Chaos Cookies

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Food & Drink on August 31, 2010 at 8:40 am

Emmylou Cakehead and the band The Futureheads collaborated on a tasty art installation unveiled at the charity exhibit Cake Britain (“The world’s first entirely edible art exhibition“) last weekend in London. The piece consists of the lyrics to The Futureheads song “The Chaos” spelled out in vanilla cookies! Cakehead, the cookie bakers, and the band spent a total of 200 hours on the artwork, which was consumed by patrons in a quite a bit less time. Their efforts raised thousands of dollars for St. Oswald’s house, a hospice in the band’s hometown of Newcastle. See more pictures of the cookies and the consumption at Cakehead Loves Evil. Link

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



Movie Icons

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Film on August 24, 2010 at 7:48 pm

Deviant Art member Joep Gerrits created 100 simplified but clever renderings of movie characters from 68 classic films. Can you name them? See all 100 and a list of movies at the gallery. Link -via Gorilla Mask

 
Email This Post 



Math Art

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Neatorama Exclusives on August 18, 2010 at 6:23 am

For many of us, the first time we appreciated the art of math was when we played with a Spirograph. However, it’s a long way from addition and subtraction to epicycloids, and very few of us actually study math that far. But those who do sometimes end up creating some very beautiful artworks based on mathematics and geometry.

Sculpture


Sculptor Bathsheba Grossman creates metal and crystal artworks of forms found in math, physics, biology, and astronomy. Grossmen shows us Borromean rings, hypercubes, gyroids, fractals, Calabi-Yau spaces, and interlaced sculptures based on the five Platonic solids. I particularly like this Voronoi network wrapped onto a Möbius toroid, sculpted in white glass.

Grossman created this beautiful lamp from one of her Ora series sculptures. Available in several lamp styles from Materialise.

Jewelry


The Julia set is a fractal equation that produces a series of rather pleasing spirals. Designer Marc Newson took that fractal shape and designed a necklace of 2,000 diamonds and sapphires that took jewelry craftsmen 1,500 hours to put together. Note that the necklace is not symmetrical, but still has a sense of balance. See how the jeweler, Boucheron, advertises the necklace.

Drawing


Probably the best known artist to use math concepts in his works is M.C. Escher. Many of his 2-dimensional drawings turned 3-dimensional geometry on its head. The lithograph titled Waterfall illustrates the concept of the Penrose triangle, also called the impossible triangle. Escher also explored tessellations in many of his drawings.

Computer Imaging


Paul Nylander was one of the developers of the Mandelbulb that we saw in a previous math post. He is a computer engineer and an artist who renders math and science concepts into colorful images including animated .gifs to help us visualize their 3- or 4-dimensional structures. Shown is a Dodeca-Spidroball, a variation on the spidron, which was invented by Daniel Erdely in 1979.

Belgian mechanical engineer Jos Leys renders and animates all kinds of math concepts into beautiful forms that boggle the mind. His artworks include fractals, Kleinian groups, inversive geometry, recursions, tessellations, knots, and tilings in both images and video renderings to show 3- and 4-dimensional effects. The image above is called Indra200, an example of “Kleinian jewelry“.

Other artists rendering math images worth checking out include Torolf Sauermann, Brian Johnston, Mehrdad Garousi, and the late Titia Van Beugen.

Video


(YouTube link)

Creating visual representations of math concepts became easier with computer rendering software and digital video capabilities. That doesn’t mean it is simple. Homporgo, the artist who created this video of a Mandelbox zoom said in a comment:

Believe me Bill, I wanted to go further too, but at the end part a single frame took 18 minutes to render, and the whole 1:27 minute video needed 12 days nonstop rendering. I felt thats more than enough at the time.

Twelve days! The result looks worth it to me. How about you? See more fractals on video in this post.

Previously at Neatorama: A Non-Math Look at Math Objects and A Non-Math Look at Math Shapes.

