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Instituto de visión (Institution of Vision)
© » KADIST

Nicolás Consuegra

Photography (Photography)

In his project Instituto de Vision (2008), Consuegra investigates how modernism gave rise to many new technological forms of vision, most notably the camera, yet also resulted in the disappearance of outmoded forms of vision. As a metaphor for this process, he looks to the afterlife of the image as evidenced in signs. When a company goes out of business or moves, their sign often lingers and slowly fades creating a ghosted image of their sojourn.

Nadie sabe de la sed con que otro bebe (No one knows the thirst with which another drinks)
© » KADIST

Nicolás Consuegra

Installation (Installation)

A residency program in the blazing hot city of Honda, Colombia, inspired artist Nicolás Consuegra to consider the difficulty in understanding the needs of a distant community. An important town during the colonial era as the main port on the Magdalena River, Honda is presently rife with poverty, unemployment, and environmental deterioration. Here he produced the work Nadie sabe de la sed con que otro bebe (No one knows the thirst with which another drinks) , a variable arrangement of cut glasses in front of a mirror so that they appear whole.

Colombia
© » KADIST

Nicolás Consuegra

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Consuegra’s Colombia is a mirror made in the shape of the artist’s home country—a silhouette that has an important resonance for the artist. Consuegra’s mirrored Colombia is similar to an earlier version, made to be show opposite a mirror of the United States. Whether reflecting his two homes within one another (Consuegra studied in the US and has made several works about this experience of living in exile from his homeland), or simply reflecting its surroundings, Colombia is a simple yet evocative work about the identity of a nation, and the things that we project—really and metaphorically—onto its form.

Erased Faces
© » KADIST

Birender Kumar Yadav

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Birender Kumar Yadav comes from Dhanbad, India, a city built on its proximity of iron ore and coal and once forested and inhabited by Indigenous people who compose the Gondwana. The forests were felled and immigrants from northern Bihar and South India were brought to exploit the mineral resources. The Indigenous people were then dispersed to live nomadically, engaging themselves as seasonal workers in farms and industries.

Eraser
© » KADIST

Will Rogan

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Will Rogan’s video Eraser (2014) shows a hearse parked in a clearing amidst leaf barren trees. The steely grey sky stands in stark contrast to the vehicle’s luminously pristine white finish and makes this already deathly object seem even more ghostly. The grass underneath is half-turned brown and further marks this as a lifeless landscape.

A Chrysalis No. 2
© » KADIST

Yétúndé Olagbaju

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Yétúndé Olagbaju’s On becoming a star series recuperates the figure of ‘Mammy’, a stereotype rooted in American slavery that typically depicts a larger, dark skinned woman as a maternal presence, often within a domestic setting, and typically taking care of white children. After being referred to as a Mammy during their undergraduate degree, Olagbaju began exploring the figure in 2016 as a means of healing. Olagbaju’s first presentation on this topic was a book called Black Collectibles: Mammy and Friends (1997) that sells tchotchkes—like salt and pepper shakers or figurines—of the racist mammy image taking different forms, from which Olagbaju exorcised the Mammy images by carefully cutting them out of the book with a razor blade.

Memory: Record/Erase
© » KADIST

Nalini Malani

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Memory: Record/Erase is a stop-motion animation by Nalini Malani based on ‘The Job,’ a short story by celebrated German poet and playwright Bertolt Brecht. Brecht’s story follows a poverty-stricken family during the German depression, as the central character, Frau Hausmann, is forced to impersonate her late husband to procure his job as a nightwatchman to support her two children. Despite her exceptional performance during the job, and even after receiving public commendation for catching a thief, when eventually her identity is discovered during a factory accident she is forced into a precarious existence where she resorts to selling herself to get by.

Person with Pillow: Desire, Lust, Fate
© » KADIST

John Baldessari

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The voids in Baldessari’s painted photographs are simultaneously positive and negative spaces, both additive and subtractive. In Person with Pillow: Desire, Lust, Fate , a woman’s facial expression is obscured by such void, leaving only her posture to suggest her emotional state. The two images stacked above the woman can be read as comic-style thought bubbles, intimating that she has lust, desire, and fate on her mind.

