Photos of my art in the garden at Dictée Gallery in Oakland California.
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Not today Justin
YOU ARE THE REASON
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Cosmic Funnies

Janaina Medeiros

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Misplaced Lens Cap
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
occasionally subtle
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JVL
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

★

Andulka

izzy's playlists!
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

#extradirty
Cosimo Galluzzi
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@kodandi
Photos of my art in the garden at Dictée Gallery in Oakland California.
My favourite depiction of Hildegard of Bingen by visionary artist, Rithika Merchant. Oh, and this...
“She is so bright and glorious that you cannot look at her face or her garments for the splendour with which she shines. For she is terrible with the terror of the avenging lightning, and gentle with the goodness of the bright sun; and both her terror and her gentleness are incomprehensible to humans.... But she is with everyone and in everyone, and so beautiful is her secret that no person can know the sweetness with which she sustains people, and spares them in inscrutable mercy.”
― Hildegard of Bingen
how do i make you believe, 2026
how do i make you believe refers to the question that I have been asking medical professionals, friends, family, and colleagues while navigating chronic illness. The textile-based works presented in this exhibition speaks of how chronically ill bodies navigate pain, illness, panic, doubt, and exhaustion to appear functional within global systems of productivity. Engaging with my personal chronic illness, I use embroidery as a feminist and disability-affirming action, creating spaces for reflection.
I choose embroidery as a medium and method, as it holds the capacity to wait for me. For example, I can work on a piece today and, if I feel unwell in the coming days, return to it later. Even after a year, the thread is still there, the needle ready to be picked up where it was last pricked. In using this slow, repetitive, unhurried medium, I am not punished for needing rest.
Chronic illness is a systematic issue, yet it is treated as an individual failure to be productive or a hyper-personal misfortune. Feeling of guilt over needing care, isolation stemming from cancelled plans, shame and invisibility, and the exhaustion of justifying paint to medical professionals, family and society shape chronically ill bodies into sites of internal conflict, visible performance and hidden labour. By tying worth to output, the so called unproductive bodies are devalued, penalized and erased. the slow, repetitive, unhurried action of fine embroidery counter this erasure.
works in this exhibition reckon with quiet, politically charged interruptions to the logic of efficiency. Each work marks a distinct set of locations and timelines. I embroidered while in bed, on the bus, at the beach, and anywhere I found myself in moments of energy. Every work in the exhibition carries the unpredictable reality of a body that is never the same the next day
The exhibition takes place in an environment of disability-affirming language, crip-time awareness, and increasing openness to share symptoms, recognize patterns of performed functionality, and find a community living through chronic illness across geographies.
how do i make you believe, flags off Anupa Mehta Contemporary Art's Emerging Artists Solos calendar for 2026 selected by Anupa Mehta, Veerangana Solanki and Shaleen Wadhwana
My first real art in a gallery experience and I already got a weird review of the show that didn’t mention my art and I’m pretty sure the writer didn’t even see my art. One of the other artists said it was “thoughtful” but I am not so polite. It was extremely not thoughtful for the writer to ignore the majority of the show and then vaguely give the show a bad review.
“Unfinished Painting” — Keith Haring
This painting was left intentionally incomplete. Haring began it when he was dying due to complications from AIDS, and knew he didn’t have much time left. The piece represents the incomplete lives of him and many others, lost to AIDS during the crisis.
“AIDS Memorial Quilt” — Multiple
This quilt is over 50 tons heavy, and one of, if not the, largest pieces of community folk art. Many people who died of AIDS did not receive funerals, due to social stigma and many funeral homes refusing to handle the deceased’s remains, so this was one of the only ways their lives could be celebrated. Each panel was created in recognition of someone who died due to AIDS, typically by that person’s loved ones.
“Untitled” (Portrait of Ross in L.A.) — Felix Gonzalez-Torres
This pile of candy weighs the same amount as Gonzalez-Torres’ partner, Ross Laycock, did. Ross Laycock had died due to AIDS-related complications earlier that same year. Visitors who see this piece are encouraged to take some of the candy. As they do so, the pile of candy weighs less and less, like how AIDS had deteriorated the body of Ross Laycock.
The SF Gay Men's Chorus
This photo was taken in 1993. The men in white are the surviving original members. Every man in black is standing in for an original member who lost their lives to AIDS.
“Electric Fan (Feel it Motherfuckers); Only Unclaimed Item from the Stephen Earabino Estate, 1997” — John Boskovich
After the death of his lover, Stephen Earabino, from AIDS, Boskovich discovered that his family had completely cleared his room, including Boskovich’s own possessions, save for this fan. An entire person, existence and relationship had been erased, just like so many lives during the AIDS crisis. Boskovich encased the fan in Plexiglass, but added cutouts so that its air may be felt by the viewer, almost like an exhalation. In a sense, restoring Earabino’s breath.
“Blue” — Derek Jarman
This was Jarman’s final feature film, released four months before his death from AIDS-related complications. These complications had left him visually impaired, able to only see in shades of blue. This film consists of a single shot of a saturated blue color, as the soundtrack to the film described Jarman’s life through narration, intercut with the adventures of Blue, a humanization of the color blue. The film's final moments consist of a set of repeated names: “John. Daniel. Howard. Graham. Terry. Paul". These are the names of former lovers and friends of Jarman who had died due to AIDS.
