Search results

Page title matches

Page text matches

  • ...nd write about certain topics that are related with my graduation project: Art films, loose narratives, stillness and slow tempo. * Cinema in the art gallery: from found footage to cinematic video art
    2 KB (311 words) - 10:06, 23 January 2013
  • ...s and others drawn from previously unrecognized areas of visual and verbal art."
    1 KB (216 words) - 14:12, 14 May 2015
  • ...practice within a broader social and artistic context referencing texts on contemporary (expanded) photography theory and other artistic practices. ...he photograph as contemporary art, Reprinted. ed, Thames & Hudson world of art. Thames & Hudson, London.<br />
    2 KB (337 words) - 15:59, 28 September 2019
  • '''THE ART WORLD TO COME ..''' Click-and-buy online art.
    2 KB (364 words) - 20:32, 21 September 2015
  • '''Photography and the Mirror of Art''' by Martin Jay ...ts artistic being, but also became the precursor of a new understanding of art.
    2 KB (270 words) - 01:57, 22 November 2018
  • = Den Haag Contemporary Art Week-End = ...''' concerning the commission given by The Hague Contemporary for Den Haag Art Week-end.
    5 KB (728 words) - 22:37, 25 May 2021
  • ...t dominates the work of creating, theorising about and, not least, selling art." (Page 6, Vassenden, 2013) ..., David 2012: ‘International Art English. On the rise—and the space—of the art-world press release’, Triplecanopy, 30.7.2012, [http://canopycanopycanopy
    3 KB (465 words) - 17:56, 21 September 2022
  • ...Photograph as Contemporary Art'', Reprinted. ed, Thames & Hudson world of art. Thames & Hudson, London'''.<br /> ...e the publication serves as a document which gives a condensed overview of contemporary photographic practices.
    3 KB (442 words) - 11:02, 29 September 2019
  • ...pon where you were when. Invention of camera has changed the uniqueness of art. Uniqueness of painting lost itself but it has gained more meaning than pas ...s still its aura because of brush shapes and real colours. They were also contemporary of their time.
    1 KB (213 words) - 12:19, 15 October 2014
  • ...pon where you were when. Invention of camera has changed the uniqueness of art. Uniqueness of painting lost itself but it has gained more meaning than pas ...s still its aura because of brush shapes and real colours. They were also contemporary of their time.
    1 KB (219 words) - 12:23, 15 October 2014
  • ...pon where you were when. Invention of camera has changed the uniqueness of art. Uniqueness of painting lost itself but it has gained more meaning than pas ...s still its aura because of brush shapes and real colours. They were also contemporary of their time.
    1 KB (219 words) - 17:51, 7 January 2015
  • ...or MoMA attests. And the problem is complicated by the fact that some new art demands yet another kind of space, an enclosed area darkened for the projec === White Cube // Consumerism = Art Consumerism? ===
    4 KB (664 words) - 16:49, 27 September 2021
  • ...Gaby Horn for Hartware MedienKunstVerein and KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Frankfurt am Main: Revolver – Archiv für aktuelle Kunst, 2007, pp. 37-6 ...On the exhibition What is Modern Art? (Group Show)”, in: ''What is Modern Art? (Group Show)'', ed. by Inke Arns / Walter Benjamin, Frankfurt am Main: Rev
    4 KB (553 words) - 15:07, 24 May 2011
  • ...ory Will Repeat Itself: Strategies of re-enactment in contemporary (media) art and performance''' ...tselffocuses on current strategies of re-enactment in contemporary (media) art and performance, and discusses various artistic positions and strategies.
    4 KB (563 words) - 18:34, 15 September 2014
  • ''''The Work of Art in the Age of Mechnical Reproduction' Synopsis'''<br> ...namely founding and stamping. When the woodcutter came into play, graphic art became mechanically reproducible. During the middle ages engraving and etch
    4 KB (678 words) - 13:49, 18 February 2015
  • ''''The Work of Art in the Age of Mechnical Reproduction' Synopsis'''<br> ...namely founding and stamping. When the woodcutter came into play, graphic art became mechanically reproducible.. During the middle ages engraving and etc
    4 KB (671 words) - 00:48, 3 February 2015
  • [[Art & Fear, Observations on the perils (and rewards) of Artmaking]] ..._Theorien_der_Gegenwart_(Annette_Treibel)|Annette Treibel: Introduction to contemporary sociological theories]]
    2 KB (239 words) - 00:54, 11 November 2017
  • ...Y, D. (2007) The cinematic. London: Whitechapel (Documents of contemporary art, 2007: 5). ..., I. (2012) Memory. London: Whitechapel Gallery (Documents of contemporary art).
