Odd Nerdrum's artwork bewilders many and offends some, but his influence on the world of mainstream art is hard to overstate.
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The 15 famous artists of Dadaism who revolutionized the definition of art, with their iconic Dada artworks, efforts, and successes
© Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti J.J.Rousseau © Lorenzo Mattotti J.J.Rousseau © Lorenzo Mattotti J.J.Rousseau © Lorenzo Mattotti Casanova © Lorenzo Mattotti Casanova © Lorenzo Mattotti Casanova © Lorenzo Mattotti Sigmund Freud. Racconti analitici © Einaudi - Lorenzo Mattotti Sigmund Freud. Racconti analitici © Einaudi - Lorenzo Mattotti Sigmund Freud. Racconti analitici © Einaudi - Lorenzo Mattotti © Lorenzo Mattotti / The Raven, Le corbeau, El cuervo © Lorenzo Mattotti / The Raven, Le corbeau, El cuervo © Lorenzo Mattotti / The Raven, Le corbeau, El cuervo © Lorenzo Mattotti / The Raven, Le corbeau, El cuervo Squadro Edizioni Grafiche: serigrafie formato 46x66 centimetri tirate in 100 esemplari Squadro Edizioni Grafiche: serigrafie formato 46x66 centimetri tirate in 100 esemplari Squadro Edizioni Grafiche: serigrafie formato 46x66 centimetri tirate in 100 esemplari © Lorenzo Mattotti / Internazionale 2009 © Lorenzo Mattotti / Internazionale 2008 Nathalie Djurberg © Domus 2010 (November) Wim Wenders © Domus 2010 (October) Peter Cook © Domus 2010 (September) Riccardo Dalisi © Domus 2010 (July-August) Andrea Zittel © Domus 2010 (June) Kazuyo Sejima© Domus 2010 (May) Freud © Domus 2010 (April) Odile Decq © Domus 2010 (March) Jean Nouvel © Domus 2010 (February) Tomás Maldonado © Domus 2010 (January)
Combining poetry, music, theatre, film, and mechanics, the six-part exhibition Rebecca Horn. Théâtre des métamorphoses at Centre Pompidou-Metz presents the bodily extensions, chimeras, and surrealistic automatons of artist Rebecca Horn (born in 1944).
Let me start this post by quoting from the Walt Disney Treasures/ On the Front Lines DVD set: On December 8, 1941, the Disney Studio was taken over by the Military as part of the war effort. Making the most of the talent that hadn't shipped out yet, Walt Disney spent the next four years creating and producing training, propaganda and educational films for the Armed Forces. The following sketches by Milt Kahl were obviously done during that time. They show caricatures of servicemen and perhaps studio personal. These sheets also look like character designs for possible propaganda shorts. And yet to my knowledge these characters were never animated. A few of the images remind me of Brom Bones, but that character wouldn't appear on screen until 1949 in "Ichabod and Mr. Toad", and certainly not in military uniform. This is fascinating stuff, all sheets have pin holes, so they were part of a presentation. There is so much appeal in these drawings, but then again it was Milt who redefined appeal for Disney. The full figure sketches just floor me, what beautiful rhythm going through the poses. If anybody has any doubt whether or not these are Milt's, just read the note on the third page regarding Ollie Johnston, upper left corner. This is the work of someone who confessed that he didn't particularly care to draw, but didn't mind. Oh, common Milt….. -
Practicing some profiles.
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Moods vary. But art lasts. LadyKflo loves Pinterest mood boards and all social media #mood posts. It’s like an unfurled secret, finding out how you feel. Even if just for a moment, a mood matters. Here are those moments – captured with art. Welcome to LadyKflo's curated Mood Museum.