Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Friday, September 23, 2011
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
stacks
Unfortunately there was no background information about the artists available.

























Tony Cragg, Stack 1975
Mixed media, 200 x 200 x 200 cm
PAPER STACKS
On wednesday September 21st, Seth Apter will host "Paper Stacks", an online collaboration.
PAPER STACKS
On wednesday September 21st, Seth Apter will host "Paper Stacks", an online collaboration.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Joseph Beuys, Thinking is Form.
A compilation of his drawings. (source the internet)
CREATIVITY
One of
Joseph Beuys' fundamental messages, delivered again and again in lectures,
interviews, and artworks, was that human beings can and must learn to be
creative in many different ways. His famous slogan "Everyone is an
artist" was not meant to suggest that all people should or could be
creators of traditional artworks. Rather, he meant that we should not see creativity
as the special realm of artists, but that everyone should apply creative
thinking in their own area of specialization--whether it be law, agriculture,
physics, education, homemaking, or the fine arts.
Beuys imagined that an expanded application of human
creativity--and the broader definition of "art" that would
follow--would result in something he called "social sculpture." While
the term encompassed many things for Beuys, it might broadly be defined as a
conscious act of shaping, of bringing some aspect of the environment--whether
the political system, the economy, or a classroom--from a chaotic state into a
state of form, or structure. Social sculpture should be accomplished
cooperatively, creatively, and across disciplines (he often cited the example
of the beehive as an ideal working model). For Beuys, the need to change, or
literally to re-form, was urgent. "All around us," he said, "the
fundamentals of life are crying out to be shaped, or created.".
(source: walker art center).
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Friday, September 2, 2011
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