Sometimes the most meaningful art doesn’t start in an art store; it starts right where we are. From forgotten buttons to weathered wood, everyday objects carry stories just waiting to be revealed.
Using found objects can be a way of expanding one's appreciation of life and art. Willis "Bing" Davis likes using discarded and recycling material as a way of expanding one's understanding and ...
The traditional approach to found-object art is to essentially let the object do the talking. But what about when the object is digital? While Charleston visual artist Jack Powell has combed through ...
Artist David Olsen creates art the viewer may touch. His chosen materials have been handled plenty — bottle caps, lids, random computer parts and actual trash he picks up while mowing his yard. “The ...
Artwork by Northwest Pennsylvania Collegiate Academy students is on display in Gannon University's education center in Blasco Library.
In the early 20th century, Marcel Duchamp stirred up controversy in the art world by displaying what he termed “readymade” art — everyday objects, like the urinal in his famous Fountain, displayed ...
Catalog of the exhibition held at the Mendel Art Gallery Jan. 12-Feb. 18, 1990. Inserted into pamphlet cover 28 x 21 cm.
Extracted from: Art and design studies (Cambridge, UK) 12, 2013, pages 41-48. Abstract, page 41. https://siris-libraries.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?&profile=liball&source ...