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Archive for the ‘exhibition’ Category

Forever & Never by Dan Estabrook

January 19, 2010

Dan Estabrook discovered photography through the underground magazines of the punk-rock and skateboard culture of the 1980’s. He worked with Christopher James, from whom he learned alternative photographic processes as well as ways to combine his disparate artistic interests. Working exclusively in 19th century processes, Dan Estabrook produces intimate, yet compelling photographs that illustrate the beauty of long forgotten methods. (via)

Just one hundred years ago, science could still claim palmistry, phrenology, and physiognomy among its disciplines, and even today we tend to believe that written on the body are the keys to decipher the secret language of the everyday. There is science, too, in photography — mixing salt and silver to represent the otherwise unseen details of the natural world. By processes physical and chemical, it is even possible to distill one’s breath, capture time, and give a material life to the immaterial. It is this alchemy that moves me. Using and emulating nineteenth-century printing techniques, and making visible the very physical materials of which photographs are made, I attempt to have seemingly anonymous photographs become highly personal objects. In these images a single repeated shape, a formation of flowers, or the patterns of dust and decay are almost legible texts, inscribed on the skin of paper, tin, and glass. — Dan Estabrook

Forever & Never, 2003

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Collision by Roger Ballen

January 17, 2010

Roger Ballen: My photographs comment on the complex word that we loosely term as reality. Reality is ultimatley impossible to define with words, perhaps images will provide some clarity. It is my belief that the most challenging photographs are those that create a tension between what we refer to as the real and the imaginative . My images symbolize the chaos around us and our inability to ultimately control our fate. In contrast to this world, my aesthetic is expressed in a very formalistic manner. (via)

Find Interviews to read or watch on Lensculture and Euroalter

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Case of Mistaken Identity by Brendan Danielsson

January 11, 2010

Brendan Danielsson: My work isn’t conceptual, personal, spiritual or political. And there’s no secret underlying message or point I’m trying to get across. I’m not trying to say much with it….at all. I simply create art that I would like to see if I were not the one making it. The process, as I develop a piece, is little more than a stream of consciousness without much forethought to what the end result will be. But I do try to incorporate a few elements of conflict to create a narrative for interest. These usually deal with man vs. beast, beauty vs. ugly, sensuality vs. violence, etc. Believe it or not, I don’t enjoy much of the actual process of creating art. It’s a contant struggle for me and I’m my harshest critic, but the end result is what keeps me going. When I create something that I actually like, I’m a happy man. (via)

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Cuban Television Sets by Simone Lueck

December 29, 2009

Simone Lueck: Green-hued beasts jimmy-rigged with ancient computer parts and fantastically adorned like religious altars

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Fresh Tears,Yum! Hibiki Miyazaki

December 16, 2009

Hibiki Miyazaki’s influences include old movies and printed illustrations from the thirties, forties and fifties, which have a dreamlike and slightly naive quality to the characters. To produce her prints she uses sandblasted copper plates, line etching, spit bite, and xerox transfer.

Sometimes this whole process seems ridiculously arduous and arcane but that’s what I love about it too…..

Follow Hibiki on flickr, sneak into her amazing sketchbook and check her gallery

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see also: Proofing Madness Unfinished State, by Hibiki M.

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Nollywood by Pieter Hugo

December 9, 2009

Nollywood is said to be the third largest film industry in the world, releasing onto the home video market approximately 1 000 movies each year.
Such abundance is possible since films are realized in conditions that would make most of the western independent directors cringe. Movies are produced and marketed in the space of a week: low cost equipment, very basic scripts, actors cast the day of the shooting, “real life” locations. Despite the improvised production process, they continue to fascinate audiences.

Welcome To the Terrordome. And Nollywood is scary shit, but not in a Hollywood way. Rather than employ the rituals of history, myth and mystery to seduce and then placate us, scare it all away — all the shit that’s not suppose to be scary but really is, Pieter throws it in our face.

What Nollywood seems to be suggesting is that it is not the “I” of the photographer or even the “I” of the viewer, but the eye of the camera. We’re thrown from “representation” (of something real) to “simulation” (with no secure reference to reality), the normal relation between sign and referent radically remixed so that we lose the connection, once presumed to exist, between sign or image and the reality to which both were thought to refer. (via)

take a look at the complete Nollywood series on Pieter Hugo’s website or gallery

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centrifuge by agraphie

December 1, 2009

agraphie: faces keep changing, people keep talking…

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view Full Set on flickr

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Spoiled Boy by Gino Rubert

November 20, 2009

Gino Rubert born 1969 in Mexico; lives and works in Barcelona.

