"Gabriele Galimberti pays homage to all the grandmothers in the world and to their love for good cooking, starting from his own grandma Marisa who, before the departure for his tour around the world by couchsurfing, took care to prepare her renowned ravioli. She was not so concerned about the possible risks or mishaps her grandson might face in his adventurous traveling worldwide, but her major worry was, “what will he eat?”. That is because only at home you can eat well and healthily. And above all, only your grandma (and sometimes mum) knows what is best for you. With the taste of his grandma’s ravioli in his mouth, Gabriele traveled around the world and, next to thousands of other adventures, turned into a curious and hungry grandson for the grannies of all the countries he visited. Appealing to their natural cooking care and their inevitable pride in their best recipe, common factors to all grandmothers in the world, Gabriele persuaded them to do their best in the kitchen."Arianna Rinaldo
Friday, April 25, 2014
Gabriele Galimberti
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Friday, April 11, 2014
“The Man Behind The Mountain” – An Intimate Look at American Folk Artist Leonard Knight
The video is a beautiful tribute to Leonard's life.
I've always wanted to visit this place. It looks incredible.
I've always wanted to visit this place. It looks incredible.
Thursday, April 3, 2014
So satisfying...
London based designer Tom Williams caught these city workers in action. So good. I always thought it was stenciled... mesmerizing.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Symmetry and Color pallete of Wes Anderson's Films

Designer Beth Mathews created the Wes Anderson Film Color Palette,
a chart of the color treatments used in Anderson’s past six films.
The Ross Sisters - Solid Potato Salad
Watch this all the way through...they are amazing back bend queens!
Lauren Satlowski
"Rich with associative qualities, the common figurine evokes connotations both personal and collective. In her work, Lauren Satlowski adopts the figurine as a cultural norm that can be dismantled and reconstructed. Satlowski’s paintings and objects aim to suspend the viewer in a state of uncertainty. Unable to reconcile their own attraction/repulsion toward the subject, viewers find themselves experiencing a cyclical interaction with the painted image or inanimate object." Wassermanprojects
Michelle Matson
Friday, March 14, 2014
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Das Triadische Ballet
"Triadisches Ballett (Triadic Ballet) is a ballet developed by Oskar Schlemmer. It premiered in Stuttgart, on 30 September 1922, with music composed by Paul Hindemith,
after formative performances dating back to 1916, with the performers
Elsa Hotzel and Albert Burger. The ballet became the most widely
performed avant-garde artistic dance and while Schlemmer was at the Bauhaus from 1921 to 1929, the ballet toured, helping to spread the ethos of the Bauhaus. "Wiki
very trippy.
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Project 562: Changing the way we see Native America
Such a beautiful project! Find out more and support this initiative here!
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Ally White
Georgia based artist, Ally White's work is so vibrant!
My paintings are a re-imagined portrayal of living in contemporary southern suburbia. They are intuitive responses to everyday surroundings that are transformed into unfamiliar and fictional situations. The image emerges through a process of erasure, mending, and embellishment of paint and collage. The use of collage as a preconceived “mark” forces the image and materials to interact with one another. Raised in a house in which the interior was a monochromatic brown, I now indulge in ebullient color. An inclination to fantasize and exaggerate the ordinary offers me a way to reshape what I see, think, and feel into something tangible. New American Painting
Kirsten Lepore - Move Mountain
Another amazing video by Kirsten Lepore. I loved her older piece "bottle." So good!
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Monday, February 3, 2014
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Erwin Wurm
“I knew from a fairly early age, about 15 or so, that I wanted to be an artist. The problem was, my father was a detective in the police. In his view, artists were almost as suspect as criminals”, explains Austrian artist Erwin Wurm. He obviously withstood his father’s objections to his artistic ambitions and followed his vocation. Good for him and for us, because Edwin Wurm is now one of the most successful contemporary artists in the Northern hemisphere.
We too love Erwin Wurm. He’s right up there with the zeitgeist. He speaks our language – the language of pop culture, tv, movies, comics and science fiction. And even though he’s had solos at some of the most prestigious museums and art galleries around the globe, Wurm dares not to take art, the art world, or himself all too seriously. “I want to reach more than just an elite circle of insiders”, says Wurm. And he did. Even if you’ve never seen one of Wurm’s shows, you’ll still know his work indirectly from The Red Hot Chilli Peppers‘ ‘Can’t Stop’ music video. The video is nothing less than a tribute to Erwin Wurm’s work. It’s filled with Wurm-style concepts and sculptural jokes inspired by his one-minute sculptures. Big Kudos to the Peppers for recognizing the influence Wurm had on their video."PrettyCoolPeopleInterviews
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