Artists Tim Noble and Sue Webster have taken piles of trash and turned them into interesting abstract artworks depicting people or animals. The piece above is called White Trash (With Gulls), it is comprised of six month's worth of trash and two dead sea gulls. The image portrayed is a self portrait of the artists relaxing with a glass of wine.
Link Via YesButNoButYes
"The Trash Heap tells all!"
"Let's face it boys; the Trash Heap is all."
//I'm making a homage of crushed diet coke cans that makes a shadow spelling out DUPLICATE.
Actually, I think I would have remembered something as offensive as two dead sea gulls being presented as "art".
Contemplate this: If this goes on the road, do they need fresh seagull corpses?
Example: This puzzle is composed of 100 pieces. Therefore, the puzzle comprises 100 pieces.
The darker side of these I'm smart pop showboating errors is that a certain critical mass of misuse forces dictionaries to redefine the misused word to include the misuse, hardly a desirable engine of language "evolution."
if i did the same thing using KFC buckets, Colt45 cans and watermelon rinds to "Artize" a "Vision" about urban crime, it would be slobberingly praised art at as well?
You took the words right out of my mouth! T.O. Stinks! On the "White Trash", totally unnecessary title. The name obscures any point they were trying to make.
~Xtina
p.s. I am white.
Go to the link below and read the usage notes. This is what happens in the course of languages. If it didn't we would still be saying "Wherefore art thou on thy soapbox?".
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/comprised