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Infestation by Alexander Binder

November 9, 2009

Alexander Binder was born in 1976 in the Black Forest/Germany. He is a self-taught photographer and has a degree in economics. Both – his photo and his film projects – are characterized by a fascination for the mystic, the spiritual and the occult.

“The overall style of my work derives from the self made lenses i use.The photos are blurred, diffuse and they give a lot of space for your peronal imagination. But it’s not only the style of my photographs - it’s also the subjects i deal with. Most of my projects move between two extremes: On one side the naive ideal of a romanticised, virgin nature in which light unfolds it’s primordial power, as the basic energy of life. And on the other side, the disenchanted monochrome works, that reflect the dystopian living circumstances of modern society.” (via)

What do you want? ”The simple things in life: family, good friends, a beer and a camera.” What do you need? ”The simple things in life: family, good friends, a beer and a camera.”

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8oinks MashUp - October Review

November 6, 2009

OMFG! Check the Highlights from October ;)

get inspired! Mashup your favourite posts, use as many as you like and upload your collage / tag: mashup

this one’s called ‘Stages’Dive in High Resolution

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Previous 8oinks Reviews: September / August / July / June / May

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Deep Shit by Eric Beltz

October 28, 2009

Eric Beltz (1975) The exquisitely rendered graphite drawings are sophisticated responses to American folkways and myths. As darkly funny as they are disarmingly earnest, the graphic works are both exhortations and critiques of our nation’s inborn exceptionalism and romanticism. The preservationists’ dualistic attitude (i.e., Humanity vs. Nature) provides only simple answers to our complex questions. By contrast, Beltz’s allegorical drawings shirk simplistic moralizing in favor of contradiction, ambivalence and multiplicity. His scenes speak to an active communion with Nature, albeit one that includes suffering, death and a melancholy nod to the essential absurdity of existence.

Appropriately, Beltz’s drawings incorporate Biblical texts and his subjects are recognizable as America’s founding fathers and God-fearing, anonymous farmers. But Beltz draws from a peculiarly American well, the proverbial melting pot. Each drawing is suffused with currents of Eastern philosophy and shamanism. His farmers and historical figures are also mystics.

Beltz’s meticulously rendered works don’t offer any answers, but neither do they shrug off the dilemma. With a richly ironic sensibility and a sensitivity to the complexities of our national character and (natural) history, Beltz embraces our clusterfuck approach even as he skewers it. “The Good Land” is sublimely ambivalent. (via myartspace)

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Bye Bye Blackbird

October 19, 2009

Gon: “assume it: we all have a dark side which always want to fly high. like a vulture. a crow. the ancient rituals and specially rites in all the cultures of the world recreated somehow the dark flights of these black birds with special meanings. some as exorcism. some others as calling or preys. pagan or religious, human or spiritual. black birds flights always had impose some human fascination. symbol of death for many cultures because their behaviour. dreaming with crows use to symbolise that death is coming. a vulture’s flight over death fields is an intense mix of beauty and of fear. if exorcism, we want that black bird will fly away, and this is most used in rites: “bye bye black bird”, let it go, free your own, dare your own. with respect.
“bye bye black bird” is a title suggested by our dear 8oink’s member Annie.

let’s fly, bye bye black bird. here you may post your own interpretations of the black birds rites in another 8oink’s collaboration. let’s be pagan. let’s free our own black bird. let’s do this rite all together. now join your own wings… in the name of death!”

Contributions in all media are welcome. Tag: oink

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Shirin K. A. Turn off lights when you leave the room

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Zach Manchester Bye Bye Blackbird

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8oinks MashUp - September Review

October 16, 2009

We’ve been walking on the boarders between real flesh and fake backbone.
Review 24 blogposts and take a tour through last month’s oink bubble.
i call it figure of a perfect head.

get inspired! Mashup your favourite posts, use as many as you like and upload your collage (tag: mashup)

Download in High Resolution

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Previous 8oinks Reviews: August / July / June / May

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Giving Birth to Death by Laurie Lipton

October 12, 2009

Laurie Lipton was born in New York and began drawing at the age of four. She was the first person to graduate from Carnegie-Mellon University in Pennsylvania with a Fine Arts Degree in Drawing (with honours). She has lived in Holland, Belgium, Germany and France and has made her home in London since 1986.

