Friday 3 February 2012

Merce Cunningham

William Forsythe


Move: choreographing you

“Move: choreographing you” develops the relationship between artists, movement and dance. Visitors are encouraged to take part by just posing within the installations, or, for the more ambitious: dancing, using hoola hoops, standing on seesaws, throwing dummies around and (see picture) apparently simple swings between suspended rings: simple until one realises that they are suspended on rubber bands
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BL4h6Pgg3ZgC&pg=PA139&lpg=PA139&dq=marcel+duchamp+dance+and+drawing&source=bl&ots=9QNOJUAQ3L&sig=H2kb7nA9dLn7rbixD-rZkSY31qs&hl=en&sa=X&ei=nuorT9CoDMXoOeLWvZwO&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=marcel%20duchamp%20dance%20and%20drawing&f=false

"Painting is a criticism of movement,but movement is the criticism of painting "

Monika Grzymala


Monika Grzymala looks at extending the line further. Into the 3D and the linuar.

Pablo Picasso

Hans Bellmer


I desided to look at Hans Bellmer as his drawings capture a fluid movement , but also a very eerie sinister astmosphere. His doll pieces are very disturbing with a sense of peodaphilla and young sexuality which is unerving to wittness, with the battle of desire and morality . But his drawings are were my focus is with a sense of cubism but furturism too. 'Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle'
  

Egon Schiele

“Bodies have their own light which they consume to live: they burn, they are not lit from the outside.”