“Untitled” (Perfect Lovers) — Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Created by the same man who created the previous untitled piece, this piece was also inspired by his lover’s deterioration and death due to AIDS. This piece consists of two perfectly alike clocks. Over the course of time, one of the clocks will fall out of sync with the other.
In a letter written to his lover about the piece, before his lover’s passing, Gonzalez-Tourres wrote, “Don't be afraid of the clocks, they are our time, the time has been so generous to us. We imprinted time with the sweet taste of victory. We conquered fate by meeting at a certain time in a certain space. We are a product of the time, therefore we give back credit were it is due: time. We are synchronized, now forever. I love you.”
Please feel free to reblog with more additions
"Dear God" - Derek Jarman. Mixed media, (1987)
My favourite of Jarman's "black paintings" created on the first anniversary of his diagnosis with AIDS.
Untitled (Sometimes I Come to Hate People) - David Wojnarowicz (1992)
The last work of art created by East Village multimedia artist and activist David Wojnarowicz. Originally intended to be part of a series of 3, Wojnarowicz became too sick to finish the 3rd work in the series. Featuring red text sourced from his diary superimposed on a black and white photograph of wounded, bandaged hands, Wojnarowicz confronts his deterioration and impending death due to AIDS. He died on July 22, 1992 at the age of 37; the public demonstration held in the wake of his death would be one of the first political funerals of the AIDS crisis. In 1996, his ashes were scattered on the White House lawn.
“Every time somebody dies of AIDS, I think their lover, their friends, should drive with their bodies 100 miles an hour down to the White House, and throw their body over the White House fence.” - David Wojnarowicz, Close to the Knives
In her delicate crafted porcelain sculptures conceptual artist Kate McDowell expresses her interpretation of the clash between the natural world and the modern-day environmental impact of industrialized society. The resulting works can be equal parts amusing and disturbing as the anatomical forms of humans and animals become inexplicably intertwined in her delicate porcelain forms. (Source)
Um…guys?
Tōshi Yoshida, Extension, 1969
Woodblock print
more
Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951~1982)
Permutations, 1976, Single channel video, black& white, silent, 16mm film transferred into HD video
Passages / Paysages, 1978, Three channels video, black& white, sound, 10min
Mouth to Mouth, 1975, Single channel video, black& white, sound, 8min
Aveugle Voix, 1975(printed 2024), Digital inkjet print, Performance, 23 Bluxome Street, San Francisco, USA
"The ink spills thickest before it runs dry before it stops writing at all." from Dictee by Theresa Hak Kyung Cha
Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951~1982) was an American novelist, producer, director, and avant-garde artist of South Korean origin. Her works are currently on display at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA), Seoul.
35cm X 50cm
Yayoi Kusama - 14th Street Happening, 1966
Dichroic Glass by Chris Wood
Chris Wood uses dichroic glass to create prism-like mandalas.Dichroic (meaning two colour) is an optical coating that selectively reflects certain wavelengths of light and allows the remaining wavelengths to transmit through.Developed in the late fifties by NASA to protect against the potentially harmful effects of direct sunlight and cosmic radiation, dichroic glass, with its striking visual qualities, has been used in a variety of scientific and industrial applications.The material shifts from being reflective like a golden mirror to vibrantly coloured or almost transparent, depending upon the viewpoint and angle of light. It is a material that very eloquently expresses the magic of the phenomenon of light. Chris Wood uses dichroic glass to create prism-like mandalas.
Dichroic (meaning two colour) is an optical coating that selectively reflects certain wavelengths of light and allows the remaining wavelengths to transmit through.
Developed in the late fifties by NASA to protect against the potentially harmful effects of direct sunlight and cosmic radiation, dichroic glass, with its striking visual qualities, has been used in a variety of scientific and industrial applications.
The material shifts from being reflective like a golden mirror to vibrantly coloured or almost transparent, depending upon the viewpoint and angle of light. It is a material that very eloquently expresses the magic of the phenomenon of light. Source:blendi and hifructose
Japanese watchmaker Citizen’s installation at La Triennale di Milano as part of Milan Salone. Developed by Tsuyoshi Tane of DGT Architects, a Paris-based architect, and CITIZEN’s in-house design team, the piece comprises 80,000 ‘main plates’ (the prime component part of all watches) suspended in mid air. Illuminated from above, the installation becomes a walk-through chandelier.
Good news friends! I will be showing art in Sacramento this summer!!!
Lee Krasner, Untitled, 1949.
Cement Bleak - 2009, Dalston, London.
By Isaac Cordal, rapidly becoming one of my favourite contemporary artists—this new venture into a street art form, placing the manipulated kitchen utensils in situ so that these breathtaking shadow art forms manifest.
Minimal single subject maps by Michael Pecirnoof explore data sourced from the USDA, in an attempt to paint a vivid picture on the agricultural landscape.
Artist Statement
Minimal Maps is an ongoing project that explores how richly-detailed single subject maps can give us new imagery to understand our landscape. The data is accurate for the year 2014 and explores the American (lower 48 states) landscape as a whole entity. The data provided by the USDA is incredible and includes a tremendous wealth of information that makes up the composition of America. By pulling this data and extrapolating specific categories I’ve been able to produce a number of unique and explicit maps that aim to push us away from the ubiquitous and low-resolution (regarding information content) physical and political map.