DADYAA: The Woodpeckers of Rotha
© » KADIST

Pooja Gurung and Bibhusan Basnet

Film & Video (Film & Video)

DADYAA: The Woodpeckers of Rotha by Pooja Gurung and Bibhusan Basnet illuminates a unique and seldom seen international perspective on indigenous cultures and contemporary social issues in the Nepali context. A small masterpiece, the work engages with one of the most pressing social issues in Nepal, mass migration and the dissolving of social fabric in rural areas. The story begins with an old couple, Atimaley and Devi, who live in a village in Jumla, in the highlands of Western Nepal.

Jackie and Chloe
© » KADIST

Carolyn Drake

Photography (Photography)

Jackie and Chloe by Carolyn Drake is from a series of works titled Knit Club . For this project, Drake collaborated with an enigmatic group of women in Mississippi who loosely call themselves “Knit Club”. There is a strangeness to this photograph; details of facial identity are withheld.

Secrets Between Her and Her Shadow 10
© » KADIST

Maryam Hoseini

Painting (Painting)

Secrets Between Her and Her Shadow 10 by Maryam Hoseini is from a series of paintings of the same title that are inspired by the story Layla and Majnun – an Arabic love story about Majnun, a 7th century Bedouin poet, and his lover, Layla. Hoseini’s compositions are visually inspired by the illustrations accompanying the Khamsa of Nizami , a manuscript of five poems, including Layla and Majnun , produced by the Persian poet Nizami in the 1590s. Unlike the original tale, Hoseini’s paintings focus entirely on Layla, any male characters are purposefully erased from this narrative.

Borrando la Frontera
© » KADIST

Ana Teresa Fernández

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The artist writes about her work Borrando la Frontera, a performance done at Tijuana/San Diego border: “I visually erased the train rails that serve as a divider between the US and Mexico. I painted them sky blue, creating a “Hole in the Wall” This deconstruction of “feminized” work explores the difficulties in reconciling both low wages and undervalued work via social and political infrastructures, confronting issues of labor and power. The images that I myself perform, present a duality: women dressed in a black tango dance attire while engaging in de-skilled domestic chores; the surreal within non-fiction.

Landslides
© » KADIST

Caroline Déodat

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Landslides is a cinematographic essay/poem by Caroline Déodat in which fictional images are the result of research into the memories of a Mauritian dance born during colonial slavery, the Sega. In the film, the contemporary Mauritian dancer Jean-Renat Anamah crosses mythical landscapes of the Sega that merge with intimate territories. From the pixels of the digital image and the signals of electronic music, this film exhumes in layers of landscapes the spectres of a ritual erased by history through a personal genealogy: between haunting memory and deferred archive.

Hands Around In Yangon
© » KADIST

Moe Satt

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Hands Around in Yangon is both a secular and religious exploration of the meaning of hands in Myanmar. Moe Satt’s father is Muslim, while his mother is Buddhist. In the Buddhist context, hand gestures or mudras are often important in signifying the identity of deities.

Raybrook
© » KADIST

Jesse Krimes

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Raybrook by Jesse Krimes takes its name from The Federal Correctional Institution, Ray Brook (FCI Ray Brook), a medium-security United States federal prison for male inmates located in Essex County, NY. In addition to its indexical title, this quilt-work tapestry is made from personal clothing and other like articles the artist was given by currently, and formerly incarcerated persons. It is part of a larger series of works called the Elegy Quilts , which illustrate domestic scenes inspired by conversations the artist has had with the individuals these fabrics were acquired from.

In View
© » KADIST

Randa Maddah

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Shot from the rooftop of her house in Majdal Shams, through a complex construction of moving mirrors, this video connects both sides of the border which has cut through Syrian Golan heights since the 1967 Six-Day war. Located on the cease-fire line, residents of Majdal Shams are reminded of this tragic separation on a daily basis. During the war the majority of the local population were exiled to Syria.

Korni (The Roots) (Our Grandmothers’ Gardens series)
© » KADIST

Olga Grotova

Photography (Photography)

Our Grandmothers’ Gardens by Olga Grotova is based on the history of Soviet allotment gardens, which were small plots of land distributed amongst the families of factory workers to compensate for poor food supply in a country that was over-producing weapons. Beginning in the 1960s, Grotova’s great grandmother and grandmother tended an allotment garden for three decades, after their release from an all-female gulag camp for “enemies of the people”. These camps detained wives, sisters, mothers, and daughters of men executed during Stalinist repressions.

