9 Burst results for "Marcel Duchamp"

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on CoinDesk Podcast Network

CoinDesk Podcast Network

02:22 min | 3 months ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on CoinDesk Podcast Network

"I think it's always wise to be mindful of that as well and to say, look, there have been critics of from the dawn of time, people that have said and challenged us to those critics. You go back no further than thinking about Marcel Duchamp and the idea that what is art? What is found art? Can I put a toilet on a wall and call it art? Why not? Who gets to decide? These are questions we've asked, I think, and they're important, critical questions we've asked for generations. But the idea now that we're somehow going to put that all in the hands of anons on the internet necessarily. I don't love that. I don't love that. It's not like we're doing so well. I don't really see that happening. What I suppose I mean by there'll be new forms of power and new forms. There will be arbiters of taste. They always will arise. I think the most interesting thing is though that the existing arbiters of taste are going to be dislodged. And that there is this new mechanism by which fans have an engagement. Will they get to dictate it? And do we want them to? Are there other questions altogether? I do think that ultimately, yeah, we skew towards these sort of monopoly dominant kind of models. That's what kind of capitalism does, whether we like it or not. All right, listen, we could go on, always fun. And this is a really important topic. And I'm just so pleased that we were able to set aside the ongoing, really increasingly boring issue of regulation. I it think must be boring for everybody who's not doing this. Yeah. And it's just, maybe it's not, but it is just getting, it's just hitting your head against a brick wall. We're talking about this stuff right now. Anyway, look, hopefully this was of interest to everybody. Thank you very much for listening. I certainly want to dig more deeply into NFTs and culture change. I think there's a lot to be said about this and clearly from the news flow, there is a lot happening. So we'll certainly get more guests on to talk about it. I think that'd be fun. Thank you, Sheila. Thank you very much everybody for listening. Reminder that you can listen to us weekly on the Coindesk Podcast Network or wherever you get your podcasts and that we would love to hear from you. So if you feel like weighing in on this topic or anything else we're talking about here on Money Reimagined, please email us at podcasts at coindesk .com subject line Money Reimagined. Alrighty, that's it for now. Bye -bye.

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Slowdown

The Slowdown

04:44 min | 5 months ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Slowdown

"The festival acts were generally not rehearsed. But the tech check allowed a glimpse into what to expect. I tried not to get too curious. I preferred the surprise. One act featured a group of exquisitely dressed women in 1960s mod fashion. Polka dots, white gloves, handbags, and big shades. Who pretending to stand in a life size kennel. Simultaneously barked like canines. Followed by the couple who recreated cabaret Voltaire in Zürich, where Dada was founded. To simulate time travel, they stretch sheets of plastic cling wrap across the stage. And back lit and low light. Saying, slow down versions of old school hip hop at a piano. With a large candelabra. Then, here was my favorite. An art student made a grainy black and white film of herself kissing a man to the live accompaniment of an accordion. The film was shown on a real to real projector. About three minutes into making out, a guy came down from the audience risers, picked up the projector, smashed it on the stage, then ran out the theater. The audience erupted into cheers and clapped loudly. The best part of the act was not planned. We learned it was her very jealous boyfriend, dramatically fleeing. Dada are isn't for everyone. Frequently, viewers whisper. I don't get it. Many won't abide by works of art that fame complexity, but can seem merely pretentious. I love at the Philadelphia Museum of Art to witness people's first encounter with Marcel Duchamp's fountain. That iconic 1917 piece in modern art. It can be dumbfounding. Angering even. To engage the conceptual nature of a urinal turned upside down and signed a fake name. Our mat. It's tempting to believe that art should be about something. Not a representation of the void. The mystery. And yet, the value of such work is the unexpected drift of thought the work takes us. Even if we do not fully understand, I like to think of poems as a means to experience sound and language which deepens my appreciation for human expression. Even if on the surface, it's meaning is elusive. Contemporary art and poetry encourage uncertainty and the spirit of inquiry. If we are willing to let go of our frustration, abandoning the quest for meaning can be its own spiritual reward. Today's extraordinary poem constructs a fascinating and dreamy space where images sharpen into an immense and profound notion of the land. And human interdependence. The half finished heaven by tamaz Trent stroma translated by Robert bly. Cowardice breaks off on its path. Anguish breaks off on its path. The vulture breaks off in its flight. The eager light runs into the open. Even the ghosts take a drink. In our paintings, see the air. Red beast of the ice age studios. Everything starts to look around. We go out in the sun by hundreds. Every person is a half open door leading to a room for everyone. The endless field under us. Water glitters between the trees. The Lake

