading all-in sustaining cost guns of $1,135 to $1,195 an ounce, so we will continue to produce high margin ounces.
On slide four, we have set out the results from Ernest Henry. Being a copper gold mine it is challenging to compare it to other gold mines. The best measure is cash flow. And on this measure, I am confident that they will be very few gold mines in Australia that generated $175 million in net mine cash flow this quarter. We have chosen to treat the copper as a by-product credit which delivers exceptionally low cost of negative $2,000 an ounce. Another lens to look at this through is on a gold equivalents basis. Through this lens, production for the March quarter would have equated to 95,000 ounces of gold, or 380,000 ounces on an annualized basis at a low all-in sustaining cost of A$11150 an ounce.
The charts on slide five tell the story of the transformation that is occurring at Red Lake. I am particularly pleased that we gained momentum through the quarter with March being the strongest month and in many areas breaking all-time records at the operation. Having consistently delivered about 1200 meters of development for the last six months, the Red Lake transformation plan now has a goal to consistently and safely mine 3000 ore times per day. This was achieved in March with 106,000 tonnes mined surpassing the previous monthly record in the history of the mine by more than 20,000 tonnes.
Pleasingly this mining rate is being sustained in April. On-going improvements to mining practices continue to drive reductions in stope dilution that improve mine grades by 17% this quarter. Both the Red Lake and Campbell mills are operating at record throughputs. The CYD decline which will provide an important new source of higher grade all gathered momentum and is on track to deliver the first production ore in the September quarter, only six months away. We expect improved production to over 40,000 ounces in the June quarter with the focus on sustaining this level consistently over the next few quarters. Whilst being a few quarters behind our original schedule, we do remain confident of the potential for Red Lake to be transformed into 350,000 ounces a year low cost operation.
Turning to slide six, the Cowal underground project continues to be on budget and schedule for critical path activity. Major procurement milestones have progressed during the quarter and the award of the primary mining and drilling contract is imminence. This will complete the award of all material contracts. First production ore from the project remains on schedule for the June 2023 quarter when the pace funds is commissioned.
Slide seven shows the significant impact of the Kundana and East Kundana acquisition has made on the future of Mungari. The integration is progressing well with the objective to create what we are describing as one Mungari standardized systems and processes and sharing of equipment and workforce costs what was previously three separately run operations.
One example of the operational synergies that are being captured as in underground maintenance and training teams with three separate units are being combined with significant savings and efficiencies. Recruitment of vacant roles is also progressing well with vacant roles reducing during the quarter despite the tight Western Australian Labor markets.
Turning to slide eight. Earlier this month, I was fortunate to be on site when Mount Rawdon hosted a delegation from the Queensland government led by the Minister of Resources, the honourable Scott Stewart. The visit included an update on the two gigawatt pumped hydro power project and the significant contribution it can make to delivering Queensland's renewable energy targets. As a potential pumped hydro facility Mount Rawdon is blessed by history, topography and location.
It has a huge head start in about in that about a billion dollars has already been spent mining 200 million which has been processed for gold production over the expected 25 year period of its life. That billion dollars has created a big hole which can be used as the lower reservoir of the pumped hydro scheme. In addition, the topography of the surrounding region also delivers Mount Rawdon a great natural sight for the upper reservoir.
In terms of location, fortunately, Mount Rawdon it's only 25 kilometers from major power lines connecting Queensland southern and central grids. And on top of that, the timing of the mines closure lines with Queensland decarbonisation strategy, with the state due to close the 700 megawatt Callide B coal-fired power station in 2028. The study work remains on-going and is due for completion in June 2023.
With that, I'll hand over to Glen to provide an update on our exploration and discovery activity.
Glen Masterman
Thank you, Jake and good morning. This morning I'll update on exploration progress achieved across the discovery portfolio in the March quarter, which is set out on slide nine. Key takeaways I'd like to draw to your attention are firstly, the positive drilling results returned on the key joint venture, which have expanded the mineralization footprint at West Island and confirm the presence of very good grades at this emerging discovery.
Secondly, at Mungari and Red Lake, drilling results continue to reinforce our views on underground upside potential, particularly at Kundana where we are delineating new areas of high grade mineralization very close to existing development.
Turning now to highlights in this morning's report. Commencing with our Cue joint venture in WA, we completed our first full quarter of managing and operating drilling activities after taking over from our partner masquerade minerals at the beginning of January. We recently switched analytical laboratories, which has reduced assay turnaround times from well over 12 weeks to a more manageable five weeks. Faster analytical turnaround times give us the confidence to accelerate diamond drilling, with a second core rig expected to arrive on the project during the June quarter. This will increase to three the total number of rigs on the JV ground in which we are earning 75% interest.