Intentionally Left Blanc
© » KADIST

Hank Willis Thomas

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Intentionally Left Blanc alludes to the technical process of its own (non)production; a procedure known as retro-reflective screen printing in which the image is only fully brought to life through its exposure to flash lighting. Using a found photograph depicting a passionate crowd of African Americans—their attitude suggesting the fervor of a civil-rights era audience— Intentionally Left Blanc reverts in its exposed, “positive” format to an image in which select faces are whitened out and erased, the exact inverse of the same view in its “negative” condition. This dialectic of light and dark re-emerges when we view the same faces again, only this time black and featureless, a scattering of disembodied heads amidst a sea of white.

Our Grandmothers’ Gardens
© » KADIST

Olga Grotova

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Our Grandmothers’ Gardens by Olga Grotova is based on the history of Soviet allotment gardens, which were small plots of land distributed amongst the families of factory workers to compensate for poor food supply in a country that was over-producing weapons. Beginning in the 1960s, Grotova’s great grandmother and grandmother tended an allotment garden for three decades, after their release from an all-female gulag camp for “enemies of the people”. These camps detained wives, sisters, mothers, and daughters of men executed during Stalinist repressions.

Zemlya (The Soil) (Our Grandmothers’ Gardens series)
© » KADIST

Olga Grotova

Photography (Photography)

Our Grandmothers’ Gardens by Olga Grotova is based on the history of Soviet allotment gardens, which were small plots of land distributed amongst the families of factory workers to compensate for poor food supply in a country that was over-producing weapons. Beginning in the 1960s, Grotova’s great grandmother and grandmother tended an allotment garden for three decades, after their release from an all-female gulag camp for “enemies of the people”. These camps detained wives, sisters, mothers, and daughters of men executed during Stalinist repressions.

Editioned Screenprints
© » KADIST

Rachel Foster

Rachel E. Foster uses printmaking, sculpture, and photography to illuminate the nearly invisible. For her source material she combs the digital world for bits of strange information that seep into our daily reality. These clues, be they coded sequences or simple phrases, become part of her puzzle; by reframing information she makes us reconsider it through a different lens.

Silencer #16 & #17
© » KADIST

Will Rogan

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

MUM , the acronym used to title a series of Rogan’s small interventions on found magazines, stands for “Magic Unity Might,” the name of a vintage trade magic publication. In the series, Rogan alters the magazine’s pages by erasing the image of the magicians doing their tricks, leaving only the background of their performances on view. These contexts range from the more overtly staged scenario in Silencer #16 —the erased magician is about to perform a trick on his assistant trapped on an odd, almost dada looking box—to the more “colloquial” Silencer #17 in which the absent magician’s silhouette appears in what seems to be a children’s hospital.

White Angel
© » KADIST

Fran Herndon

Working independently, Herndon experimented at the forefront of a now-canonical method—appropriation—by painting additions into found images from magazines such as Life and Sports Illustrated in a way that imbues the resulting works with mythical significance. Associated with the Beat movement, her work is integral to that part of the history of San Francisco. White Angel (1962), painted in the year of Marilyn Monroe’s death, portrays the actress in a process of devolution.

Searching for We’wha
© » KADIST

Carlos Motta

Photography (Photography)

Searching for We’wha is composed of five photographic triptychs combining photographs from the American West (New Mexico and Arizona) with excerpts from American Indian poetry in an attempt to reconstruct imaginary aspects of the life of We’Wha, a famous member of the Zuni tribe, who was born male but who lived a feminine gender expression. With this work, Carlos Motta aims to question gender fluidity, indeterminacy, neutrality and non-conformity, using We’wha as an image of the ways in which Two-Spirit American Indians express gender in non-Western non-traditional ways. They are often accepted and revered by their tribes, and in We’wha’s case she even became an official representative of their social interests.

Mr. Shadow 1
© » KADIST

Nontawat Numbenchapol

Photography (Photography)

The series of prints titled Mr. Shadow by Nontawat Numbenchapol engages with the history of and current state of militarization in Thailand. Each print features an invisible person, their silhouette only outlined by the military fatigues that they wear.

