This looks to me like a 'romantic/nostalgic' contemporary painting in the style of Jack Vettriano... the curved lines and pavilion shades... It seems to relate back to the earlier parasol drawing which in turn makes me think of Queen Victoria. Was 8½ the number of minutes the dance lasted, or the dancer's average shoe size?
The e-space lab project is exploring how internet connections between people in diverse urban and international contexts can enable a dialogue that helps make more meaningful a reciprocal representation of what the conditions of actual everyday life in different places really are. Many of the ideas, illusions and misrepresentations that shape our understanding of where and how other people live in places different from our own can fall away in this kind of dialogue, and also be replaced by a live and ongoing pattern of multiple alternative representations. The forms that we use range from the human voice (by Skype or phone), text, text messages, and images produced by digital cameras and mobile phones, video of course, and even to web pages and podcasts. We like to engage with these forms in a process of dialogue and exchange, using whatever resources are available, and exploring the potential of new tools as they come on stream, especially streaming video. As artists we are especially interested in the role the arts play in valuing practices and the human qualities that shape everyday life in the different places we find ourselves.
2 comments:
This looks to me like a 'romantic/nostalgic' contemporary painting in the style of Jack Vettriano... the curved lines and pavilion shades... It seems to relate back to the earlier parasol drawing which in turn makes me think of Queen Victoria. Was 8½ the number of minutes the dance lasted, or the dancer's average shoe size?
haha, that's the name of the film, otto e mese? An Itlian one.
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