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FRAGMENTS

FRAGMENTS. Your first step is to build a rich resource bank of YOUR drawings and photos to make experiments with. The following link has lists of artist’s that work to different themes to inspire you;. https://www.theartyteacher.com/artistthemes.

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FRAGMENTS

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  1. FRAGMENTS

  2. Your first step is to build a rich resource bank of YOUR drawings and photos to make experiments with The following link has lists of artist’s that work to different themes to inspire you; https://www.theartyteacher.com/artistthemes

  3. noun 1. a part broken off or detached: scattered fragments of the broken vase.2. an isolated, unfinished, or incomplete part: She played a fragment of her latest composition.3. an odd piece, bit, or scrap. verb (used without object) 4. to collapse or break into fragments; disintegrate: The chair fragmented under his weight.verb (used with object) 5. to break (something) into pieces or fragments; cause to disintegrate: Outside influences soon fragmented the Mayan culture.6. to divide into fragments; disunify. 7. Computers. to split a file into smaller parts and store in non-contiguous sectors on a disk, resulting in fragmentation of both the file and available free space on the disk. fragment [nounfrag-muhnt; verbfrag-muhnt, -ment, frag-ment]

  4. Japanese Artist Yayoi Kusama

  5. Thread art by Gabriel Dawe | Thread art, Gabriel and Artisthttps://www.pinterest.com › pin › 180425528792785671"Plexus no. 19", an installation made of thread for Miniartextil in Italy, by artist Gabriel Dawe.

  6. El Anatsui Bleeding Takari II El Anatsui (born 1944) is a Ghanaiansculptor active for much of his career in Nigeria. He has drawn particular international attention for his iconic "bottle-top installations",[1] distinctive large-scale assemblages of thousands of pieces of aluminium sourced from alcohol recycling stations and sewn together with copper wire, transformed into metallic cloth-like wall sculptures in a way that can "draw connections between consumption, waste, and the environment".[2]

  7. El Anatsui’s Lines that Link Humanity

  8. WENDY MARUYAMA - Tag Project Replications of the tags worn by Japanese Americans forced to relocate. Art Installations Paper Installation ...

  9. Parisian artist, Baptise Debombourg, creates mind bending three-dimensional installations The turbo wave of the 80’s left its mark on the industry and on the whole cultural situation in Western Europe.It became a model of behavior, since having a « turbo » in your own car was giving you this feeling of superiority among other common cars. It was meaning you were more powerful than them. The sound effect gives the sensation of a real physical power. To advance, the people from Eastern Europe put some more «tuning, customizing» everywhere – for example in their folk music.  The installation « Turbo » is actually dealing with this testosterone competition, and is putting in jeopardy this representation of the masculine power. Elements: wood installation Dimensions: variable size, H 3,2 x 7,3 x 3m Realisation time: variable time, 145 to 35 hours

  10. Tadashi Kawamata

  11. Tadashi Kawamata is an artist who transforms our environment, he works in the midst of demolition and construction. These projects have taken place all over the world and range from intimate transformations of a single house or apartment to the whole scale reconfiguration of towns. Usually using scrap or reclaimed materials, mostly wood, Kawamata sets about building new and unusual structures; a bridge between an apartment block and a museum, a wooden walkway that leads from a town centre to a lakeside, slum dwellings constructed in a picturesque park. Kawamata's aim is to turn these environments inside out, and present the viewers with a completely fresh view of their surroundings, whether it's from a walkway built three metres above the town square or by a room transformed with a suspended ceiling of reclaimed doors. These projects make us question our environment, the way it is constructed and how we interact with it. Born in Hokkaido, Japan in 1953. Tadashi Kawamata has had many one-man exhibitions and projects throughout Europe, the United States and Japan including the Serpentine Gallery, London, the Kunsthalle, Recklinghausen and the Meguro Museum of Art, Tokyo. Tadashi Kawamata exhibited at the 40th Venice Biennale in 1982, and later was invited to Documenta VIII and Documenta IX.

  12. GowLangsford Gallery1900 × 1268Search by imageFragmented Illuminations (1)

  13. Lukas Vasilikos In these photos I see fragments of memories and fragments of light https://lukasvasilikos.com/gallery/fragments/ Lukas Vasilikos (b. 1975, Crete, Greece) Lukas Vasilikos started photography in 2006.He lives and works in Athens.Lukas is a member of the “Depression Era” team of artists and writers that record the Greek crisis and he participated in an exhibition that took place in March 2014 at Palais de Beax Arts (Bozar), Belgium and in DUPON gallery part of Mois de la Photo a Paris in November 2014. He is also a member of the international collective “street-photographers” and the “Photography Circle”.