Encouraging results from the diamond program in the quarter are highlighted on page 11 of the report. Pleasingly we identified additional mineralized loads along the west Island trend, which has also extended 500 meters in recent aircore drilling to 2.1 kilometers long. The June quarter program will focus on drilling extensions of non-structures to understand potential scale of the mineral system and to test other targets styles that may be important to hosting high grade gold.
At Mungari, drilling results outlined on page 14 extended the structure that hosts the Christmas hanging wall load at Kundana. This mineralisation is located 35 metres from the main Christmas ore body which we're currently mining. The results signify that the important ore bearing structure remains open along [Indiscernible]. The next round of drilling will target the high grade quartz load within the structure with the aim of potentially expanding the high grade mineral resource.
An exciting implication of the recent Christmas results is the realization of untested potential and the hanging wall of the stress load where this structural position is modeled to continue. At Red Lake, drilling retained high grade results own extension of the ozone at lower Campbell, as summarized on pages 12 and 13 of this morning's report. The results confirm great continuity at the local scale and highlight an opportunity for significant resource potential between these deep intercepts at the bottom of the lower Campbell mineral resource. Future drilling will be planned at short step outs from adjacent development to extend the mineral resource into the 500 meter gap identified on the ozone corridor. I look forward to sharing the results of the June quarter drilling programs at our next opportunity in July.
With that, I'll hand over to Lawrie.
Lawrie Conway
Thank you, Glen. Good morning, everyone. This morning, I'm pleased to update on our financial performance for the March quarter as shown on slide 10 of the presentation and outlined on pages 9 and 10 of the report. We're in a very strong quarter of cash generation with operating cash flow up one third to $269 million and we delivered a $125 million of net mined cash flow. This was an increase of 135% from December. We invested $144 million in capital comprising $33 million in sustaining and 111 million on major projects.
At Group Capital guidance remains unchanged at $150 to $175 million for sustaining capital, and $440 million to $505 million for major projects. Group cash flow for the quarter was just under $22 million. Jake mentioned are excellent all-in sustaining cost performance for the quarter, and the $990 per ounce equates to a margin of around 60%. We remain on track to deliver our group all-in sustaining costs within the guidance range of $1135 to $1195 per ounce. We did see some higher costs come through in the quarter and these were in line with what we outlined with our half year results.
As I mentioned that the half year results though, the improvement in metal prices and revenue are more than offsetting these cost pressures. Now achieved gold price was up 3.6% in the quarter. The achieved copper price was down slightly by 1.5% but our copper volume more than tripled. The focus remains on managing the cost pressures across all of it.
The balance sheet continued to strengthen even after the increased debt associated with the Ernest Henry acquisition. Our gearing is sitting at around 23% and is expected to trend down below 20% in the coming months. This is in line with our first target level that we set post any acquisition. We ended the quarter with a cash balance of $538 million and have around $900 million of liquidity.
Turning to slide 11, and a summary of the quarter, delivering an all-in sustaining cost below $1,000 per ounce is certainly sector leading and we will finish the year within our group cost guidance range. The margins we are generating is able to fund our growth plans and still return funds to our shareholders. The immediate exceptional contribution from Ernest Henry is evident in terms of additional copper exposure, reducing our group all-in sustaining costs, and materially increasing the cash flow. The existing mine life plus the expected extensions, we'll see this cornerstone asset generates significant benefits for many years to come. The ability of the team at Red Lake to achieve improvements in all areas of the operation gives us confidence that the transformation is now progressing well and we expect the momentum to increase again in the June quarter.
The other assets are performing well. And throughout the business, we have demonstrated resilience against the extreme rainfall events, and the impacts of COVID especially the isolation requirements for positive cases and close contacts. We are in a very good position to close out the financial year.
Thank you for your time this morning. And Harmony, please open the line for questions.
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Matt Greene from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Matt Greene
Hey, good morning, Jake and the team. My first question is just on Red Lake -- do you think heading in the right direction? My question is around the milling. Can you please provide some context as to how running the Campbell mill beyond the 2000 tonnes per day? Are you getting a sense of what the optimal milling capacity could be? And just to confirm the exception to run beyond that level. I think, I recall you mentioning about it was only for six to eight weeks. Is that the case? Or have you been able to extend it?
Jake Klein
Yes, so the last question first. It's a 12-week trial that we've you can restart, if it's intermittent. So we are confident that we can run it till the end of June and into early July at these higher rates of 2000 tonnes, but we are we're pushing it to the boundaries. I think it was only running at about 17 tonnes or 1800 tonnes a day when we acquired the operation. These are the milling throughput, which it achieved in the first quarter are historic, historic highs as the other mining roads. So we're starting to get the productivity through that we need to convert this into a medium grade higher tonnage operation.
