October 8, 2011

iheartmyart:

Quayola, Strata #4, Teaser2, 2011

Artwork premiere at Palais des Beaux Arts, Lille | 7-9 October 2011

October 7, 2011
nikophotography:

Judy Chicago, Atmospheres, 1967

nikophotography:

Judy Chicago, Atmospheres, 1967

(Source: xicanismo, via androphilia)

October 3, 2011
iheartmyart:

Alessandro Pagani, Untitled (Van Dyck), 2010, oil on canvas, 42 x 60

iheartmyart:

Alessandro Pagani, Untitled (Van Dyck), 2010, oil on canvas, 42 x 60

11:16pm
  
FILED UNDER: art painting 
September 30, 2011
futureshipwreck:

Jonathan May

futureshipwreck:

Jonathan May

2:17pm
  
FILED UNDER: Art photography 
September 22, 2011
eileenede:

Maria Sardari

eileenede:

Maria Sardari

(via ekgraphicdesign)

10:54am
  
FILED UNDER: photography light art 
September 20, 2011
iheartmyart:

Sonia & Mark Whitesnow from the series Psychospa

iheartmyart:

Sonia & Mark Whitesnow from the series Psychospa

6:29am
  
FILED UNDER: art 
September 20, 2011
tree-breath:

Levi Van Veluw

tree-breath:

Levi Van Veluw

(via lagodilot)

September 17, 2011
rerylikes:

Allyson Levy. I Hop, 2011. Eggshells, wax and pigment
(via iamjapanese)

rerylikes:

Allyson Levy. I Hop, 2011. Eggshells, wax and pigment

(via iamjapanese)

(via tartanspartan)

2:16pm
  
FILED UNDER: Allyson Levy art 
September 17, 2011
newyorker:

According to the feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey, “the male figure  cannot bear the burden of sexual objectification.” How do women  photograph men? A search through The New Yorker’s photography library provided some answers. Here’s a selection of images that seem to flip the paradigm.

newyorker:

According to the feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey, “the male figure cannot bear the burden of sexual objectification.” How do women photograph men? A search through The New Yorkers photography library provided some answers. Here’s a selection of images that seem to flip the paradigm.



(via perpetualcollapse)

12:31pm
  
FILED UNDER: photography art film 
September 14, 2011

alligatorindian:

Q: How do I make contemporary art?
A: All you need is a warehouse and something inflatable

(via laguerra)

September 12, 2011
fuckyeahgiantpanda:

Ball point pen project, via Feliciachiao.

fuckyeahgiantpanda:

Ball point pen project, via Feliciachiao.

(via bearstation)

9:41pm
  
FILED UNDER: panda animals art 
September 10, 2011

(via lagodilot)

10:48am
  
FILED UNDER: art painting 
August 30, 2011
pablogriff:

Jons Note 2.

pablogriff:

Jons Note 2.

August 30, 2011
julienfoulatier:

Photography by Jaime Martinez.

julienfoulatier:

Photography by Jaime Martinez.

(via velcrorodeo)

August 19, 2011
Woody Allen on the folly of art as religion, artistic "risks," and the overvaluing of creativity

austinkleon:

From his great interview with the Paris Review:

I hate when art becomes a religion. I feel the opposite. When you start putting a higher value on works of art than people, you’re forfeiting your humanity. There’s a tendency to feel the artist has special privileges, and that anything’s okay if it’s in the service of art. I tried to get into that in Interiors. I always feel the artist is much too revered—it’s not fair and it’s cruel. It’s a nice but fortuitous gift—like a nice voice or being left-handed. That you can create is a kind of nice accident. It happens to have high value in society, but it’s not as noble an attribute as courage. I find funny and silly the pompous kind of self-important talk about the artist who takes risks. Artistic risks are like show-business risks—laughable. Like casting against type, wow, what danger! Risks are where your life is on the line. The people who took risks against the Nazis or some of the Russian poets who stood up against the state—those people are courageous and brave, and that’s really an achievement. To be an artist is also an achievement, but you have to keep it in perspective. I’m not trying to undersell art. I think it’s valuable, but I think it’s overly revered. It is a valuable thing, but no more valuable than being a good schoolteacher, or being a good doctor. The problem is that being creative has glamour. People in the business end of film always say, I want to be a producer, but a creative producer. Or a woman I went to school with who said, Oh yes, I married this guy. He’s a plumber but he’s very creative. It’s very important for people to have that credential. Like if he wasn’t creative, he was less.

Emphasis mine. I’ve said it so many times: the world doesn’t necessarily need more artists — what it needs is more decent human beings. It’s like Jeff Bridges’ mother told him: “remember to have fun and don’t take it too seriously.”

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