Tuesday vibes.
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline
Cosimo Galluzzi
Sade Olutola
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Today's Document
todays bird
Monterey Bay Aquarium

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home

JVL
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
trying on a metaphor

Discoholic 🪩
styofa doing anything
Not today Justin

#extradirty
Show & Tell
Peter Solarz
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

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seen from United Kingdom

seen from Taiwan

seen from Germany
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seen from United States
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seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
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@erinmtucker
Tuesday vibes.
There’s something oddly beautiful about the figurative works of Kansas based artist Jamie Bates Slone. Her vibrant sculptures are teaming with diseased growths and discolorations, and the effect is simultaneously fascinating and horrifying. Slone can relate to the physical and emotional impact that disease brings. “Through conjured memory, I revisit my family’s history with illness and premature death. These memories are flooded with emotion and anxiety that I use as the base of my sculptural work,” she says.
See more on Hi-Fructose.
Now on view: “ALISON SAAR: Bearing” at Museum of African Diaspora, San Francisco. NOV11-APR3
“My work has always dealt with dualities – usually of the wild, feral side in battle with the civil self” —–Alison Saar
So deeply entrenched in history, myth and a narrative so universal and inclusive, Alison Saar’s work seem to shy away from addressing the elephant in the room. Consisting primarily of Saar’s sculpture and installation work, this exhibition explores the ways in which the legacy of history bears on the body, and how this history both shapes and guides the way society conceptualizes identity. Her interest in the body, specifically the mothering body, present both the corporeal and cultural endurance of African American women.
In her 2013 show “slough” at L.A. Louver, Alison’s work conjured a duality of meaning, and a sense of both impasse and renewal, that pervades the 15 new works in the exhibition. The title for the exhibition Slough, is defined as “a situation characterized by lack of progress,” or “to cast off or shed dead skin.”
“With a lot of my work, there are these really heavy sort of ideas and issues. But I like to think there’s always some element of play in them,” she says with a laugh, “so I don’t just scare everybody off.”
The largest work in the show, Thistle and Twitch (Mombie), depicts a larger-than-life female figure towering nearly 8 feet (2.4 m) tall, formed by built-up layers of thin paper, with painted barren briars veining beneath the skin’s surface. Massive in scale, yet delicately constructed, the viewer is invited to peer inside her navel to find the hollow form filled with a thicket of brambles. Captured in a transitory state, the figure appears to be exiting a stage of fertility, or rather, experiencing a rejuvenation of new growth following a period of dormancy. The title of this work borrows from Ovid’s Metamorphases and the mythological tale of Demeter (the goddess of harvest) who is overcome with grief when her daughter Persephone (the goddess of spring) was abducted by Hades and held captive in the underworld.
Click here to learn more about Saar’s current show at Museum of African Diaspora, San Francisco.
Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Archaeological Find, Number 9, 1964
True strength is delicate.
Louise Berliawsky Nevelson (via infamoussayings)
Erin Tucker
cast iron hangers and vintage clothing, 2015
Erin Tucker
Details of Untitled Studies, 2015
Fabric, thread, wood glue and embroidery hoops
Erin Tucker
Untitled Arm 2015
cotton thread and wood glue on panel
Erin Tucker with Izzy Jarvis at Blueline Gallery in Bloomington, IN
Erin Tucker (prints by Izzy Jarvis) at Blueline Gallery, Bloomington IN
‘Frayed and Fragile’
tissue paper, glue, coffee and cotton thread
Erin Tucker
collagraph print with thread, 2015
Erin Tucker
installation view of prints at Blueline Gallery
Erin Tucker
untitled studies, 2015
various fabrics, thread, wood glue and embroidery hoops
Gallery Page for my current show in Bloomington IN
Yuni Kim Lang - Hair once again
© All images courtesy of the artist
Yuni Kim Lang (USA) - Comfort Hair
Yuni Kim Lang is a Michigan-based visual artist who creates sculptures, photographs and wearable art that explores themes of weight, mass, accumulation, hair and cultural identity. She makes sculptures out of rope and synthetic materials where it transcends its materiality and become bodily. She is fascinated by what people give power and meaning to, along with our obsession with adornment.
Her recent work Comfort Hair is a sculpture inspired by the Gache, a big wig worn by Korean women of high social backgrounds back in history. So powerful and beautiful yet so burdensome and heavy. It is this intense, overwhelming, yet so satisfying relationship with our hair that makes us obsess over it. © All images courtesy of the artist
[more Yuni Kim Lang]
Micaela Lattanzio fragments portraits into mozaic-like works that appear to dissipate into the walls. Hers is an unconventional method of showing photography. She cuts her photos into abstract shapes. While in some, the original image remains intact, in others, she uses the image’s newfound porousness to intertwine multiple photos at once. The pieces become visual puzzles where details are scrambled and our eyes must do work to see them as cohesive wholes. Lattanzio has a solo show coming up titled “Fragmenta” at Ma’ Showroom (Largo S. Agostino, Montefalco, Italy) March 21 through May 21.
See more on Hi-Fructose.