Standing with Adrian Piper’s “Mythic Being Video, 1973,” at her colossal MoMA retrospective. April 2018.
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Three Goblin Art
Jules of Nature

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DEAR READER
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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if i look back, i am lost

shark vs the universe

JBB: An Artblog!
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Today's Document

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@leighkane-artworker
Standing with Adrian Piper’s “Mythic Being Video, 1973,” at her colossal MoMA retrospective. April 2018.
With Jennine Michna-Bales extraordinary Underground Railroad photographs at the Phillips in DC, all made at night, when freedom-seekers could travel the under cover of darkness. April 2019.
Amrit & Rabindra Kaur Singh / The Singh Twins, b. 1966 The Last Supper UK (1994-5) [Source]
The artists’ website says:
Cited by Simon Schama as the “artistic face of modern Britain”, The Singh Twins are contemporary British artists of international standing whose award-winning paintings have been acknowledged as constituting a unique genre in British Art and for initiating a new movement in the revival of the Indian miniature tradition within modern art practice - something which, in 2011, was officially recognized at the highest level of British Establishment when they both received an MBE “for Services to the Indian Miniature Tradition of Painting in Contemporary Art” in the Queen’s Birthday Honours. In 2015 they were awarded Honorary Doctorates from the University of Chester for their “outstanding contribution to British Art”.
William Mortensen
Self Portrait of William Mortensen and Courtney Crawford, 1926
Quite a bit of new articles on Mortensen lately: Monster Brains, Dangerous Minds, Beautiful / Decay, Widewalls
*not quite certain what this has to do with Pride today, but enjoy the articles and galleries.
William Mortensen @ age 29
Taken in the backyard of her home in Athens, Georgia, a series of photographs document a private performance in which Beverly Buchanan burned some of her wood shack sculptures. Buchanan connected these performative burnings with the racial violence she encountered as a student protester in Greensboro, North Carolina, in the early 1960s.
See Beverly Buchanan—Ruins and Rituals now through March 5.
Beverly Buchanan (American, 1940–2015). ‘‘Out of Control’’ Postcard, 1991. Postcard. Private collection
Beverly Buchanan @ age 51.
Lotte Laserstein @ age 30; Self Portrait with Traube, 1928 http://womenintheactofpainting.blogspot.com/2013/03/lotte-laserstein-friends.html
Inside Of Me, 1998 by Helena Almeida
“I turn myself into a drawing. My body as a drawing, myself as my own work – that was what I was searching for” - Helena Almeida
Helena Almeida @ age ?
Shinichi Maruyama, b. 1968 Self Portrait Japan (2006) [Source]
Bruce Silverstein says:
Shinichi Maruyama exemplifies the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi–the beauty of things imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete. In his work, he captures the underlying principle of energetic interactions between forms. The artist first started halting the passage of time through images of suspended liquids forms intending to collide in mid-air. In his series Nudes, Maruyama has more recently collaborated with dancers to create a sense of motion in a single photograph, through layering different frames. In its spatial illusionism and meticulous details, he inevitably points to a vortex of visual forms and sensations, where spontaneity and control stand in perfect balance. The artist’s status lies in his ability to create a new abstract visual language that generates motion and stillness in perpetuum.
Shinichi Maruyama @ age 38.
Lauren Kelley, b. 1975 Pickin’ US (1999) [Source]
The Seattle Times says:
For “Pickin,’ ” Lauren Kelley photographed herself wearing hair picks that match her skin tone. Their handles are upraised fists, symbols of the Black Power movement, and create a crownlike Afro.
Check out the artist’s website here!
Lauren Kelley @ age 22.
Eugene Soh Saturn Devouring His Naan Singapore (2014) [Source]
Eugene Soh @ age 27
The rest of my room is book shelves. I hoard books. They are people who do not leave.
Anne Sexton, A Self-Portrait In Letters (via oiseauperdu)
This book about Anne Sexton belongs here.
Izumi Miyaki / 宮崎 いず美, b. 1994
Until I Become an Object Japan (2015)
Tomato Japan (2015)
Eye Japan (2013)
Sandwich Japan (2013)
Hair Cut Japan (2016)
Rice Ball Mountain Japan (2016)
Not Similar Japan (2013)
[Source], [Source]
CNN reports:
As an only child growing up in Japan, photographer Izumi Miyazaki often let her imagination roam free.
