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kritika savremene umetnosti


Caligula

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Posted (edited)

Dobro to bi i Mikelandjelo radio, samo da je 60 i neko godiste :fantom:

 

Inace gledam sajt, nije mu los koncept mada su mu radovi živi qratz. A ovi što se zgražavaju (čast izuzecima) ne zgražavaju se zbog egzekucije ili nedajbože pišanja po umetnosti nego zbog mučenja životinja. Dok izmedju zuba iščačkavaju komad junetine koji im je zapao posle krvavog stejka.

 

 

Spoiler

Meat-industry-braces-itself-for-3.2-billNew-law-finally-makes-it-illegal-to-crus

 

Edited by Caligula
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Posted (edited)

dogovorili smo se da mucimo iskljucivo zivotinje koje jedemo, pozeljno koje zbog toga gajimo, i to da ih mucimo sto manje, pozeljno nikako do same smrti. ne salim se.

 

enivej, aj recimo da volim spoj umjetnosti i tehnologije (npr upotreba imersivne/uranjajuce ili kako prevodimo virtuelne realnosti) ali ilic mi je nekako zasjenjivanje prostote, robustna tehnika za mali efekat.

Edited by morgana
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Posted

nisam ispratio do kraja, ali pretpostavljam da su psi ostali živi i zdravi, a vlasnik sad može da ih učlani u SANU.

ne vidim problem  :fantom:

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Posted (edited)

Spojler alert :fantom:   21. vek vam predstavlja Pricass-a

 

Spoiler

 

 

Edited by Caligula
  • 5 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

 

Benzin vaš, ideje naše

Jens was loaned $115,000 to use in an exhibit. Instead, he kept the cash and called that art.

What is art, anyway? From one Danish artist’s point of view, it’s pocketing 534,000 kroner in commission ($115,000 in Australian money) from a museum.

The Kunsten Museum of Art in Aalborg, Denmark paid artist Jens Haaning in advance to re-create two older sculptures. Instead, he kept the money without doing the job and called it conceptual art.

 

85532a606d4f49fc1067be96ab6f5ad6ab20d762

 

SaE

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Posted

Gallery_Asset_16_9_3PianoTrans.jpg?r=m&w

 

DivljačenjeTM@Zli Gli po klaviru:

 

Paljenje 10. jun

Davljenje 11. jun

Gušenje 3, 4, 10. i 11. jun

 

Slobodan ulaz.

 

Spoiler

In late March, in a paddock in Tyabb on the Mornington Peninsula next door to a mushroom farm, a small team of Rising art festival producers, technicians and a curator set fire to an upright piano, and watched it burn to cinders.

 

The wood crackled and snapped, resonating in the instrument’s interior. Strings popped from the steel skeleton, and finally the ashen wreck toppled to the earth. The observers nodded. Yep, this was going to work.

 

It was a technical test run of one of the more unusual musical performances coming to this year’s Rising winter arts festival: Piano Burning, by expat New Zealand artist Annea Lockwood, which premiered on the banks of London’s Thames river in 1968.

 

The “musical score” for the performance is a few evocative lines.

 

“Set upright piano (not a grand) in an open space with the lid closed / Spill a little lighter fluid on a twist of paper and place inside, near the pedals / Light it / Balloons may be stapled to the piano / Play whatever pleases you for as long as you can.”

 

Lockwood smiles at the memory of that time, the experimentation and freedom of the arts scene in swinging London where she’d moved in 1961 from New Zealand to study composition at the Royal College of Music. She’d been working with a British choreographer and they’d had “the wonderfully crazy idea of involuntary audience participation by heating up a performance space enormously”.

 

“We didn’t get around to making that piece,” she says. “But as I was beginning to gather ideas for it, I realised I wanted to record fire.”

 

Experiments in her Essex home’s fireplace and courtyard were not compelling.

 

“So I got to thinking about what should I burn that really might be resonant,” Lockwood says, and her mind turned to the London council’s “piano graveyard” where they dumped instruments that were beyond repair, or had been replaced in a lounge room by one of these newfangled televisions.

 

At an arts festival on Chelsea embankment she set up the piano, popped in an old microphone wrapped in asbestos linked to a tape recorder, and set a tiny flame to it.

 

“The recording was totally useless because people (at the event) talked their heads off,” she recalls. “But it sounded magnificent. There are resonant spaces inside the instrument; when a piece of the structure collapses it sounds great.”

 

They burnt another that evening, in the semi-darkness.

 

“I had no idea it would look so stunningly beautiful,” Lockwood says. “I’ve seen colours in the flames depending on the varnish: purple, green, orange and of course red. It’s the way the flames lick through the instrument and the uncertainty that you never know where they’re going to emerge.

 

“It very often happens that [the audience] subsides into a sort of intense silence, which is a lovely thing to feel. ”

 

The piece has been regularly performed around the world – and, laughs Lockwood, regularly misinterpreted.

 

“It keeps recurring [an idea] that I was setting out to make destructive inroads on Western culture. Really! I’m a product of Western culture. The experience was the original aim, nothing to do with destroying cultural icons, something which people are all too ready to attribute to it.”

