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A somewhat chaotic multidisciplinary collection of visual art, photography, design, architecture, poetry, and literature.

Tiny, but cosy discussion group [Not to be taken too seriously!]:
https://t.me/+I522TcNiXNwwYTM6
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Charlotte Rudolph
Mary Wingman’s Dancing Hands
1928
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Barry Le Va
On Center Shatter — or —Shatterscatter (Within the Series of Layered Pattern Acts)
1968-1971
Installation at Galerie Ricke, Cologne, 1971
6
Lee Miller
Max Ernst and Leonora Carrington
1937
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Vera Molnár
144 Trapèzes
1974

A series of 16 variations showing the progressive deformation of 144 trapeziums from a stage where the deformation is nearly invisible to the stage of the decompostion of the forms.
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Lygia Clark
Hand Dialogue, shown with Clark's and Oiticica's hands inside the elastic Möbius strip
1966
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Julius Bissier
Gimpel Fils, London, 1963. Exhibition: May-June 1963
Art Books & Ephemera
3
Servie Janssen
Hengelo 22 8 79
1979
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1) Anna Reivilä, Bond #22, 2015

2) Anna Reivilä, Bond #12, 2015
4
You can't give away the virtues
these days, and I have none
to offer anyway.

Only these silent hands,
their heavy weakness,
their inscrutable signs.

*

But is it the emptiness
of the left hand that you want,
or the emptiness
of the right?

One of them holds the pick.
One of them presses down
on the strings. And one of them stretches
without ever daring to touch
to stroke to caress
the beloved's neck.

*

Four thousand years ago
we all inhabited
the same tiny bulletproof egg.

*

Were you two close?
someone asked,
and I replied yes,
I was too close.

Troy Jollimore, from "Going Viral", Syllabus of Errors
3
Minor White
Valentina Oumansky, San Francisco
1952
2
Dezider Tóth
Koán II/4
1977
2
Britton Daniel
Dyslexia
2015

“The intention is that a reader has to take their time to decipher which letters are used in words and sentences, slowing them down to the speed of someone with dyslexia.

[…]

The project began as a self-initiated graphic design assignment during Britton's studies at the London College of Communication, for which he decided to apply his experiences of dyslexia to help others understand some of the symptoms.

"You can't skim through, you have to pick out and read each individual letter, then piece together the words, then sentences and paragraphs," Britton said. "The whole process of reading is 10 times slower, similar to that of a dyslexic reader, to recreate the embarrassment of reading with everyday type."

Dan Howarth,
Dan Britton's typeface recreates the frustration of reading with dyslexia, article for Dazeen

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