Armed with her mother’s silver Pentax, the young teen developed a peculiar approach to capturing the world around her.
Surreal, grotesque and often humorous, her self-portraits seem to turn “kawaii” – the Japanese descriptor for all things cute – on its head.
In one photo, she’s beheaded – her clumpy insidesspilling onto a pink backdrop. In another, her signature black bob is obscured by two slices of bread.
Appreciation for Miyazaki’s off-beat style is growing, with thousands following her Tumblr account. And she recently finished her first solo exhibition at the Wild Project Gallery in Luxembourg.
Below, the Tokyo’s Musashino Art University graduate discusses her work with CNN Style.
I'm all for turning kawaii on it's head.
Guillermo Tolentino Self Portrait Philippines (undated) [Source]
Wikipedia says:
Guillermo Estrella Tolentino (July 24, 1890 – July 12, 1976) was a Filipino sculptor and professor of the University of the Philippines. He was designated as a National Artist of the Philippines for Sculpture in 1973, three years before his death.
セルフポートレイト by 西本喜美子 self portrait by Kimiko Nishimoto
(【自分の意思でやってます!】87歳のアマチュアカメラマンの自撮り作品に吹き出す | CuRAZY [クレイジー]から)
西本喜美子の創作生活
Kimiko Nishimoto Self Portraits Japan (c. 2016) [Source]
Self-Portraits by 87-Year-Old Photographer Kimiko Nishimoto
Kimiko Nishimoto learned how to use a camera for the first time at the age of 71 and even furthered her skills by taking courses on digital editing to manipulate her images. While she mostly focuses on still life and nature photography, she has a series of hilarious self-portraits involving random costumes and staged falls.
Kimiko Nishimoto @ age 87
Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun Self-Portrait with Hat
Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun @ age 27; Self Portrait, 1782
Albert Adams, b. South Africa 1929, d. UK 2006 Self Portrait South Africa (1958) [Source]
SMAC Gallery says:
Adams was born in Johannesburg and at the age of four moved to Cape Town with his mother and sister. He attended Livingstone High School and qualified as a teacher at Hewat Teachers’ Training College in Cape Town. Denied entrance to the Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town, due to the colour of his skin, he subsequently applied for, and was awarded, a scholarship to study at the Slade School of Art in London (1953-1956). This training, and exposure to some of the great artistic talents and minds of the twentieth century, provided a solid foundation from which Adams could forge his own style. In 1957 he went to the Munich Academy of Arts and during the summer, he attended master classes at Oskar Kokoschka’s (1886-1980) School of Vision in Salzburg.
Adams returned to Cape Town where he exhibited widely to critical acclaim and was chosen to represent South Africa in international exhibitions on more than one occasion, but in 1960 he decided to leave South Africa and permanently settle in London. Initially teaching at schools in the East End, he was appointed to the staff of the City University, London in 1979, where he lectured in art history for 18 years.
The time spent with Oscar Kokoschka had an enduring influence on Adams’ philosophical and technical approach to his own creative expression. Throughout his life, he remained true to Kokoschka’s words, contained in a taped speech, specially recorded for and played at the opening of Adams’ first solo exhibition in Cape Town in 1959: never to close his eyes to ‘the misery we create on earth’. Adams spoke of the tightrope that an artist walks, between the emotions that direct creativity, and the objectivity required in the development of the work; he managed this walk throughout his creative life in his paintings, drawings and graphic works. Through his training and volition Adams was a modernist and expressionist, but he remained – till the last – spiritually and politically contemporary.
Adams was moved by, and responded to, the horrors of his own time and experiences and captured them in his work – genocide, natural disasters and atrocities perpetrated across the globe – yet he always returned to South Africa for inspiration, depicting or alluding to, amongst others, homeless individuals in Cape Town, the darker side of the Cape Minstrel parades, and the ‘baggage’ or legacy of apartheid. After 1994 he explored the challenges, dangers and threats that came with political change, compelling the viewer to see and share the disillusionment of the downtrodden and marginalised. He was unforgiving for the wrongs done to people, while, at the same time, searching for the spiritual and metaphysical in and through his art.
More info here.
Albert Adams @ age 29.
<p>Adriana Varejão @ age 51;<br> Kindred Spirits (detail-1 of 3) ) 2015<br><a href=“http://www.adrianavarejao.net/home”>http://www.adrianavarejao.net/home