Patiwangi, the death of fragrance
© » KADIST

Leyla Stevens

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Leyla Stevens’s two-channel video Patiwangi, the death of fragrance is an immersive video installation that addresses erased histories. In the left channel, set in a fine museum storage facility, art conservators unfurl and inspect modernist Balinese paintings, prints, and sculptures. In the right channel, Javanese-Australian dancers, Ade Suharto and Melanie Lane, echo each other’s movements.

Mr. Shadow 2
© » KADIST

Nontawat Numbenchapol

Photography (Photography)

The series of prints titled Mr. Shadow by Nontawat Numbenchapol engages with the history of and current state of militarization in Thailand. Each print features an invisible person, their silhouette only outlined by the military fatigues that they wear.

Bullet
© » KADIST

Maya Watanabe

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Maya Watanabe’s video installation Bullet unfolds within the context of the Peruvian justice and forensic systems. During the Peruvian internal armed conflict that occured between the subversive group Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) and the Peruvian military from 1980-2000, approximately 21,000 people, civilians, and guerilla fighters were killed. Most of the killings that were perpetrated by the military during this period of political upheaval were later deemed extrajudicial acts, and almost all of them were carried out with firearms.

Proxy II (Beetles)
© » KADIST

Robert Zhao Renhui

Photography (Photography)

The photograph Proxy II (Beetles) by Robert Zhao Renhui belongs to a series, titled Christmas Island, Naturally, that focuses on the ecology of Christmas Island; a remote volcanic land formation in the Indian Ocean. Since the first settlements in the late 19th century, the ecosystems of Christmas Island have undergone devastating alterations. After nearly 150 years of human settlement, a number of invasive species have been unwittingly introduced to the island.

Zonnebloem Renamed
© » KADIST

Haroon Gunn-Salie

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Executed on Sunday 17 August 2013, “Zonnebloem renamed” is a site-specific performative video film marking the centenary of the 1913 Natives Land Act in South Africa. The short film forms part of the artist’s ongoing collaboration with District Six residents titled WITNESS. Commencing in 2011, WITNESS negotiates the forced removals and land compensation in District Six and across South Africa.

Lim Sokchanlina

Lim Sokchanlina, nicknamed ‘Lina’, works across documentary and conceptual practices with photography, video, installation, and performance; particularly drawn to the use and function of space where urban communities meet rural attitudes...

Xyza Cruz Bacani

Xyza Cruz Bacani is a Filipina author and photographer who uses documentary-style photography to call attention to less visible, erased, and under-reported global events...

Wong Wai Yin

Wong Wai Yin is an interdisciplinary artist who experiments with a variety of media ranging from painting, sculpture, collage, performance, video, installations and photography...

Nontawat Numbenchapol

Nontawat Numbenchapol is primarily known as a film director and television screenwriter, widely recognized for his documentary work...

Olga Grotova

Olga Grotova is an artist and poet whose practice involves collecting and mapping stories of Soviet and Eastern-European women that have been erased from established historical narratives...

Chantal Edie and Zacharie Ngnogue

Chantal Edie and Zacharie Ngnogue are a photography duo who channel their personal experiences into social commentaries...

Will Rogan

John Wood and Paul Harrison

John Wood and Paul Harrison have been working collaboratively since 1993, producing single screen and installation-based video works...

Elad Lassry

Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige

Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige collaborate as both filmmakers and artists, producing cinematic and visual artwork that intertwine, spanning feature and documentary films, video and photographic installations, sculpture, performance lectures and texts...

Suzanne Treister

In the 1980s, Suzanne Treister’s practice was concerned primarily with painting...

Ana Vaz

Ana Vaz is an artist and filmmaker whose works speculate on the relationships between self and other, and myth and history, through a cosmology of signs, references, and perspectives...

Birender Kumar Yadav

Birender Kumar Yadav is a multi-disciplinary artist who experiments with various media including painting, sculpture, photography, installation, etching, found and man-made objects, as well as live documentary...

John Baldessari

Maayan Amir and Ruti Sela

Maayan Amir and Ruti Sela, two young Israeli women artists work collaboratively or individually by project...

Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain

Linguists, semiologists, and graphic designers by training, Angela Detanico and Raphaël Lain consider the use of graphic signs in society...