Matt Greene
That's great. Thanks, Jake. And then, development rates are being sustained above the 1200 minutes a month. And if you're able to get 3000 tonnes a day on a sustained basis, what's your thinking around the Bateman mill versus Red Lake mill. I mean its a new mill, are there potential for cost savings there or scale. If you were to go down that medium grade path, it's a transition to Bateman. And what's your thinking around running all three mill?
Jake Klein
Yes, so we're assessing that, Matt now. It is a thing and 11 kilometer distance from the Campbell and Red Lake Mills. We're also doing the, we have the opportunity to do the bulk trial at McKinley deposit, which is near the Bateman mill. But we're working out the milling strategy, obviously, the upper Campbell area, which will come on track in the first half of next year from the CYD decline gives us higher grade and potentially completely independent access to ore [ph] bodies. So, up until now, we've been focusing on keeping the two mills filled, because this is the first quarter, which the Red Lake mill and the Campbell mill have run combined throughout the quarter. So up until now, issues being on mining rates, we're getting that right; we need to start getting consistency and reliability. We feel we're getting there, you can see the trends. But obviously we've had a tough 12 mind set at Red Lake pre this quarter.
Matt Greene
Yes, that's great, Jake. And then just on Cowal changing quarter there with the rain and COVID mentioned the 25% of confirmed cases, if we were to take the close contacts that had to isolate what sort of levels of entities and to the experience of time on site?
Jake Klein
I think I saw that the highest level of absenteeism on one day was about 80 people, 75 to 80 people, it's now down to about 35. So it's reducing, but 80 out of about 400 people is a lot of people off site. That's 400 of total workforce. So if you took that that shift and those who are on break, it would be less than the 400.
Matt Greene
Yes, got it. Okay. And then do you expect things to ease with the recent, these recent changes on close contacts by the government.
Jake Klein
On John Penhall, the general manager of Cowal is sitting in the room. Yes, he's nodding his head. But what none of us are pandemic experts. So we're hopeful. Yes, Cowal has dealt with the brunt of it. And they've dealt with it very, very well. I mean, getting 300 people onto site for a shutdown was a pretty remarkable achievement without getting infections.
Matt Greene
Yes, I appreciate it. Okay. And look, if I could just squeeze one last one on Mount Rawdon there, perhaps a longer dated question here. A lot of a lot of gold miners wanting to become net zero on emissions. What's your thinking on this pump hydro project, could this be a project that you participate in the future and look to maybe, I guess, generate credits to offset carbon elsewhere in the portfolio? And they're just on the scale, how did you arrive at the 2 gigawatts for 10 hours?
Jake Klein
So I think the scale has been determined really by the reservoir capacity on the pit. It is a multibillion dollar project and we are not power operators and we don't intend to become them. But yes, there is, the opportunity which I've described, can we have some ownership of the projects, it would be small, and a disproportionate amount of carbon credits to me would be a structuring outcome that would be fantastic for Evolution. It's, we haven't yet been able to test it. The first priority is to make sure that this project is feasible and economic. The prefeasibility study says that it is, the meetings with the Queensland Government suggests that it fits and aligns exceptionally well within their requirements. The more I read about pumped hydro and deep battery storage, the more compelling Mount Rawdon becomes. But fundamentally Matt Evolutions priority is twofold; one is to do the right thing by the community and the remediation of the mind. The second thing is to maximize the value of the project and the pumped hydro has the potential to be a very significant and valuable project for Evolution shareholders.
Matt Greene
That's great. Appreciate your time. Thanks Jade.
Operator
Thank you. Your next question comes from Mitch Ryan from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Mitch Ryan
Good morning, Jake and team. First question. This one's probably Lawrie we'll have some on page 10 of your quarterly working capital build of roughly $67 million during the quarter. That seems high relative to previous quarters. I'm guessing it's got something to do with the Ernest Henry Acquisition but just wondering if you could please provide some color on that quantum of movement.
Lawrie Conway
Yes, Mitch it's exactly that I mean what happened in the March quarter is we closed out the joint venture. So we get the gold sales. So that was a positive working capital movement. But we then moved to 100% of the concentrate, which works on either a three or four month, quotation or period. So in this very first quarter of owning 100%, our working capital will increase, and it increased by over $40 million on the receivable side. And that was the major impact on our movement in working capital in the quarter.