 

But the piece has gathered new resonance over time. Those who have watched the Twin Towers burn live on television, or shed a tear at the immolation of Notre Dame, hear echoes in this fire.

 

And there is Australia’s own recent immolation.

 

“These piano events are like some sort of indirect, slantwise reference to these huge forces, that are becoming overwhelming. Fires, floods, landslides, circling around us.”

 

Uniquely to Rising, Piano Burning will be performed along with two of its younger siblings, Piano Garden (1969) and Piano Drowning (1972). You can guess how they work.

 

Or go see them, of course. Even play them. And if you go to Piano Burning, Lockwood has a tip.

 

“Take some foil wrapped potatoes and just slip them in near the pedals.”

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, peralozac said:

Gallery_Asset_16_9_3PianoTrans.jpg?r=m&w

 

DivljačenjeTM@Zli Gli po klaviru:

 

Paljenje 10. jun

Davljenje 11. jun

Gušenje 3, 4, 10. i 11. jun

 

Slobodan ulaz.

 

  Reveal hidden contents

In late March, in a paddock in Tyabb on the Mornington Peninsula next door to a mushroom farm, a small team of Rising art festival producers, technicians and a curator set fire to an upright piano, and watched it burn to cinders.

 

The wood crackled and snapped, resonating in the instrument’s interior. Strings popped from the steel skeleton, and finally the ashen wreck toppled to the earth. The observers nodded. Yep, this was going to work.

 

It was a technical test run of one of the more unusual musical performances coming to this year’s Rising winter arts festival: Piano Burning, by expat New Zealand artist Annea Lockwood, which premiered on the banks of London’s Thames river in 1968.

 

The “musical score” for the performance is a few evocative lines.

 

“Set upright piano (not a grand) in an open space with the lid closed / Spill a little lighter fluid on a twist of paper and place inside, near the pedals / Light it / Balloons may be stapled to the piano / Play whatever pleases you for as long as you can.”

 

Lockwood smiles at the memory of that time, the experimentation and freedom of the arts scene in swinging London where she’d moved in 1961 from New Zealand to study composition at the Royal College of Music. She’d been working with a British choreographer and they’d had “the wonderfully crazy idea of involuntary audience participation by heating up a performance space enormously”.

 

“We didn’t get around to making that piece,” she says. “But as I was beginning to gather ideas for it, I realised I wanted to record fire.”

 

Experiments in her Essex home’s fireplace and courtyard were not compelling.

 

“So I got to thinking about what should I burn that really might be resonant,” Lockwood says, and her mind turned to the London council’s “piano graveyard” where they dumped instruments that were beyond repair, or had been replaced in a lounge room by one of these newfangled televisions.

 

At an arts festival on Chelsea embankment she set up the piano, popped in an old microphone wrapped in asbestos linked to a tape recorder, and set a tiny flame to it.

 

“The recording was totally useless because people (at the event) talked their heads off,” she recalls. “But it sounded magnificent. There are resonant spaces inside the instrument; when a piece of the structure collapses it sounds great.”

 

They burnt another that evening, in the semi-darkness.

 

“I had no idea it would look so stunningly beautiful,” Lockwood says. “I’ve seen colours in the flames depending on the varnish: purple, green, orange and of course red. It’s the way the flames lick through the instrument and the uncertainty that you never know where they’re going to emerge.

 

“It very often happens that [the audience] subsides into a sort of intense silence, which is a lovely thing to feel. ”

 

The piece has been regularly performed around the world – and, laughs Lockwood, regularly misinterpreted.

 

“It keeps recurring [an idea] that I was setting out to make destructive inroads on Western culture. Really! I’m a product of Western culture. The experience was the original aim, nothing to do with destroying cultural icons, something which people are all too ready to attribute to it.”

 

But the piece has gathered new resonance over time. Those who have watched the Twin Towers burn live on television, or shed a tear at the immolation of Notre Dame, hear echoes in this fire.

 

And there is Australia’s own recent immolation.

 

“These piano events are like some sort of indirect, slantwise reference to these huge forces, that are becoming overwhelming. Fires, floods, landslides, circling around us.”

 

Uniquely to Rising, Piano Burning will be performed along with two of its younger siblings, Piano Garden (1969) and Piano Drowning (1972). You can guess how they work.

 

Or go see them, of course. Even play them. And if you go to Piano Burning, Lockwood has a tip.

 

“Take some foil wrapped potatoes and just slip them in near the pedals.”

 

 

Mož da bude i skroz dobro, izgleda super. Pogledaj na youtube i ako ima sajt prvo, proveri sve nemoj da se oslanjaš na sinopsis performansa.

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Posted (edited)

 

mail artspacer.png

Edited by ultra plasticni
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Posted

Rasa car!

200 evra jbt...

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Posted

Dvesta nego sta :isuse:

 

Pitam se ko je to potpisao i izbrojao novcanice.

 

 

  • 4 months later...

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