 
Email This Post 



Iron Maiden’s “Eddie” Heralded

Posted by Johnny Cat in Art, Music on August 17, 2010 at 8:09 pm

Illustration: Derek Riggs

Gunaxin has a comprehensive roundup of all things Eddie, the long-standing mascot of Britain’s heavy metal kings, Iron Maiden. About the only thing missing is this illustration of the song “2 Minutes to Midnight.” Check out all aspects of Rock n’ Roll’s most recognized character, but beware… he’s a scary figure.

Link – via Digg

 
Email This Post 



Patterns for Colouring

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Baby & Kids on August 16, 2010 at 8:58 am

If you or your children are tired of supermarket coloring books and their generic designs, or if you yourself like to doodle with color, try something a little more interesting. Illustrator Carlton Hibbert has a collection of artistic patterns that you can download, print, and color. Quite a few artists and illustrators have contributed to the collection, and all patterns are licensed under Creative Commons, which means you can use them freely. Link

 
Email This Post 



Computer Controlled Fountain

Posted by Johnny Cat in Travel, Video Clips on July 23, 2010 at 3:51 pm

(YouTube Link)

Located in a Japanese mall called Canal City, this fountain is programmed immaculately to “paint” the air with falling water.

Canal City (Wiki)  via Bits and Pieces

 
Email This Post 



Unlimited Urban Woods Pavilion

Posted by Miss Cellania in Architecture, Art on July 22, 2010 at 7:44 am

One tree + four mirrors = an entire forest! Step into a small booth and experience an infinite number of trees. This installation by DUS Architects was shown to folks in Oosterdokskade, Amsterdam last month. Link -via Metafilter

(Image credits: Pieter Kers)

 
Email This Post 



Jell-O Mold Competition

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Food & Drink on July 12, 2010 at 5:34 am

I love the motto on the poster for this year’s Jell-O Mold Competition from the Gowanus Studio Space: “Keep Calm and Wobble On.” The 2010 winners have been selected! The grand prize was awarded to sculptor Shelly Sabel for her creation Aspic Ascension–Tastes Like Heaven. See all the winners at the contest site. Link -via Nag on the Lake

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



Chicago’s New Eye Sculpture

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art on July 9, 2010 at 10:32 am

The work of art is called dimply, “Eye.” The sculptor is Tony Tasset, who modeled it on his own eye. Folks in Chicago get to see this 30-foot-tall eyeball until the end of October. Watch it being built in a video at Laughing Squid. Link

 
Email This Post 



Roger Ebert Eats his Words

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Toys on July 1, 2010 at 10:09 am

When film critic Roger Ebert declared that video games can never be art, he set off an internet firestorm.

At this moment, 4,547 comments have rained down upon me for that blog entry. I’m informed by Wayne Hepner, who turned them into a text file: “It’s more than Anna Karenina, David Copperfield and The Brothers Karamazov.” I would rather have reread all three than vet that thread. Still, they were a good set of comments for the most part. Perhaps 300 supported my position. The rest were united in opposition.

Today he reversed his position. NeatoGeek has more. Link

(Image credit: Taylor Evans)

 
Email This Post 



Claire Hardman

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art on June 30, 2010 at 8:47 am

Have you been to the Neatorama Art Blog lately? Our latest addition to the gallery is Claire Hardman, an artist and sheep grazier from Australia. She works in several media, paint, clay, textiles, even computer graphics. Hardman also climbs rocks, flies remote control helicopters, and is learning Klingon! This is one of her gargoyle egg cups; see more whimsical works at the Art Blog. Link

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



Monster Scroll

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art on June 29, 2010 at 4:29 pm

The Bakemono Zukushi scroll was painted in Japan sometime in the 18-19th centuries by an unknown artist. There are 24 legendary Japanese monsters depicted on the scroll. Pink Tentacle has scans of them, including the Rokurokubi (a long-necked woman) and the Inugami (dog spirit) shown here. Link

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



Yekpare

Posted by The Nag in Art, History, Travel on June 28, 2010 at 4:14 am

(Vimeo link)

This is the 8500 year history of Istanbul projected onto the beautiful Haydarpasa Train Station.


