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50bb01e0ac6731598cc8459a8e3cd669.jpg (JPEG Image, 800 × 533 pixels) Awkward Black Girl. Galleries and Art Things. Street art. Bethere.co.nz/media/cache/6c/57/6c57ba397a896ce148d3a6237c5dfabd. Guim Tió. Guim Tió. Oat Montien (London, UK) Suspended Cloud Paintings by Joris Kuipers. While Dutch artist Joris Kuipers spent years studying traditional painting and fine art techniques at both the Arnhem Academy and the Frank Mohr Institute in Groningen, his installations fly in the face of anything traditional. While borrowing from ideas rooted in expressionism as far as the application of paint and use of color, the artist constructs large-scale installations that spiral and twist off the walls, blurring the lines between painting and sculpture.

Two of his most recent works shown here were installed at Galerie Jaap Sleper in Utrecht and Het Plafond in Rotterdam. The artworks are made from suspended and raised components of depron foam coated with acrylic paint, appearing like a storm of whirling clouds or maybe flowers. I really hope he continues in this direction. (via saatchi online) The Artist | Red Wombat Studio. Ursula Vernon is the author and illustrator of “Nurk,” “Digger,” and a number of other projects. The daughter of an artist, she spent her youth attempting to rebel and become a scientist, but eventually succumbed to the siren song of paint (although not before getting a degree in anthropology, because life isn’t complete without student loans, right?). Her work has been nominated for an Eisner award, “Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition,” received Junior Library Guild Premier Selection and Ursa Major awards, as well as a number of Webcomics Choice Awards, and a mention in the New York Times, which she did not get tattooed to her forehead, despite her mother’s insistence.

Ursula grew up in Oregon and Arizona, went to college at Macalester College in Minnesota, and stayed there for ten years, until she finally learned to drive in deep snow and was obligated to leave the state. In addition to writing and making art, Ms. Home - Studio 360. Rosanna jones. TAKAHIRO KIMURA. Original collageFine Arts2013 Illustration for the magazine 'GQ JAPAN' Illustration2013 COLLAGE original worksFine Arts2012 Music VideoAnimation, Music2012 Illustration for Love fortune-tellingIllustration2011 Picture book 2003Illustration, Publishing2011 IllustrationIllustration2011 COLLAGE original worksFine Arts2009 Novel IllustrationsIllustration2011 COLLAGE original worksFine Arts2010 COLLAGE original worksFine Arts2011 COLLAGE for "LAST DINNER"Fine Arts2011 original shirts.Costume Design, Fashion2010 FILM / e-motionAnimation, Music, Video Arts2011 FILM / e-motionAnimation, Motion Graphics2011 FILMMotion Graphics2011 FILMMotion Graphics2011 FILMAnimation, Motion Graphics2009 FILMAnimation, Motion Graphics2011 FILMAnimation, Production2011 FILMAnimation, Production, Video Arts2011.

Main/True Art Is Angsty. PAGES IN THE MIDDLE OF NOWHERE (former FIRST AND THE ONLY REAL NET ART GALLERY) Appearing next at 12.09.-- 22.11.20 Something for Everyone; Espace multimedia gantner, Bourogne (solo)18.11 Animated JPEGs, CalArts Experimantal Animation programme (talk) 28.10.20 – 21.03.21 Me Family; MUDAM, Luxemburg (group show)April.21 Online Newspapers; Fragment gallery, Moscow (solo) to olia lialina's home! False Memories For Internet Explorer 6, Windows 2000, and virtual machine Online for short time September 11 through November 30, 2020 Olia Lialina -- Net Artist ISBN : 978-2-37896-186-2 Monograph edited by Valerie Perrin 🇬🇧 🇫🇷 Hosted a network performance for a swimmer and buckets Josephine Bosma: A Performance, One Stroke at a Time Best Effort Network I am in your browser as long as no one else is interested Symbolic version, 2015 Self-Portrait A GIF for three networks winner of net based award 2018 Lossless Blingee.com, speculative archeology better late than never also available as unique prints in Firefox and Chrome Give me Time/This Page Is No More 2015 -- ongoing Peeman Online Newspapers.

The Feminist Art Base Brings the Museum to You. Jamie’s Team Pick: Having the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art right here in Brooklyn at the Brooklyn Museum is pretty terrific. I’ve strolled through The Dinner Party, seen bunches of feminist art exhibits and my favorite of all, attended a Barbara Hammer book tour event! Judy Chicago (American, b. 1939). The Dinner Party, 1974–79. Mixed media: ceramic, porcelain, textile. But it turns out, not everyone can or wants to live in Brooklyn. Welcome to the Feminist Art Base, the first online digital archive dedicated solely to feminist art. In addition to the database, the Brooklyn Musuem website offers podcasts and videos so go ahead and get your art on without weathering the elements of the real out of doors. Annie Sprinkle. Artist Attack! Yoko Ono is My Hero and I’m Not Sorry.

