portraitpainting

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Jean Michel Basquiat the Radiant Child

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Patrick Devreux Together

2007. Lithograph

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Marcel Duchamp interview on Art and Dada (1956)

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donotdestroy:

“They speak of poverty, yet their art finds its home among the wealthy.”

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donotdestroy:

“They speak of poverty, yet their art finds its home among the wealthy.”

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donotdestroy:

“They speak of poverty, yet their art finds its home among the wealthy.”

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Object-Oriented Ontology

Object-Oriented Ontology (OOO) isn’t an art movement originally, but a philosophical framework that’s had influence in contemporary art and theory.

Here’s the gist:

  • What it is: OOO is a branch of speculative realism, developed mainly by Graham HarmanLevi Bryant, and Ian Bogost in the early 2000s.
  • Core idea: Objects exist independently of human perception. A chair, a rock, a virus, or even a fictional character has its own reality that isn’t reducible to how humans experience or use it.
  • Why it matters for art: Traditional Western art has long been human-centered — even abstract or minimalist works are often framed around human meaning or perception. OOO pushes back against this “anthropocentrism.”
  • In art practice: Artists influenced by OOO often explore the agency of objects themselves, how materials interact with each other, or how nonhuman entities (machines, ecosystems, algorithms) shape reality. This can look “anti-human figure” because the focus shifts from people to things.

Examples in art influenced by OOO:

  • Installations where objects “confront” viewers as independent beings.
  • Works that emphasize materiality — like how steel, plastic, or digital code behaves on its own.
  • Ecological and post-humanist art that treats humans as just one actor among many.

So in a sense, OOO isn’t anti-human like Suprematism or Constructivism were, but it de-centers humans — making the human figure no longer the default subject of art.

By ChatGPT

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