Search This Blog
Popular Posts
-
Here's the story: an artist is fascinated by falling . He takes pictures of himself falling off different things: ladders, trees, buildi...
-
He's been around for a while. In 2002, for instance, he made the world a better place by putting flags on high-tension electricity lines...
-
The Tea Bag garden is a landscape made of stacked bags of garden soil. The bags, padded like a bench, are essentially soft plant containers...
-
If you want to know what Tim Crouch's An Oak Tree is about, and what it is like, first read his own description . You can also read the...
-
Truly great art has the strange effect of making us, the spectators, feel intelligent. - António Damasio , director of the department of neu...
-
Exactitudes (= exact attitudes), by photographer Ari Versluis and stylist Ellie Uyttenbroek, is an exercise in style (or rather was, from ...
-
This house which is almost gone. Which still has the lines and weight of a house, yet could very well be called landscape. This house which ...
-
Just so you don't think I'm ignoring you - check out some great projects by Marc Kremers : As found , a site with images found on th...
-
In a comment in the Portuguese daily newspaper Público , my colleague Tiago Bartolomeu Costa commented on a controversial artistic residency...
-
Brick of Coke is part of the Experience the Experience project by Monochrom ( from the site : monochrom is an art-technology-philosophy gr...
Thursday, 18 February 2010
Visit
Published :
06:18
Author :
ekkii
Two pictures from the Visit series (2007/8) by Filip Berendt.
The idea is so simple and to the point that it is irritating. Berendt put an ad in a newspaper saying he wants to make installations in people's homes out of the things he finds there and take pictures of them. Some people answered. He went to their homes, and, well, did what he said he would do.
The series won him the Sittcomm award last year.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
My Other Blogs
Archive
-
▼
2010
(453)
-
▼
February
(31)
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934
- Reclining Deco lady
- The afterthought experience
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - Fatally short-sighted (...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - Automatic cleaning cham...
- The End Is Never Nigh (A few sentences that never ...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - The Muse
- Life Magazine, 1927, She Didn't Have a Leg To Stan...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - A Well Deserved Reward
- More Gentle Uncertainty
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - A True Story
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934
- Another childish question inspired by a beautiful ...
- Visit
- Vogue, Bon Voyage
- The Landscape Is You
- Dreaming the book
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - Benjamin Rabier, Monkey...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - Modesty
- Gorgeous Deco Valentine Postcard
- The unwearable jewel
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - A Curious Distraction
- Audience
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - 57
- T. ENAMI in NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE -- Septem...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - Ridgewell, At an antiqu...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - The beginnings of a dip...
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - Useless excuses
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934
- Almanaque Bertrand, 1934 - The aeroplane in farming
-
▼
February
(31)
0 comments:
Post a Comment