
Barbara Bloom, ‘Ghost of Vanitas Still Life’ (1994)
BB had a deep affinity for Dutch “Golden Age” painting, a result perhaps of her many years in Amsterdam, but more pertinently of a shared love of the material world. These were painters fascinated by framing: not only in the form of coy devices like the pulled-back drape at the edge of the canvas, but in the literal depiction of framed pictures within their pictures. (We know the artists whose paintings Vermeer owned because he showed them so often in his own paintings.) In David Bailly’s picture, things and pictures are arrayed across the surface of his canvas. Whatever his allegorical intentions, Bailly’s concern with the observable world, in all its idiosyncratic particulars, has trumped conventional narrative. BB’s peekaboo mounting only exacerbates Bailly’s pre-occupation with distracting surfaces and the limpid connections of thoughts and things.
By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged american, Barbara Bloom, canvas, collection, David Bailly, describe, device, DIY, dutch, fragment, frames, framing, ghost writer, gray, grey, intervention, material, mount, narrative, netherlands, painting, romance, still life, things, thoughts, vanitas, windows
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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.”

By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged Abstraction, action, american, background, baffle, ball, black, british, camouflage, chelsea arts club, collection, costumes, dazzle, disappearance, DIY, found, fuckem, fun, geometric, invisibility, invisible, jazz, london, painting, public art, public space, razzle, razzle dazzle, royal albert hall, shapes, ships, unknown, white, world war
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By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged architecture, babushka, collection, DIY, elements, fuckem, german, in, industrial, Martin Kippenberger, material, non-function, particle board, scale, sculpture, stack, the wild, trash, unknown, untitled, wood
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Ahmet Ögüt, ‘My Spy Desk’ (2011)
installation with Spy Cam Glasses, Spy Cam Watch, Spy Cam Pen, Spy Cam Lighter, Spy Cam Car Key, Spy Cam Car Key Chain, Spy Cam MP3 Player, Spy Cam Flashlight, Spy Cam Calculator, Spy Cam ID Card, Spy Cam Cap, Spy Cam Lighter and Spy Cam Clock
By dd
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged Ahmet Ö?üt, calculator, cap, car key, clock, desk, fake form, gadget, glasses, installation, lighter, mp3 player, pen, record, secretly, show, sneak, spy cam, Turkey, waiting, watch
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Boo Ritson, ‘Godfather’ (2006)
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged boo ritson, DIY, eyes, face, fuckem, fun, gloss, godfather, man, mask, paint, performance, photograph, portrait, romance, shine, the wild, trash, unknown
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‘Elisabeth in folds’ (1245-2011) by Klaus Weber
Original cast from medieval sculpture, covered with blankets.
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged appropriation, blankets, classical, coverup, elisabeth, folds, installation, klaus weber, medieval, romance, sculpture, statue, unknown
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Amanda Ross-Ho, ‘Paintings to disguise a set of architectural elements’ (2011
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged Amanda Ross-Ho, architecture, blank, collection, disappear, disguise, elements, installation, light, measurements, painting, size, unknown, wall, white
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Michael Coombs, ‘Abandoned’ (2001)
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged abandoned, collection, disguise, empty, furniture, ghosts, house, installation, linen, michael coombs, move, romance, sculpture, sheets, unknown
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