Across China, protesters are holding up blank white signs (everyone knows they're demonstrating for freedom). There's no law against white paper. Authorities don't know what to do. 哈哈哈哈 pic.twitter.com/49KgOMmdB8
This amazing video of an octopus changing colors in her sleep might be an indication she's dreaming 🐙💤 Nature is more amazing then we can ever know. Let's protect her in all her forms.🥰 pic.twitter.com/B9QuSFyVK3
Schon wieder Gemüse auf Kunstwerke! Wait, das war 1969…
Made in 2006, it documents a fictitious performance set in 1969 which clearly resembles a Fluxus event.
The artist, played by Rodney Graham, is shown sitting in a chair in an alternative art space.
The audience watches him trying to hit a gong with potatoes.
Taking as his fashion icon the artist Dan Graham, Rodney Graham’s costume represents what he might have worn had he been a New York artist at the time: plaid shirt, jeans, and Red Wing boots.
The potatoes that hit the gong were subsequently distilled to create a limited-edition vodka.
As with many films by Graham, this relatively simple action contrasts starkly with the efforts that went into the production, for which the artist did much research and hired a professional film crew.