Single Ladies (via beyonce)
performing, visual, digital
arts
(images are links)
performingvisualdigital@gmail.com
New media artist Shane Mecklenburger is auctioning Wealth on eBay. A signed archival certificate of ownership will be delivered to the auction winner. The document will certify singular possession of all forms of wealth, in their entirety. Bidding begins on October 1, and ends October 10.
Wealth Auctioned on eBay
ManInTheDark
I would say this is pretty cool… but then again I basically do it everyday anyway.
At least one Lehman Brothers employee had enough of a sense of humor to buy “The Annotated Fuld,” named after Lehman Chairman Richard Fuld, from Mr. Raymond off the street for $10,000.
The Local: The Annotated Geoffrey Raymond | The New York Observer
Seeking Emerging Artists & Collectors for Interviews
I am seeking emerging artists and collectors who have displayed/sold/purchased artwork online, whether through social networks like Saatchi Online or print shops like 20x200. The interviews will be used in an academic thesis on new systems of marketing and distribution being made available to artists and collectors through the internet.
Please reblog this/contact me at performingvisualdigital@gmail.com if you’re feeling charitable.
Pasta&Vinegar » Blog Archive » Spectrum range and human activities
This colorful diagram depicts the allocations of frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum in the US.
waiting_lotus.gif (2008) - P. Doyle
Rhizome
Because of the job, and the access to countless medicine cabinets, I could finally do portraits of people without the need for a literal figure.
Coke Wisdom O’Neal: 20x200 : Close Call
A painting has always had an excellent chance to be viewed by one person or by a few. The simultaneous contemplation of paintings by a large public, such as developed in the nineteenth century, is an early symptom of the crisis of painting, a crisis which was by no means occasioned exclusively by photography but rather in a relatively independent manner by the appeal of art works to the masses.
Walter Benjamin



