Cunningham making a hat in 1954.
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Show & Tell
h

Kiana Khansmith
NASA
tumblr dot com
Sade Olutola

ellievsbear

No title available

Origami Around
trying on a metaphor
hello vonnie

No title available
styofa doing anything
sheepfilms
YOU ARE THE REASON
KIROKAZE
Today's Document

titsay

JBB: An Artblog!
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Czechia
seen from Mexico
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Ireland
seen from United States

seen from United States
@erasmiakad
Cunningham making a hat in 1954.
Young Boy Dancing Group
Lawrence Weiner, ‘IN & OUT OF PLACE CARRIED BY ITS OWN WEIGHT’, 2011
Bacteria-sex, molecular_sex,
nuclide-sex, quark-sex (fading out)
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMCTxkFwLHw)
Faye Wong, 1994
BACK IN THE BOOKSHOP: “THE ARTWORK CAUGHT BY THE TAIL : FRANCIS PICABIA AND DADA IN PARIS” by George Baker
The artist Francis Picabia — notorious dandy, bon vivant, painter, poet, filmmaker, and polemicist — has emerged as the Dadaist with postmodern appeal, and one of the most enigmatic forces behind the enigma that was Dada.
In this first book in English to focus on Picabia’s work in Paris during the Dada years, art historian and critic George Baker reimagines Dada through Picabia’s eyes. Such reimagining involves a new account of the readymade — Marcel Duchamp’s anti-art invention, which opened fine art to mass culture and the commodity. But in Picabia’s hands, Baker argues, the Dada readymade aimed to reinvent art rather than destroy it. Picabia’s readymade opened art not just to the commodity, but to the larger world from which the commodity stems: the fluid sea of capital and money that transforms all objects and experiences in its wake. The book thus tells the story of a set of newly transformed artistic practices, claiming them for art history — and naming them — for the first time: Dada Drawing, Dada Painting, Dada Photography, Dada Abstraction, Dada Cinema, Dada Montage. Along the way, Baker describes a series of nearly forgotten objects and events, from the almost lunatic range of the Paris Dada “manifestations” to Picabia’s polemical writings; from a lost work by Picabia in the form of a hole (called, suggestively, The Young Girl) to his “painting” Cacodylic Eye, covered in autographs by luminaries ranging from Ezra Pound to Fatty Arbuckle. Baker ends with readymades in prose: a vast interweaving of citations and quotations that converge to create a heated conversation among Picabia, Andre Breton, Tristan Tzara, James Joyce, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, and others. Art history has never looked like this before. But then again, Dada has never looked like art history.
George Baker is Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of California, Los Angeles, and an editor at October magazine and Books, and frequent contributor to Artforum.
Available via our website and in the shop. #worldfoodbooks #francispicabia (at WORLD FOOD BOOKS)
RENATE BERTLMANN
Zärtliche Berührungen, 1976
Digital photography mounted on dibond
Peter De Potter - The Vanity of Certain Flowers, monograph book, published Sept 2016. 272 pages, soft 4-fold cover, 19 x 24 cm. limited edition of 500 copies.
An exhibition and publication exploring how political powers in Europe are using technologies in bureaucratic systems to determine the fate of asylum seekers.
I guess the right sentence is: Don’t CONTROL YOURSELF