Tag Archives: found


Noor Nuyten

A Handful of Skyline Noor Nuyten

Noor Nuyten, ‘A handful of skyline’


Chelsea Arts Club

Chelseaartsclub-Dazzle_camouflage_costume_ball

From the Chelsea Art Club’s 1919 Dazzle Ball. Yvonne Gregory by Bertram Park

On March 12, 1919, the Chelsea Arts Club held a costume party, called a Dazzle Ball, at Royal Albert Hall in London. It was inspired by the abstract geometric shapes on camouflaged ships in World War I , a method that was first employed by the British, who called it “dazzle painting” or dazzle camouflage. When the Americans adopted a comparable method, they referred to it by other names, among them “baffle painting,” “jazz painting,” and (rarely) “razzle dazzle.”

IMG_9395


David Lamelas

David Lamelas_Senalamiento de tres objetos (Signaling of three objects), 1968-1

David Lamelas_Senalamiento de tres objetos (Signaling of three objects), 1968-2

David Lamelas_Senalamiento de tres objetos (Signaling of three objects), 1968-3

David Lamelas, ‘Senalamiento de tres objetos (Signaling of three objects)’ (1968)


Pierre Huyghe

pierre-huyghe-influenced

The instructions for Pierre Huyghe‘s ‘Influenced’ (2011)


E.J. Pace

A Fundamentalist cartoon portraying Modernism as the descent from Christianity to atheism, first published in 1922 and then used in Seven Questions in Dispute by William Jennings Bryan

‘The descent of the Modernists’ (1922) by E.J. Pace.

A Fundamentalist Christian cartoon portraying Modernism as the descent from Christianity to atheism, first published in 1922 and then used in the book ‘Seven Questions in Dispute’ by William Jennings Bryan.


Fred Wilson

Fred Wilson, Guarded View, 1991

Fred Wilson, ‘Guarded View’ (1991)

Four mannequins with museum guard uniforms.


Kevin Yates

Kevin Yates, Usher the Fall of the House, 2013

Kevin Yates, ‘Usher the Fall of the House’ (2013)


Wiebke Grösch & Frank Metzger

Wiebke Groesch_Frank Metzger, Untitled, 2014, Fig leaves

Wiebke Grösch & Frank Metzger, Untitled (2014)

Fig leaves.


Christiane Löhr

christianeloehr-Zwei kleine Kuppeln two little domes, 2009 plant stalks, grass stalks

Christiane Löhr, ‘Zwei kleine Kuppeln (two little domes)’ (2009)

Plant stalks, grass stalks.


Matt Dunham

Matt Dunham

Bankers in London’s City enjoy the sun, reflected by the surrounding buildings’ glass façades.

Photograph by Matt Dunham