Showing posts with label wall drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wall drawing. Show all posts

WA L L W O R K S

Paul
Morrison:
black
and
white








Paul Morrison
(these wallworks have always excited me.)



Morrison lives and works in London. He is best known for his large monochromatic botanical landscapes that are at once both familiar and foreign: Familiar because his subjects—trees, flora, and their natural surroundings—are immediately recognizable, and foreign because he can cause a mere dandelion or weed to become threatening due to its immense size and lack of color. All his images are painted in two coats of acrylic paint.

They are then scanned into a computer, manipulated and projected onto the canvas. The different elements tend to be disproportionate in size: tiny plants become huge, while massive trees shrink. This is called 'cognitive landscape'






















images via
cheim and reid.... new york








Paul
Morrison:
black
and
white


























Semâ Bekirovic
see more work here..

"Plankjes are four shelves I found in a burnt-down house.
The shelves show traces of the objects they were carrying when the fire took place. "



via zoobezoobezoo blog... here!
.
the
writings
(drawings)
on
the
wall.
(in the corners.)




Sol Lewitt






"The best part of LeWitt's art, however, isn't how it's made, it's what it does. The finest wall drawings -- and these, by and large, were designed before 1993 -- render one of art's most invisible qualities, content, visible. They make you understand architecture as material; why the wall is a subject; how image, abstraction and text connect; what logic, authorship and even capitalism look like when they're thrown into question. This is no mean feat; it's almost miraculous..."

taken from Jerry Saltz's article here...














































(images from top to bottom)

1. sol lewitt: Wall Drawing #146. All two-part combinations of blue arcs from corners and sides and blue straight, not straight and broken lines., September 1972
2. richard wright, wall drawing
3. neil campbell : c/o marianne boesky, here 2008
4. unknown wall drawing