Tricia Rumbolz, 370 Colored Rectangles 370 Rectangles, 2011. Courtesy of Las Manos Gallery. (via artlog)
Tricia Rumbolz, 370 Colored Rectangles 370 Rectangles, 2011. Courtesy of Las Manos Gallery. (via artlog)
I can’t figure out where I first found this Georgia O’Keeffe on the internet. But in looking for it (again), I did find this, instead: Stieglitz And O’Keeffe: Their Love And Life In Letters.
This is lovely. I hope you find it (and share it)!
Jocelyne Grivaud recreates Barbie as famous works of art. (via photojojo:Beautiful Decay)
Holy stickers!!
Check out this amazing installation for the Queensland Gallery of Modern Art by artist Yayoi Kusama. She gathered used furniture, recreated a typical Australian home all in white and then gave kids tons and tons of stickers to cover it in colorful polka dots over the course of two weeks. The show runs through March 11, 2012.
LOVE this!
For exactly one week of his life Evan Bross tediously kept track of what he consumed. (via thingsorganizedneatly)
Oooh. Creative brushes & tools by CuldeSac. (via morganlevine:danceabletragedy)
Louisa and her Goats by Louisa’s Dad! (via icelandicbutterflies:artbywhit)
Anne Trubek on how Twitter works as a new literary form (Associative, not narrative. Helps resist the curse of paragraphism.):
Twitter may have some odd analogy to a compositor’s stick. Compositors would select type and put letters in their stick, upside down and backwards, before laying them on a galley. The average length of the type in a stick before laying down (or “publishing”) is not too far from 140 characters.
Twitter as a letterpress dream? I can attest that 140 characters is a pretty press-friendly number. We just need some of those old school fonts to revive and make an “@” sign.
It’s true. Maps as Art | Print by Best Made Company (via npr:condenasttraveler)