View allAll Photos Tagged GilbertGeorge
Ferencváros | Komor Marcell útca
Ludwig Museum - Museum of Contemporary Art.
Gilbert & George Scapegoating Pictures for Budapest exhibition, Jul. 8 - Sep. 14, 2017
Gilbert showing us the different samples sent back from Agfa, Kodak etc with custom profiles created specifically for their prints. They are exacting about the amount of grain they require in each print.
Gilbert & George “The Nature of Our Looking” (1970)
everydaylifestyle.wordpress.com/2013/03/19/looking-at-the...
This is the project we created for the latest Cedar Block event at the Art Museum. Artists were asked to work with a partner to pay tribute to the wit of Gilbert & George by producing a piece of work based on a joke. Our joke was the following:
A woman gets on a bus with her baby. As she pays for her ticket, the bus driver says: “That's the ugliest baby I've ever seen. Ugh!” The woman sits down, fuming. She says to a man next to her: “The driver just insulted me!” The man says: “You shouldn’t take that. You tell him off! Go ahead. I'll hold your monkey.”
we visited the de young museum... they were having some sort of floral display this particular week which opened the door for photography. normally they wouldn't let you take photographs! yippee for me! i hope you enjoy some of my faves...
the main exhibit was 'gilbert & george'...there were NO floral displays within this display so no photos...boo hoo...
google them if you wish, very thought-provoking indeed.
cover & portfolio: Gilbert & George
interviste: Gilbert & George, Paola & Chiara, Terre Thaemlitz, Giorgio Celli, Charlotte Vermeulen
This is the project we created for the latest Cedar Block event at the Art Museum. Artists were asked to work with a partner to pay tribute to the wit of Gilbert & George by producing a piece of work based on a joke. Our joke was the following:
A woman gets on a bus with her baby. As she pays for her ticket, the bus driver says: “That's the ugliest baby I've ever seen. Ugh!” The woman sits down, fuming. She says to a man next to her: “The driver just insulted me!” The man says: “You shouldn’t take that. You tell him off! Go ahead. I'll hold your monkey.”
Gilbert & George place themselves, their thoughts and their feelings at the centre of their art, and almost all of the images they use are gathered within walking distance of their home in London’s East End. Yet their pictures capture a broad human experience, encompassing an astonishing range of emotions and themes, from rural idylls to gritty images of a decaying London; from fantastical brightly-coloured panoramas to raw examinations of humanity stripped bare; from sex advertisements to religious fundamentalism.
www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/gilbertandgeorge/defau...
caption: "FOREVER WE WILL SEARCH AND GIVE OUR THOUGHTS TO THE PICTURE WE HAVE IN OUR MIND. WE ARE WALKING ROUND NOW AS SAD AS CAN BE"
The first gallery of this exhibition comprised four walls of Gilbert & George's enormous charcoal drawings, including this one. Walking slowly around the perimeter, ruminating on these, with their nostalgic and pastoral scenery and text such as that above, I thought nothing more that I was walking through some of Belle & Sebastian's earlier work. Is it Wicked Not to Care? www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGtJs3PngtI
This is the project we created for the latest Cedar Block event at the Art Museum. Artists were asked to work with a partner to pay tribute to the wit of Gilbert & George by producing a piece of work based on a joke. Our joke was the following:
A woman gets on a bus with her baby. As she pays for her ticket, the bus driver says: “That's the ugliest baby I've ever seen. Ugh!” The woman sits down, fuming. She says to a man next to her: “The driver just insulted me!” The man says: “You shouldn’t take that. You tell him off! Go ahead. I'll hold your monkey.”
This is the project we created for the latest Cedar Block event at the Art Museum. Artists were asked to work with a partner to pay tribute to the wit of Gilbert & George by producing a piece of work based on a joke. Our joke was the following:
A woman gets on a bus with her baby. As she pays for her ticket, the bus driver says: “That's the ugliest baby I've ever seen. Ugh!” The woman sits down, fuming. She says to a man next to her: “The driver just insulted me!” The man says: “You shouldn’t take that. You tell him off! Go ahead. I'll hold your monkey.”