March 14, 2011

Animal, Vegetable or Minimalism?

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Have we considered Damien Hirst's vitrine sculptures from the Wunderkammer perspective? Because the giant grab-bag auction at Pierre Berge & Associes in Brussels is stuffed [heh] with disturbing taxidermy, eerie medical/scientific specimens, and elaborate butterfly displays. Yes, that is a butterfly skull under glass. If you're playing any Hirstian drinking games, you are now passed out on the floor.

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Or have we considered Olafur Eliasson's art to be inhabiting a similar historical aesthetic trajectory?

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Because seriously, put something in a bell jar, or on a tiny little display stand, and it gets immediately objectified and pretty damn near artified.

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If not, then hop to it, Art History. Because right now, I'm too busy planning my show of found conceptualism and ur-Post-Minimalism:

Lot 451: a suite of 9 framed marble samples [est. EUR1300-1500]

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Lot 562: a cube-shaped Oryx-skin pouf [est. EUR 300-450]

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I guess it's really a pair: Lot 563: a cube-shaped boar-hide pouf [est. 300-450]

Lot 561: a large monochrome grid made of white wolf skin [est. EUR3000-5000]

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I guess it's really a diptych: Lot 823: a large monochrome grid made of pink flamingo feathers [est. EUR 1500-2000]

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And a couple for the back room:

This could be bigger: Lot 504: a sphere [23cm dia.] of polished thuya root burl [est. EUR 150-200]

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And this could be a bit less Madison Avenue, but still: Lot 576: a plaque of caravan salt from Mali [est. EUR 1200-1500] [ref. flickr]

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art | etc. | posted by greg at March 14, 2011 8:59 PM