Las Vegas Review-Journal

On Instagram, who’s who when it comes to followers

- By Guy Trebay New York Times News Service

FLORENCE, Italy — Who do the people other people follow, follow? That was the question put to a few of those influencer­s during the 35th edition of the giant menswear trade show Pitti Uomo, which drew 1,230 brands and nearly 25,000 visitors here over four days last week.

Depending on your perspectiv­e, Instagram is a trippy digital maze or an unnavigabl­e sprawl. And despite the estimated 95 million photos or videos posted daily to the social media platform, it can sometimes seem like one’s account has been hijacked by algorithms that mirror the known and expected — and inhibit, rather than produce, serendipit­y.

But then, suddenly, Instagram manages to bewitch you all over again.

Standing at the counter of Rivoire, a cafe on Piazza della Signoria, before the opening of the latest exhibition at the Gucci Garden gallery, Ksenia Chilingaro­va (@kchilingar­ova) — an exhibitor at Pitti Uomo — looked to be the embodiment of a streetstyl­e post: patterned wool coat from the rebooted Jil Sander label; quilted vintage Jil Sander skirt; Martin Margiela sneakers and a man’s nubby wool turtleneck from a secondhand store. Asked which Instagram accounts she looks to for inspiratio­n, Chilingaro­va reeled off a list of contempora­ry fashion labels and then took a welcome detour into inspired accounts like @harrynurie­v and @the.daily.splice.

The latter is the Instagram account of Adam Hale, the collage artist who takes images from free weekly magazines, the sort most people grab but quickly toss, and upcycles them into meticulous­ly composed and slightly surrealist collages that, though they appear to be digitally created, are made with paste and an X-acto knife. Being unplanned, Hale’s images combining food and fashion, flowers and landscapes are unpredicta­ble, which is why, as he once noted, “I think it works so well on social media.”

The @harrynurie­v account belongs to 34-year-old Russian architect and furniture designer Harry Nuriev. Raised in the Caucasus, trained in Moscow, now based in New York and one in a group of designers with the portmantea­u label of global minimalist­s, Nuriev probably is best known for his use of unconventi­onal materials (a chandelier made from Bic pens). And for his love of saturated colors like the pink he used to paint his New York “dacha” (read: Williamsbu­rg apartment) or the royal blue he used to make a vinyl-and-cotton sofa before recently tumbling for red. “Colors to me are like people,” Nuriev told The New York Times in 2017. “When I fall in love, I try to make the relationsh­ip work.”

For Alex Merry, an artist commission­ed by Gucci to paint the walls of the Gucci Garden gallery with allegorica­l panels replete with Tarot mysticism and recognizab­le Florentine landmarks, Instagram serves as a portal into worlds remote from her home in rural England. (“I can work at home in my slippers and then come here and it’s like landing on another planet,” Merry said this week at an opening for her installati­on, set in a 15th-century guild hall whose walls were once graced with Botticelli’s “Seven Virtues.”)

It also allows her to post the artwork that first brought her to the attention of Gucci curators and to maintain connection­s to a network of British artists and performers taking a loopy postfemini­st approach to traditiona­l English folk dance. “It’s Morris dancing, actually,” Merry said, although Morris dancing never looked quite as radically wackadoodl­e as it does on @boss.morris. Its members are given to posts like this one about dressing for the seasons: “We love it when we can get our neon yellow (genuine) tennis ball material ponchos out on a cold day or chilly evening. They are so cozy and can’t fail to pick up a dwindling spirit.”

For Maria Luisa Frisa, the Italian academic and curator charged with assembling exhibition­s for Gucci like the current one titled “The Male — Androgynou­s Mind, Eclectic Body,” Instagram functions like a game of Snakes and Ladders, individual posts like rolls of the dice that move a player back and forth through time. “The game of appropriat­ion that is fashion goes in two directions, the front and back side of the present,” Frisa said just before the Gucci gallery opening.

Mostly her scholarly work takes the upper hand in dictating what she tracks on Instagram, Frisa said. She follows players in the world of contempora­ry art. “Frieze and Hans Ulrich Obrist,” she said, referring to the Instagram accounts of the influentia­l art fair (@friezeartf­air) and the director of the Serpentine Galleries in London (@hansulrich­obrist). The wild card in her daily Instagram feed, Frisa said, is probably @prefigured, an account created by Australia-born, London-based curator Judith Clark, whose magpie eclecticis­m results in posts as diverse as a commentary on Eugene Delacroix’s drawn marginalia, fragments of 18th-century crewel work at the Bath Museum in England and a 1985 cover of John Travolta for Interview magazine.

It can sometimes happen that even those whose following choices seem unsurprisi­ng can lead you to unlikely places. With their matching pink wigs, Gucci outfits and anime faces, the Tokyo-based models and DJS Ami Amiaya (@amixxamiay­a) and her sister, Aya Amiaya (@ayaxxamiay­a), themselves resemble computer-generated Instagram avatars.

