søndag 25. mai 2014

mandag 19. mai 2014

fredag 16. mai 2014

Robotized

Now I'm looking forward to the exhibition may 21.: Departure 20 14

torsdag 8. mai 2014

Tools



These are the tools I have used so far in my practical aesthetic project.
Trying my way out. 

Norbert Roos



The antilope is not a DikDik, it is a Cape Grysbok. I got it from Norbert Roos. He hunted it three years ago in South Africa (not far from the city George in a province called Cape). The antilope is active by night. the area is a typical South African bush, not so many large trees, but many small bushes. This link shows you the Antilopen Cape Grysbok where he got shot.


THANK YOU NORBERT ROOS!
(Professor - Section of Physiology and Cell Biology at University of Oslo)

fredag 2. mai 2014

Cape Grysbok

The beginning of a New life for the Cape Grysbok, finding out what's inside...

torsdag 1. mai 2014

Damien Hirst

Mother and Child Divided is a floor-based sculpture comprising four glass-walled tanks, containing the two halves of a cow and calf, each bisected and preserved in formaldehyde solution. The tanks are installed in pairs, the two halves of the calf in front of the two halves of the mother, with sufficient space between each pair that a visitor may walk between them and view the animals’ insides. Thick white frames surround and support the tanks, setting in brilliant relief the transparent turquoise of the formaldehyde solution in which the carcasses are immersed. The sculpture was created for exhibition at the 1993 Venice Biennale and was subsequently the focal point of the 1995 Turner Prize at Tate Britain (then The Tate Gallery), the year that Hirst won the prize. It is now in the collection of the Astrup Fernley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo. Hirst created Tate’s copy for exhibition in the Turner Prize Restrospective at Tate Britain in 2007.

Glass, painted steel, silicone, acrylic, monofilament, stainless steel, cow, calf and formaldehyde solution.

Abraham Poincheval

Abraham Poincheval first performed Dans La Peau de l'Ours - Inside the Skin of the Bear - at the CAIRN Centre for Contemporary Art in Digne last year. Hunting and Wildlife Museum in Paris. According to the Musee de la Chasse et de la Nature, Poincheval is a performance artist "familiar with extreme situations".

The performance piece will see him eat, drink, sleep and relieve himself within a man-made chamber, housed within the sterilised carcass of a bear, while being filmed by two cameras.

BBC