RUBICON
Big Flavour Behaviour
Jasmine De Silva
STILLS
commissioned
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commissioned //
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Client: Rubicon
Agency: Lucky Generals
CHANNEL 4
Generation Z
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Client: Channel 4
(Direct to client)
VIVO
BAREFOOT
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Client: Vivo Barefoot
(Direct to client)
CHARLES
Gorgeous, Sick & Tired
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Client: Charles
Commissioner: Chloe Anderson
ELLIE
DIXON
GLAIZE
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Client: Glaize
(Direct to client)
editorial
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editorial //
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This series of portraits creates surreal settings that draw upon one of our habitual beauty pursuits. Referencing hair within this series recognizes the salon as a physical space humans frequent to beautify one of their most dominant features. By deconstructing the women and extracting the hair from their crowns, we are left with a bold yet striking sense of beauty. We cherish our hair as it serves as our personal security blankets, but when it is all stripped away, women are more beautiful than ever before. They are pure, they are fearless and they are embracing their truest form. This editorial series focuses on the obsessive and sometimes, absurd actions we undertake through the physical construction of ourselves in an attempt to achieve an unnecessary level of perfection.
BASIC
MAGAZINE
The Salon
personal work
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personal work //
CRYSTAL
QUEENS
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Crystal Queens is a satirical, retro futuristic story, set in a colourful and sparkling world where the ultimate beauty product crystallizes women’s skin.
Swing!
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Client: Ellie Dixon / Decca Records
See music video HERE.
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“The focus of the shoot was to create a mash up of surreal set design and bold styling with 6 amazing girls, and to throw ourselves into the dream world of the shoot for a little bit of escapism.”
PINK SKIES
BEAUTY SLEEP
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Fed up with compromising her creative vision for beauty trends, a mortician forced to give makeovers to living teens for their sweet sixteen, must get creative when she accidentally kills a client.
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“It’s never fails to blow my mind how weird it is that we have learnt to be disgusted, freaked out and disturbed by bodies and body parts. Whether it’s too much of a body, too little of a body, and everything in between.
Our bodies are the one constant in our lives that we physically have to live with day in and day out, so why don't we enjoy them and celebrate them more. My work centers itself around the idea of holding up a mirror to our own dehumanising obsession with appearances. Through this image series I have combined the food and the body and we have collaborated with a variety of independent designers whose garments emphasis and amplify the body, celebrating individual body parts”