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The Four Stages of Cruelty
February 22, 2010The Four Stages of Cruelty is a series of four printed engravings published by English artist William Hogarth in 1751. Each print depicts a different stage in the life of the fictional Tom Nero. (Read More)
First stage of cruelty (Plate I)
Second stage of cruelty (Plate II)
Cruelty in perfection (Plate III)
The reward of cruelty (Plate IV)
Find more etchings by William Hogarth on gutenberg.org
Let him laugh now, who never laugh’d before;
And he who always laugh’d, laugh now the more.
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Vivace / Doloroso
February 22, 2010From the Something Else Yearbook 1974 (via)
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Zbrodnia i Kara / Crime and Punishment
February 11, 2010Piotr Dumała: Zbrodnia i Kara/Crime and Punishment 2000, 30min
Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Viddler video.also take a look at Piotr Dumała’s Franz Krafka 1991, 16min;
and Woslnosc Nogi/Freedom of a Leg 1988, 10min (more)
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PAPERS 制作:Yoshinao Satoh
February 10, 2010Posted in blog, video | No Comments »
Pssst…The End by Buck
February 5, 2010Posted in blog, video | No Comments »
The Darker Side of Light
February 4, 2010The Darker Side of Light: Arts of Privacy, 1850–1900 at the Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, February 11 – June 13, 2010
The Darker Side of Light reveals the private worlds of late nineteenth-century Europe through prints and other works meant for quiet contemplation. The exhibition presents over one hundred prints, drawings, illustrated books, and small sculptures by artists such as Félix Bracquemond, James Ensor, Max Klinger, Käthe Kollwitz, James McNeill Whistler, Charles Meryon, and Anders Zorn, among others. The Darker Side of Light evokes shadowed interiors and private introspections to tell a far less familiar story of late nineteenth-century art. (read more)
Download selected images in High Resolution at smartmuseum.edu

Max Klinger, Abduction, 1881

Albert Besnard, Morphine Addicts, 1887

Eugène Carrière, Sleep, 1897

Käthe Kollwitz, Woman with a Dead Child, 1903

Félix Bracquemond, The Moles, 1854

Odilon Redon, This Is the Devil from Temptation of Saint Anthony, 1888
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Bathyllus taking the pose by Aubrey Beardsley
February 1, 2010Aubrey Vincent Beardsley 1872 – 1898, was an English illustrator and author. His drawings are characterized by an erotic nature, and his most erotic illustrations are those found in the Lysistrata; Beardsley drew these for a privately printed edition.
Beardsley later converted to Catholicism, and would subsequently beg his publisher to destroy all copies of Lysistrata and bad drawings…by all that is holy all obscene drawings.
The Yellow Book, an illustrated quarterly 1894
The Yellow Book was the brain-child of Beardsley even down to its title. Novels by the French decadent writer were often issued in yellow wrappers; the most important of the novels was J.K. Huysmans’ A Rebours, 1883. Beardsley proposed a new illustrated quarterly dedicated to modern literature and art because many brilliant story painters and picture writers cannot get their best stuff accepted in the conventional magazines, either because they are not topical, or perhaps a little risquÇ. The Yellow Book published some of the best authors and artists of the Nineties, often causing scandals to the conservative public. (via)
Read all 13 volumes of the yellow book online or download via wikipedia
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The Floating World by Judith Supine
January 30, 2010Posted in blog | No Comments »
skin and bones
January 30, 2010Posted in blog | No Comments »
Divine Mother of Guilt by Eric White
January 29, 2010Eric White: The idea that there are things that exist beyond our perception is fascinating to me. It is something that I think about a lot, and it is not necessarily clear in most of my paintings, but I think it’s the foundation of pretty much all of it.
Read an interview with the artist on fecal face,
and have a look at Eric White’s Eclecticism: Virtue or Defect?
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The Day Nobody Died
January 29, 2010we make money not art wrote a great review about Manipulating Reality, at CCCS.
This exhibition explored the way photographic images and videos represent reality as much as they can construct and betray it. One of its section was dedicated entirely to the treatment of images in the context of war.
Artists Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin followed the British army in Afghanistan as embedded photo reporters in June 2008. (Read More)
What Broomberg and Chanarin seek to demonstrate with this paradoxical work of “anti-documentation” is that their images are equivalent in terms of truth content to the photographs of embedded reporters approved by military censorship. Their abstract painting of light bears witness to the reality of the conflict in the same almost paradoxical way as the work of the war photographers, which in any case does not present the truth. (Read More)
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Siphoning Dreams
January 29, 2010Free Download Album from Two Ton Sloth (Brad Hamers: Raps + Big Pauper: Beats). The album’s consists of 13 tracks. There is also a visual accompaniment to the album for download that includes artwork, photos, and lyrics for each track. (via ugsmag)
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petite monnaie
January 29, 2010Posted in blog | 1 Comment »
The Bird by David Shrigley
January 29, 2010Posted in blog, video | No Comments »
Qiu Zhijie, On Writing Names with Light
January 28, 2010Qiu Zhijie is a Chinese contemporary artist and works with a diverse range of media including photography, video, calligraphy, painting, installation and performance, and combines writing and curatorial practice with his artistic explorations. (via)
For the first time, I used light to write the names of everybody related to me. In the following nights, I did the same thing. Writing always became more difficult later in the night, and also more evocative and sentimental, especially when I wrote the names of those who have died, who live at the other end of the world, or whom I might never meet again . (read more)
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Stock off by Daniel K Sparkes
January 28, 2010Daniel K Sparkes Illustrations, paintings and photographs (via)
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Un instant de repos
January 28, 2010engravings by Fredillo, 19th century (via)
also take a look at: Le Roman de Violette
First published in Bruxelles by Augustin Brancart in 1870 [c.1883] as “Le Roman de Violette”. A later edition was published, c.1883, probably by Kistemaeckers, with 6 engravings by Fredillo. The English translation was published, possibly by Mlle. Doucé, in 1891 as “The Romance of Violette”.
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one for the road by Poster Boy
January 25, 2010Posted in blog | No Comments »
they come in threes by Shannon Keller
January 25, 2010Posted in blog | No Comments »
Friends by Ashley Reaks
January 24, 2010Ashley Reaks: it seemed a good idea when i started it…
see also: Reasons to Live, Rasons to Die by Ashley Reaks
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Cloud of Dust on Dunes
January 23, 2010Beautiful new photos from the HiRISE Camera - Picture Of Sand Dunes on Mars.
(read more) Make sure to watch in High Res.

see also: Mars: a collection of over 1,500
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come away to lala land with me
January 22, 2010Posted in blog | No Comments »
Distractions by Collin van der Sluijs
January 22, 2010Illustrations and paintings by Collin van der Sluijs more works on flickr
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Muzorama
January 20, 2010Posted in blog, video | No Comments »
The Meaning of Life
January 20, 2010Don Hertzfeldt’s 2005 animated epic; this short took approximately four years to create.
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Miumachi by Sofia Ajram
January 20, 2010Sofia Ajram: relax, turn around and take my hand. (via)
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Paperworks by Simon Schubert
January 18, 2010Simon Schubert is a German artist and sculptor.
take a look at his Art With Folded Paper. (via)
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HAM (jamón)
January 18, 2010Animated short film, traditional hand drawn, directed by Nico Di Mattia 2009 (via)
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Notes to a friend by William Schaff
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