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6 votes
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Faroe tunnel has opened up more than 150m below the Atlantic, boasting a six-mile-long art installation complete with its own spectral soundtrack picked up by car radio
10 votes -
The real history of Rule 34
8 votes -
What ecelebrity did to my brain
6 votes -
JINZO Paint — vintage mobile drawing app
8 votes -
Adastra: The best furry visual novel
15 votes -
The homemade limits of everyday weirdness
12 votes -
Velocipedia: Renderings of strangers' drawings of bikes
30 votes -
Moki Cherry blended work and life, embodying a free-spirited 1970s vision – daughter Neneh Cherry, and her granddaughter Naima Karlsson recall her life and work
5 votes -
Stephen Fry reads Nick Cave's stirring letter about ChatGPT and human creativity
33 votes -
This Lego artist builds masterpieces using all black bricks | Obsessed
15 votes -
George Carlin - Seven words you can't say on TV
12 votes -
Musical about tiny B.C. town returns to the stage... in Finland. Sointula chronicles the charismatic leader who founded the town and dreamed of building a socialist utopia.
9 votes -
Why restoring a Banksy mural in Venice is so controversial
15 votes -
Jeff Bezos Rowing Boat
24 votes -
Early computer art by Barbara Nessim (1984)
18 votes -
Meet Nightshade, the new tool allowing artists to ‘poison’ AI models with corrupted training data
56 votes -
In the depths of Hobart's Museum of Old and New Art, a volcano is stirring – Hrafntinna (Obsidian) is an immersive installation by Icelandic artist and musician Jónsi
9 votes -
How AI art reduces the world to stereotypes
33 votes -
Tomoya Ikeda — Macintosh artist
12 votes -
Kenichi Shinohara's pixel art Ukiyo-e (1987)
6 votes -
The great advantage of being alive
I desire more poetry on this site. So here is more poetry! I believe this is Cummings due to the style and some cursory internet searches but I was unable to find an authoritative source. If...
I desire more poetry on this site. So here is more poetry!
I believe this is Cummings due to the style and some cursory internet searches but I was unable to find an authoritative source. If anyone has one I'll edit it in! The formatting is taken from a book (I discovered this in a photo online).
the great advantage of being alive
(instead of undying)is not so much
that mind no more can disprove than prove
what heart may feel and soul may touch
--the great(my darling) happens to be
that love are in we,that love are in weand here is a secret they will never share
for whom create is less than have
or one times one than when times where--
that we are in love,that we are in love
with us they've nothing times nothing to do
(for love are in we am in i am in you)this world(as timorous itsters all
to call their cowardice quite agree)
shall never discover our touch and feel
--for love are in we are in love are in we;
for you are and i am and we are(above
and under all possible worlds)in lovea billion brains may coax undeath
from fancied fact and spaceful time--
no heart can leap,no soul can breathe
but by the sizeless truth of a dream
whose sleep is the sky and the earth and the sea.
For love are in you am in i are in we23 votes -
Any good art based podcast recommendations?
I'd love to add some more podcasts to my rotation tbat include artists. Possibly talking about stuff they've been working on, or talking about new media in the field they work in and discussing...
I'd love to add some more podcasts to my rotation tbat include artists. Possibly talking about stuff they've been working on, or talking about new media in the field they work in and discussing jt, or talking about old works or really anything.
Maybe podcasts with helpful advice or something?
I've listened to almost all of draftsmen. That was entertaining most of the time. It doesn't have be like that though.
Just curious if anyone have any good ones tk share.
6 votes -
Paul Gregory - Heavy Metal Painter
8 votes -
Gentileschi. Let us not allow sexual violence to define the artist
11 votes -
Pokemon x Van Gogh Museum exhibit opens today
14 votes -
Rubens & Women review – ‘Naked breasts moved him religiously’
4 votes -
Getty Images to debut its own AI image generator which will be trained on Getty’s own data
16 votes -
Award winning photojournalist James Nachtwey holds retrospective exhibition in Thailand
2 votes -
Danish artist who submitted empty frames as artwork told to repay funding
23 votes -
Danish artist Jens Haaning ordered to return €67,000 to a museum after he supplied it with two blank canvasses for a project he named "Take the Money and Run"
27 votes -
Art restoration fail
15 votes -
Germany wins Michigan’s first international fireworks competition
19 votes -
Ever Present, the National Gallery of Australia's behemoth exhibition of First Peoples art, resonates with Auckland audience
7 votes -
American Psycho: The musical that got chopped too soon
4 votes -
Businessman involved in fraudulent Alaska Native artwork scheme given longest sentence ever handed down to someone violating the Indian Arts and Crafts Act
12 votes -
Where can I see Hokusai's Great Wave today?
22 votes -
Winners: Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year
18 votes -
On this day nineteen years ago, Edvard Munch's 'The Scream' was stolen in broad daylight from an Oslo museum
14 votes -
Selected works of renowned Iranian painter, Mahmoud Farshchian
12 votes -
Artist collaborates with bees to create sculptural wax skulls
23 votes -
‘His name was Bélizaire’: Rare portrait of enslaved child arrives at the Met
21 votes -
Two short films about potters
These two videos about potters are lovely. They're long (well, 20 minutes and 30 minutes) so the people get a chance to speak. There's no jump cuts, no weird edits. You get to spend some time with...
These two videos about potters are lovely. They're long (well, 20 minutes and 30 minutes) so the people get a chance to speak. There's no jump cuts, no weird edits. You get to spend some time with these quiet, reserved, people as they go about their craft.
Everything in Batterham's studio is covered in clay. Including, sadly, probably his lungs by the sound of him.
Anne Mette Hjortshøj - Paying honest attention
"Danish potter, Anne Mette Hjortshøj lives and works on the small island of Bornholm, situated in the Baltic Sea. ...
Our documentary gives a gentle and revealing insight into one of Denmark's leading potters. It follows Hjortshøj's daily life; collecting clay from the local beach for her glazes, throwing and making pots in her studio, and talking about the firing of her two chamber wood-fired salt kiln and its role in producing the decorative aspects of her work. We learn of her influences both within and outside of the Danish potting tradition and the inspiration she takes from the nature of the island.
Her pots are characterised by a quiet dignity, entirely in tune with her surroundings and with the greatest respect for both beauty and function."
Richard Batterham - Independent Potter
A 30-minute documentary about one of the UK's finest potters. ...
Batterham's domestic stoneware is highly collectible - but made for everyday use. Here he shares his philosophy and demonstrates his art, from mixing the clay to glazing the finished item and much in-between. Batterham died on 8th September 2021(I tried to tag this with Anne Mette Hjortshøj's name but tags didn't like the unicode.)
10 votes -
Staring into the sun
9 votes -
ArtSEA: Seattle’s waterfront makeover brings new art to Alaskan Way
7 votes -
French photographer Romain Veillon is making it his mission to capture in pictures the potential result of a planet without people
10 votes -
Interview with artist Danielle Clough about her vibrant embroidery
9 votes -
American theater is imploding before our eyes
39 votes -
IATSE holds strike authorization vote for theater workers on the pink contract
8 votes -
Known for photographs showing hundreds of naked people posing in a wide variety of environments, US artist Spencer Tunick has gathered thousands to pose naked in Finland
16 votes