Art Attack Month: 0. 1/28/2012 - Art Attack Call for Submissions, by Riese1. 2/1/2012 - Art Attack Gallery: 100 Queer Woman Artists In Your Face, by The Team2. 2/3/2012 - Judy Chicago, by Lindsay3. 2/7/2012 - Gran Fury, by Rachel4. 2/7/2012 - Diane Arbus, by MJ5. 2/8/2012 - Laurel Nakadate, by Lemon6. 2/9/2012 - 10 Websites For Looking At Pictures All Day, by Riese7. 2/10/2012 - LTTR, by Jessica G.8. 2/13/2012 - Hide/Seek, by Danielle9. 2/15/2012 - Spotlight: Simone Meltesen, by Laneia10. 2/15/2012 - Ivana, by Crystal11. 2/15/2012 - Gluck, by Jennifer Thompson12. 2/16/2012 - Jean-Michel Basquiat, by Gabrielle13. 2/20/2012 – Yoko Ono, by Carmen I love Yoko Ono (and I don’t think she broke up the Beatles).

“True artists are prophets. I don’t want to be that prophetic in that sense because it’s so lonely.” It is hard to write about Yoko Ono as an artist for a few reasons, including but not limited to my inability to separate Yoko Ono’s tweets from spoken word poetry. “Everybody’s an artist. Untitled. Artist Attack! Boom For Real, Jean-Michel Basquiat Was Here. Art Attack Month: 0. 1/28/2012 – Art Attack Call for Submissions, by Riese1. 2/1/2012 – Art Attack Gallery: 100 Queer Woman Artists In Your Face, by The Team2. 2/3/2012 – Judy Chicago, by Lindsay3. 2/7/2012 – Gran Fury, by Rachel4. 2/7/2012 – Diane Arbus, by MJ5. 2/8/2012 – Laurel Nakadate, by Lemon6. 2/9/2012 – 10 Websites For Looking At Pictures All Day, by Riese7. 2/10/2012 – LTTR, by Jessica G.8. 2/13/2012 – Hide/Seek, by Danielle9. 2/15/2012 – Spotlight: Simone Meltesen, by Laneia10. 2/15/2012 – Ivana, by Crystal11. 2/15/2012 – Gluck, by Jennifer Thompson12. 2/16/2012 – Jean-Michel Basquiat, by Gabrielle Puerto Rican.

Haitian. Brooklyn. Graffiti tags on SOHO buildings turned high concept neo-expressionist art gathered for retrospectives in the Whitney Museum of American Art. This is the legacy of Jean-Michel Basquiat. Jean-michel basquiat Basquiat did not just bomb tags. Madonna and Basquiat I won’t go into a complete retelling of his life — that’s what Wikipedia is for, right? "ernok" We Who Feel Differently: The Queer Database Documentary. Jamie’s Team Pick: We Who Feel Differently is a massive multimedia project created by artist Carlos Motta featuring themes, a journal, interviews, and ephemera. Some readers may remember Carlos Motta from Episode 5 of the Signified video series we encouraged you to check out.

As an artist from Colombia, Motta sees his experience as a queer immigrant as an opportunity to create a utopic space. Carlos Motta: Episode 5 from anna barsan on Vimeo. Motta explains that this project, “attempts to reclaim a queer “We” that values difference over sameness, a “We” that resists assimilation, and a “We” that embraces difference as a critical opportunity to construct a socially just world.” Motta focuses on five themes: The Equality Framework: Stop Begging for ToleranceDefying Assimilation: Beyond the LGBT AgendaGender Talents Silence Stigma, Militancy and Systemic Transformation: From ACT UP to AIDS Today Queering Art Discourses Installation view at Other Gallery, Shanghai Jamie. Queer Couchsurfing Through Europe: A Photography Book You Can Help Fund. Whitney’s Team Pick: Ever wanted to backpack through Europe, Turkey and Morocco? You can live vicariously through Brooklyn-based photographers Yael Malka and Cait Oppermann as they backpack through places like Germany, France, Czech Republic, Slovenia, England and the Netherlands on a quest to couchsurf through (and document) queer communities overseas!

The ultimate goal: To make a text and image-based book chronicling the whole two-month journey, from start to finish. They’re going to document every step of the way with rolls and rolls and rolls of film, and they’ll write down words spoken and written. They’ll collect these beautiful (and queer) images in a book to be titled Too Much Information: A Photography Book. This is where you come in: Malka and Opperman started a Kickstarter for the photography project, and they are currently just over $1000 away from their current goal of $3500, with eight days left.

Cait (on the left) and Yael (on the right) by Cait Oppermann by Yael Malka. Opus Gay. Elizabeth 'oscar' maynard's Photostream.