Maya Watanabe

Drawing on her background in theater design and direction, Maya Watanabe is known for her multi-channel video installations that explore the relationship between language, collectivity, identity, and space...

Jane Jin Kaisen and Guston Sondin-Kung

Working with narrative experimental film, multi-channel video installation, performative video art, photography, and text, Jane Jin Kaisen engages themes of memory, trauma, migration and translation at the intersection of personal and collective histories...

Musquiqui Chihying and Gregor Kasper

Through his artistic career, Musquiqui Chihying has striven to dislocate and reconstruct established modes of behavior within systems and structures of power...

Hank Willis Thomas

Julian Hoeber

Haroon Gunn-Salie

Haroon Gunn-Salie (b...

Maryam Hoseini

Maryam Hoseini makes delicate, figurative paintings to investigate the political, social, and personal conditions of identity and gender...

Rachel Foster

Rachel Foster is concerned with showing the unseen...

Kennedy Browne

Formed in 2005, Kennedy Browne is the collaborative practice of Gareth Kennedy and Sarah Browne...

Ed Ruscha

Richard Bell

Richard Bell works across a variety of media including painting, installation, performance and video and text to pose provocative, complex, and humorous challenges to our preconceived ideas of Aboriginal art, as well as addressing contemporary debates around identity, place, and politics...

Leung Chi Wo and Wong Sara

Leung Chi Wo tends to highlight in his art the boundaries between viewing and voyeurism, real and fictional, and art and the everyday...

© » THE GUARDIAN

about 3 months ago (02/08/2024)

Frank Auerbach: The Charcoal Heads review: war-scarred faces on paper that has taken a pounding | Art and design | The Guardian Skip to main content Skip to navigation Skip to navigation The only remaining family Auerbach had … Gerda Boehm, 1961...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 3 months ago (02/06/2024)

Cities are the heroes in an 'easy-going and unpreachy' publication that takes us on whirlwind tour of art history Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Books review Cities are the heroes in an 'easy-going and unpreachy' publication that takes us on whirlwind tour of art history Fifteen art capitals are captured at their brilliant apogee in Caroline Campbell's book Keith Miller 6 February 2024 Share Detail of Hungry Ghosts Scroll (late 12th century) by an unknown artist Kyoto National Museum The last book I reviewed with this title was by the historian Simon Schama...

© » TWOCOATSOFPAINT

about 3 months ago (01/27/2024)

Andy Meerow, medium cool – Two Coats of Paint Andy Meerow, installation view of Slanted Andy” at Derosia Contributed by Jonathan Stevenson / In Haskell Wexler’s iconic 1969 counterculture film Medium Cool , John Cassellis, a cold-eyed TV photojournalist played by the great Robert Forster, has internalized the notion of television as a “cool” medium in the McLuhan-esque sense of requiring viewers to search for context in order to understand what they are seeing...

© » 1854 PHOTOGRAPHY

about 3 months ago (01/24/2024)

‘I didn't know when it was going to stop’: Inside the machine of motherhood - 1854 Photography Subscribe latest Agenda Bookshelf Projects Industry Insights magazine Explore ANY ANSWERS FINE ART IN THE STUDIO PARENTHOOD ART & ACTIVISM FOR THE RECORD LANDSCAPE PICTURE THIS CREATIVE BRIEF GENDER & SEXUALITY MIXED MEDIA POWER & EMPOWERMENT DOCUMENTARY HOME & BELONGING ON LOCATION PORTRAITURE DECADE OF CHANGE HUMANITY & TECHNOLOGY OPINION THEN & NOW Explore Stories latest agenda bookshelf projects theme in focus industry insights magazine ANY ANSWERS FINE ART IN THE STUDIO PARENTHOOD ART & ACTIVISM FOR THE RECORD LANDSCAPE PICTURE THIS CREATIVE BRIEF GENDER & SEXUALITY MIXED MEDIA POWER & EMPOWERMENT DOCUMENTARY HOME & BELONGING ON LOCATION PORTRAITURE DECADE OF CHANGE HUMANITY & TECHNOLOGY OPINION THEN & NOW All images © Pauline Rowan In Between the Gates , new mother Pauline Rowan navigates an often-obscured side of parenthood Pauline Rowan was wholly prepared for the realities of motherhood – or so she thought...

