Matthew Barney: now there's an interesting frude. I've seen pictures of him/his work and thought "Cool!" while simultaneously thinking "...creepy...". Based on a quick google search, he seems to be most well-known for his work with makeup/prosthetics. Just like special effects artist, Barney transforms people in the mythical and grim. However, while some of his pieces, which he deems as "sculpture", are performed live, it's usually captured in photography, film, and drawings. A Yale graduate, he is also the creator of the Cremaster Cycle, "an art project consisting of five feature length films, together with related sculptures, photographs, drawings, and artist's books" which is regarded as one of the greatest achievements in avant-garde cinema. He is a strange man. A strange strange man. I just watched the trailer for the Cremaster Cycle and I have no idea what it's about. No bloody idea. But it looks pretty and twisted. But in regards to our body project, Barney seems to specialize in costumes and sculpting upon the body to create something else. Both implying and transforming the human form. Did I mention he's married to Bjork?
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Rachel Whiteread: here is one of those artists who has found her thing, her niche and is STICKING TO IT! She was made known famous for her empty space sculptures where she filled the area beneath chairs. With it she clearly illustrated the space in our lives that goes unused or perhaps wasted. Since then she has moved on to fill the spaces of bookshelves, stairways, to entire houses. Easily it can be seen as a commentary on the greed we in 1st world countries have for space in not just our homes but in our lives. She was the first woman to win the coveted Turner Prize in 1993 and currently one of the Young British Artists. She's almost 50 so I wonder how much longer she's eligible for that little club? But she's innovative in that she thought to capture a place no one and yet thought to, mostly because it was something that is so taken for granted it's hardly seen at all.
Rebecca Horn: Is an installation artist who is probably more known for her works that extend the body. We've covered her in class and she was the creator of those long-fingered gloves meant to expand one's presence in the room. While it added a sense of liberation from the normal confines of the human anatomy, it also became a burden through the unfamiliarity of having and using 4ft long fingers. Another piece of hers that I liked and almost chose to emulate was her mesh face mask with attached pencils. So rather than drawing with one's hands they can draw with their face. I wanted to take this and make a pair of denture from sharpened pencils but I felt it was just not original enough for my taste. She has also created a piece known as 'Unicorn'. The title informs the imagry of a horn strapped to a womans head. It has been noted that this strap suit is almost identical to Frida Kahlo's 'Broken Column' and I would just like to point out that this outfit was the inspiration for one of the costumes Milla Jovovich wore in the sci-fi fantasy film, The Fifth Element. It is erotic while simulating the confines of bars or straps used to secure potentially harmful patients.
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