The connection between middle east to west has been provided by Istanbul and Haydarpasa since 1906. In the 50’s it served as a door for millions of internal emigrants who have triggered the chaos in Istanbul’s dialectical daily life scenes.The project’s conceptual, political and geographical positioning, the location’s depth of field and the fact that the entire show can be watched from Kadiköy coast; make “Yekpare” a dramatic presentation.

Art Direction & Visuals:
Deniz Kader – Candas Sisman

Music & Sound Design:
Görkem Sen

Project Management:
Erdem Dilbaz

Via Notcot

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



Finding Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks

Posted by The Nag in Architecture, Art on June 18, 2010 at 4:16 pm

Many of us are familiar with American artist Edward Hopper’s evocative painting of folks hanging out at a diner in New York City. It has been speculated that the location of this cafe is Multry Square. Jeremiah Moss seeks to solve the mystery of Hopper’s diner.

The gas station turns up in photos as late as 1940. Nighthawks is dated 1942. So perhaps the gas station was demolished and replaced with a diner in 1941. The city’s taxmen photographed the corner again in 1980. In that photo, there is still no diner and no remnants of it, though the Esso station buildings were still standing there, graffitied and abandoned beneath a painted advertisement for London’s Hard Rock Cafe.

Link - Via Violins and Starships

 
Email This Post 



Ghostsigns

Posted by The Nag in Advertising, Art, History on June 17, 2010 at 3:50 pm

Advertisements painted by hand directly onto the brickwork of buildings were once a common sight in cities, towns and villages across the country. The rise of printed billboards soon led to their decline but many still survive, often faded, clinging to the walls that host them. These ‘Ghostsigns’ provide a window into the past and evidence of the craftsmanship that once went into their production. However, they are disappearing fast, often due to weathering but also as a result of property development and demolition.

This U.K. archive originated by Sam Roberts features 600 signs showcasing old time products hand painted by craftsmen. They don’t make them like that any more.

Link – via Londonist

 
Email This Post 



Crayola Monologues

Posted by The Nag in Art on June 15, 2010 at 12:55 pm

(You Tube link)
And you thought crayons were just for making pretty pictures! Nathan Gibbs will set you straight.

Crayola Monologues (2003) uses the crayon as a human metaphor for exploring color and identity in the United States. This animated video features crayons expressing how color hierarchies have shaped their lives. These crayons live in a world much like our own, complete with prejudice, class boundaries, social hierarchies and those who fall between the lines. Crayola Monologues also reveals the politics behind Crayola label changes, and gives a voice to the previously unheard perspective of crayons.

 

Link - Via Box Vox
 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



Poster Boy: The War of Art

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Book & Literature on June 15, 2010 at 7:55 am

Poster Boy is the pseudonym of a New York City street artist who converts advertising into something completely different by combining elements into collages.

“His cut and slash mash-ups of subway platform billboards only exist in New York City, but Poster Boy’s artful and funny appropriations of advertising have gotten him attention the world over. The New York Times dubbed him an “anti-consumerist Zorro with a razor blade, a sense of humor and a talent for collage”; the Guardian UK said of his work, it “is witty, web-savvy and economical…and the only materials it requires are chutzpah, imagination and a 50 cent blade.”

A new book featuring Poster Boy’s works called Poster Boy: The War of Art will be published next month. Neatorama has a preview with a sampling of the art today at the Spotlight blog. Link

 
Email This Post 



This Week at Neatorama

Posted by Miss Cellania in Neatorama Exclusives on June 12, 2010 at 6:02 am

We didn’t plan it that way, but this past week turned out to be “Art Week” at Neatorama.

We welcomed The Nag to Neatorama, as in Marilyn Bellamy, who many of you know as the Nag on the Lake. Since we spent years finding neat links on her site, she has now taken on duties as our newest contributing author!

You Call That Art? listed some strange art projects that go way beyond painting and sculpting and even macrame, from Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader.

