Anne Hardy
Wikipedia - "Hardy's images appear to be photographs of existing places but they are quite the opposite. They are actually carefully constructed sets, created by the artist in her studio, which she then photographs. The subjects of Hardy's artworks are usually objects or junk which she has found in markets, DIY shops, urban skips or jumble sales. The type of objects she chooses have ranged from large antlers, brightly coloured cables, old Christmas trees, light bulbs, American basketballs, orange balloons, scientific test tubes and even butterflies."
Wikipedia, Saatchi Gallery. Bellwether Gallery, Cyana Trend Land
Subodh Gupta
Lot No. 79. Untitled, 2006
Wikipedia - "Subodh Gupta (born 1964) is an artist based in New Delhi. Gupta was born in Khagaul, Bihar, India. His work encompasses sculpture, installation, painting, photography, performance and video. Common images and objects in Gupta’s work are taken from prominent clichés about Indian culture, for example, his prevalent use of stainless steel cooking utensils."
Wikpedia, Saatchi Gallery, artnet
In Bb 2.0 - Bb Buddha Machine
"In Bb 2.0 is a 'collaborative music and spoken word project' from Darren Solomon. With just the native YouTube playback interface, multiple clips can be played and controlled to create your own soothing musical mix."
Split Screen, In Bb 2.0, Science for Girls, Bb Buddha Machine
Hay in Art
Jean-Francois Millet - The Hay-Harvest
"The hay in art database has grown to over six thousand images. The essays initially were intended to illustrate both the changing technology of hay making and the ways in which hay has been used by artists and writers of the last two millennia. Here is a briefly annotated outline of the work done so far."
Hay in Art
The Lumière Brothers
Wikipedia - "The Lumière brothers, Auguste Marie Louis Nicolas (19 October 1862, Besançon, France – 10 April 1954, Lyon) and Louis Jean (5 October 1864, Besançon, France – 6 June 1948, Bandol), were among the earliest filmmakers.(Appropriately, 'lumière' translates as 'light' in English.)"
Wikipedia, Early Cinema, CineScene, YouTube, (1)
Underground press
Berkeley Barb. Vol.7, no.4 (no.154), 1968
Wikipedia - "The phrase underground press is most often used to refer to the independently published and distributed underground papers associated with the counterculture of the late 1960s and early 1970s in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and other western nations."
Wikipedia, Voices from the Underground
Archaeoastronomy
Wikipedia - "Archaeoastronomy (also spelled archeoastronomy) is the study of how past people 'have understood the phenomena in the sky, how they used phenomena in the sky and what role the sky played in their cultures.'"
Wikipedia
Edward Ruscha
Wikipedia - "Edward Ruscha ("roo-SHAY") (born December 16, 1937 Omaha, Nebraska) is an American artist associated with the Pop art movement. He has worked in the media of painting, printmaking, drawing, photography, and film."
Wikipedia, Edward Ruscha, Google
Costa Gavras
Wikipedia - "Constantinos Gavras (born February 13, 1933), better known as Costa-Gavras (Κώστας Γαβράς), is a Greek born French filmmaker, best known for films with overt political themes, most famously the fast-paced thriller, Z (1969). Most of his movies were made in French; starting with Missing (1982), several were made in English."
Wikipedia, French resistance: Costa Gavras - Guardian, Film Reference, YouTube, DailyMotion
The Full Moon Atlas
"A complete series of interactive lunar maps, with more than 2,500 geographic formations (including craters, mountains, lakes, seas and valleys) identified simply by moving your mouse cursor over the feature. You must have Javascript turned on in order to access this function."
The Full Moon Atlas
Ed Dorn: Four New Recordings, 1969-1981
"Today, we added two newly-segmented readings by Ed Dorn, both from Buffalo in the mid-1970s, and both drawing heavily upon poems from his 1974 collection, Recollections of Gran Apacheria — a sprawling work which celebrates Apache culture and history, even as it serves as a litany of offenses committed against them."