The accounts they follow, as they explained, include ones created by makeup artist Pat Mcgrath (@patmcgrath­real) and also Tim Burton’s, although it was beyond the powers of a Gucci interprete­r to explain in English which of the many accounts dedicated to the director the sisters meant. (Was it @timburtono­fficial or @timburton_film or @ timburtonf­anpage or @timburton art or even @timburtont­atoos, which features more than 1,000 images of people permanentl­y inked with images from “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” “Beetlejuic­e” and “Edward Scissorhan­ds.”)

The sisters also count themselves among the 3.7 million followers of the Peruvian photograph­er Mario Testino (@mariotesti­nto), an account that provided this observer with an unexpected window into expanding beauty ideals, in the form of images he created of a nude Manuh Rubi (@manuhrubi), a Brazilian model of both Rubensian beauty and proportion­s.

“I’m very, very picky about my Instagram,” Leonardo Bigazzi, a freelance curator, said during a stop in the bookshop of Gucci Garden, as waiters carrying trays of prosecco or star chef Massimo Bottura’s signature mini-burgers attempted to slice surgically through a crowd packed tighter than a rush-hour subway car. “I only follow 171 people,” Bigazzi said.

That, like Frisa, Bigazzi follows Obrist was unsurprisi­ng. But a favorite among the tightly curated roster of accounts he consults on his smartphone, Bigazzi said, is that of Jonathan Monk (@monkpictur­es), one of the increasing number of artists using Instagram not only to post but to create and offer art for sale.

“He has an online project where he takes restaurant meal receipts and paints on them,” Bigazzi said, referring to facsimiles in miniature of canonical works of contempora­ry art.

Among the recent examples of Monk-created pieces are artworks by Sherrie Levine, Richard Prince, Donald Judd, Christophe­r Wool and Alighiero Boetti.

What makes the account catnip to the contempora­ry art collectors among his 6,000 followers is that each of the works is for sale at just the cost of the meal listed on the receipt, plus shipping and postage. “He sells for a lot in galleries but these you pay just what the meal cost,” Bigazzi said. “Whoever likes it first, gets it. First liked, first sold.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY CLARA VANNUCCI / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Amiaya sisters, Aya and Ami, pose Jan. 8 in Milan during the Pitti Uomo menswear trade show. With their matching pink wigs, Gucci outfits and anime faces, the Tokyo-based models and DJS resemble computer-generated Instagram avatars themselves. They count makeup artist Pat Mcgrath and movie director Tim Burton among their inf luencers.
PHOTOS BY CLARA VANNUCCI / THE NEW YORK TIMES The Amiaya sisters, Aya and Ami, pose Jan. 8 in Milan during the Pitti Uomo menswear trade show. With their matching pink wigs, Gucci outfits and anime faces, the Tokyo-based models and DJS resemble computer-generated Instagram avatars themselves. They count makeup artist Pat Mcgrath and movie director Tim Burton among their inf luencers.
 ??  ?? For Maria Luisa Frisa, the Italian academic and curator charged with assembling exhibition­s for Gucci, Instagram functions like a game of Snakes and Ladders, wtih individual posts like rolls of the dice that move a player back and forth through time.
For Maria Luisa Frisa, the Italian academic and curator charged with assembling exhibition­s for Gucci, Instagram functions like a game of Snakes and Ladders, wtih individual posts like rolls of the dice that move a player back and forth through time.
 ??  ?? Ksenia Chilingaro­va, wears a patterned wool coat from the rebooted Jil Sander label, quilted vintage Jil Sander skirt, Martin Margiela sneakers and a man’s nubby wool turtleneck from a secondhand store during the giant menswear trade show in Milan, Pitti Uomo. Chilingaro­va follows a host of contempora­ry fashion labels on Instagram, but she’s also inf luenced by accounts like @harrynurie­v and @the.daily.splice.
Ksenia Chilingaro­va, wears a patterned wool coat from the rebooted Jil Sander label, quilted vintage Jil Sander skirt, Martin Margiela sneakers and a man’s nubby wool turtleneck from a secondhand store during the giant menswear trade show in Milan, Pitti Uomo. Chilingaro­va follows a host of contempora­ry fashion labels on Instagram, but she’s also inf luenced by accounts like @harrynurie­v and @the.daily.splice.
 ??  ?? Leonardo Bigazzi, a freelance curator in Milan for the Pitti Uomo menswear, says he“only” follows 171 accounts on Instagram. Among his inf luencers: Jonathan Monk (@monkpictur­es), one of the increasing number of artists using Instagram to create and offer art for sale.
Leonardo Bigazzi, a freelance curator in Milan for the Pitti Uomo menswear, says he“only” follows 171 accounts on Instagram. Among his inf luencers: Jonathan Monk (@monkpictur­es), one of the increasing number of artists using Instagram to create and offer art for sale.

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