  14. Lukas Vasilikos My guess is that this photo is about the Greek crisis, with their economy in difficulty in relation to the rest of Europe. The country has become fragmented by this and the photographer has used fragments of two different images https://lukasvasilikos.com/gallery/fragments/

  15. http://mattw.us/images/experiments/ Matt Wisniewski

  16. Sarah Simblet…. Draw fragments of nature

  17. Décollage Décollage is a French word meaning literally to unstick, generally associated with a process used by artists of the nouveau réalisme (new realism) movement that involved making art from posters ripped from walls The artists involved, such as Raymond Hains, often sought out sites with many layers of posters so that the process of décollage took on an archeological character and was seen as a means of uncovering historical information. They exhibited their ripped poster artworks as aesthetic objects and social documents. From 1949 Hains made work from posters that he tore from the walls of Paris. Raymond Hains Jacques Mahe de la Villegle Jazzmen 1961 Tate Mimmo Rotella http://timothyharney.com/home.html

  18. Mark Bradford

  19. BRIAN KASSTLE http://www.briankasstle.com/art-journals/fragments-of-life/ These are the fragments of my life.  Tattered, worn, wrinkled, layered, pulled apart, fragmented.  A glimpse of what came before me, what is now, and what will be left after I have gone.  What do you see?  What is hidden?  How much do I allow you to see?

  20. Liu Bolin Becomes a fragment of a scene Think What do you think is going on in this artwork? What was your first reaction to this artwork? Why do you think you had the reaction? What is it about? Do you think there a meaning, message or story? Does it remind you of anything and if so why? Does your opinion about the artwork change the longer you look at it? Why? What do you think the purpose of the work is, why do you think the artist made it? Does it achieve it’s purpose? How? Do you notice any symbols or juxtaposition in the artwork? What do you think the artist was feeling or thinking when working on it? Why? What have they done to show this? Do you think the time and place the work is made for gives you any clues to the artist’s intention or the meaning of the work? How does your eye move through the artwork? What choices do you think the artist made to make this happen?

  21. Making new images out of fragments of others Think What do you think is going on in this artwork? What was your first reaction to this artwork? Why do you think you had the reaction? What is it about? Do you think there a meaning, message or story? Does it remind you of anything and if so why? Does your opinion about the artwork change the longer you look at it? Why? What do you think the purpose of the work is, why do you think the artist made it? Does it achieve it’s purpose? How? Do you notice any symbols or juxtaposition in the artwork? What do you think the artist was feeling or thinking when working on it? Why? What have they done to show this? Do you think the time and place the work is made for gives you any clues to the artist’s intention or the meaning of the work? How does your eye move through the artwork? What choices do you think the artist made to make this happen? CAROLINE DE RIVIERE, 1981Original silk-screen in colours, hand-signed in pencil. Jiri KOLAR " Picasso "

  22. Think What do you think is going on in this artwork? What was your first reaction to this artwork? Why do you think you had the reaction? What is it about? Do you think there a meaning, message or story? Does it remind you of anything and if so why? Does your opinion about the artwork change the longer you look at it? Why? What do you think the purpose of the work is, why do you think the artist made it? Does it achieve it’s purpose? How? Do you notice any symbols or juxtaposition in the artwork? What do you think the artist was feeling or thinking when working on it? Why? What have they done to show this? Do you think the time and place the work is made for gives you any clues to the artist’s intention or the meaning of the work? How does your eye move through the artwork? What choices do you think the artist made to make this happen? Aldo Tolino fragments images

  23. Alessia Avellino From left to right; Holborn Scaffolding 2", Charcoal and pigment on paper, 85cm x 60cm "Battersea Power Station 2", Oil on canvas, 183cm x 152.2cm "Swiss RE - 'Gherkin'. London", Charcoal on paper, 153cm x 153cm What do you think is going on in this artwork? What was your first reaction to this artwork? Why do you think you had the reaction? What is it about? Do you think there a meaning, message or story? Does it remind you of anything and if so why? Does your opinion about the artwork change the longer you look at it? Why? What do you think the purpose of the work is, why do you think the artist made it? Does it achieve it’s purpose? How? Do you notice any symbols or juxtaposition in the artwork? What do you think the artist was feeling or thinking when working on it? Why? What have they done to show this? Do you think the time and place the work is made for gives you any clues to the artist’s intention or the meaning of the work? How does your eye move through the artwork? What choices do you think the artist made to make this happen? Think Fragments of buildings

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