From mental_floss, we did The MacGyver Fact-Check, to see the 80s TV hero pull some of his most outlandish stunts and find out how plausible they are in the real world.

Bill Zeman of Tiny Art Director guest posted at NeatoBambino in At the Met with the Tiny Art Director. We had a contest, too- congratulations to commenter Maceo24, who won a custom original Zeman artwork (which you can see here) and and to Wendy, CheeseThief, TheRhube, and nepomuk who all won copies of Zeman’s book.

Have you been to the Neatorama Art Blog lately? We are adding new artists to the gallery all the time. Just this week, we posted works by mixed media artist Jason LaFerrera, printmaker Mark Hosford, and cut paper artist Lorraine Nam.

In more art news, the four-year run for The Vader Project is coming to a close. The decorated Darth Vader helmets will be auctioned off this summer, but you can see some of The 100 Helmets of THE VADER PROJECT at the Spotlight Blog.

At NeatoGeek, John posted a collection of his favorite Geek Love Songs in video form. Then many of you suggested lots more songs in the comments! Oh yeah, NeatoGeek also featured a lot of fan art this week.

Individual prize winners from the Quiz Play Day promotion were announced. Even though Boing Boing won the friendly blog competition by raising the most money for charity, the Grand Prize winning player is a Neatorama reader! Vanessa won an iPad from Neatorama and will appear on the Game Show Network to talk about her favorite charity.

You’re invited to join in the fun at our Facebook page and keep up with even more neat links with our Twitter feed!

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



You Call That Art?

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Bathroom Reader on June 7, 2010 at 4:32 am

The following is an article from Uncle John’s Triumphant 20th Anniversary Bathroom Reader.

If you were to see some of the tacky stuff that adorns the walls here at the BRI, you may not think we are qualified to comment on what anyone else considers art. Well, we say: if dogs can play poker, anything is possible.

(Image credit: Kathy Keatley Garvey/UC Davis photo)

Artist: Rebecca O’Flaherty, the Monet of Maggots

This is Art? When making her paintings, O’Flaherty kind of cheats-she lets the maggots do the work for her. An entomology doctoral student at the University of California at Davis, O’Flaherty is fascinated with the larvae of flies. She dips the maggots in nontoxic paint, then lets them writhe around on the canvas (a piece of white copier paper). Result: unique trails of color and form. O’Flaherty displays her maggot paintings at gallery exhibits and even holds maggot-art workshops for kids. She also teaches forensic officers how to collect maggots at a crime scene for evidence and uses the maggot art as an “icebreaker” to get them used to dealing with the squirmy creatures.

Artist statement: “The activity usually begins with some measure of skepticism or disdain, but the maggots are quick to win over the critics.”

Artist: Jessica May, the Rembrandt of Roadkill

This is Art? May, a 24-year-old graduate art student at Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville, decided that the roadkill lying on the roadside in and around her Midwestern town needed a little sprucing up. So she dressed dead raccoons in baby clothes, put nail polish on the claws of dead possums, and gave a deer carcass a coat of gold spray paint. May wears gloves when she works on her art, because when she finds the animals, they’re “pretty far gone”.

Artist statement: “I think of this as my way of paying homage to these animals.”

(Image credit: Herald Sun)

Artist: Colin Douglas Barnett, the Picasso of Publicity

This is Art? Frustrated that his art wasn’t getting the attention he thought it deserved, Burnett, 46, decided to scare up some publicity in Melbourne, Australia. In October 2005, he sculpted a vase out of clay and put it on the sidewalk in front of the National Gallery of Victoria. Labeling it “The Peace Bomb”, he called police and reported a suspicious package outside of the building. The gallery was evacuated, the surrounding roads closed, and the bomb squad was called in. Burnett received the press he was looking for, but it came in the form of news stories reporting his arrest. The artist was ordered to pay for the police investigation and sentenced to three months in jail.

Artist statement: “I’m totally embarrassed.”

