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I'm a graphic and interactive designer. I live in New York City, but frequent Los Angeles. This is where I toss my ridiculous ideas, conversations, inspirations, etc. I can be reached at info@ashleysimko.com
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Jul 15
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Photograph by Dash Snow…

Photograph by Dash Snow

Jul 14
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Everything’s a blur and every night is New Year’s as far as I’m concerned. [When I’m at a party, I look for] a dark corner, a wallet, a bag of blow and some love to go.
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Hamster Nest installation by Dash Snow and Dan Colen…

Hamster Nest installation by Dash Snow and Dan Colen

Jun 04
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Last night I went to the opening of the Moeller Snow Gallery. The gallery is owned by to of my favorite people - Karline Moeller and her cousin Max Snow. Needless to say, the opening was a huge success. Details from Mens.Style:

Manhattan’s Moeller Snow Gallery opens with an exhibit by one of its partners, Max Snow, featuring portraits of Scandinavian metal heads, Midwestern Klansmen, and L.A. gang members. “They’re all groups that have positioned themselves on the fringe,” Snow says. “I was wondering: What kind of person chooses to be extreme?” The kind that starts young, apparently. The photographer says the exhibit takes its title from a statement given to the police by a seven-year-old in Florida who’d stolen his grandmother’s car: “When the cops caught him, that’s what he said: ‘I wanted to do it because it’s fun to do bad things.’” He knows where he’s coming from—his big brother, artist Dash Snow, is a well-known figure on the fringe.

Last night I went to the opening of the Moeller Snow Gallery. The gallery is owned by to of my favorite people - Karline Moeller and her cousin Max Snow. Needless to say, the opening was a huge success. Details from Mens.Style:

Manhattan’s Moeller Snow Gallery opens with an exhibit by one of its partners, Max Snow, featuring portraits of Scandinavian metal heads, Midwestern Klansmen, and L.A. gang members. “They’re all groups that have positioned themselves on the fringe,” Snow says. “I was wondering: What kind of person chooses to be extreme?” The kind that starts young, apparently. The photographer says the exhibit takes its title from a statement given to the police by a seven-year-old in Florida who’d stolen his grandmother’s car: “When the cops caught him, that’s what he said: ‘I wanted to do it because it’s fun to do bad things.’” He knows where he’s coming from—his big brother, artist Dash Snow, is a well-known figure on the fringe.