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topics for forum: What's On
80 messages in 72 topics last message added 16 September 2008 4:46 AM GMT
What's on. A review of an arts events around the UK
creedable said: A tech art installation that travels the UK will be set up in Liverpool on 3rd May and will be accessible till 5th May.The installation is a large dome, surrounded with cameras, taking panoramic pictures of what's around the dome every minute. All the pictures get stored and can be accessed at any time either through the Internet, or from inside the dome, where they can be viewed on screens. The peculiar thing is how the screens show the photographs - they react on the viewer. The closer the viewer moves to the screen, the farther the capture memory recedes.Basically, you see what was on the other side of the screen, a few hours/days ago, depending on how close to the screen you stand.Here's a youtube vid that first caught my interest: [url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4WZdLGDtbA"]click{/url]
1 replies to this topic. (Last message: 28 April 2008 9:28 AM GMT)
lolly_pop said: An exhibition of work by Tristram Hillier (1905-1983) can be seen at the RA (14/3-25/6: Admission free). Born in Beijing, he moved to France in the late 1920s. Friendly with Braque, Ernst and Masson, Hillier also had links with the English Surrealists (via Paul Nash’s Unit One Group). Early Italian and Flemish masters were to also influence his output.
0 replies to this topic.
selina said: The Hotelier André Balazs, in partnership with the Design Museum and Tate Modern, brings to Britain a house designed by the architect Jean Prouvé (1901-84). This prototype, erected outside Tate Modern, is part of the Design Museum’s exhibition ‘Jean Prouvé – The Poetics of the Technical Object’ (05/02-13/04). Found in Brazzaville (Republic of the Congo) in 2000, this ‘flat pack’ house was dismantled, returned to France, and restored. All its component parts were designed to be lightweight and neatly fitted into a cargo plane for shipment. Intended for mass production, it was no cheaper than the local product and their industrial aesthetic did not appeal. This house exists both as a celebration of modernism and as a defunct bygone of the colonial era.
0 replies to this topic.
selina said: Extended Landscape (Tate St Ives, 26/01–11/05/08) is the first solo show at Tate St Ives of Cornish-born painter Margo Maeckelberghe (b 1932). Her expressive seascapes and landscapes identify her as a native painter, having owned a cottage and studio in Zennor since the 1960's. Maeckelberghe's paintings are a social and geological history of her native landscape in visual form.
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selina said: In Tate Britain (13/2 - 5/5) meet the Camden Town Group who introduced Post-Impressionism to Britain; inspired by the work of Van Gogh and Gauguin. A major theme in the work of Gore, Gilman, Bevan, Ginner and Sickert was life in our capital city. The CTG captured the mood of a transitional period in British social history. Camden Town being home to bigartspace, it's only fair we give lads a bit of press.
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selina said: ‘The Moment Art Changed Forever’ (Tate Modern 21/02 to 26/05: Entrance £11) exhibits the work of Duchamp, Man Ray and Picabia. This trio made a lasting impression on modern and contemporary art.  Duchamp invented the ‘readymade’, Man Ray pioneered new photographic and film techniques and Picabia’s use of kitsch and popular imagery challenged artistic conventions. At the heart of the Dada movement they questioned the nature of art and society as a whole.
0 replies to this topic.
selina said: ‘The Moment Art Changed Forever’ (Tate Modern 21/02 to 26/05: Entrance £11) exhibits the work of Duchamp, Man Ray and Picabia. This trio made a lasting impression on modern and contemporary art.  Duchamp invented the ‘readymade’, Man Ray pioneered new photographic and film techniques and Picabia’s use of kitsch and popular imagery challenged artistic conventions. At the heart of the Dada movement they questioned the nature of art and society as a whole.
0 replies to this topic.
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