Rih's imagery so far with Anti is incredible, she's such a visionary.
when will gag's koons ball
God bless you all.
The Navy are smart. They already have an excuse for that Anti disaster. Imagery
So she was on a vacation for almost a year because she was taking inspiration from all different places to develope such a revolutionary and ground-breaking imagery?
R8 and AppPop are so similar that it's frightening. So far they have weirdly alike pre-release buzz around them: overarchingly arty, little GP attention being paid, etc.
Only thing is Rih's 3 singles are better than most of AP.
I thought Skylar was really happening when Bed of Lies was released especially when it was promoted everywhere .
Too bad, she seems a nice girl since Marshmallow trusts her..
It's a bit sad that all her moments have been torn out from beneath her feet (being replaced by Rih on LTWIL, Bed Of Lies flopping and not getting proper single treatment) but it's also OK.
This is literally what a deluded Radio ARTPOPER would have said about the ARTPOP era in 2013.
Quote:
The cover features a picture of Rihanna as a child with a crown covering her eyes. Laid over the image is a poem by Chloe Mitchell written in Braille, whose work has previously been used by Kanye West, Anti’s executive producer.
“He see things beyond the surface which is why I decided to collaborate with him,” Rihanna said of Nachum. “He really interpreted it in his own way, with exactly the message I wanted.”
She added: “The whole idea behind the Braille is that people who have sight are sometimes the people who are blindest.”
Nachum referred to Rihanna in return as “a true artist and visionary”. He has used Braille in the past, incorporating it into oil paintings in his “Blind” series.
she has a real vision with this album and something to say, its more than just putting a blue ball between your legs on the cover of an album full of tired electro pop and calling it 'art'.
she has a real vision with this album and something to say, its more than just putting a blue ball between your legs on the cover of an album full of tired electro pop and calling it 'art'.