Her work has been exhibited extensively throughout Europe and the USA. Lipton was inspired by the religious paintings of the Flemish School. She tried to teach herself how to paint in the style of the 17th century Dutch Masters and failed. When traveling around Europe as a student, she began developing her very own peculiar drawing technique building up tone with thousands of fine cross-hatching lines like an egg tempera painting. “It’s an insane way to draw”, she says, “but the resulting detail and luminosity is worth the amount of effort”.

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Cultural Independence by Jo Seub

October 7, 2009

The system of belief or not; that is not the problem of yours ;
Jo Seub’s World of Disbelief

Jo Seub (1975, Born in South Korea), has developed a distinct system of disbelief, the centerpiece of which is a fluctuating of self-identity. By putting the symbolism of contemporary symptoms of scepticism into the artificially controlled images, he has taken disbelief as one main subject in his art. Irrationality and the distortion of one’s internal life have been common paradigm for postmodern system of reasoning and acting. This self-betrayal produced by the tension between the superficial belief and the internal disbelief are continuously knocking on our belief system of which we thought it could guide us to imagine and advance our own perspective of ’sensus communis’. From the perspective of a ‘pictorial ideology’, Jo Seub questions that why our living has to be determined in a trivial way. (via)

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Pareidolia / To see in the Dark

September 9, 2009

Vesna Jovanovic is a contemporary visual artist whose work ranges from surreal drawings to pinhole photographs and double-walled ceramic vessels. Her creative process often involves a combination of chance and precision, reflecting interests in time, science, and the unity of opposites.

“My involvement in science caused a personal transformation that is reflected in my current artwork. During my pursuit of chemistry, moments and events gradually acquired names, and the world turned into a language of formulas. But once something could be named and broken down, it no longer contained its sublime, powerful anonymity. As a result, and despite my continued love of chemistry, I experienced anguish and a desire to find other ways to explore the enigmas of life.”

Instead of serving as a means of self-expression or communication, art now fulfills the same role that chemistry once did: it is an avenue of inquisition and discovery. Unlike chemistry however, art aims to reveal questions rather than answers. (via)

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Benedetta Bonichi relies upon the collaboration of Italian and foreign important universities and scientific institutions, in order to realise her works; where she has been invited to deliver lectures and teach.

After years of research and studies (ranging from philosophy, ancient history and language philosophy to paleethnology and ethology) thanks to the President of the Italian Microbiology Society, she gets into contact with the School of Human Anthropology within the Biology Faculty in Florence and collaborates with some of the American teachers. In 1991 she leaves University dedicating herself to music, dance and mime and founds a theatre company, also beginning drawing, painting and sculpting. In 1995, by chance, she comes across the article “To see in the dark”, written in Germany in 1934.
In light of a Kantian reading of reality of Laurentian features, from 1995 to 1997 she creates approximately fifty sculptures illustrating the theme of shadows. Persuaded by the need to go beyond, “I do not know how to study, describe, nor draw this magnificent obsession that is reality…”, Benedetta Bonichi seeks a new type of language. After years of research going beyond aesthetics and ignoring light, in 1999 she creates the first X-ray images.

“Radiography is more than a technique. It is rather a teknè; that is the only possible means to read reality, through matter rather than light. Radiography, together with photography, digitalisation and fresco powders…” (via)

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Hollywood Prayers by Antony Micallef

September 7, 2009

I got into art when I was really young. I have always been drawing and creating paintings ever since I can remember. As a child, you never really know what you want to do, I just knew it had to be something to do with art. I went through art college and studied Fine Art at university. While there, I met some people who had a real hunger for art and they had a really big influence on me. I fed off their desire to create and it made me realize that it was possible to make a living as an artist. (via)

Antony Micallef has exhibited throughout the world from L.A, Tokyo to Palestine. As well as exhibiting at the National Portrait Gallery recent group shows include the Royal Academy, Burlington Gardens and a print show at the Tate Britain.

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Also make sure to check out Antony Micallef’s face studies and portraits

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8oinks MashUp - August Review

September 4, 2009

Little monsters from past and present. Discover 24 of the most oinked blogposts from August in the collage and a story behind each link.