    3 KB (427 words) - 12:16, 8 November 2019
  • ...n source culture, and processes of self-education and peer learning, in an art, activist and community contexts. ...as well as WeWontFlyForArt and Zero Dollar Laptop (both part of our Media Art Ecologies programme).
    3 KB (446 words) - 16:05, 27 November 2011
  • .../colour-critique/ ; also adressing the book called " Spaces of Experience, Art Gallery Interiors from 1800 to 2000" from Charlotte Klonk. ...visual appetites and values attributed to art. In contrast to contemporary art, where they are rarely seen, exhibition walls painted various colours are o
    4 KB (616 words) - 18:53, 22 September 2021
  • ...nd prognostic value and announces its subject as the interrelation between art and technical progress. ...rious new terms which he confronts with the terminology of the traditional art forms.
    4 KB (626 words) - 14:30, 10 February 2012
  • ...nd prognostic value and announces its subject as the interrelation between art and technical progress. ...rious new terms which he confronts with the terminology of the traditional art forms.
    4 KB (626 words) - 16:39, 25 October 2011
  • ...tselffocuses on current strategies of re-enactment in contemporary (media) art and performance, and discusses various artistic positions and strategies. ...ticipants in an action, in which they actively participate.In contemporary art there has been an increasing number of artistic re-enactments – the perfo
    4 KB (630 words) - 09:00, 12 May 2011
  • Art works have always been reproduced, but the change in the method of producti Mechanical reproduction of a work of art, -represents something new. Historically, it advanced intermittently and in
    4 KB (759 words) - 13:07, 18 February 2015
  • ...tains different styles of artworks which include oil painting, performance art, Sculpture, and animation, etc. ...nd China to do their own projects about recreations of Chinese traditional art. I received more than 100 pieces of works in 2 months and picked up most ou
    2 KB (421 words) - 14:08, 21 September 2017
  • * Art Photography Now - Susan Bright * Art and Photography - David Campany ✓
    2 KB (345 words) - 19:20, 28 June 2020
  • A practical report that can sort out the logic of my art creating methodology, supplemented by the analysis of the corresponding art I am a person who is controlled by contemporary digital technology but also wants to control it in return. In my experience
    2 KB (317 words) - 15:18, 15 October 2020
  • ...nected to the theme of the second annotation I did this trimester: Film as Art. ...these directors with many others have strongly influenced a generation of contemporary visual artists that have been fascinated by the phenomenon of cinema.
    4 KB (639 words) - 10:51, 7 March 2012
  • ...ual language. Vanitas as a genre finds its origin in 16th and 17th century art, reflecting a cultural acceptance (and even obsession) with death and morta
    928 bytes (144 words) - 16:47, 8 December 2017
  • ...e towards creating works that reference that history of image making using contemporary tools. Examples throughout art history where the body is recorded, modified and distorted.