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

04:03 min | 5 months ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Where have all the mortgage companies gone with all the here today gone tomorrow companies out there. It's important to use seasoned mortgage experts with years of experience. Use the company I personally use for my mortgage needs. I've used them and I can tell you andro del Rey and Todd akin that Sierra Pacific mortgage make the process enjoyable. Yes, they're Friends of mine. Yes, they're Christians. Yes, they're conservatives and no, they're not woke keys, but they make it enjoyable. They have fun with you. They ask you the important questions. I don't waste your time. I've used them for mortgage stuff and you should too. Go to Andrew and Todd dot com. They've been in the mortgage business for decades and they're more than problem solvers. Their solution providers. Many of the clients they help require special solutions to their tough loan challenges. I had a whole bunch of nonsense. They had to start out and they've been fabulous. They're really great and they were there for me. They text you back instantaneously. They love finding loan solutions for people who are self employed. First time homebuyers, real estate investors, or people with credit challenges. And if you're considering a reverse mortgage, they can help answer all your questions. If you or someone you know is having a mortgage challenge, let them help. Go to Andrew and Todd dot com. Tell them Charlie Kirk sent you. In fact, they would love to hear that. They are good friends. We have dinner often. I think the world of them, they've helped me personally. So check it out. No more woke banks, they hate you. Don't take out a mortgage from a company that hates you. Go somewhere that wants to do business with you. Andrew and Todd dot com are called triple-A triple-A to let 1172. I only tell you to use them because I've used them. If you're young, you want to buy a home, first time homeowner. It's good to start building equity. Look, I'm not telling you what's going to happen, but it looks like the housing market might be surging up a little bit. Go to Andrew and Todd dot com, that's Andrew Todd dot com called triple-A triple 8 1172, Andrew and Todd dot com. So Heather, I have a theory, and I could be wrong. I would like your take on it. When it comes to art and the appreciation of objective beauty was the was Marcel Duchamp, the famous episode, where he signed the fountain, where it was assigned urinal. Was at the beginning of the end of western art, does this connect with your general theme? It's a very, very good candidate for the beginning of the in Charlotte, because what we see is a lot of what we see today, which is it required absolutely no artistic skill to do that. He didn't have to learn how to draw. Yes. And it was deliberate provocation. What drives me craziest when I go to contemporary art shows is that these people do have no artistic talent. I sort of feel if you've learned to draw and you've mastered that basic hand eye coordination, which is the basis of all artistic accomplishment in the visual arts. And then you decide that you're going to become an installation artist and you're going to create rooms filled with used tampons and a video playing a woman screaming at a banana for 24 hour loop. I kind of, I'll semi, if I'm put if you put a gun to my head, I'll respect that choice. But the people today that are putting themselves up as artists have no artistic health whatsoever. And I don't know about Duchamp if he actually had mastered the craft of seeing and drawing, but it was, it was simply a provocation. It had nothing to do with human expression. It was a way of trying to puncture the long tradition that had brought us at that point the height of visual expression was John Singer-Sargent's watercolors in his portraits that are just of stunning mastery breathtaking beauty that we'd involved. You know, for hundreds of years you think, my God, we're at Van Dyke now, one of the great netherlandish painters, portrait painters. It can't get any better than that. And then you get to the 19th century. It gets better than that. You know, it's one wave of beauty after another, and then for.