Get inspired. MashUp your favourite posts, use as many as you like and upload
your collage. Tag: mashup

Download in High Resolution

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Previous 8oinks Reviews: July / June / May

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Muerte con color de vida by Gonzalo Bènard

August 31, 2009

bild-22 deconstruction and regeneration… Gonzalo Bènard belongs to a very special category of humans; those whose lives are comprised of many storylines. “Reborn” in various occasions, Bènard began as an art history, fine arts and computer science student, he went on to pursue a career as editorial coordinator in the Cultural Centre of Belen in Lisbon, gained notoriety as the editorial coordinator of the Pavilion of Portugal in the 1995 Venice Biennial, left everything for a three-year residence in the painting school of a Tibetan monastery, came back, became a painter, finally ending up an emerging photographer. (via)

G. Bènard mixes cultures, rites and rituals, life and death. Encompassing everything human his work speaks of faith, sex, spirit and what it is to be alive and trying to make sense of a world that cannot make sense of itself.

Take a look at GBenards Video-Projects and visit him on flickr and 8oinks.

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Maya Bloch, I do

August 30, 2009

Maya Bloch was born in Be’er Sheva (1978). Anna Veronica was the original, now almost forgotten, name of Maya Bloch’s mother, before she was granted a new, Hebrew one, upon her arrival in Israel at the age of five. Its employment does not point to a preoccupation with the artist’s biography, but vice versa - to a kind of metaphorical ghost symbolizing for her the possibility of otherness to inhabit a familiar space and the possibility of melding real and fictional biographies.
This doubling is expressed in the way Bloch produces the subjects of her portraits, which are based on photographs from newspapers, other people’s family albums and the internet; she “harasses” these family photographs and “imports” them into her own world, in this way resuscitating unknown identities and making up other people’s emotional worlds. But even though she relates to the photographs’ characteristics by borrowing their compositions, she does not search for a realist context but rather dredges up the dark psychic situations that lie behind the photographed figures’ representational “poses.” mia.in.the.sky

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Use Yourself by Elitsa Ganeva

August 26, 2009

foxeto // foxe

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Ultrart / Invading the Vintage

August 14, 2009

Takahito Iguchi

Japanese Entrepreneur and Artist
TonchiDot CEO & Photographer

[ Planet of the blythe ]
No man’s planet of the Blythe dolls. It is very peaceful and lovely.

[ Ultrart ]
Ultraman + art = ultrart.

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Italian illustrator devoted to sci-fi.
Founder of Airstudio.

[ Invading The Vintage ]
Cute Aliens invading grandpa’s postcards.

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For the Love

August 10, 2009

Infectious times are about to come! 8oinks presents For the Love. An exclusive swine flu mask encrusted with 681 flawless diamonds - For the total illusion of safety. The mask has been spotted in the art collections of Steven Cohen, Leonard Lauder, David Geffen, Henry Kravis, Eli Broad, Ronald LauderPaul Allen and  Francois Pinault.

Read everything about it and secure your mask on forthelove.8oinks.com

Created by Shirin K. A. Winiger (view images on flickr)

—> Feel free to use The Head for your own version.

Creative support is highly appreciated! tag: for the love <—

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GBenard with Shirin’s Diamonds. For the Love.

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Shirin K. A. inspired by GBenards love.

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Patrick Jannin FoR The Evol

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The Raha For the Love.

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Solaris° For the Love.

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Shirin For the Love Bug

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Herr Schobel , For the love of…

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Zach Manchester For the Love.

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Solaris° For more Love.

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Zach Manchester For the Love.

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ssmidd God is my curator For the Love.

Zach For the HUGE Love (56x A4 poster of the skull and mask - Download pdf )
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incandescente boy we are not terrorists ¡!

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8oinks MashUp - July Review

August 3, 2009

We have travelled through collaborative artworlds during the last four weeks and are exhited to share the first pictures of our great reviewed shows. We thank the galleries for their generous support and are proud to present:

Rembrandt in one day at the Louvre in Paris

What is Collaboration at the MoMA in New York

Hair Family on Oink at the Tate Modern in London

Thanks to the visitors, who came from far away, to share these unique moments with us. Download our highlights in High Resolution via the link below each image, as a little gift in return :)

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Rembrandt in one day @ Louvre

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What is Collaboration @ MoMA

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Hair Family on Oink @ Tate Modern

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Peintre de l’absurde by Patrick Jannin

August 1, 2009

“J’aimerais vivre dans un film porno et mourir d’extase plusieurs fois par jour.”

