Really Cool Conceptual Art
szymon:

orange tree by Alexandre Arrechea

szymon:

orange tree by Alexandre Arrechea

szymon:

1-Bit Symphony by Tristan Perich

szymon:

1-Bit Symphony by Tristan Perich

tunagobbler:

breaktime

tunagobbler:

breaktime

thedailywhat:

Art! of the Day: Chen Chen and Kai Tsien-Williams filled a couple of Budweiser cans with cement, linked them with a length of chain, and called the whole thing “American Ninja.”
[laughingsquid.]

thedailywhat:

Art! of the Day: Chen Chen and Kai Tsien-Williams filled a couple of Budweiser cans with cement, linked them with a length of chain, and called the whole thing “American Ninja.”

[laughingsquid.]

szymon:

Inception Chair by Vivian Chiu

szymon:

Inception Chair by Vivian Chiu

bremser:

How to Destroy a Photograph
Almost 40 years ago, a man entered St. Peter’s in the Vatican. With a hammer he lunged at Michelangelo’s Pietà several times, knocking chunks of marble off Mary’s face, including her nose. A few weeks ago a group of men entered a museum in France, with hammers they attacked the controversial photograph by Andres Serrano called “Piss Christ,” smashing the glass and leaving a gash where the face of Christ had been.
One interesting aspect of the attack on the Serrano’s banal photograph is that journalists covering the story regularly used the word “destroyed.”
For auctions, the wound this photograph suffered would probably prevent it from being sold. But for this particular photograph, the wound probably has greatly increased it’s value. Photographs are delicate - they are works on paper. Read this discussion of the rock photographer Jim Marhsall’s prints, and how much a crease or indent mark will reduce the value of a photograph, or even make it worthless.
A photographic print is incredibly delicate in one sense, but then you see this image of the aftermath and 90% of the Serrano’s photograph is unharmed. Ironically, the “Christ” has been defiled, leaving the “Piss” alone.
Certainly it’s a frustrating time to be a Christian extremist. These men must regularly consider that 700 years ago their predecessors were able to lay waste to vast sections of the European continent, burning entire cities of non-believers. Today, they are not even able to fully “destroy” a single piece of paper.
Besides swinging a hammer wildly, how do you destroy a photograph? This is where paragraphs can be spent discussing negatives, edition sizes, what is the real work of art, and whether a low resolution reproduction on the internet counts as a photograph. Do the true believers spend millions over decades to buy every extant print, perhaps wait for the artist to die and buy his estate for the negatives? The problem with this approach is that the more the profane is fetishized and rareified, the more it seems sacred.
Perhaps the only way to silence a photograph over the next 100 years is to be silent about it.

bremser:

How to Destroy a Photograph

Almost 40 years ago, a man entered St. Peter’s in the Vatican. With a hammer he lunged at Michelangelo’s Pietà several times, knocking chunks of marble off Mary’s face, including her nose. A few weeks ago a group of men entered a museum in France, with hammers they attacked the controversial photograph by Andres Serrano called “Piss Christ,” smashing the glass and leaving a gash where the face of Christ had been.

One interesting aspect of the attack on the Serrano’s banal photograph is that journalists covering the story regularly used the word “destroyed.”

For auctions, the wound this photograph suffered would probably prevent it from being sold. But for this particular photograph, the wound probably has greatly increased it’s value. Photographs are delicate - they are works on paper. Read this discussion of the rock photographer Jim Marhsall’s prints, and how much a crease or indent mark will reduce the value of a photograph, or even make it worthless.

A photographic print is incredibly delicate in one sense, but then you see this image of the aftermath and 90% of the Serrano’s photograph is unharmed. Ironically, the “Christ” has been defiled, leaving the “Piss” alone.

Certainly it’s a frustrating time to be a Christian extremist. These men must regularly consider that 700 years ago their predecessors were able to lay waste to vast sections of the European continent, burning entire cities of non-believers. Today, they are not even able to fully “destroy” a single piece of paper.

Besides swinging a hammer wildly, how do you destroy a photograph? This is where paragraphs can be spent discussing negatives, edition sizes, what is the real work of art, and whether a low resolution reproduction on the internet counts as a photograph. Do the true believers spend millions over decades to buy every extant print, perhaps wait for the artist to die and buy his estate for the negatives? The problem with this approach is that the more the profane is fetishized and rareified, the more it seems sacred.

Perhaps the only way to silence a photograph over the next 100 years is to be silent about it.

thedailywhat:

Nutty Art of the Day: A patron of the Boijmans van Beuningen museum in Rotterdam has been asked to pay up after he damaged a 50-year-old piece by Dutch artist Wim T. Schipper when he inadvertently stepped in it.
Peanut Butter Platform — a large wading pool filled with 2000 jars worth of peanut butter — isn’t cordoned off to avoid “spoil[ing] its beauty” — a decision which has invited three similar incidents in the past.
[arbroath.]

thedailywhat:

Nutty Art of the Day: A patron of the Boijmans van Beuningen museum in Rotterdam has been asked to pay up after he damaged a 50-year-old piece by Dutch artist Wim T. Schipper when he inadvertently stepped in it.

Peanut Butter Platform — a large wading pool filled with 2000 jars worth of peanut butter — isn’t cordoned off to avoid “spoil[ing] its beauty” — a decision which has invited three similar incidents in the past.

[arbroath.]

contemporary-art-blog:

Monumenta 2011, Leviathan, by Anish KapoorGrand palais, Paris, may 11 to june 23rd, 2011Image DesignBoom

contemporary-art-blog:

Monumenta 2011, Leviathan, by Anish Kapoor
Grand palais, Paris, may 11 to june 23rd, 2011
Image DesignBoom

defacedbook:

Alex Schweder
A Sac of Rooms All Day Long, 2009 Clear vinyl and fan blown air
(11’-0” x 21’-0” x 30’-0”)

defacedbook:

Alex Schweder

A Sac of Rooms All Day Long, 2009

Clear vinyl and fan blown air

(11’-0” x 21’-0” x 30’-0”)