© » ARTNEWS REVIEWS

about 4 months ago (12/26/2023)

Mickalene Thomas Imagines the Lives of 19th-Century Black Sitters Skip to main content By Lucia Olubunmi R...

© » WHITEHOT

about 4 months ago (12/18/2023)

Ruth Gonzales & Lorien Suárez-Kanerva: The Embrace of Nature advertise donate post your art opening recent articles cities contact about article index podcast main December 2023 "The Best Art In The World" "The Best Art In The World" December 2023 Ruth Gonzales & Lorien Suárez-Kanerva: The Embrace of Nature Eric Minh Swenson Art Films: Ruth Gonzales & Lorien Suárez Kanerva, The Embrace of Nature Exhibition Curator Narration by Peter Frank...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/17/2023)

Anselm’s Sweeping Vision Obscures the Political Skip to content Anselm , dir...

© » WALLPAPER*

about 5 months ago (12/17/2023)

LA artist Patrick Martinez captures the passage of time | Wallpaper (Image credit: Yubo Dong / ofstudio...

© » ARTNEWS

about 5 months ago (12/15/2023)

Shilpa Gupta Gives Voice to Silence and Resilience – ARTnews.com Skip to main content By Andy Battaglia Plus Icon Andy Battaglia Executive Editor, ARTnews & Art in America View All December 15, 2023 11:52am Detail of Shilpa Gupta’s Untitled (Spoken Poem in a Bottle) , 2018...

© » TWOCOATSOFPAINT

about 5 months ago (12/15/2023)

Brice Marden’s valedictory courage – Two Coats of Paint Brice Marden, Blue Painting, 2022-2023, oil on linen, 72 x 96 inches Contributed by David Rhodes / Brice Marden died at the age of 84 in August 2023...

© » AESTHETICA

about 5 months ago (12/11/2023)

Aesthetica Magazine - Enigmatic Composition Enigmatic Composition Elina Brotherus’ (b...

© » ARTNEWS MARKET

about 5 months ago (12/06/2023)

Art Basel Arrives in Miami with a New Structure and Hints about Future – ARTnews.com Skip to main content By Daniel Cassady Plus Icon Daniel Cassady Senior Writer, ARTnews View All December 6, 2023 9:29am MIAMI, FLORIDA - NOVEMBER 30: An exterior view of Miami Beach Convention Center during Art Basel Miami Beach on November 30, 2021 in Miami, Florida...

© » LENS CULTURE

about 6 months ago (10/31/2023)

Post Boxes and Tokyo Street Aesthetics - Photographs by Bruno Quinquet | Book review by Magali Duzant | LensCulture Feature Post Boxes and Tokyo Street Aesthetics Working under the moniker ‘Bureau d’Etudes Japonaises’ photographer Bruno Quinquet deftly applies a conceptual approach to street photography, exploring the 23 wards of Tokyo from the perspective of a postman...

© » BOMB

about 7 months ago (10/05/2023)

Launching our new series on civil action, AA Bronson and Adrian Stimson discuss their apology project, which was inspired by their opposing connections to an extremely oppressive residential school, and what individuals and communities can do to address colonial violence....

© » LENS CULTURE

about 10 months ago (07/04/2023)

Reunion — Hand-Embroidered School Class Portraits - Photographs and text by Diane Meyer | LensCulture Feature Reunion — Hand-Embroidered School Class Portraits By obscuring the faces with embroidery — which would typically be the most important parts of these elementary school class portraits — otherwise overlooked details are brought into focus, such as body language and other embodiments of social convention...

© » LENS CULTURE

about 11 months ago (06/14/2023)

49/23 — Considering Technology, AI and Photography - Photographs by Gregory Eddi Jones | Interview by Liz Sales | LensCulture Feature 49/23 — Considering Technology, AI and Photography In his new thought-provoking series “49/23,” Gregory Eddi Jones considers the implications of rapidly advancing technology by intertwining vintage photography and AI-generated images...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 11 months ago (06/12/2023)

