Hi my name is Allanah Claire - Here is a Kill Bill (Uma Thurman) painting I created for my brother. Hope you like it ^_^
More of my art here: www.facebook.com/AllanahClaireArt
Hi my name is Allanah Claire - Here is a Kill Bill (Uma Thurman) painting I created for my brother. Hope you like it ^_^
More of my art here: www.facebook.com/AllanahClaireArt
Sick af.
Alice Lindstrom // The Pushpin Ladies
This sequence of collages was inspired by my love for Modern art movements and vintage fabric and fashion design. The project started when I was browsing in a local vintage boutique named Pushpin Boutique and was struck by the overlap between the dresses displayed in the store and modern art movements. I decided to take the design of an existing dress from the boutique and match the design to a world inspired by a famous painting. The finished collages were then displayed at the boutique, beside the dresses that had originally inspired them. (artist statement)
Xx
None of these pieces are actually three-dimensional! They’re all just cleverly designed to look like it from the right perspective by Odeith. Via Design You Trust.
Sick af💯
Barry Moser’s illustration for Lynne Reid Banks’s “The Hare in His Magic.” From The Magic Hare, Avon, 1994.
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George Barbier, Illustration for Les Chansons de Bilitis by Pierre Louÿs, 1929.
i love this so much i dont know where to start
- the comedy itself
- the commentary on ‘what is art’
- further on what is art: the viewers are interpreting this as art, but the intention of the “artist” was not actually art, so is it art or not? who gets to decide, the viewers or the creator?
- the act of placing the glasses and watching the response (and the response itself being that the viewers treated the glasses as art) as performance art
like is this a critique of postmodernism? does the critique betray itself since (one could argue) the viewers interpreting the glasses as art makes them art? or is that so ridiculous that it doesn’t matter? i could go on
The intention of the “artist” was not actually art, but… their intention was to create a specific image for public display in order to evoke a reaction from an audience, and then to create an image of that in order to evoke a different reaction from a second audience.
I think they accidentally arted. Twice.
I hate everything about this post
This stuff is why my art appreciation class was so deliciously easy. I just bullshitted my way through all the assignments with random drivel about “what is really art” and got an A.