Artist: Wenda Gu, the Kandinsky of Coiffure

This is Art? The Chinese artist was commissioned by Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, to create two installations on their campus. First project: “The Green House,” an 80-foot banner made from 420 pounds of human hair. All that hair came from Hanover barbershops, who collected the clippings from 42,000 haircuts and shipped it to Wenda’s Shanghai studio, where his workers dyed it bright colors. Wenda then wove the strands together, creating the colorful banner that now hangs in the college library. Second project: “United Nations, United Colors,” a seven-and-a-half-mile-long braid (begun in 1993) made from leftover hair donated by wig factories in China and India.

Artist statement: “The banner is a comment on education and capitalism, an the braid represents a utopian vision of unity among nations.” (Image credit: Kawakahi Amina)

Artist: Ian Thorley, the Degas of Doormats

This is Art? In October 2006, Thorley, a British performance artist, received a £1,600 grant ($3,176) from the Wansbeck and Blyth Valley town councils for his weeklong art project “Utilitarian Utopia.” The project: Thorley wore a badge that said “Government Doormat tester” and stood on a doormat in the middle of a sidewalk for a week. The councils were widely criticized for spending taxpayer money on the art. But they defended their actions, saying that Thorley “provides viewers with a thought-provoking experience.”

Artist statement: “It’s about drawing attention to, and invoking some sense of, the absurdity of existence and the things that we do.”

____________________

The article above was reprinted with permission from Uncle John’s Triumphant 20th Anniversary Bathroom Reader.

Proving that some things do get better with age, the 20th annivesary Bathroom Reader is jam-packed with 600 pages of fascinating trivia, forgotten history, strange lawsuits and other neat articles.

Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.

If you like Neatorama, you’ll love the Bathroom Reader Institute’s books – go ahead and check ‘em out!

 
Email This Post 



Michelangelo’s Secret Message

Posted by marcmywords in Art on June 1, 2010 at 8:06 pm

Two experts in neuroanatomy are convinced that Michelangelo’s depiction of God in the Sistine Chapel contains a secret message found in the bumps on the Almighty’s neck: a map of the human brain (meant to represent human intelligence). It seems to me that an expert in vegetables would see a bell pepper, and an expert in clouds would see a cumulonimbus, but their argument is nothing if not exhaustive.

There are plenty of other easter eggs hidden in masterpieces, so maybe it’s true.

Link via 3QuarksDaily

 
Email This Post 



Riding Bombs

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Pictures on May 31, 2010 at 10:47 am

When most of us think of someone riding a bomb, the image of Slim Pickens in the movie Dr. Strangelove comes up. But he was far from the first character to do so, as you’ll see in this collection of photographs and art at Oobject. Link -via Jason Kottke

 
Email This Post 



Bi-King

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art on May 28, 2010 at 11:34 am

Korean designer SungKug Kim made this bicycle and a couple of others which incorporate the shapes of antlers and horns and named the art project Bi-King. Link | Artist’s site -via Chris Tackett

 
Email This Post 



Now That’s Penmanship!

Posted by Queuebot in Art, Book & Literature, Pictures on May 26, 2010 at 11:38 pm

Google Books has full text available of a wonderfully beautiful collection of scans from 16th, 17th, and 18th century works displaying the amazing penmanship of those centuries. The flourishes are amazing, bringing to mind a time when writing was an art.

From Penmanship of the XVI, XVII and XVIIIth Century by Lewis. F. Day:

The book begins with some examples of the various Chancery hands, and these are followed by specimens of Old English, German, Roman, and other more or less formal types of penmanship. The rather restrained running hands come next, followed, in their turn, by writing characterized by more or less heavy blobs of ink at the end of the letters. The current hands in which flourishes are predominant, bring to an end the examples chosen simply as writing.

Link – via ministryoftype

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by nmiller.

 
Email This Post 



Guide to Pac-Man Ghosts

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Toys on May 26, 2010 at 10:43 am

Martin Refsal created this whimsical artwork in honor of Pac-Man’s 30th anniversary. This will make it easier to recognize a Pac-Man ghost when you see one! Link -via Holy Kaw!

