about 2faced1.com

2FACED1.com shows one persons two different faces in photos;

Persona 1:
WHAT YOU WANT TO BE
CONSIDERED AS

Persona 2:
WHAT YOU FEAR TO BE
CONSIDERED AS

This leads to a discussion about stereotypes and inner fears of getting misunderstood by the surroundings. Thoughts that every thinking modern day person does reflect upon. We're asking people from an innercity context where old categories as ethnicity, nationality, gender, sexuality and class are reassessed, why they choose to look like they do. We’re diggin' deep, peeling off garments, codes and attributes. We’re searching for transnational identities - is the conclusion that we choose whoever we want to be today?!

 

A 2FACED1 STATE OF MIND

A 2FACED1 is highly aware of existing stereotypes related to your own ethnicity, nationality, gender, sexuality and class. You’re trying to avoid them but sometimes also play with them to make people think twice about who you are. Two faced doesn’t mean anything negative here, it explains the double folded view you have on identity if you’re not the existing norm. It means you have the feet in different worlds, can move between them but feel rather at home in that space in between. You've stepped out of your comfort zone and have become one of the new identities where ol' categories are mashed up and rootlessness and non-given identity just means major possibilities.

Read more
THE 2FACED1 NETWORK

2FACED1 is a state of mind, 2FACED1.com is a display-window for that mindset and the network of 2FACED1 includes all of you progressive, non-stereotypes with a double perspective on identity .

 

2FACED1.com:

Decida -  Editor, Founder, Creative Director
Oscar Stenberg - Web, Photography
Linn Marcusson - Writer, Style Assistant (Gypsie's Mega Trip)
Spoek Mathambo - (the Zombo Blog)

 

2FACED1s:

Under Construction

 

THIS SITE LET YOU SEE THE WORLD
TROUGH A 2FACED1'S PERSPECTIVE!

 
contact: info@2faced1.com

V for Very, Very, Very Good Magazine

Post date Wed 7 Apr 2010 2:47 PM

Once again, better late than never. During this blogging hiatus we've missed some great editorials that just need their space up in here. It's V Magazine, ladies and mens, doing good right now. First we go for Christian Brylle and Yuki James shooting Come On Feel the Noice inspired by 80ies Heavy Metal Parking Lot - movie. Great styling and wonderful hairs!

 

 

Then totally amazing MIRROR MIRROR make up (wow!) by Chanels Peter Philips, photo by Inez van Lamsweerde & Vinoodh Matadin and styling by Panos Yiapanis

 

And the finally Josh Olins (havent found the stylists name yet) PUSH IT REAL GOOD, with some really tight pictures but also a few less interesting, see the rest here.

plain hoops instead of doorknockers would have killed this though!plain hoops instead of doorknockers would have killed this though!notice nail!notice nail!

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.