This colds got me all Rudolph nosed. #withyournosesobright #rudolphtherednosedreindeer #bigredandshiny #colds #sick #cometakecareofme

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Indonesia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from United States
This colds got me all Rudolph nosed. #withyournosesobright #rudolphtherednosedreindeer #bigredandshiny #colds #sick #cometakecareofme
Have you submitted yet? 4 Days, folks! Help us build a thriving arts movement throughout the Manchester community!
Lucy Kim, Field Projects favorite from show # 2, has been featured in this wonderful video above and an article I will quote from below. I am quoting from the article because I couldn't say it better myself.
I think why I feel such a strong connection with Lucy Kim’s work is my connection to her process. Process is part of Lucy’s subject—the translation of information from one form to another is key in these works. In the theater, it is all about that the process—not the final result, but the investigation. Or at least it should be. I had a mentor, John Stix, who would come to the rehearsal room at 84 years old. This was a man who had directed James Dean, Steve McQueen, and Arthur Miller’s "The Price" on Broadway, mentored by Helen Hayes, etc; I was acting in a play I’d written about Robert Mapplethorpe, and John would say each and every day at rehearsal " What can we learn today?" and he meant it. Yeah sure, sounds easy. But, this seemingly simple question asked each day by an artist in the theater or in the studio can lead to a thrilling creative ride and result in innovative artwork. Every day Lucy is asking this question in her studio, and her idiosyncratic and surprising process makes us see the world in a whole new way.
read the rest at this address : http://www.bigredandshiny.com/cgi-bin/BRS.cgi?section=av&issue=147&article=2013-05-22-093425868729536540
She has dispensed with nouns. She doesn't give us an object she gives us a verb and in doing so reminds us that there is a difference between the two. Thank you Lucy, fluidity will reign supreme! and painting will never die.
This is a Kickstarter video you'll want to watch more than once. I'm biased, but I think it's the best Kickstarter video ever made.
Watch it, share it, and support the relaunch of Boston art journal Big Red & Shiny.