Charlie Kirk 24 hour 19th century Heather Andrew Todd Charlotte John Singer-Sargent Duchamp today hundreds of years Marcel Duchamp tomorrow andro del Rey first time First time 8 1172 decades Van Dyke one
"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Economist: The Intelligence

The Economist: The Intelligence

05:34 min | 6 months ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Economist: The Intelligence

"Pieces all told. That abundant led to a thriving market for his works, with far more of them changing hands in Britain and America than any other artists. But that market may be about to turn. Since 1999, prices of Picasso's work at auction has grown twice as fast as the broader market for 20th century artists been enormously successful. Lima rogo is The Economist's culture correspondent. The most expensive Picasso was sold for about a $180 million, reportedly by a Saudi collector in London to a former prime minister of Qatar. But in the midst of what one commentator calls the Picasso palooza around the 50th anniversary of the artist's death, dealers and auction houses around the world are very nervous that Picasso's time may be up. Why are they nervous? One real indication is Picasso's waning influence on creators today. Critic that I spoke to made the point that artists more than anyone are the people who propel the artists of the past into the future, and according to him, Picasso just isn't as popular or as influential which may be more important as he once was. Few modern artists seem to cite Picasso as an inspiration. Perhaps his influence has been completely absorbed into art history, and there's no more to be said about him. You're more likely to hear them talk about Marcel Duchamp, Philip guston, or almost always now Louis bourgeois, far more than Picasso. And so what's changed if he was on such a bull run? It's possible that Picasso's personal behavior has something to do with it. It just doesn't sit right with today's artists. He too timed his wives, he sighed children with different women at once, he caused a enormous amount of pain. He seduced maitres Walther, for example, she who became his mistress and his muse when she was 17 and he was 45. In 1932 he painted her dreaming of sex. He depicted her left cheek in her eye as in erect penis. You don't see it at once, but if you look really carefully, suddenly that comes into focus, and having seen it, you can't unsee it. Nowadays after me too, people aren't as willing to separate the art from the artist, particularly young people. And you see the works of other prominent artists, including, for example, both who Salvador Dalí have lost value in the eyes of critics and collectors because of how they acted in private. At the same time, though artists do kind of come into and go out of fashion with some irregularity. Do you reckon all this adds up to a definite peak Picasso moment? Well, Picasso's work is still certainly making money. But one recent auction Sotheby's offered a sculpture and illustrative book, cubist bronze cast, some grave prince and several drawings and paintings all by Picasso, the prices of these ranged from under 5000 pounds to more than 18 million pounds. There was something for every collector. But how long this will go on is another question. Celebration Picasso is an exhibition which will open at the Brooklyn museum in June and many dealers and collectors around the world are anxiously waiting to see how it will be received. The museum says it aims to address compelling questions that young, diverse museum audiences raise all the time about the issue of misogyny, masculinity, creativity, and our these essential to genius. Because those work electrified the 20th century, it was sexy. It was interesting. It was daring. It was amazing to look at, but this definitely a sense that somehow he's lost his cool. That the way he treated women both in his

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Slowdown

The Slowdown

04:57 min | 6 months ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on The Slowdown

