Feeds to Follow #5
Here are this month's six Insta-picks to follow, from a culinary duo celebrating Polish cooking to a Rome-via-Massachusetts-based sculptor.
I truly consider the 1400+ feeds I follow on Instagram a highly curated pack of people that inspire me on the daily basis. And I openly confess that I might spend way too much time on browsing my feed, but even if it seems to be a form of leisure, it’s 90% work-connected! And well, I love beautiful things that please my eyes and intriguing people that stimulate my mind, both IRL and digital. So, I decided to start sharing with you from time to time my favorite accounts I follow and which you might also fancy following. Here are this month’s six picks!
Bracia (meaning “brothers” in Polish) is a culinary concept by Karol Adamiak and Barclay Bram that celebrates modern Polish cooking. Karol is a chef at Plates and Barclay is a writer, anthropologist and former chef. Together they are exploring and reinterpreting Polish cuisine at the intersection of their respective journeys as immigrants and second-generation diaspora. Their one-off food events and charitable suppers are instant sell-outs, so if you’re in London and want to taste Polish cuisine with a twist, make sure to follow their next steps!
All that passionate cooking and color palette of tomatoes and beetroots takes my mind to the world of a director who loves to depict food, kitchens, and hot hues. Of course, I’m talking about Pedro Almodóvar. There’s this amazing feed that posts a great curation of film stills from the Spanish auteur’s films. Even if you thought you’ve seen all of Almodóvar’s films, this Instagram profile will instantly make you want to rewatch them, just for the details you might have not spotted.
As Madonna’s “Celebration” world tour is coming to an end (she will have her last concert in Rio de Janeiro on May 4th at the Copacabana Beach), let’s take a moment of appreciation for these distorted visuals by Jess Cuevas, who’s a mixed media artist and creative director (and frequent Willy Chavarria collaborator). Cuevas did all the merch and graphics for the Queen’s ultimate celebration, and re-imagined her biggest eras in this psychedelic, unsettling-in-a-good-way style.
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