‘Têtes-paysage‘ (Heads-landscape) (1928) by Francis Picabia.
Tag Archives: heads
Institute for Human Activities (IHA)
The Institute for Human Activities (IHA) asserts that even when art critically engages with global inequalities, it most often brings beauty, jobs, and opportunity to the places where such art is exhibited, discussed and sold – London, Venice, New York and Berlin. At its secret artist colony in the Congolese rainforest the IHA aims to make critique profitable in those places that provide artistic content, thus recalibrating art’s critical mandate.
In 2012, the IHA began ‘A Gentrification Program’ on a former Unilever plantation, 800 kilometers from Kinshasa, on a tributary of the Congo River. As Congolese plantation workers cannot live off plantation labour alone, they will now, with the help and support of the IHA, try to live off their artistic engagement with plantation labour. Two small self-portraits, cast in cocoa from a Congolese plantation, are now available for € 39,95.
Self Portrait by Djonga Bismar.
Self Portrait by Manenga Kibwila.
Unknown
Ottoman miniature from the Surname-i Vehbi (‘Book of Festival’, an album with illustrations depicting celebrations), showing the Column with the three serpent heads, in a celebration at the Hippodrome in 1582.
Matthew Day Jackson
‘Lower 48 – Texas’
‘Lower 48 – Oregon’
‘Lower 48 – Connecticut’
The series ‘The Lower 48’ (2006) by Matthew Day Jackson
Gerhard Richter
Gerhard Richter, ‘Two Sculptures for a Room by Palermo’ (1971)
Two plaster heads, painted with gray oil paint, one a self-portrait of Richter, the other a portrait of the German artist Blinky Palermo. The heads face each other across the room, with eyes closed as if each artist is actually looking inward.