Mitch Ryan
Thank you. And my second question. And understandably, you've softened the guidance for FY 22, given the events during the quarter. Just wondering if there any drivers for that change that are likely to flow into FY 23 and ended up potential risk of impacting sort of the guidance out there for FY 23 currently?
Lawrie Conway
I think Mitch the real risk is on Red Lake. We had guidance out there for 200,000 ounces for next year. We are really looking at that. We are likely to need to downgrade that in due course, as the final budgets and loans come in place. But it is, at 40,000 ounces is the next hurdle and then 50,000 ounces that caught up from there.
Mitch Ryan
And then I guess on that, then can you provide a bit of clarity on Red Lake with regards to that 40,000 ounces? My the way I would think about it is that that's the new base once you've achieved that in the fourth quarter, is that the right way to be thinking about it? Or is it a running hard in the fourth quarter and may come down in 1Q FY 23?
Jake Klein
No, what we saw, when we had this debate around reducing guidance in the range, we've made a conscious effort to try not to push the sights in the fourth quarter and fall off the edge of the cliff in the first quarter next year. So we are very driven by the fact that we've recognized our missteps at Red Lake. We need to build confidence and we need to get credibility. And we are going to be trying to build a base and then step up from those bases.
Mitch Ryan
Thank you. That's it for me.
INTERVIEW: Brian Tyree Henry on the pure genius of Atlanta and evolution of Alfred/Paper Boi – The Atlanta Journal Constitution
Posted: at 1:47 am
If it wasnt our show, these subjects wouldnt have gotten out there, he said. We can take on certain topics people are afraid to approach. We can flip them on their head. (And yes, he is all for slavery reparations.)
And race is still very much a central part of the show. The first episode has Alfred and his crew in Amsterdam where they encounter a disarming amount of Blackface, which is largely verboten in the United States but not so much in Europe.
And Alfred learns that fame often turns his humanity into a commodity, Henry said. Racism is not just an American thing. During a poker game in episode three at a rich mans home, Alfred is told its a $20,000 buy in and almost to overcompensate over the presumption he might not have that amount to gamble, he whips out $60,000 in cash.
No matter what level of success he finds himself in, Henry said, he still has to prove he belongs at this table. He experiences a lot of dichotomous situations.
One of the stranger situations is in a Netherlands jail, where he is treated like a king and he likes it so much, he takes a nap before leaving, even after Earn had paid for his bail. And when Alfred gets out and has some extra cash, he just throws it at his adoring fans as if they were a bunch of strippers at Magic City.
Hes leaning into the perks of being Paper Boi, Henry said. They dont need to know Alfred. He is bringing these fans a certain kind of joy.
Henry himself feels that dichotomy as well, given his own level of fame thanks to all the film work hes done in recent years. He has been feted in serious films like If Beale Street Could Talk and Widows and crowd-pleasing big-budget films like Godzilla vs. Kong or Eternals. He, like Paper Boi, is now recognized everywhere.
It doesnt matter if Im Paper Boi or in a Marvel movie, he said. I cant afford not to be conscious about my standing. Thats the same with Alfred. People love him, but something is always dragging him back.
And he knows even in these press interviews, theres an artifice to it all, that he cant be entirely vulnerable to a random journalist. We shouldnt give parts of ourselves away to people who dont deserve it, he said. We have to navigate to make those parts precious and keep to ourselves.
Als relationship with his cousin Earn has become more business, less personal. As his manager, Earn is mostly there for logistics and problem solving, whether its scrounging up cash to get Al out of prison in time for a concert or to interrogate suspects who may have stolen Als smartphone.
During the fifth episode, Al attempts to connect with Earn during a quiet moment, asking how hes been doing, noting how he seems busy all the time. Earn, in pure business mode, provides Al nothing except to agree, saying. Busys good before leaving the room. Earn, as usual, seems disconnected and vaguely unhappy.
There are glimmers of them trying to hold on to the family aspect during the season, Henry said. But there are things pulling Alfred away.
In comparison, the relationship between the surrealistically quirky Darius (LaKeith Stanfield) and Alfred remain rock solid. Its an unspoken understanding that their friendship is authentic with no strings attached. That is something that never deviates, he said.
Fame and success, though, has clouded Als ability to make music. And he admits to a stranger, a possible culprit who might have stolen his phone, that he wasnt really into rapping but its what he does and its too late to do anything else.
Henry has spent the past ten months in Atlanta, after finishing Atlanta to shoot another FX series called Class of 09, an upcoming sci-fi thriller that just recently wrapped. But he will always treasure Atlanta, which is ending after four seasons.
While Atlanta doesnt reach the eyeballs of some of Henrys big-budget movies, the show is a representation of home for me. These other projects take me all over the world. Even when we shot Atlanta in Europe, it felt like coming home. It still felt like it was ours.
