Been there…
Dvorak Symphony 9 performed on balloon pic.twitter.com/MgLVFojmYq
— score follower (@incipitsify) November 12, 2022

Been there…
Dvorak Symphony 9 performed on balloon pic.twitter.com/MgLVFojmYq
— score follower (@incipitsify) November 12, 2022
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.
(via kfm)
Hamnwa sowas auch mal hier.
Hand dance pic.twitter.com/i09tszaOlK
— Tansu YEĞEN (@TansuYegen) November 17, 2022
I want to meet the person who came up with this fucking cover pic.twitter.com/g6i81krXv3
— Sam (@nukedtoronto) November 16, 2022
Schöne Idee.
Design-Agentur hat eine neue Deutschlandflagge gestaltet, die für mehr Vielfalt stehen soll. Wird bei unseren 🇩🇪 Accounts für helle Freude sorgen. pic.twitter.com/T87TKv2naT
— Alf Frommer (@alf_frommer) November 16, 2022
Wusste nicht, dass die existiert. Hatte hier früher schon mal eine Schallplatte mit dem Mitschnitt eines Gasangriffs im 1. Weltkrieg.
Die digitalisierte Originalaufnahme der letzten Minute vor dem Waffenstillstand am 11. November 1918 um 11 Uhr, der den Ersten Weltkrieg beendete.
Was für ein gespenstisches Zeitdokument. pic.twitter.com/SBKHSnEw1G
— Blake (@BlakesWort) November 13, 2022
How a camel climbs a sand dune.pic.twitter.com/jGPkPzB8Jb
— Fascinating (@fasc1nate) November 2, 2022
Vgl. meine Split Screen Studies.
In 1914, a 20-year-old Mabel Normand directed her second film, Won in a Closet, where she pulled off this really cool split-screen shot pic.twitter.com/ARgw6LpeSb
— Silent Movie GIFs (@silentmoviegifs) October 15, 2022