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otarafa: Konser ilani napiyim | butarafa: Papers written by Googlers |
bienalden bikaç isim
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bienale gelcek sanatçılardan bazıları nefs-işler var
johanna billing bi tanesi- ), ola perhson başka bi santçı aşşada işlerinden birinin tanımı - With this we are getting close to the subject of Ola Pehrson’s latest works: the Market. We are fed daily with reports about the state of the financial markets: The market reacted thus and thus to the statement of the Prime Minister; The market reacted negatively to a forecasted reduction in unemployment, etc. If it has long been claimed that political decisions are increasingly being made on the terms of capital rather than on ideological grounds this is at least evident today. Ola Pehrson’s Yucca Invest Trading Plant can be seen as a picture of the market’s logic, or lack of logic. A Yucca palm has been coupled to a computer using electrodes, and the electrical currents that are registered govern purchasing or selling indications for a number of shares. If the Yucca palm does not give a positive result it gets no water, whereas if it succeeds it is given water and can grow more. Here the market undeniably appears as the nervous and irrational system that it is, in which every decision is as dependent on gut feeling as on intellectual and technical calculations. The work also links to the terminology that pervades economic language — growth, offshoots — words that seem to indicate a natural law. The ‘market’ is increasingly depicted in this fashion by the frequently paradoxically servile media. Was it not Fredric Jameson who said: We are living in a time when it is easier to imagine the end of the world than to conceive of a non-capitalist economy. Ola Perhson works with various techniques, often conceptual, even though painting is his base. In one of his paintings he has, for example, tried to recreate every brush stroke of Zorn’s self-portrait with a view to being able, in due course, to reproduce the ‘genius’’ painting mechanically. Simulations and translations are two recurring concepts as in the works in which the artist has played with computer simulation of imagined physical objects but which do not necessarily have any simple physical reference. In his Desktop Ikonostas [Desktop Iconostasis] we meet, instead, a physical model of a normal icon-based Windows interface. The religious terminology causes me to think of what Sherry Turkle in ‘Life on the Screen’ (1995) calls the ‘Macintosh Mystique’: users in an interface constructed in accordance with a simulation aesthetic remain on the surface, at a level of visual representation, without being able/needing to know anything about the underlying mechanisms. nedko solakov 'un eski bi işi |
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yukardaki isimlerlen alakalı bakınırken karşima çıkan eelenceli siteler manifesto siteleri futur pop scum |
boşlukları doldurun
bunlara da göz atabilirsiniz:
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otarafa: Konser ilani napiyim | butarafa: Papers written by Googlers |
iletişim - şikayet - kullanıcı sözleşmesi - gizlilik şartları |