ON TV
Atlanta, Thursdays at 10 p.m. on FX and available on Hulu the next day
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INTERVIEW: Brian Tyree Henry on the pure genius of Atlanta and evolution of Alfred/Paper Boi - The Atlanta Journal Constitution
Vanity Fare: Lip and eye colours take on the vibrant shades of summer – The Star Online
Posted: at 1:47 am
As we step out into the world again to meet friends or go about our lives the closest to normal that is possible, beauty brands are ready to help. The latest releases bring to mind freedom, fun and joy.
From bright colours to a glimmery effect, these products can help you achieve your best out-of-the-house look.
Choose your icon
To elevate your lipstick wardrobe Rihanna has created the Fenty Icon Lipstick Case in Matte Black, a stylish and fully customisable lipstick case.
Photo: FentyCustomisable with all Fenty Icon Refillable Lipstick fills, this luxe matte black lipstick case lets you mix and match your Icon Lipstick shades to suit any mood or style. Beyond customisation, you can also be part of Fenty Beautys earth-conscious evolution to reduce waste with these refillable components.
With a range of seven neutrals and three reds, anyone can find a classic to fit the look that you want.
All in one
Nudestix travels back to Y2K to launch the Nudegold Glam Palette, a six piece palette inspired by the euphoria of summer. Nudegold Glam Palette is a limited edition collection of summer favourites for eyes and lips that features a new Magnetic Luminous Eye Colour and Nude Lip Glace. It comes in a custom fine art tin created by artist Jessica Gorlicky with a mirror to hold your summer essentials.
Eye colours include a nude champagne-gold (new), nude rose-gold, nude copper-gold and nude burgundy-gold, while the lip colour is a matte tan-nude. Another new addition is the nude rose-gold shimmer Lip Glace that completes the palette. The Nude Gold Palette is vegan, gluten-free, cruelty-free and synthetic fragrance-free and is formulated without parabens and sulfates.
Read more: Having a problem with 'cakey face'? Here are some beauty tips that can help
Photo: ChanelLuxury balm
Inspired by the flowers that grow around La Pausa, Chanels latest Rouge Coco Baume reflect the colours of summer flowers. The spirit of La Pausa inspired the brand to develop a lip care product with unique sensory qualities, combining the colour provided by a lipstick with the moisturising benefits of a balm.
Olive Oleoactive, a new active ingredient produced specifically for the brand and an echo to La Pausas hundred-year-old olive trees contains a high concentration of polyphenols and omega-9s, which provides antioxidant protection.
Shea butter and three plant waxes at the heart of the Hydra Boost Complex, the signature ingredient of the Rouge Coco line, keeps your lips moisturised.
From deep burgundy to fresh pink, it is available in six shades, along with a transparent, pearlescent white shade which completes the collection and intensifies the natural radiance of the lips.
Dewy lips
Why choose between wearing a beautiful lip tint and enjoying nourished, supple lips? You dont have to with innisfrees new Dewy Tint Lip Balm inspired by the shades of bright petals in nature.
Photo: Innisfree
Innisfrees tinted lip balm is available in five different natural rosy shades alongside a colourless Treatment Lip Balm. The formula contains Jeju camellia seed oil and camellia ceramide that provides deep moisturisation to soften the texture for healthy-looking plump lips. These tints have a moist formula containing hyaluronic acid ampoule which deeply nourishes chapped and dehydrated lips to reveal moist, dewy glass lips.
Its formula has been dermatologically tested to keep lips in great condition and has the added scent of eucalyptus for daily use, suitable for even sensitive lips.
Read more: People are 'mewing' to sculpt their faces, but does this beauty technique work?
Luminous skin
Formulated with SPF, anti-pollution and anti-blue light properties, the Gucci Cushion De Beaute the brands first cushion foundation is a lightweight and moisturising foundation that offers buildable coverage and glowy skin.
Cushion De Beaute features high reflection index oils and mineral powders that maximise the reflection of light on the skin to provide a luminous finish.
Photo: Gucci
A moisturising complex composed of glycol and glycerin deeply hydrates the skin, while the Black Rose Oil, one of Gucci Beautys key ingredients, offers antioxidant protection.
Debuting in six shades, Cushion De Beaute is encased within a pastel pink compact. A distinctive Gucci design adorns the top of the round casing, which features a lion pattern surrounded by a wreath of flowers. Inside is a mirror and soft cushion applicator, and the foundation itself is refillable, allowing wearers to reuse the same compact as a cherished beauty relic.
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Vanity Fare: Lip and eye colours take on the vibrant shades of summer - The Star Online