 
Email This Post 



New York City Sculpture turns Weather into Art

Posted by Queuebot in Art on May 23, 2010 at 5:54 am

Artist Erik Guzman has just installed a very cool art concept in New York City’s World Financial Plaza. The installation is a concoction of “moving gears and flashing lights” that is constantly changing based on weather data. As the weather changes, the art responds, changing in its own interpretive way, creating neat designs and patterns.

But how? This weather data is received via radio waves, which then get turned into visual representations of spring breezes, winter winds, and we’re guessing that lovely NYC summer humidity (warm garbage smell not included).

Link

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by nmiller.

 
Email This Post 



Weird and Wonderful Objects From The First Ripleys

Posted by Queuebot in Travel on May 22, 2010 at 3:01 am

Robert Ripley traveled the world in search for the odd and unique. He broke the mold in worldwide travel, venturing out of America during the 19th century. His rare collections and interesting letters are still available today for us to ponder. Believe It or Not!

The gem castle was made in Italy and contains over 2000 semi precious stones including jade, agate, rose quartz, tiger’s eye, and malachite. The castle was once owned by the founder of Ethan Allen, Nat Ancell. It had been lost for years until it turned up in an old Ethan Allen warehouse in 1994.

Link

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by lannaxe96.

 
Comments Off
Email This Post 



The Divine Dali Drama

Posted by Jill Harness in Art, History, Neatorama Exclusives on May 21, 2010 at 4:07 am

This month’s birthday article is a little belated because I had some personal projects I had to take care of, but Salvador Dali is a May baby and his creations just make him too great to pass up, even if his birthday was back on the 11. So without further ado, I bring you a brief history of Dali and his infinite weirdness in celebration of his much belated birthday.

The Reincarnated Salvador Dali?

The Dali we all recognize was actually the third Salvador Dali in his family. His father also had the name and his parents had another son that was also named Salvador, but he died nine months before Dali was born. For this reason, Dali’s parents always believed that he was the reincarnation of his brother, a belief the artist also held throughout his life. In many of his writings, he claimed that he felt deep stress from the pressures of living as both himself and his dead brother.

Humble, But Flashy Beginnings

Dali’s family was decidedly middle class and his mother was incredibly supportive of his work…until she died when he was only 16. The next year, he moved to the student housing at an arts school in Madrid and he immediately started to stand out through his eccentric methods of dress. The young student enjoyed wearing knee breeches with sideburns and long hair, similar to something Oscar Wilde would have worn forty years earlier.

While he made friends with a number of students at the school, he was not an ideal student and was expelled shortly before he completed his courses after he refused to be tested by anyone in the faculty, saying, “I am very sorry, but I am infinitely more intelligent than these three professors, and I therefore refuse to be examined by them.”

It wasn’t long after this that his unique painting style, which seamlessly blended classic influences like Raphael with modern avant garde styles like those of Joan Miro, started to garner him quite a bit of attention in the art community. Not to be outdone by his own artwork, Dali promptly started to grow his trademark moustache, which was influenced by the seventeenth-century painter Diego Velazquez.

His Wife Was a Bit of a Groupie

When Dali met his future wife, Gala, in 1929, she was already married to a prominent French poet. She soon left this artist for Dali, who was ten years her junior, but after their 1934 marriage, she continued to have many other affairs with young artists and even a rockstar in the 70s –all with Dali’s permission of course. While Dali was said to have a terrible fear of the female genitalia (part of the reason he was so accepting of her affairs was because he preferred to watch, but not partake in the activities), he was still unquestionably in love with Gala all the way up until his death. “Without Gala,” he said, “Divine Dalí would be insane.”

When To Make An Apology…And When Not To

Dali was a prominent player in the surrealist movement, but many of the surrealists actually disliked him. This was for a number of reasons, but one of the biggest issues was the fact that surrealists did not believe that anyone should ever apologize for their art.