"Last year, I visited my old neighborhood. I flown in to receive an alumni award from central high school of Philadelphia. Go, lancers. I have not lived in Philly in many years. But I've maintained a long affection for the city of my birth. So whenever I'm in town, I prefer to rent a car and idly drive its streets. I almost always drive along the glittering school kill river. Almost always return to the majestic Philadelphia Museum of Art. To view the artworks of Elizabeth cattley, Marcel Duchamp cite tumbling. And most definitely, return to patronize my favorite patisserie in all the world. Those ceiling cozy room with metal cafe chairs and small round tables, hitting off chestnut hills, cobbled Germantown avenue. Whenever I enter the French bakery, yes, that's his name. That rich buttery aroma, those fresh baked goods, cooks me further into its haven. My mouth instantly waters at the sight of pastries and fresh bread beneath the glass case. During wintry days, the oven warms both the small restaurant and its loyal customers who patiently wait in line. As a teenager, me and some friends would pretend to do homework in a corner after school while drinking hot chocolate and eating croissants. On this most recent trip, regrettably, I was greeted with a locked door. Inside the lights were out and the glass case emptied. A panga sadness overcame. I experienced the same feeling when one of my favorite jazz clubs shut down. And when I reached the entrance of another old favorite eating establishment, there, a security guard asked if they could help me. I said I was here for brunch. She looked at me with pity and said, honey, I'm sorry. But this place has been closed as a restaurant for over ten years. By watching the landscape of Philadelphia change, I've learned to read for the hidden history of cities and towns I visit now as a tourist. It makes me wonder. What ties us so strongly to a place? City shift, they grow and they decline. And inevitable fact, I did not realize how much I needed Philly to preserve itself. And in a way, to preserve me, each time I return, a part of myself disappears. Which is maybe as it should be. Today's poem understands the extent to which our memories are interwoven in the fabric of a place. A ruin by Paul modun, it might have been a gris mill, a dilapidated granary, or Grange, I first drove by some 60 years ago, and with my little eye, a spy through a door frame, the tasseled ferns and red haired Dawkins of kids, my own age, sent out to play in the snow. Their snowballs so specific in the sprawl. Windowless now, ruthless, tucked under the first sheltering hill of a range that ran all the way to Mexico. A country. Into which we still hope to ride hell for leather. Still hope to adjourn after the stick up. This ruin, but tokens not only the slow mowing of a meadow for shopping mall, but the fate that would befall the many tagged and re tagged over those 60 years. The landscape is so marked by change. The bungo peace process, the shoddy bungalows, the wind farms taking us in their stride. So marked by all the turns, things have indeed taken. For kids, now summoned back from playing in the snow. The nettles almost as tall as it's dividing wall. A ruin seems the only thing intact..

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on TED Talks Daily

TED Talks Daily

07:20 min | 6 months ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on TED Talks Daily

