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this is advertising | nn - 25.03.2010 17:41
moderators!!!!!!!! this is nothing more than advertising without a political context. delete please | - | NN - 25.03.2010 18:06
zeikerd! | - | Ulrike M - 25.03.2010 20:06
Alles is politiek!
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ja hun mogen geld verdienen want het is/was ooit een kraakpand? beetje 10 euro vragen voor een paar kutbandjes.. ja hoor | Revisionisten | nn - 25.03.2010 20:58
Ja, geld verdienen is vies en revisionisties. Door 10 euri's toegang te vragen maken die kunstenaars meteen deel uit van de bezitende klasse! Die kunstenaars moeten alles gratis doen inclusief het aanschaffen van materiaal. De enige politiek korrekte manier van leven is het leven van een uitkering zodat andere mensen voor je onderhoud betalen. Verder zal de kunst zelf ook wel revisionistiesch zijn. De enige juiste kunst is socialistiesch realisme en wie wat anders maakt hoort thuis in het heropvoedingskamp in de flevopolder. | Socialist realism? | David Bowie - 26.03.2010 18:08
Yawn, the usual indymedia grasp of logic and inability to even use sarcasm effectively. Yay. Brilliant use of 'socialist realism' as the only type of politically engaged art ... do kindly fuck off. Let's strip away some of the veneer of art speak surrounding so much of contemporary art where rhetoric is a substitute for substance let alone decent ideas, critical engagement or even 'originality'. "DO NOT DISTURB is an installation investigating the invisible layering of interactions behind closed hotel rooms doors." Invisible layering, what does this even mean? And invisible to who? "Considering hotel rooms as temporal private spaces," Temporal in what sense? Temporal in terms of the amount of time the room is payed for, the lifetime of the museum as a physical building? What? "it focuses on the mechanism that not only acitvates the priviate within the public" That mechanism being the do not disturb sign? Right? "but palces an important role evoking the imagination and narrative behind those close doors." So basically, what this comes down to is an art exhibition about the curiosity people have about what's happening behing closed doors (or) when they see a do not disturb sign? Biting stuff. I'm aware that a certain level of cynicism is inherent and neccessary to both the production and viewing of so much contemporary art, but apart from the fact that this is on in a space that was formerly a squat, what the fuck has it to do with indymedia? Send it to radar.squat.net | |
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