Patrick Jannin’s website and flickr

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Dumbster SF by Matthew Palladino

August 1, 2009

Matthew Palladino is a 22 year old artist from San Francisco. Matthew’s a recent CCA student who dropped out and felt that he’d do alright by educating himself instead. Say hi to Matthew, enjoy his work and what he has to say. Read an Interview with the artist at Fecal Face.

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Make ‘em dance

July 26, 2009

8oinks is collaborating with Crashroots!
crashroots is an opensource music collaborative - crashing and mashing samples from around the globe. ’Make em dance’ is the title of our collaboration and our goal ;)
pick any song you like from Crashroots’ Releases and create a Mashup-Music-Video, using the endless sources of youtube. upload your video to the 8oinks blog (featuring the url’s you used and the name of the track) Tag: make em dance

Latincontra - Cachaopeople Videomashup by samim YouTube Preview Image

Babalao - 20Points Videomashup by shirin YouTube Preview Image

Latincontra - se me olvidio el delay Videomashup by shirin YouTube Preview Image

Latincontra - Pasito tun tun Videomashup by shirin YouTube Preview Image

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(Youtube sources)

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Basement Vodou by Shannon Taggart

July 26, 2009

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fox

hypnosis

library

jimmy

healing

leolyn

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maureen

mauro

garbageseattle_group

crowd

Shannon Taggart Photography

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C - Subway by Feroze K. Alam

July 20, 2009

“My work vacillates in between various different modes, some days I address extreme states of psychopathology other days politics, history or beauty. I don’t have a standard modus operandi, but rather address any subject that moves me; I paint my concerns.”

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Rembrandt in one day

July 12, 2009

Herman: I started to make Rembrandt copies, I call them Rembrandt in one day. i was inspired by the great idea of Beurs van Berlage in Amsterdam. they are showing digital copies of 317 Rembrandt paintings in original size, titled The Complete Rembrandt, Life Size.

i would like to start a collaboration and create more Rembrandt-inspired art.

Please give me some help!

Make your own copy of a Rembrandt painting - Draw, Paint, make a collage or a photo all contributions are welcome. but dont spend too much time, remember the title: Rembrandt in one day

tag: rembrandt in one day

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h e r m a n

cropped

Shirin

if you’d like to continue or mashup this painting, you can download it here:

rembrandt in one night (2) uncropped and in high resolution

 
icon for podpress  Podcast Video: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
 Serbé Databending Rembrandt in One Hour. S/He who discovers which Rembrandt’s painting is deconstructed in the clip will win a ‘price’ consisting of a 40-minutes version of the clip soundtrack.

superbrandt

Samim

I call this fun obscure piece, Superbrandt - adressing the quesstion “What if super mario was invented in Rembrandt´s times?

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GBenard

(Rembrandt in 3 mins)

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Tag teamed by Feroze and Ravinder.

Ganymede with a modified female slant.

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slouvre1

Rembrandt in one day at the Louvre! READ MORE

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Brancusi7 Feeding time with the Valkyries.

Rembrandt emailed me to stop ripping him off.


For inspiration, explore the links to these Rembrandt paintings:
(additional sources are appreciated, please post the url into the comments below)

1rembrandtGemŠldegalerie Alte Meister, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden380_rembrandt_r_ochse556f2e53f8

2007-10-02-rembrandt_toiletofbathsheluk1213-p-rich-fool-17-rembrandt-der-reiche-narrrembrandt-1rembrandt-3

rembrandtdissectionrembrandtdm2610_468x621badende-frauselvaxxde

rembrandt-lachendes-selbstbildnis-9701077rembrandtaltermannrembrandt01_grembrandt14-7587982

rembrandt062rembrandt_1669rembrandt_anatomie_3249rembrandt_bathseba_brief

rembrandt_emmaus-openrembrandt_emmaus-opwegrembrandt_emmaus-wegrembrandt_jewish_bride

rembrandt_maedchen_am_fenster_7123004rembrandt_philosopher_in_meditationrembrandt_tote_pfauen_mrembrandt_van_rijn_the_feast_of_belshazzar_c1635

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