"About 1600 years ago, saint Augustine wrote to confessions, which was the story of his youthful descent into sin, and his later conversion to Christianity. And book two of the confessions has a great beginning. I propose now to set down my past wickedness and the carnal corruption of my soul. So you expect sex. But to the disappointment of readers over the centuries, the sin that Augustine talks about, isn't carnal at all. It has to do with pairs. He and his friends break into an Orchard. And they steal some pears. And that was it. They didn't have anything against the person owned Orchard. They weren't hungry. They threw the pears to pigs. What stunned augustan and disturbed him was that he seemed to be motivated by desire just to do wrong. He writes, if any part of one of those pairs passed my lips, it was a sin that gave it flavor. I had no motivation for waking this, except wickedness itself. I was foul and I loved it. Now, I'm a psychologist. And I was interested in real life stories of perverse action. So I started a diversity project where I invited people to send me stories about perverse things that they did. I defined these access when you choose to do something you know is wrong. Morally or otherwise, at least in part because it's wrong. So when I first stories, I got was, flirted with a woman's boyfriend, knowing fully well he liked me. I knew I could steal him if I wanted, but I didn't want to do that. I just wanted her to feel uncomfortable whenever the three of us were in the same room. Causing people pain is wrong, but that's exactly why I did it. And in fact, this is the plot of a Dolly Parton song jolene. Sometimes it's self destructive. A young man wrote to me. Ice skating on a pond, dark and frozen spot 30 yards out. Instead of avoiding it, I skate towards it. Knowing what wondering, knowing but wondering and splash. Now, psychologists have long been interested. In these sort of violent disruptive perverse acts. And the kinds of people who do them, an example, people often give as a joker for The Batman comics. And Christopher Nolan's film, The Dark Knight, Alfred, Batman's butler, describes the Joker by saying, some men can't be bought bullied recent or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn. And psychologists have fought up a need for chaos scale. It gives you a bunch of statements and how much you agree with them will tell you how much you want to watch the world burn. So just do this quietly in your head. I need chaos around me. It's too boring if nothing is going on. Sometimes I just like destroying beautiful things. But not all the stories I got had that kind of nature. Some were a little bit more of a benign. Here's one of my favorites. On one occasion in my early 20s, I was out with a friend. He decided to get himself an ice cream. And before he had a chance to try it, I stuck my finger in it. I tried to play it off as a joke. But really I had the sudden thought, man, it would be messed up if I just jammed my finger and his ice cream. Someone else wrote me when I was in a professional choir at every concert I felt the desire to sing a few notes very incorrectly on purpose. To this day, I don't completely understand why. Someone else wrote me, and this is going to sweetest sadness, little example of modest perversity. Sometimes I walk on the grass instead of the path just because I know it's wrong. Now, a lot of perversity makes the world worse. I wouldn't want an Uber driver who scores high on a need for chaos scale. And I don't want a friend or a colleague either. But sometimes I'll suggest to you, perversity can be clever, creative, beautiful. And there's some examples from art. There was an illustrious art exhibition in New York City in 1917. And he said, you can send in anything you want. We'll accept everything. So Marcel Duchamp sent in a urinal. To describe the founding. And they rejected it. They said, no, no. We just accept artwork. But Duchamp insisted it was artwork, and the resulting controversy turned out to be one of the pivotal moments in the history of modern art. Or take Banksy. A few years ago, Banksy sold a painting, girl with balloon at Sotheby's at auction. And he set up the frame that the moment the painting was sold, the moment the gavel went boom. A machine in the frame shredded the painting halfway through. Horrifying the audience. But getting onto front pages of newspapers all over the world. Later on describing a Banksy quotes a Russian anarchist who says the urge to destroy is also a creative urge. I take comedy, perversity is part and parcel of comedy. So much of what's funny is when people do things that are irrational or immoral. In the right hands, perversity is such a source of joy. Perversity can also be powerful. Rory Sutherland wrote, irrational people are much more powerful than rational people. They gave two reasons why this is so. The first is their threats are so much more convincing. Suppose you've been a confrontation with you. And you threaten me and you're a rational reasonable irrational reasonable person. So I know your threats are going to be normal in proportional and reasonable. But if you're a perverse agent, I have no idea what you're capable of and you're far more frightening to me. Second reason is, if you're wholly predictable, people learn to hack you. So again, if you're rational and I have to outsmart you, figure out what you're going to do next. I'll do the rational thing. If you're perverse, you're harder to predict. And so harder to hack. Edgar Allan Poe describing perversity, described it, talk about imps, little magical demons in our heads that cause us to do terrible things. But like I said, I'm a psychologist. I don't believe in imps. I think what we do has reasons has motivations. And I think for perverse actions, there's a range of them. One of them was mentioned by Augustine. So later on after describing the incident of the pairs, he writes, I would not have done it by myself. My satisfaction and outline appears that lay in the crime itself committed in the league with a gang of sinners. The social force drove him. And there are other things too. One force that really interests me goes under many names, self governance, freedom, liberty, agency, call it autonomy. Call it a desire to be free to do what you want. Free of the constraints of other people. And freer also of the constraints of rationality and morality. And Jonah Berger gives a nice example of this. He talks about the tide pod challenge of a few years ago. Where many teenagers, instead of using these as detergent products, bit into them and sometimes consume them. Now, as you might imagine, Procter & Gamble who own the products were incredibly unhappy about this. And they set up an extremely expensive ad campaign designed to stop people from consuming these products. And one of your campaigns involved the football player, popular football player, known as Gronk. So the ad would begin, hey Gronk, is eating the pods ever a good idea? And Gronk responds, no, no, no. Burger points out, when this ad came up, consumption of the pots shot up. No,

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on Ladies Knight Chess

Ladies Knight Chess

03:31 min | 1 year ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on Ladies Knight Chess

