Andy Goldsworthy: Wall Drawing (2014)
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vriska calls you the f word (real)
i drew her also before on a paper lol
i know i fucked up the horns stfu i did this w/o ref :'o)
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Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #565, Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, Italy, 1985
VS
Villa Poppaea, Oplontis | Torre Annunziata, Italy, 50 BC - 54 AD ph. Valter Scelsi
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birds on wall
Galleri Hedenius
Stockholm, Sweden
13 October - 13 November, 2022
W. Tucker
wtucker-art.com
photo by: Per-Erik Adamsson
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Wall Drawing #1 and Wall Drawing #2: A Conversation between Sean Weisgerber, Daniel Griffin Hunt and Rebecca Travis - written for Peripheral Review magazine, April 2022.
The context behind this article for Peripheral Review was the simultaneous showing of two new Wall Drawing installations by artist Sean Weisgerber - one at Open Studio, Toronto, and one at The Plumb, Toronto. To connect these two works and the two different sites they occupied, we had a conversation in front of Wall Drawing #1 at Open Studio, travelled together to the Plumb, and finished our conversation in front of Wall Drawing #2.
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ability to draw bae'zel returned
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gordon and chell. wall-e and eva. you understand
THAT IS THE SMARTEST GODDAMN IDEA
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i drew an oc and gamzee on my school walls yo
i really like that we're just allowed to do that
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‘Cities begin in the mind.
Or so proposed Elias Canetti, a novelist and social philosopher often written off as one of those offbeat mid-century central European thinkers no one knows quite what to do with. Canetti speculated that Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers living in small communities must, inevitably, have spent time wondering what larger ones would be like. Proof, he felt, was on the walls of caves, where they faithfully depicted herd animals that moved together in uncountable masses. How could they not have wondered what human herds might be like, in all their terrible glory? No doubt they also considered the dead, outnumbering the living by orders of magnitude. What if everyone who’d ever died were all in one place? What would that be like? These ‘invisible crowds’, Canetti proposed, were in a sense the first human cities, even if they existed only in the imagination.’
The Dawn of Everything
David Graeber and David Wengrow
Collage via archive0101.tumblr.com
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