    4 KB (679 words) - 18:09, 15 November 2018
  • ...o engages in experiments and empirical researches within the frameworks of art and design. ...devices. With a collage of found footage and text, it reenacts a series of contemporary events turning them into Simulacra that creates a dystopian fiction-reality
    1,021 bytes (150 words) - 16:02, 26 May 2015
  • *<b>Duty Free Art</b> - <I>Hito Steyerl</I> (Reading group with Steve) *<b>Borders and ghosts: migratory hauntings in contemporary visual cultures</b> - <I>Nermin Saybasili</I>
    2 KB (253 words) - 13:54, 11 October 2023
  • ...how the knowledge of being gazed upon, self-regulates the subjects in the contemporary world where surveillance is a very big part of. The last section is about <
    3 KB (579 words) - 03:30, 2 November 2011
  • ** [http://www.nadiff.com/ NADiff a/p/a/r/t Ebisu] Contemporary art and photography bookstore ...devoted to the presentation of a rotating, hand-selection of international art, design and literature publications with an emphasis on the anti-traditiona
    2 KB (295 words) - 17:33, 22 March 2021
  • ...ing hipsters their coffees. She moved to Rotterdam to make and ingest more art. She makes films, with a tendency to talk about real people, places and sto ...wers'' (2021) is part of a larger research project about women’s labour in contemporary Italy, 'The most essential work', which started at the end of 2019. In the
    2 KB (279 words) - 18:19, 2 July 2021
  • Writers are curators of language just as a curator in contemporary art works as an artist himself. This should be understood in a broad sense, whi Whether photography is defined as art can be explored through its comparison with painting. On one hand, photogra
    3 KB (516 words) - 11:02, 8 November 2018
  • Jos de Mul's text ''The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Recombination'' outlines an adaptation of Benjamin's ...cognises the contemporary relevance of Benjamin's arguments in The Work of Art, he makes a clear distinction between mechanical and digital reproducibilit
    4 KB (544 words) - 16:25, 17 January 2012
  • 10. Art movements— This chapter describes two art movements that had special effects on the current avant-garde, structural f '''Picture of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock, P1: Why Abstract Art''', Krik Varnedoe
    5 KB (867 words) - 16:44, 16 February 2018
  • ...formance show in the Normalville Contemporary Art Centre for Contemporary Art this summer. Here is Zhibin’s interview talking about his upcoming show.
    3 KB (588 words) - 16:20, 11 April 2018
  • ...y art scene in Bulgaria and their role in it? I highlight the contemporary art scene (though it could be implied for new media discourse) because it is li ...ulgaria and what is happening now? Why Art fair such a RAW, RE-Rotterdam & ART Rotterdam won’t happen in Bulgaria in the near future ? What are the cond
    7 KB (1,133 words) - 11:54, 28 March 2013
  • '''''Life, Once More: Forms of reenactment in contemporary art''''' by '''Sven Lutticken, Witte de With, Rotterdam, 2005''' ...Arena in Which to Reenact“ Sven Lütticken is specifying, that performative art tries to fight repetition with repetition, ultimately recharging the past b
    4 KB (646 words) - 17:52, 10 January 2019
  • ...he supersensible, that is: between the physical materiality of the work of art and its meaningful history. ...uraistic object are being replaced by transitoriness and reproducibility." Art has become more accessible, and in regard to its reproduction; the whole di
    5 KB (922 words) - 13:43, 18 February 2015
  • ...& Research Methodologies". I was reading several books about contemporary art pieces that uses found footage material from films and also the modernity i ...vier Lloret - Essay: Modernity, Film, Art | Javi - Essay: Modernity, Film, Art]]
    2 KB (399 words) - 11:07, 8 April 2013
  • * + how to write about contemporary art
    1 KB (152 words) - 01:32, 4 December 2018
  • ...rst place this meant the bringing together and fusion of various separated art forms in the creation of a single unified environment. For the first time art and technology could become one: put on the some practical footing with rea
    6 KB (960 words) - 19:15, 10 March 2015
  • -Proposition for art as propaganda (defined as a tool of worldmaking) within a world of competin -Sinclair said all art is propaganda. <br>
    7 KB (1,128 words) - 13:59, 7 November 2018
  • Synopsis on '''Life, Once more: Forms of reenactment in contemporary art''' by '''Sven Lütticken''' and '''The Culture of the Copy: Striking Likene ==Synopsis on '''Life, Once More: Forms of reenactment in contemporary art''' by '''Sven Lütticken'''==
    6 KB (983 words) - 11:49, 6 March 2019
  • link --> [https://www.facebook.com/amsterdam.art.nl/videos/787241151620550/] -1:03:23 '''Let's talk as one human being to another: towards a shared art history'''
    4 KB (735 words) - 21:21, 28 November 2018
  • Contemporary tools in relation art history As the project draws inspiration from art historical sources, I’ve been doing a lot of visual research, visiting mu
    3 KB (548 words) - 16:34, 13 September 2018
  • ...-line (with Luci Eyers), which became a commissioning agency for web-based art projects <ref>Mute Issue Everything On Line (Digital Publishing Feature) B ...at aimed to explore the influence of cybernetics and information theory on contemporary cultural life by testing out its central idiom, “feedback”, through deb
    3 KB (478 words) - 17:44, 13 September 2022

View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)