Displacement, Disconnection & Disruption: Alternate Perceptions of the Diasporic Experiences – Art and Cake June 12, 2023 June 15, 2023 Author Displacement, Disconnection & Disruption: Alternate Perceptions of the Diasporic Experiences Fatemeh Burnes “Wonderland” Displacement, Disconnection & Disruption: Alternate Perceptions of the Diasporic Experiences By Betty Ann Brown We are living in dystopia, in a world that is dominated by technology and disconnect, alienation, loneliness, and dysfunction...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 11 months ago (06/12/2023)

Displacement, Disconnection & Disruption: Alternate Perceptions of the Diasporic Experiences – Art and Cake June 12, 2023 June 15, 2023 Author Displacement, Disconnection & Disruption: Alternate Perceptions of the Diasporic Experiences Fatemeh Burnes “Wonderland” Displacement, Disconnection & Disruption: Alternate Perceptions of the Diasporic Experiences By Betty Ann Brown We are living in dystopia, in a world that is dominated by technology and disconnect, alienation, loneliness, and dysfunction...

© » ARRESTED MOTION

about 17 months ago (12/15/2022)

Release/Benefit: Banksy – ‘Fragile/Agile’ « Arrested Motion Continuing his support for humanitarian causes around the globe, Banksy is releasing a new screen print in partnership with Giles Duley ’s Legacy of War Foundation ...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

For more than 40 years, Bernard and Shirley Kinsey have amassed one of the largest private collections of Black paintings, letters, books and other artifacts to teach the next generations what history has erased....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Leonardo DiCaprio and his father George DiCaprio have produced a film about the late Polish artist Stanislaw Szukalski for Netflix....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Buying and collecting art is seen as a privilege for the wealthy – after all, we’ve all seen movies or heard stories where obscure paintings fetch millions of dollars...

© » CREATIVETIME

about 21 months ago (07/28/2022)

Announcing the 2023 Creative Time Open Call Artists - Creative Time Announcing the 2023 Creative Time Open Call Artists July 28th, 2022 Tweet Email Creative Time announces Kite and Alisha Wormsley as the artists selected from the 2022 Open Call invitation...

© » THE INDEPENDENT

about 27 months ago (02/18/2022)

Titan of pop art returns to auction after record-breaking sale | The Independent Andy Warhol’s Self-Portrait, one of his final works, is going under the hammer in New York ...

© » ARTMARKETMONITOR

about 30 months ago (11/08/2021)

Deep Inside the Macklowe Sale: Koons, Richter, Polke and de Kooning (Part 2) Jeff Koons, Aqualung, $8-12m Now that the Macklowe collection is finally on the auction block, we can see that it has already filled one important role...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 50 months ago (03/19/2020)

The Space of/for Memory: ”Last Night I Saw You Smiling” | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Courtesy of artist March 19, 2020 By Alfonse Chiu (2,078 words, 7-minute read) Every space tells a story: the empty prison cell speaks of redemptions, of wrongs that were righted, and to the cynical, more earthly, minds, of miscarriages of justice, and the irrevocability of tragedies and the people who made them; the crowded hospital ward hums, sometimes a baleful tune when a heart attack becomes a full-body scan becomes something decidedly terminal, and sometimes a bright chime when a newborn takes their first breaths and screams to announce their entry into this world; and tales of homes, houses, and hauntings have infested almost every definition and genre of fiction and non-fiction known to mankind: killing, nourishing, obscuring, stagnating, etc...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 63 months ago (03/11/2019)

Weekly Picks: Malaysia (11–17 Mar 2019) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Weekly To Do March 11, 2019 For events in Penang this week, go to the Penang Free Sheet ...

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about 64 months ago (02/04/2019)

Experiencing the Ebb and Flow of “yesterday it rained salt” | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Mark Benedict Cheong February 4, 2019 By Casidhe Ng (1,068 words, five-minute read) In yesterday it rained salt , we are always surrounded by the acoustics of the sea...

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about 70 months ago (08/15/2018)

In George Town, a Proxy War for the Nation | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles August 15, 2018 By Kathy Rowland (1165 words, 5-minute read) Coloured ink on paper...

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about 87 months ago (03/13/2017)

Karolina Halatek: The power of light - The re:art Karolina Halatek: The power of light In her immersive site-specific installations, Polish artist Karolina Halatek uses light as the main medium...

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about 29 months ago (12/09/2021)

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about 112 months ago (03/01/2015)

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about 136 months ago (03/01/2013)

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about 169 months ago (06/01/2010)