View this post on Instagram ‘Humankind is represented by mankind … Fake news!’, said Judy Chicago, laughing, when she met Art Basel’s video team at the Institute of Contemporary Art Miami. Most of the artist’s forty-year-long career has been spent debunking that myth. Her best-known work, ‘The Dinner Party’ (1974–1979), celebrates the role of women throughout history. The monumental installation has drawn over one million of visitors since its first display and is now permanently housed at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum in New York City.‘ The Dinner Party’ has sometimes overshadowed the diversity of Chicago’s practice. Yet she has tackled minimalism, land art, history painting, and embroidery, addressing topics as diverse as male domination, depression, and the Holocaust. For the ‘Birth Project (1980–85), Chicago turned her eye to what she saw as a major blind spot in art history: the representation of

“In our digital world what separates reality from computer generated imagery is thinning, vanishing. At times the eye is barely — if at all — able to distinguish one from the other.” –Alessio De Vecchi Here are some of the items trending on the ARTWALK channel right now. Hope you find something here to enjoy! NOW PLAYING @blx (blocks) a new web series bringing people back to where it all began for them. Their block. www.bet.com/blx via @lucian FEATURED at Ello.co/Artwalk Olafur Eliasson Contact can been seen at The Fondation Louis Vuitton until Feb. 23 ‘15. Wolfgang Tillmans Source: @kapka “@alessiodevecchi: a couple of months ago Renata Lemos Morais, curator of Trandusctions — a pop-up show at awesome Pause Fest in Melbourne — asked if i would have liked to be part of her exhibition. she was particularly interested in some gifs i posted which had a tactile element to them. i decided to develop the concept a little

CIELA wins the Grand Chameleon Award Best Narrative Feature – COYOTE Best Documentary Feature – SWEETHEART DEAL Best Narrative Short – CIELA Brooklyn, NY (June 12th, 2023) – 26th Brooklyn Film Festival “Human Times”, which was staged both indoor at Windmill Studios, Wythe Hotel, The Center for Fiction and online, ended on Sunday, June 11th with an award ceremony during which all the winners were announced. Three groups picked the competition’s winners: 1) The external panels of judges, 2) The festival Board of Directors, and 3) the Audience. Through the resources of industry-related sponsors, the winning filmmakers have been awarded prizes in cash, products and services. To learn more about the BFF selection process and to check the full award breakdown: visit our Winners and Awards & Prizes pages on our website. CIELA picked up the coveted Grand Chameleon and the Best Narrative Short awards. COYOTE took home the award for Best Narrative Feature. The award for Best Documentary Feature went

Papier–mâché, aged and worn documents, leather, electrical wiring, twine, found objects

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