“I work in waves because I’m impatient” - Cy Twombly

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“I work in waves because I’m impatient” - Cy Twombly
Skeletons of man and gorilla. The people’s natural history, embracing living animals of the world and living races of mankind. 1903.
Female and Male Body Language as a Result of Patriarchal Power Relations, Marianne Wex, 1972-1978
http://www.badischer-kunstverein.de/index.php?Direction=Programm&list=Ausstellungen&Jahr=&Detail=437
via the milanese
John Baldessari/ Tristam Shandy
Marcel Duchamp, 1960s -by Michel Sima [+]
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Gemma Anton
Emma Jane Levitt Ode to Helen (Study) (2011), Wood relief on BFK Rives
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Jacques Tati (watch the original scene).
Alexei Sundukov
The Queue. 1986.
Le Corbusier, Book Dummy for “Une Petite Maison”, (1954)
In 1954, Le Corbusier published the book, “Une Petite Maison”. In it, he describes the house that he built for his aging parents on the shores of Lake Geneva. It is above all about the act of dwelling, an essay on the poetics of space. As Gaston Bachelard explains in his book of the same name, “The act of dwelling arises infallibly as soon as one has the impression of being sheltered.” Le Corbusier’s book is a series of lessons on the poetics of shelter. They begin with the title and dust jacket. “Une Petite Maison” means not simply a quantitatively small house but especially a quantitatively small house. We sleep more soundly”, observes Bachelard in a “little house” than in a large one. The “little house” calls for reveries of coziness associated with miniatures. This cozy seclusion is even suggested in the cover where Le Corbusier has drawn a broad black band around it’s surface, thereby placing it in it’s own sheltered nest.
Cinéastes de notre temps: Luis Buñuel (1964)
Palmeras al viento