"Seeing that boys and men are so invested in being allies and making the chess world more gender inclusive. Is super exciting to me. And I was grateful, but also not necessarily a surprise because I see a lot more of that. I see a lot of men asking me, how do I get more girls and women into the game? How do I make sure that I'm representing them? In my chest lessons. I see that so much and it's so beautiful and encouraging. After Memphis, and by the way, I'll post a few photos from all of these locales and my show notes. After Memphis, I went home for two days to pick up my fam. My little guy Fabian and my husband Daniel. And we went to St. Louis for the tenth anniversary of the world chess Hall of Fame moving to St. Louis. So we were there to celebrate that and I also had a couple pieces in the show that the world chess Hall of Fame have on to celebrate ten years. Mind art and experience. My husband, Daniel Roman, I have created a number of art pieces related to chassis. And the two that were selected for the show by curator Shannon Bailey and Emily are naked chess, which was a spin off on famous Marcel Duchamp photograph where he played a naked woman. Eve Bobbitt's in chess. For those of you who don't know, Marcel Duchamp, he was a chess master. And he was also an artist, a contemporary artist who really changed the landscape of our very inspirational to artists for. All for all artists, really. I mean, some people call him the most influential artist of all time because of how much he changed. 20th and 21st century are. I mean, he certainly been inspiring to me. I quote him many a times in my book chess queens. And here's the part where I talk about Marcel Duchamp in chess queens. In 1929, mentek traveled to Paris for her first international tournament. One notable opponent was Marcel Duchamp, the celebrated conceptual artist and painter, who for some time gave up art to pursue his passion for chats. Born in France, marcelle spent most of his life in New York City, as well as a year in Buenos Aires when his interest in chess was most intense. Marcel's position in the chess world was similar to Vera's. Both were superstars when they played world class events. To shop because of the same as an artist and Vera because of her gender. Even though they were weaker than most of their opponents, now keep in mind, this is in the elite events that they're playing with capablanca. So it's not really a dig. The most famous gameplay by played between Duchamp and a woman remains the one chronicled in a much celebrated photograph. In it, he is playing against a completely naked eve Bobbitt, an American writer. Bobbitt said just started taking birth control pills, which made her breasts swell to the size of bowling balls. Not short first if they were going to just pose or also play,.

chess Marcel Duchamp Memphis Daniel Roman Shannon Bailey St. Louis Eve Bobbitt Fabian mentek Daniel Emily Vera marcelle capablanca Paris Buenos Aires Marcel New York City France Bobbitt
"marcel duchamp" Discussed on Quizbeard weekly trivia quiz

Quizbeard weekly trivia quiz

05:58 min | 2 years ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on Quizbeard weekly trivia quiz