To some extent, Dali did agree with this sentiment and when his father demanded an apology for a painting the young artist made that bore the words “Sometimes, I spit with pleasure on my mother’s portrait.” While it seems unlikely that Dali actually even meant it about his own mother because he adored her, he still refused to tell his father he was sorry, which resulted in his being thrown out of his childhood home, written out of his father’s will and being threatened by his pop that he should never step foot in Cadaquès again.

When Dali and Gala caused a serious scandal in America, shortly after his work was introduced into the country, though, he quickly changed his tune. The incident in question involved the couple showing up to a masquerade party in New York dressed as the Lindbergh baby and his kidnapper. After facing great outrage on the part of the American press, he apologized, but he only ended up facing more outrage from the surrealist group he was a member of when he returned home. Of course, they were furious about the apology, not the act.

Political Abstinence

Around this same time, the majority of surrealists began to lean to leftist politics, but Dali further incensed them by always maintaining an ambiguous position on the matters. Dali disagreed with the idea that surrealism should involve politics and at the same time that he refused to support fascism, he also refused to denounce it. Eventually he was subject to a mock trial in his surrealist group and was expelled largely for his absence of political beliefs.

His politics didn’t just bother the surrealists. Dali moved to France at the outbreak of war and only moved back after World War II ended. George Orwell denounced him for this, stating, “When the European War approaches he has one preoccupation only: how to find a place which has good cookery and from which he can make a quick bolt if danger comes too near.”

All About The Benjamins


Another major problem the surrealists had with Dali was his apparent willingness to sell his soul for money. As some started referring to him in the past tense, although he was dead, others preferred the nickname “Avida Dollars,” which is more than just an anagram for his name, it also sounds the same as avide à dollar, which can be translated as “eager for dollars.”

More Surreal Than The Surreal

Dali is famous for quipping, “the only difference between me and the surrealists is that I am a surrealist,” but perhaps even that was a bit of an understatement, as he developed many of his best known works by connecting with his subconscious not through drugs, but through sleep manipulation. He claims he would sit in a chair with a metal spoon in his hand, directly above a metal pan. When he started to fall into deep sleep, he would drop the spoon, the clang of the spoon hitting the pan would wake him up. Perhaps this method is what he used to create his most enduring surrealist works, the lobster telephone and the Mae West Lips Sofa.

Deeper Meanings of Dali


The surreal nature of his works should never be taken as a sign that Dali’s work was without meaning though. In fact, Dali was a huge fan of Freud and believed in a much deeper meaning of dreams, which is widely demonstrated in his artwork. Here are a few interesting symbolisms to look for next time you enjoy some of his artworks:

Image via Kaneda99 [Flickr]

His Portfolio is Massive


Throughout his life, Dali painted over 1,500 works. This number is on top of the many illustrations, lithographs, theater sets, costumes, drawings, photographs, sculptures, films, holographs, and other works he helped to create. He loved to experiment with new mediums and even stepped into the world of high fashion, designing a few outfits for Elsa Schiaparelli and Christian Dior. He also created the rainbow-colored Chupa Chups logo.

Even more amazing is the fact that his portfolio only recently expanded to include his completed Disney animation, Destino. While he started it with Walt in 1946, the pair soon found themselves out of money for the project. It was instead completed in 2003 by Roy Disney and Baker Bloodworth.

That wasn’t his only film contribution though. He also worked on the famous surreal art piece Un Chien Andalou, worked on a dream sequence for Hitchcock’s Spellbound, and narrated about a search for magic mushrooms in Impressions of Upper Mongolia.

Image via pecaenrique [Flickr]

Dedicating A Museum to Himself

As a matter of fact, Dali was one of only a few artists to actually play an active role in the museum dedicated to his works. His Theater and Museum in Figueres goes beyond showcasing his paintings, it is in its own way, another work of his. It’s hardly surprising that a self-obsessed creator like Dali would make a museum for himself, after all, he was famous for once saying, “every morning upon awakening, I experience a supreme pleasure: that of being Salvador Dalí.”

