[photospace]
Drawings from Out of Order Video - Work in Progress
Out of Order - Exhibition Invite Image
Eduardo Chillida
Dorothy Cross Interviewed by Young Model
They ask her "Are you a crazy animal killer ?"
Claes Oldenburg Talk from 1976
Out of Order - Video Trailer for Upcoming Show
Philip Glass Music and Animation for Sesame Street
Anish Kapoor at the Grand Palais
Daniel Bejar
Daniel Bejar, The Visual Topography of a Generation Gap, brass keys, adhesive, 2006
The artist explains:
A copy was made from my original apartment key, then a copy was made from that copy. This process was repeated until the original keys information was destroyed.
Utility Fog is a hypothetical collection of tiny robots, envisioned by Dr. John Storrs Hall while he was thinking about a nanotechnological replacement for car seatbelts. The robots would be microscopic, with extending arms reaching in several different directions, and could perform lattice reconfiguration. Grabbers at the ends of the arms would allow the robots (or foglets) to mechanically link to one another and share both information and energy, enabling them to act as a continuous substance with mechanical and optical properties that could be varied over a wide range. Each foglet would have substantial computing power, and would be able to communicate with its neighbors.
More info here
Jeremy Clapin
The Anonima Group
Francis Hewitt, Generation of the Tesseract, ballpoint pen on Paper, 1961
The American artist collaborative, Anonima Group, was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 1960 by Ernst Benkert, Francis Hewitt and Ed Mieczkowski. Propelled by their rejection of the cult of the individual ego and automatic style of the Abstract Expressionists, the artists worked collaboratively on grid-based, spatially fluctuating drawings and paintings that were precise investigations of the scientific phenomena and psychology of optical perception.
More info and images here: http://anonimagroup.org
Chris Burden - Metropolis II
Tony Smith Mini-Documentary
Playlist of Artist's Talks on Youtube
Here is a youtube playlist which I have compiled of artist's talks. Below is a talk by Ann Hamilton featured in the playlist.
Dorothy Cross - Ossicle
Robert Irwin
Robert Irwin, at 80, thinks we are only at the half-way point of modernism. He also talks more generally about his work in this video.
Michelle Allard
Michelle Allard, Pile I, 2009, cardboard, gluestick
More here