
Institute for New Feeling, ‘Seek’ (2015)
a private session using the internet to tell your future.
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged America, design, esotherica, feelings, fuckem, fun, future, installation, Institute for New Feeling, liquidity, modernity, new age, optimism, participation, performance, predict, progress, prophecy, purity, relative, romance, seek, spiritualism, surface, technology, treatment, unknown, USA, water, white, world
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Tonio de Roover, ‘Rack II’ (2013)
By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged architecture, barrier, connected, decoration, design, divide, function, gold, grid, hanging, installation, mesh, mirror, netherlands, openings, pattern, rack, regularity, rotterdam, sculpture, silver, space, steel, structure, tonio de roover, tubes, unknown
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Art & Language, ‘Secret painting’ (1967-1968)
By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged action, Art & Language, artist, black, blank, character, closed, collaboration, content, description, dimension, diptych, DIY, empty, fuckem, invisible, light, mel ramsden, painting, secret, square, text, unknown, void
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Evan Roth, ‘Slide to unlock’ (2013)
By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged american, digital, DIY, enlargement, Evan Roth, finger, fingerprint, fuckem, fun, identity, individual, iphone, mural, muur, painting, paris, person, portrait, self, selfie, single, slide, smartphone, technology, touch, unknown, unlock, wall
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‘Reclining Buddha’ (1994) by Nam June Paik.
By sk
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged Buddha, found, korea, laserdisc, media, naked, Nam June Paik, nude, pioneer, reclining, samsung, sony, statue, television, TV, woman, zen
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Martin Boyce, ‘Broken branches and flyovers’ (2007)
By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged DIY, foam, found, grid, installation, martin boyce, mattress, modernist, organic, sculpture, steel, stiff, structural, structure, wall
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‘Constellation (for Netmares)’ (2009) by Kari Altmann.
Recording of a day’s worth of clicks on a screen.


‘Objects of Desire’ (2005-2008) by Michael Kargl (aka Carlos Katastrofsky).
A numbered but unsigned set of sentences, which disappears from the screen as soon as the next set is automatically displayed, allows the visitor to become the owner of a unique work of art, but only as long as he or she keeps it in mind.
By sk
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged Art, Carlos Katastrofsky, computer, desire, forget, keep, Michael Kargl, mind, number, object, script
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