The Great Art Debate
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Had to laugh. Sorry...
http://theapesheet.com/archivefive/newart2.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://theapesheet.com/archivefive/newart2.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Great Art Debate
bloody norah - what have I started?? I only wanted to check you were still alive!!! 

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Re: The Great Art Debate
Relax, I'll die off again shortly. Have to post things on the spot cos I've forgotten about them ten minutes later.thebish wrote:bloody norah - what have I started?? I only wanted to check you were still alive!!!

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Re: The Great Art Debate
This is a bit weird. Guy does self-portraits on different drugs. Bit like when you those scientists gave spiders drugs and watched them make webs, but not.
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1tjLTb/ww ... n-on-drugs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1tjLTb/ww ... n-on-drugs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Odd. No heroin picture though.Verbal wrote:This is a bit weird. Guy does self-portraits on different drugs. Bit like when you those scientists gave spiders drugs and watched them make webs, but not.
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1tjLTb/ww ... n-on-drugs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Really barking. Little too self conscious to be totally taken in by them. But some i liked!Verbal wrote:This is a bit weird. Guy does self-portraits on different drugs. Bit like when you those scientists gave spiders drugs and watched them make webs, but not.
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1tjLTb/ww ... n-on-drugs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
you're always dragging up really interesting stuff for this thread, Verbal...

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Re: The Great Art Debate
More current affairs than Art, but look at some of these pictures from a recent Volcanic eruption in Chile. Some of them are outstanding
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... apart.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... apart.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Great Art Debate
I think he should stay on the mushrooms (Painting 14/21). I quite like that one.Verbal wrote:This is a bit weird. Guy does self-portraits on different drugs. Bit like when you those scientists gave spiders drugs and watched them make webs, but not.
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1tjLTb/ww ... n-on-drugs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Given the website I hesitated, but I'm glad I clicked on the link in the end. Not in fact for the pics, which are pretty awesome, but two of the first three comments are utter Daily Mail brilliance. For the record, in case it changes they are 6/6/11 17.37 and 17.33, though I'm sure if you took the first comments at any point they would be ridiculous!boltonboris wrote:More current affairs than Art, but look at some of these pictures from a recent Volcanic eruption in Chile. Some of them are outstanding
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... apart.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Lucien Freud has died... prepare yourselves for a weekend of retrospectives featuring pink fleshy nudes with pubes on display.... yeuch!

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and here's one he did of me..


(Benefits Supervisor Sleeping - cost: $33.6million)
and here's one he did of me..

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Re: The Great Art Debate
Now - that's a stool!
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Re: The Great Art Debate
A fantastic artist. RIP.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Absolutely agree.William the White wrote:A fantastic artist. RIP.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Just back from nine days in London. urgent family business mostly - illness and other grim stuff. but eventually sorted enough to allow a few cultural explorations in the capital, where the art scene seems to be exploding... with mixed results...
So, last Friday, went to the Hayward Gallery to see the Tracey Emin retrospective - 'all you want is love' covering about 25 years of her work, including one pretty spectacular installation, in memory of her father, that is a broken down, ramshackle pier, at the end of which is a little shed, neat, with curtains at the windows... He always wanted a hut looking over the seas, it seems, but perhaps a ramshackle life prevented him getting it.
The exhibition is pretty hit and miss but has great moments, i think. In one section, identified as 'Trauma', amidst disturbing artwork inspired by her two abortions in the 1990s, is a rather moving 'tribute' called 'In memory of my mother' - on a stolen hotel bedsheet is the figure of a naked woman, created, i think in charcoal, then stitch, and out of her vagina, or maybe her womb, in applique, brightly coloured cotton butterflies and flowers are erupting. It's lovely, made me smile.
The major work of Emin-esque 'outrage' is 220 black and white drawings of a woman masturbating, from the perspective of between her feet, so fingers and vagina in central focus, face scarcely visible, photographed, put on a 22second video reel and projected continuously onto a huge screen dominating a final room mostly devoted to female sexuality...
The walk through took about two hours. £12. Plenty of stuff that misses the mark, imho, but plenty that shows why she's earned a solo exhibition on the south bank.
Runs until 24 August. We booked in advance, but i don't think this is essential. There were a good number there but not jammed.
I presume Tango will be down there in the next 24 hours...
So, last Friday, went to the Hayward Gallery to see the Tracey Emin retrospective - 'all you want is love' covering about 25 years of her work, including one pretty spectacular installation, in memory of her father, that is a broken down, ramshackle pier, at the end of which is a little shed, neat, with curtains at the windows... He always wanted a hut looking over the seas, it seems, but perhaps a ramshackle life prevented him getting it.
The exhibition is pretty hit and miss but has great moments, i think. In one section, identified as 'Trauma', amidst disturbing artwork inspired by her two abortions in the 1990s, is a rather moving 'tribute' called 'In memory of my mother' - on a stolen hotel bedsheet is the figure of a naked woman, created, i think in charcoal, then stitch, and out of her vagina, or maybe her womb, in applique, brightly coloured cotton butterflies and flowers are erupting. It's lovely, made me smile.
The major work of Emin-esque 'outrage' is 220 black and white drawings of a woman masturbating, from the perspective of between her feet, so fingers and vagina in central focus, face scarcely visible, photographed, put on a 22second video reel and projected continuously onto a huge screen dominating a final room mostly devoted to female sexuality...
The walk through took about two hours. £12. Plenty of stuff that misses the mark, imho, but plenty that shows why she's earned a solo exhibition on the south bank.
Runs until 24 August. We booked in advance, but i don't think this is essential. There were a good number there but not jammed.
I presume Tango will be down there in the next 24 hours...
Re: The Great Art Debate
William the White wrote:That, of course, is the trick - in all seriousness, though - look at the Yves Klein 'blue' - an entirely monochromatic career as an artist...Worthy4England wrote:Not with the same level of idiosyncratic brushwork...William the White wrote:They've both been done, unfortunately...TANGODANCER wrote:Or possibly a completely black canvas entitled: Life through the eyes of a bat.Worthy4England wrote:"a white cat drinking milk in the snow" By Van Tango
It is a very beautiful shade of blue... Of course...

I'm wholly unqualified for this thread when I look at the above 'work of art' and think I can hear the sound of 'the piss being taken'. (Which in itself is a pretty good title for a painting.)
Still, it's better than Vettriano...
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Re: The Great Art Debate
That, of course, is the trick - in all seriousness, though - look at the Yves Klein 'blue' - an entirely monochromatic career as an artist...Jakerbeef wrote:
It is a very beautiful shade of blue... Of course...[/quote]

I'm wholly unqualified for this thread when I look at the above 'work of art' and think I can hear the sound of 'the piss being taken'. (Which in itself is a pretty good title for a painting.)
Still, it's better than Vettriano...[/quote]
Yep...

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Re: The Great Art Debate
I take it all back. If she's been conning a living out of the public for 25 years, then she really is talented.William the White wrote:.
So, last Friday, went to the Hayward Gallery to see the Tracey Emin retrospective - 'all you want is love' covering about 25 years of her work,

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Re: The Great Art Debate
Thank God for that.William the White wrote:Yep...
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Re: The Great Art Debate
I'm betting yours and WTW's living rooms are real happy places to be.Jakerbeef wrote:Thank God for that.William the White wrote:Yep...
Postcards and coasters; all he's good for.

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