Word: artistically
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...know about this. It’s all around,” Studnicki-Gizbert says, pointing to my roommates with a broad gesture that links our relatively brief act to a tradition spanning continents. She remembers a performance artist in Spain who was so still that she touched him to make sure he was actually alive...
Kristin R. Hoelting ’03, a longtime piano student and aspiring guitar player asked FM to arrange for a music lesson with Livingston Taylor, artist in residence in Lowell house, faculty member at the Berklee School of music and—as it takes him under 15 minutes to mention—brother of James Taylor. Hoelting says she wanted to meet Taylor “for inspiration” and to talk about how to best incorporate music into her life post-college...
...Being a smart comix artist, Chester Brown makes the design of "Louis Riel" match its concept of history as viewed through a personal lens. He strives for historical accuracy in every way except the characters, who are deliberately cartoonish - sometimes absurdly so. Canada's Prime Minister, Sir. John McDonald has a comically gigantic gibbous nose. Riel himself starts out rather normal in scale but after his enlightenment becomes huge, like the Hulk in a wool suit. In the final issue, Brown cites Harold Gray's "Little Orphan Annie" as a major influence, and the comparison is dead on. From...
...Foundation, folks think big. Over the past three decades, the foundation has spent millions of dollars commissioning and maintaining art, some of it having dimensions you associate with the Army Corps of Engineers. In the late 1970s, it was Dia that bought artist Donald Judd a derelict, 340-acre Army post in Marfa, Texas. Judd filled it mostly with his rows of concrete, wood or aluminum boxes, the alpha and omega of Minimalist sculpture. It's Dia that in 1977 paid for and still superintends The Lightning Field by Walter De Maria--400 stainless-steel poles arrayed in a rectangular...
...exactly clear. There are those traditional motifs he's working on, such as calligraphy and screen painting. And he mentions an animated feature film he would like to make. He doesn't know. He's still figuring it out. Overall, though, he likes his chances. "As a Japanese artist whose art is born in the chaos of an art scene without rules or distinctions, maybe I am able to break boundaries in ways that a Western artist cannot," he says. "In some ways, I do all this," and here comes another smile, "because...