He started working on the building in 1960 and he continued adding to it all the way through the mid-80’s.These days, it houses the largest collection of his works, followed by the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida. The most interesting place for his work to be displayed though was the Rikers Island jail in New York. Dali donated a crucifixion drawing to the warden and it was hung in the dining room for years before officials decided to move it into the lobby so it could be kept safe. Humorously, after spending 16 years in a jail dining room, the painting wasn’t lost or damaged until it was moved to the lobby, where it was stolen in 2003. It is still missing to this day.

The Death of an Immortal

When Dali went on 60 Minutes in the 70’s, he told Mike Wallace that, “Dalí is immortal and will not die.” Unfortunately, like all self-proclaimed immortals, he was wrong. In 1980, his health started to fade and when Gala started dosing him with unprescribed medicine, it only made things worse as her drug cocktail damaged his nervous system.

In 1982, Gala passed away and this made Dali’s health fade away even faster as he lost his will to live. He started dehydrating himself and a few years later a fire broke out in his bedroom. Both acts may have been accidents or he may have been trying to commit suicide, no one knows for sure. After the fire though, he started living in his museum until the end of his life.

In 1989, Dali died of a heart failure, shortly after King Juan Carlos visited him on his deathbed and confessed his lifelong adoration of Dali’s works. Dali quickly sketched a drawing for the king and it turned out to be the last artwork ever done by the artist.

I love Dali, so I was really excited to write this article, but I must admit, he was a bit of a freak. There is so much information about him, particularly his crazy stunts, that I couldn’t even begin to describe them all here. So, instead I leave them to you. What are your favorite Dali tales?

Sources: Wikipedia #1, #2, Artcyclopedia, Smithsonian Magazine, BBC News, Salvador Dali Museum, and Neatorama

 
Email This Post 



Banksy Work Removed to Gallery

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Crime & Law on May 17, 2010 at 3:56 am

An incident in Detroit raises several questions about street art. Renowned British graffiti artist Banksy visited a crumbling factory in the city and painted a wall.

Discovered last weekend, the stenciled work shows a forlorn boy holding a can of red paint next to the words “I remember when all this was trees.” But by Tuesday, artists from the 555 Nonprofit Gallery and Studios, a feisty grassroots group, had excavated the 7-by-8-foot, 1,500-pound cinder block wall with a masonry saw and forklift and moved the piece to their grounds near the foot of the Ambassador Bridge in southwest Detroit.

The move — a guerilla act on top of Banksy’s initial guerilla act — has sparked an intense debate about the nature of graffiti art, including complicated questions of meaning, legality, value and ownership. Some say the work should be protected and preserved at all costs. Others say that no one had a right to move it — and that the power and meaning of graffiti art is so intrinsic to its location that to relocate it is to kill it.

The gallery defends its action by pointing out that the artwork would have been destroyed soon along with the building. Others respond that Banksy may have intended for that to happen. And then there’s the fact that the context gave the painting it meaning in the first place. One could say that while Banksy broke laws against trespassing and vandalism, the gallery is guilty of theft. The property owner hasn’t said anything about it yet. No one yet knows who, if anyone, stands to profit from the incident. Link -via Metafilter

(Image source: Banksy)

 
Email This Post 



Awesome Biomechanical Mic Stand

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art, Gadgets, Hacks & Mods on April 29, 2010 at 11:31 am

Adam Gontier, lead singer of the band Three Days Grace, commissioned artist Chris Conte to make him a microphone stand. What he got is something straight out of The Terminator! Link -via The Daily What

(image credit: Dennis Blachut)

 
Email This Post 



Epic Thriller

Posted by Miss Cellania in Art on April 28, 2010 at 9:20 am

Artist Kelly Coats created a phenakistiscope that follows the life of Michael Jackson. Spin the wheel and see him change. It looks like this:

Link -via Dangerous Minds

 
Email This Post 




Don't Miss: New Stuff | Bestsellers | The Cute Store
                   Funny T-Shirts

Need a gift? Get unforgettable gifts for:
Geeks | Pranksters | Kids | Hipsters | Shutterbugs

Lijit Search

Old school? Bookmark us! RSS Feed Twitter Facebook Page