"Number twenty three which british actor who suffered serious head injuries in the nineteen ninety car accident played the character of renting in the bbc. Wartime sitcom lolo number twenty four. Which city provides the setting for the opening scene of one thousand nine hundred seventy one film. The french connection number twenty five. What's the name of the process by which an unstable nucleus loses energy but radiation okay ancestor. Today's quiz then one was games. People play number one. The decade of the nineteenth century when overarm bowling was legalized in cricket. Walls the eighteen sixties. It was eight hundred sixty four to be precise number two in the card game bridge. The highest ranking suit is spades number three the maximum number number of runners permitted to start the grand national be forty horses number four and it is in diving that a competitive performed tux. And pike's number five in the board game cluedo the feature that the four corners rooms contain that the others don't is that they all contain secret. Passage round two was marble play sculptures and statues round number six. The armless statue that has been exhibited in the louvre in paris. Rediscovery is the venus de milo number. Seven overlooking rio de janeiro christ. The redeemer is a thirty meters tall number eight. The army that was buried with the emperor of china was made of terra. Cotta number nine. The italian artist antonio canvas sculpture of perseus is holding up the head of medusa a number ten the artists that produced a series of found found object sculptures known as ready mades with the porcelain urinal. The bicycle wheel was marcel. Duchamp ran three was the oh happy day round number eleven the shakespeare's history plane that contains we few we happy. Few we band of brothers is henry. The fifth number twelve the animated film in which elijah wood robin williams and hugh jackman are improperia. Wins is happy feet number thirteen according to the advert. Happiness is a cigar called hamlet number fourteen actor and director who played ritchie cunningham. In happy days is ron howard. A number fifteen as of march twenty twenty one the un world. Happiness report ranks finland. The happiest country in the world has done four times in a row round four. Was the grays the new gray round number. Sixteen the name that you would better know lord greystoke as tarzan number. Seventeen the ex prime minister. That was always gray and spitting image with john. Major number eighteen the Oscar wilde novel walls the picture of dorian gray them nineteen lady. Jane grey was the queen of england for nine days and the twenty. The nintendo game boy was first released in the nineteen eighty s. He was nine hundred thousand nine in japan and north america and then released in one thousand nine hundred. Ninety in europe and career ran five. Was the general knowledge round number twenty one. The tv adverts that feature the james bond star figure that goes to great lengths to deliver box of chocolates to a lady is for milk tray number. Twenty two the maiden name of jacqueline kennedy onassis bouvier number twenty three the british actor who suffered head injuries in one thousand nine hundred and played renting twat in lolo gordon k number twenty four. The city that provides the setting for the opening scene of the french connection is marseille. I'm number twenty five. The name of the process by which an unstable nucleus loses energy by radiation is a radioactive decay but also accept nuclear decay radio activity radioactive disintegration on nuclear disintegration.

japan hugh jackman elijah wood robin williams north america nine hundred thousand Ninety nine days Seventeen twenty ritchie cunningham Sixteen five europe Duchamp fifth number forty horses paris nineteen lady one thousand nine hundred Today
"marcel duchamp" Discussed on Feast of Fun

Feast of Fun

05:32 min | 2 years ago

"marcel duchamp" Discussed on Feast of Fun

"The original one. And then his his relationship with his father is explored more thoroughly and his relationship to follow schism and its iconography is more explored so i was because i was watching. Because it'd been awhile on. What is the difference. And so i had to do a little reading up on but what i think it was interesting about it too. Is that one of the people. Who's a producer for. It was was faith from the tv. Show buffy the vampire slayer buffy fan at a lot of people out there. Yeah elisa do. She had been involved in the project since like two thousand ten or two thousand twelve or something like that and you know had read the script and had was like i want to help produce this and eventually did help it well and robert mapplethorpe artistically is kind of the next generation of andy warhol. Artists who saw photography is not just a mechanical process but art form in of itself. Like now we we. We have no question right now of photography being art but back when he started people were just kind of like is it are is the realm of photographers technicians or journalists. It was not seen as something that was in the art magazine. Yeah something that was being made by the hands of of an artist or conceived in the mind of an and manifested into reality. It is something that is like a toaster car And so our andy warhol and you know certainly Marcel duchamp many other pioneering artists said you know cars. Toasters can be art. Anything can be art. If you just change the way you look at it and so found objects can also be art. Photography can be art. Ideas can be aren't and Really you know changed the world and how we think about creativity and and how we think about each other by embracing these burgeoning these developing forms right. And so you know for robert mapplethorpe. He somebody we always think about those. You know sexy naked. Men and their penises on but just like any warhol. He took a ton of photos of very very famous people including antiwar himself And as a picture that they use in mapplethorpe itself. And its of roy cohn you know who the evil roy cohn. Trump's trance mentor. trump's mentor. Yeah you know. The the not protagonist the evil guy and angels in america. The central character essential character and angels in america. Dying of aids He He he helped the rosenberg. Trial pay basically put them to death..

Marcel duchamp robert mapplethorpe america trump Trump two thousand elisa andy warhol one ten two thousand twelve roy cohn ton of photos mapplethorpe buffy buffy the vampire slayer rosenberg