Is this considered an art piece? I'm sure some of you have seen this:
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Art (Contemporary and Otherwise)
Collapse
X
-
Nymph And Triton(Bas-relief, 1547-50) Jean Goujon
Are you afraid of women, Doctor?
Of course.
www.becomingmads.com
Comment
-
-
wow
some of the pieces are interesting and disturbing at the same time by Kristina Lerner.
I wonder in general if most of the artists (I have some friends who create amazing pieces only when on hallucinogens) are on some form of drugs while painting.Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people
Comment
-
-
can anyone tell me more about the image used in this Xennakis video?
Kṿ⅃♰, s▲⎳ṿặƓξ ႼUɴK, ◍ccữ⅃✞ⅉƨ✞, ⍹ⅉ✞cƕ ƕ◍ữƨℯ, ặ♏ℬⅉℯɲ✞, ⅉ⅃⅃ℬⅉℯɲ✞, ℬ⅃ặck ♏ℯ✞ặ⅃, ▲♰ლ●sႼӉξᴙI☾, ♏ץ✞ⅉcặ⅃, ɲ◍ⅉƨℯ, đặℾkƨ✞ℯ⍴, ⨑ữɲℯℾặ⅃, ƕặữɲ✞◍⅃◍ℊⅉcặ⅃, ξႼI☾, ƨ⅃◍⍹, ↁᴙ▲Ɠ, Ɠ●♰Ӊ,ƨƕ◍⍹ℊặzℯ, ƨcℾℯ⍹ℊặzℯ, ƨ⍴ℯ⅃⅃ƨ, ♏ặℊⅉc ặɲđ ♏◍ℾℯ...... ℬặƨⅉcặ⅃⅃ץ ژữƨ✞ ặ đữ♏⍴ⅉɲℊ ℊℾ◍ữɲđ ⨑◍ℾ ặ⅃⅃ ✞ƕℯ ℾℯ⍴ℯ✞ⅉ✞ⅉ◍ữƨ, ℾℯṿℯℾℬℯℾặ✞ⅉɲℊ, đℾặℊℊℯđ, cƕ◍⍴⍴ℯđ, ƨcℾℯ⍹ℯđ ặɲđ ⍹ặℾ⍴ℯđ ♏ữƨⅉc ⅉ ⅃ⅉkℯ - I ƕ◍⍴ℯ ץ◍ữ ⅃ⅉkℯ ⅉ✞ ✞◍◍
Thanks
Comment
-
-
I'm almost sure I'm imposing meaning that isn't present in the image, but it looks as if the giant on the left delivered the elephant to a fairground, and is walking away from a business deal. Despite all the ropes and helicopters, the elephant seems barely contained and the giant implies that there's something out there more powerful than the tiny humans.
The image can be read as an allegory for nature as pretty things in national parks and zoos vs powerful "speculative realist nature". The first image is so pervasive that the latter is only present by way of reading plot holes. (This isn't quite "smoothly functioning, unnoticeable ideology". What constrains nature is painfully noticeable, what is constrained is almost entirely hidden.)
(Its funny, I've watched that particular youtube video many times, but never noticed how interesting the image was until you mentioned it.)"He described this initial impetus as like discovering that they both were looking at the same intriguing specific tropical fish, with attempts to understand it leading to a huge ferocious formalism he characterizes as a shark that leapt out of the tank."
Comment
-
-
Oh - really, the image was the first thing I noticed! I think you posted this on FB a few days ago right - wonderful Xennakis piece - thanks for putting me onto that...
Yeah, it could be seen that way - as if it's life brutalised into order.... lacanian style - good call.
I reckon its russian, I just get that feeling.
Comment
-
Comment