Elad Lassry, Untitled (Folk Dance), 2015. Silver gelatin print, carpet, and walnut frame; 11.5 × 14.5 × 1.5 in (29.2 × 36.8 × 3.8 cm). Unique.
Show & Tell
ojovivo

titsay
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Love Begins
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Xuebing Du
Today's Document
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🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
Three Goblin Art
macklin celebrini has autism

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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Stranger Things
todays bird

shark vs the universe
Cosmic Funnies

izzy's playlists!

oozey mess

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@danbourke
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Folk Dance), 2015. Silver gelatin print, carpet, and walnut frame; 11.5 × 14.5 × 1.5 in (29.2 × 36.8 × 3.8 cm). Unique.
Donald Judd, Untitled, 1981. Plywood; 138 ½ × 927 ½ × 45 ¾ in (352.1 × 2356.2 × 116.2 cm).
Mathew Cerletty, Old California, 2014. Oil on linen, 15 × 15 in.
Mathew Cerletty, Mut(u)ate; (Un)ity, 2017. Text by Darren Bader. Oil on linen, 43 × 43 in.
Kenzo Spring/Summer 1992
Wolfgang Tillmans at Galerie Buchholz
Wolfgang Tillmans, yet untitled, a, 2015. C-print, 50.8 × 61 cm.
Keith Haring Journals April 14, 1980
I missed Cosmology class. I completely forgot. I never thought about it the whole day till I saw Kenny and he said, "God is light."
Keith Haring Journals November 30, 1979
PENIS POEM HE SAID TRAIN RUTGERS MEDIA ANSWER SAMO. WINDOW LOOKING CONFRONTATION FOLLOWING STREET LOOKING ALWAYS AFTER FINALLY CATCHING INTERPRET SEEING WORDS BED FLOOR
This really happened…I met this boy 'cause we were late looking at SAMO's window at Patricia Field's—followed him to the East Village—went home—first time I ever came doing 69. Made love under blinking Christmas lights—Nova Convention poster in hallway—never seen again.
Torben Ribe, Untitled (No Signal), 2012.
Robert Barry, Inert Gas Series: Krypton, from a measured volume to indefinite expansion. On March 3, 1969 in Beverly Hills California one liter of Krypton was returned to the atmosphere.
The Inert Gas pieces were an attempt to use material - inert gas - which is an undetectable material, you can’t smell it or see it, and use this material to create a kind of large environmental sculpture, if you will. It was one of the last works that I did in ‘69, where I actually used physical material. And so it was a kind of transitional work, in that I was still using material, even though one’s understanding of the work and appreciation really had to be totally mental. One would have to use one’s imagination. I used inert gas - neon, helium, xenon, krypton - because they were, first of all, called the änoble gasesô. I always thought they were sort of romantic. They were completely unknown about 100 years ago, we didn’t know they existed, and yet we breathe them in and exhale them, we live around them and move in these inert gases. They have very beautiful names, like änewô, ähiddenô - their names in Greek are quite nice. So, I just kind of liked that as a material. And we take it from the atmosphere - we can’t manufacture them - they’re in the atmosphere, so they must be removed from the atmosphere. They’re used in industry, they’re used for certain kinds of lighting. If an electrical charge is put into neon, for instance, it creates a certain kind of light, which is what they’re used for primarily, but there are other uses for them. So it was a very interesting material for me to work with and I felt that this was something that I could deal with and fit into what I was trying to do at the time.
Bill Noonan, Minimum Chips, 2013. Cardboard, screws, fluoro tube, and ultrasonic cleaner.
Hany Armanious, Generic Techno, 2014. Phosphorus bronze and pigmented silicone. Edition of 2.
Darren Sylvester, For You, 2013. Illuminated dance floor with sound system; 605 × 1500 × 1980 cm.
For You is an illuminated dance floor that appropriates current make up palettes offered by Yves Saint Laurent, colours ‘proven’ by market research to appear flattering on the widest cross-section of people.
Based on Yves Saint Laurent Les Essentials rouge pur couture, La laque couture and Rouge pur couture range revolution lipsticks, Marrakesh sunset palette, Palette city drive, Ombres 5 lumiéres, Pure chromatic eyeshadows and Blush radiance.
Gelitin, Human Elevator, 1999. Documentation of a performance at Pearl M. Mackey Apartments, Los Angeles, USA.