VVORK

»Angle«, 2008 by Darri Lorenzen. A pole hung at an angle slowly rotates in the middle of a space. During a one-minute sequence, bright lights directed at the pole gradually fade out, pause, and fade back in. As the space becomes darker, the pole glows.




»RE:«, 1960′s by Vito Acconci.




»Poem«, march 1966 by Dan Graham. Schema for a set of poems whose component pages are specifically published as individual poems in various magazines.




“Untitled”, 2008 by Pratchaya Phinthong. Installation. Anonymous quote found on Internet printed on transparent film, portable projector, electrical transformer.




From the exhibition »До pixel«, 2009 by Armen Bugayan.




»Obelisk«, 2009 and

»Diagonal of Personal Ecstasy«, 2009 by Ben Schumacher.




now vs. then vs here vs. there vs this vs. that vs me vs. you vs. us vs. them“, 2008 by Hayley A. Silverman.
Single-channel video, mirror, Powerbook G4 (DVD loop, w/sound).




»Goodnight mom, goodnight dad«, 2008 by Johan Thurfjell.




Film poster for “On Otto”, 2007 by Tobias Rehberger. Video. Instead of starting with a script, the work of this movie was started with the movie poster.




»/ \« by Damon Zucconi.




»Matt Damon (Near Mint)«, 2007 by Christian Andersson.




“All the Dead Stars” by Katie Paterson. A map documenting the locations of just under 27,000 dead stars – all that have been recorded and observed by humankind – from data supplied by astronomers, supernova hunters, and astro-physicists.




»Untitled, (Today your room was serviced by…)«, 2008 (Enamel on board, piano hinge, magnets and concealed paper money) by Claire Fontaine.




“Atari Light”, 1999 by Pierre Huyghe. Computer game program interface, joysticks, halogen lamps.




“Freud.ppt”, 2008 by Gregory Fong. Diagrams culled from Freud’s writings, presented as a PowerPoint.




»Internet Painting«, 2009 by Miltos Manetas.




»La peinture des Martin de 1900 a 2000«, 2000 (a collection of paintings by artists whose surname is Martin) by Bertrand Lavier .




Fabiola“, is an ongoing work by Francis Alÿs. Over the last two decades, Francis Alÿs has assembled a collection of nearly identical paintings and other reproductions of fourth-century Saint Fabiola, all based on a now-lost original painted in the nineteenth century by the French artist Jean-Jacques Henner.




»Four Screens as Dialogue (pioneering, devotional, familiar, invasive)«, 2008 by Emily Roysdon.




“Dawn Chorus”, 2006 by Marcus Coates.




« Vorherige SeiteNächste Seite »