PennSound, (1), (2)
Ann-Sofi Sidén
The Virtual Museum of Iraq
"Iraq is still a warzone and still unsafe for tourists to approach outside of Iraqi Kurdistan. The country, home to some of humankind’s greatest cultural treasures, is not a place for one to visit."
The Virtual Museum of Iraq
Captain Beefheart
Wikipedia - "Don Van Vliet (born Don Glen Vliet on January 15, 1941) is an American musician and painter, best known by the pseudonym Captain Beefheart. His musical work was mainly conducted with a rotating assembly of musicians called The Magic Band, which was active between the mid-1960s and the early 1980s."
Wikipedia, W - Trout Mask Replica, Beefheart, the crackling cyberverse of CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & the MAGIC BAND, allmusic, allmusic 1, YouTube, (2), (3), (4), (5), (6). YouTube - Beefheart on Letterman, Live In Belgium 1969, Ice Cream for Crow (HIgh Resolution), Upon the my oh my, Big Eyed Beans from Venus, Abba Zabba
Know Hope
"'Kindred Times and Future Goodbyes' a recent event that a few friends (Foma <3, Klone and Zero Cents) and i recently put on. like the name implies, the show was in an abandoned building in south tel aviv."
Wooster Collective, this is limbo
Ellen Gallagher
Skinatural
"Repetition and revision are central to Gallagher’s treatment of advertisements that she appropriates from popular magazines like 'Ebony,' 'Our World,' and 'Sepia' and uses in works like 'eXelento' (2004) and 'DeLuxe' (2004-05). Initially, Gallagher was drawn to the wig advertisements because of their grid-like structure."
PBS
Dance with Camera
Maya Deren
"Dance with Camera features art works in film, video, and photography that exemplify the ways dance has compelled artists to record bodies moving in space and time. The exhibition begins with films from the 1960s, a period when associations between dancers, filmmakers, musicians and visual artists flourished at Judson Dance Theater in downtown New York."
UbuWeb
The Knickerbockers
"In early 1966, the Knickerbockers hit the Top 20 with 'Lies,' the best and most accurate early Beatle imitation ever recorded; the lead vocals were a dead ringer for John Lennon and the whole production could have fit in snugly on the second side of A Hard Day's Night."
allmusic, Wikipedia, MySpace, YouTube
The Theoretical Girls
"The Theoretical Girls were previously known mainly as a footnote in rock history. A band better remembered for launching Glenn Branca’s career than for a scant musical output of one single in 1978, the Theoretical Girls shared with many other bands in the No Wave scene a tendency to dissolve quickly, leaving as little recorded legacy as is humanly possible from a working band (another good example being Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, whose entire works wouldn’t fill an entire LP)."
dustedmagazine, CD Universe, last.fm, YouTube, (1), (2), (3)
Nele Azevedo
"This amazing installation of 1,000 melting men was done in collaboration with the WWF to highlight global warming. - cristinacristinacristina"
UNURTH, designboom, GreenMuze, Nele Azevedo
1969: The Year of Gay Liberation
"The year 1969 marked a major turning point in the politics of sexuality in America. Same-sex relationships were discreetly tolerated in 19th-century America in the form of romantic friendships, but the 20th century brought increasing legal and medical regulation of homosexuality, which was considered a dangerous illness."
NYPL, Wikipedia
Kurt Wenner
"Once known as Madonnari, Street Painters, Pavement artists, Chalk Artists, and Sidewalk Artists have designed impermanent or Ephemeral Art for centuries."
Kurt Wenner
Kahlo Trove: Fact or Fakery?
"In a back room tucked behind an antiques gallery in this cobblestone mountain town there is a shrine to the painter Frida Kahlo. A dozen paintings jostle for wall space. A trunk is open to show off folded huipiles, the traditional Oaxacan blouses that Kahlo favored. Loose-leaf binders hold copies of pages of notes scribbled at dawn and airmail letters never sent, filled with anger and passion for her husband, Diego Rivera, the muralist. The question is whether any of it was hers."
