Composition on doormat

Stanley Brutus
Composition on doormat #35, 2024
Mixed media

Birds, Brancusi and Starling; Autoxylopyrocycloboros

Simon Starling - Two Birds, No Birds — A Mirrored Displacement (Proposal for an Inter-Institutional Exchange)

Some days ago, I wrote about ‘Bird,’ Brancusi’s artwork, which I stumbled upon in Bucharest’s National Gallery. Steichen bought it and paid a premium to import it into the US.
Yesterday, I watched a video about Simon Starling, a conceptual artist and photographer from the UK. Starling created a work in 2004 with the exuberant name Two Birds, No Birds — A Mirrored Displacement (Proposal for an Inter-Institutional Exchange). This work is a diptych of two photographs of ‘Bird’ in a particular exhibition space.
A nice loop.
(Omitting pun re bird named starling)

 Autoxylopyrocycloboros

Unrelated, I found Autoxylopyrocycloboros is an interesting conceptual work by Starling about a wooden steamboat that eats its own tail, being fueled by its own hull.

Nice nerdy weaving

Beautiful artwork from chip design and a vice nerdy story about this Navajo weaving from Marilou Schultz.

Hans Aarsman on Garry Winogrand’s Rattle

Hans Aarsman wrote about Garry Winogrand, and also created a fantastic, expressionistic monologue about the chaos he recognizes in his photographic works.

You can download the monologue on this page in English and Dutch. The links are sort of hidden. Hoover the mouse under the text “ARCHIEF”, where you see a large faint “X”. I think the original thumbnail has disappeared. The monologue is called Ruis in Dutch and Rattle in English. Rattle, I can imagine, is the noise in the streets, but I do not understand Ruis (noise, static). The monologue reads like a train-of-thought rattle. Very much how like Winogrand talked in a very Rattly manner.

Listen to this except:

You can find the full interview here.

Garry Winogrand