Art

2695 items found

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Happy Birthday Nina Simone (February 21, 1933 – April 21, 2003)

“Once
I understood Bach’s music, I wanted to be a concert pianist. Bach made
me dedicate my life to music, and it was that teacher who introduced me
to his world.” 

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The Death of Sardanapalus by Eugène Delacroix

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“It is not enough to know your craft – you have to have feeling. Science is all very well, but for us imagination is worth far more.”

The Dead Bullfighter
1864-1865, oil on canvas
76 × 153.3 cm (29.9 × 60.4 in)
by Édouard Manet

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In fall 1977, Sherman began making pictures that would eventually become her groundbreaking “Untitled Film Stills.” Over three years, the series grew to comprise a total of seventy black-and-white photographs. Taken as a whole, the “Untitled Film Stills”—resembling publicity pictures made on movie sets—read like an encyclopedic roster of stereotypical female roles inspired by 1950s and 1960s Hollywood, film noir, B movies, and European art-house films. But while the characters and scenarios may seem familiar, Sherman’s “Stills” are entirely fictitious; they represent clichés (career girl, bombshell, girl on the run, vamp, housewife, and so on) that are deeply embedded in the cultural imagination. While the pictures can be appreciated individually, much of their significance comes in the endless variation of identities from one photograph to the next. As a group they explore the complexity of representation in a world saturated with images, and refer to the cultural filter of images (moving and still) through which we see the world.

Untitled Film Stills, 1977 by Cindy Sherman

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“I don’t know where I’m going from here, but I promise it won’t be boring.”

A photograph of David Bowie by Gavin Evans

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This type of painting is called a ‘vanitas’, after the biblical quotation from the Old Testament book of Ecclesiastes (1:2): ‘Vanitas vanitatum… et omnia vanitas’, translated ‘Vanity of vanities, all is vanity’. The books symbolise human knowledge, the musical instruments (a recorder, part of a shawm, a lute) the pleasures of the senses. The Japanese sword and the shell, both collectors’ rarities, symbolise wealth. The chronometer and expiring lamp allude to the transience and frailty of human life. All are dominated by the skull, the symbol of death.

Still Life: An Allegory of the Vanities of Human Life (about 1640) by Harmen Steenwyck

R.I.P. John Berger / Ways of Seeing , Episode 1 (1972)

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‘The Cuckoo and the Nightingale’ – E Power Biggs, Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra

CBS, date and designer unknown,

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“I don’t want life to imitate art. I want life to be art.”

R.I.P. Carrie Frances Fisher (October 21, 1956 – December 27, 2016)

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We live in an age where the artist is forgotten. He is a researcher. I see myself that way.

— David Hockney

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by Natee Utarit

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 Greatest Art Movie Ever “Art of the Steal” (2009)