Archive pour la catégorie ‘inspirations-jerome’

Sterling Ruby

Mardi 7 février 2012

A primary tension between repression and expression runs throughout L.A.-based Sterling Ruby’s multifaceted practice, at least as a jumping-off point. If for Ruby repression results from dogma—specifically the rigid tenets of Modernist art—then his work in turn expresses a thoughtful, pointed attempt to expose and counter any whiff of either. Minimalism has been a particular target (a much-cited print by Ruby declares “Kill Minimalism/Long Live the Amorphous Law”), and he mobilizes an inclusive, brash and often confrontational esthetic in heralding his charge.

-Art in America

 

 

 

 

 

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Keegan Mchargue

Mardi 31 janvier 2012

Keegan Mchargue fascination with the subconscious  forces the viewer to engage with is work in a way that we have to confront  Mchargue’s twisted subconscious itself. We, as viewers, need to work at rearranging all these associations, multiple forms, shapes and colors as well as a weird kind of ordered randomness. The result is a charming blend of everyday objects and almost recognizable silhouettes that all seem to symphonize in a strange world.

 

 

 

 

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Louise Bourgeois

Mardi 24 janvier 2012

Louise Bourgeois is in my personal opinion the most important women artist to have ever lived. Although she is mostly known for her spider sculptures, notably the one just outside our National Gallery in Ottawa, her body of work is gigantic and very diverse,  always touching and hauntingly beautiful.

Louise Bourgeois was born in Paris in 1911. She studied art at various schools there, including the Ecole du Louvre, Académie des Beaux-Arts, Académie Julian, and Atelier Fernand Léger. In 1938, she immigrated to the United States and continued her studies at the Art Students League in New York. Though her beginnings were as an engraver and painter, by the 1940s she had turned her attention to sculptural work, for which she is now recognized as a twentieth-century leader. Greatly influenced by the influx of European Surrealist artists who immigrated to the United States after World War II, Bourgeois’s early sculpture was composed of groupings of abstract and organic shapes, often carved from wood. By the 1960s, she began to execute her work in rubber, bronze, and stone, and the pieces themselves became larger and more referential to what has become the dominant theme of her work: her childhood. She has famously stated, “My childhood has never lost its magic, it has never lost its mystery, and it has never lost its drama.” Deeply symbolic, her work uses her relationship with her parents and the role sexuality played in her early family life as a vocabulary in which to understand and remake that history. The anthropomorphic shapes her pieces take—the female and male bodies are continually referenced and remade—are charged with sexuality and innocence and the interplay between the two. Bourgeois’s work is in the collections of most major museums around the world. She lived in New York, where she passed away in May 2010.

 

Source; PBS Art21.  Please visit the Art21 website to watch her talk about her work.

 

 

 

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Michael Cina

Mardi 13 décembre 2011

Michael Cina is an internationally recognized Creative Director who is currently leading a multi-disciplinary design studio, Cina Associates. Michael is known globally for originating YouWorkForThem, a graphic design boutique, and its’ sister company, WeWorkForThem, an award-winning design studio. His design portfolio includes many prominent Fortune 500 companies including Apple, American Express, ESPN, Pepsi, Coke, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, Mazda, and Victoria’s Secret. Cina’s work is consistently featured in numerous publications and he has spoken at many global design conferences about his unique vision for design. He also does works that is more painterly and not intented to be commercial. Using graphic communication and visual narratives, his works explores different techniques and mediums exploring visuals possibilities that they have to offer.

 

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Tadao Ando

Mercredi 7 décembre 2011

 »There is a role and function for beauty in our time. »

- Tadao Ando

 


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Ida Ekblad

Mardi 29 novembre 2011

 

Ida Ekblad is a norwegian artist working in a broad range of mediums such as painting, sculpture, poetry and music. She works mostly with our society’s waste that she collects in the different cities where she works, resulting in abstract compositions that are some kind of reminiscence early expressionism of  the CoBrA movement. The strongest aspect of her work lies in the fact that she is using that visual language to make a  comment  on our contemporary culture.

 

 

 

 

 

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Douglas Gordon

Mardi 22 novembre 2011
http://www.dailymotion.com/videoxkk4zh

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Willem van Aelst

Mercredi 16 novembre 2011

 

 

 

 

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Paul Delvaux

Mardi 8 novembre 2011

Paul Delvaux, 1897 – 1994

 

 

 

 

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Jayson Scott Musson // Hennessy Youngman

Mardi 1 novembre 2011

Jayson Scott Musson is a gorilla in a tie. If he’s not wasting hours upon hours re-watching the cantina shoot-out between Han Solo and Greedo as if it were the Zapruder film, then Jayson Scott Musson is sleeping. If he’s not sleeping then he’s eating. Once he’s done eating, he then takes a small hike into the forest where he digs a hole into the earth so he can have sex with the planet. “I’m trying to make a golem like a Hebrew wizard.” Mr. Musson declares as his reason for this violation of Mother Earth’s sacrosanctity. This is the closest Mr. Musson will ever come in being either a scientist or a father.

 

Jayson Scott Musson lives in the city of Philadelphia where he sometimes writes, sometimes plays around with his crayons in the production of visually arresting stuffs, and sometimes makes raps.

Mr Musson also has a pretty funny alter ego that he calls Hennesy Youngman, aka aka’s aka the Pharaoh Hennesy aka Henrock Monarch. Make sure to watch all of his ART THOUGHTZ videos. Thoses will for sure make you a better and more successful artist. 

Image de prévisualisation YouTube Image de prévisualisation YouTube

 

 

 

 

 

 

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