Join Airam F. on Amplify
The Web's Social News Network.

Curate, connect & build relationships you'll learn from.

Anton Kannemeyer - The Alphabet of Democracy

No Commentary

a selection of Kannemeyer’s works on paper from The Alphabet of Democracy-series, a new series entitled Cursed Paradise and drawings from recent sketch books; all of which raise extremely uncomfortable questions in the debate about racial stereotypes and South Africa cultural and socio-political landscape.
0aasayifyou.jpg
00achairchair.jpg
0aabirthh.jpg
With The Alphabet of Democracy, the white South African artist tackles many issues politicians and journalists tent to “diplomatically” avoid. The series sharply comments on the madness below the surface of the rabidly conformist parts of white South African society, especially the Afrikaans community. Black politicians are not protected from his sarcasm either as the alphabet also targets the absurdity of some of their statements.
00nightmanre.jpg
00amugabe.jpg
0ainarainbo.jpg

In this context, the word “democracy” becomes subversive. The liberated South African society and its form of government are shown as just another arbitrary social order fraught with moral ambiguity and human absurdity.

0aabotswanan.jpg
0ablackdik.jpg
See more at www.we-make-money-not-art.com
 

? = BEAUTY

No Commentary

Amplifyd from www.boston.com
MFA exhibit showcases a collector who says he has unlocked a secret of design - using math
Horace Brock, at the MFA in an exhibit of works from his collection, has strong ideas about what makes certain objects visually appealing.
Designed objects, Brock writes, can be broken down into “themes” and “transformations.” A theme is a motif, such as an S-curve; a transformation might see that curve appear elsewhere in the design, but stretched, rotated 90 degrees, mirrored, or otherwise reworked.

Aesthetic satisfaction comes from an apprehension of how those themes and transformations relate to each other, or of what Brock calls their “relative complexity.” Basically - and this is the nub of it - “if the theme is simple, then we are most satisfied when its echoes are complex . . . and vice versa.”

Complex theme, simple transformation: Voila! The chair is beautiful.

In his great novel, “Herzog,” Bellow warned against “the dream of intellect, the delusion of total explanations.” Keeping these cautionary words in mind, I prefer - rather than seeking the truth of beauty - to subscribe to something the philosopher Gaston Bachelard once wrote: “The world is beautiful before it is true.”Read more at www.boston.com
 

Silhouette Masterpiece Theatre

Only clipped the first frame- I recommend that you visit the source. The site is simple, funny, and a pleasure to view.