LS 26 | Habitare SUBMISSION
Vassilis Konstantinou - SOUTHERN PROVINCE
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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LS 26 | Habitare SUBMISSION
Vassilis Konstantinou - SOUTHERN PROVINCE
magazine.landscapestories.net
SVERRE BJERTNÆS
PURPLE AND BLUE, 2015-16
Oil on canvas
80 x 70 cm 31 1/2 x 27 1/2 in
http://kristinhjellegjerde.com/artists/116-sverre-bjertns/works/
https://news.artnet.com/art-world/clouds-inspire-munch-scream-935855
Ana Mendieta, Untitled (from the Silueta Series), 1976, Richard Saltoun
‘An influential artist best known for her “earth-body” performances, as she called them, Ana Mendieta explored her identity as a female emigrant in work that also encompassed photography, film, and sculpture. Exiled from Cuba at the age of 12 and sent to an orphanage in Iowa, Mendieta used the earth as a site to address issues of displacement, impressing her body in various outdoor locations and recording its imprint in photographs and video. In these Silueta works, performed from 1973–77, she would often fill in the silhouette of her body with materials including rocks, twigs, flowers, and blood, combining a concern with primal rituals and a modern, feminist sensibility. Mendieta wanted to invoke the “magic, knowledge, and power of primitive art…to express the immediacy of life and the eternity of nature,” as she once said. In other works she smeared herself with blood, or used it to trace her outline. She tragically died, aged 36, in New York when she fell from her 34th-floor apartment window; her husband, the artist Carl Andre, was acquitted of her murder.’
American, Cuban b., 1948-1985, Havana, Cuba, based in New York, New York
http://www.dreamsrewired.com/synopsis
“DREAMS REWIRED traces the desires and anxieties of today’s hyper-connected world back more than a hundred years, when telephone, film and television were new. As revolutionary then as contemporary social media is today, early electric media sparked a fervent utopianism in the public imagination – promising total communication, the annihilation of distance, an end to war. But then, too, there were fears over the erosion of privacy, security, morality. Using rare (and often unseen) archival material from nearly 200 films to articulate the present, DREAMS REWIRED reveals a history of hopes to share, and betrayals to avoid.”
Jiang Zhi 蒋志, love letters No.3, 2011, Tang Contemporary Art
Chris Trueman, NS 34, 2013, Adah Rose Gallery
Chris Trueman draws on Op Art and Abstract Expressionism for his distinct style that references graffiti and digital art. “I make paintings based on the premise that the sum of two contradicting experiences does not cancel out but creates a whole separate experience unto itself,” the Southern California–based artist has said. Trueman achieves his unique optical and textural effects by alternating between gestural painting and spray-painting. Working on unprimed canvas, he uses squeegees and brushes to apply gestural swatches of paint. He then tapes off layers of his canvases and sprays acrylic paint on them, noticing how it adheres to the canvas. Such techniques create hard-edged bands of untouched canvas that bring a sense of order to his otherwise expressionistic compositions.
American, based in Los Angeles, California
Emilie Brout & Maxime Marion, Oasis Max Life, 2016, Steve Turner
Emilie Brout & Maxime Marion, Return of the Broken Screens (Philips Ambilight II), 2016, Steve Turner
Emilie Brout & Maxime Marion, Return of the Broken Screens (Apple iPhone 4s II), 2016, Steve Turner
Yung Jake, 1 RETWEET, 2016, Steve Turner
Thrush Holmes, Untitled, 2016, Beers London
Felix R. Cid, Untitled (New York, Monegros Desert), 2015, Garis & Hahn
Maha Malluh, Sky Clouds, 2009, Galerie Krinzinger
700 black polyester gloves filled with polyester and dessert sands, praying rugs
Felix R. Cid, Untitled (Subtractions of Color and Flesh), 2016, Garis & Hahn
Constant Dullaart, Orchid I, 2014, Carroll / Fletcher
Although he trained in video, Constant Dullaart’s medium is the internet. Rather than creating works from the ground up, Dullaart instead relies on existing frameworks, websites, search engines, and the like, treating them as “found objects” on which he enacts distortions and witty reconfigurations. One of his best-known works is The Revolving Internet, a website that presented the Google homepage spinning in circles—and was shut down by Google, but not before garnering three million hits. He’s also created a work, Terms of Service, that turns the Google search bar into a mouth that reads the site’s oft-criticized terms of use, as well as several websites that poke fun more specifically at the art world—including a seizure-inducing version of a Berlin art museum’s website and an inversion of Georg Baselitz’s Wikipedia page. “The Internet has been out there for a long time; it’s already nostalgic,” Dullaart says of his medium of choice. “It just became a large corporate backyard and that’s what we’re all frolicking in.”
from a roll of 120mm film that I shot on my recent trip to North Carolina