Showing posts with label Marcel Duchamp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcel Duchamp. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Wunderkammer (again and again)

After reading Umberto Eco's Infinity of Lists, thoughts of the wunderkammer reappeared (as they often do) in addition to the presentation of collections based on old curiosity cabinets. Here are some images that I have pondered over the past couple weeks featured in Eco's book.


Johann Georg Hainz, Collector's Cabinet, 1666, Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle

From Eco (page 203): "Most of what remains of the Wunderkammern are pictorial representations or etchings in their catalogs. Sometimes they were made up of hundreds of tiny shelves holding stones, shells, the skeletons of curious animals and sometimes masterpieces of the taxidermist's art capable of producing non existing animals. Other times they are cupboards, like miniature museums, full of compartments containing items that, removed from their original context, seem to tell senseless or incongruous stories."



Reliquary Urn with pebbles from the Holy Land, 17th century, Paris, Musée des Civilisations de l'Europe et de la Méditerranée


 A place that I must visit someday: the Museo del Tempo Ozzano Taro.




The three images above come from this source.

Part of me wants to spend years toiling away on a site-specific wunderkammer that no one is aware of much like Marcel Duchamp's Etant Donné.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Emoji Art History: The Not So Serious Side Project (Part 1)

It began during finals week at the end of last semester while lying in bed unable to sleep. Deliriously I began recreating works of art with the Emoji app on my iPhone and posted 18 of the results on Instagram. I stopped for a month but kept thinking of new ones. Five weeks later with the new Postcard Collective Winter submission deadline looming, I revisited it. I settled on a form, deciding that I would simulate texting the artist at the top and include only the title of the artwork below. There are many limitations of Emoji - unfortunately there are not enough icons to create some of my favorite artworks (I am still wishing I could do more with Duchamp). Here are 28 in no particular order with a list of 15 others to attempt (coming soon).



Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: David Hockney



Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Walter De Maria


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Yves Klein (with a little help from a friend)


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Wayne Thiebaud



Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Vincent van Gogh


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Sol LeWitt


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Sherrie Levine


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Roy Lichtenstein


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Robert Smithson


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Maurizio Cattelan


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Mark Di Suvero


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Marcel Duchamp


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: John Baldessari


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Jeff Koons


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Janine Antoni


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Henri Rousseau


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Grant Wood


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Georgia O'Keeffe


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Frida Kahlo


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Felix Gonzalez-Torres


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Eleanor Antin


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Ed Ruscha


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Damien Hirst


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Christian Marclay (made while staring at Marclay during an artists' conversation at the Wexner Art Center last night)


Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Andy Warhol




Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Edvard Munch




Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Maya Lin



Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Tom Friedman

One of my favorite parts was pretending for a few brief minutes that I did indeed have all these artists as contacts in my phone.

Monday, January 31, 2011

The Original Copy: Photography of Sculpture, 1839 to Today



I am slowly perusing my Christmas book acquisitions. This was the exhibition I wanted to see at MOMA badly but was unable to go to NYC at the time to view it. Here are some images that I am interested in (scale and a beheaded perspective, an unusual Marcel Duchamp photograph and a photograph of his artwork displayed in a way that I had not seen before and the Bruce Nauman I could recreate in my house right now).


Alois Locherer, Transporting the Bavaria Statue to Theresienwiese, 7 August 1850


Marcel Duchamp, Cigarette Covers, 1936


John D. Schiff, The Large Glass Installed Before a Window Overlooking the Garden at Katherine S. Dreier’s Home, Milford, Connecticut, c. 1948


Bruce Nauman, Composite Photo of Two Messes on the Studio Floor, 1967