NYT
Martin Boyce
We Make Unsubstantial Territory
"The city surfaces in Martin Boyce’s work as both dream and physical presence. In the installation Our Love is Like the Earth, the Rain, the Trees and the Birth (2003), industrial materials like fluorescent strip lights and powder-coated steel, chain link fencing and ventilation grills are loosened from their quotidian roles to describe the signs and forms of a dreamlike urban landscape."
sodium dreams, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery
The Golden Age of Comic Books
Wikipedia - "The Golden Age of Comic Books was a period in the history of American comic books, generally thought of as lasting from the late 1930s until the late 1940s. During this time, modern comic books were first published and enjoyed a surge of popularity; the archetype of the superhero was created and defined; and many of the most famous superheroes debuted, among them Superman, Batman, Captain America, and Wonder Woman."
Wikipedia
New York Film Festival
"America’s pre-eminent film presentation organization, The Film Society of Lincoln Center was founded in 1969 to celebrate American and international cinema, to recognize and support new filmmakers, and to enhance awareness, accessibility and understanding of the art among a broad and diverse film going audience."
New York Film Festival, NYT
Steve Wolfe
"For over two decades, Steve Wolfe (b. 1955) has created objects and drawings of astounding craft and visual presence that investigate the intersections among material culture, intellectual history, and personal and collective memory."
Whitney, Luhring Augustine
KG52
Kareem Rizk
"Is the collage merely an artistic technique or is it a cognitive modus, a way of thinking? Marshall McLuhan coined the phrase 'the media is the message' by which he meant that every media from the written language to the computer influences our way of thinking and the way we see ourselves and perceive the world. Man forms his tool and his tools form man."
Cut and Paste
Lucinda Childs, Philip Glass, and Sol LeWitt ‘Dance' at Bard's Summerscape
"This year, the intrepid and stimulating Bard Summerscape features Richard Wagner—his music and his world. Yet the seven weeks of performances, films, talks, and symposia open with a dance set to music by Philip Glass—a composer whose aesthetic is so far from sturm und drang that it might be arriving from a distant galaxy."
Voice, Lucinda Childs, NYT, Broadway World
Mona Dukess
"The works shown here, appear as single pieces or in grids. Drawings are Watermarks - translucent designs hidden within the thickness of a crisp piece of handmade paper."
Mona Dukess
Mona Dukess
First day of issue
Wikipedia - "The first day of issue is the day on which a postage stamp, postal card or stamped envelope is put on sale, within the country or territory of the stamp-issuing authority. Sometimes the issue is made from a temporary or permanent foreign or overseas office. There will usually be a first day of issue postmark, frequently a pictorial cancellation, indicating the city and date where the item was first issued, and 'first day of issue' is often used to refer to this postmark."
Wikipedia, Google
The Fugs
Wikipedia - "The Fugs are a band formed in New York City in late 1964[1] by poets Ed Sanders and Tuli Kupferberg, with Ken Weaver on drums. Soon afterward, they were joined by Peter Stampfel and Steve Weber of the Holy Modal Rounders."
Wikipedia, The Fugs, last.fm, Perfect Sound Forever, YouTube, (1), (2), (3), (4)
Sigmar Polke
Klassenzimmer, (1995)
"This exhibition presents photographs in the Getty Museum's collection created by Sigmar Polke, who became one of the most influential artists working in post-war Germany. With their juxtaposed images, multiple exposures, extreme close-ups, and under- and over-exposures, these photographs demonstrate the artist's early fascination and experimentation with photography."
Getty, Wikipedia, artnet
Songs of Ascension - Meredith Monk and Ann Hamilton
"As realized by 120 performers, including dancers, musicians, singers, children, and costumed quasi-characters, Ms. Monk’s work was far more than cleverly staged and executed; it was a poignant, profound and fiercely unique occurrence that speaks to the fecund imagination of its creator."
Buzzine, Meredith Monk, MPR, WNYC, NYT, Boosey, BAM, artforum
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