1960 : Anonima

“The American artist collaborative, Anonima Group, was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 1960 by Ernst Benkert, Francis Hewitt and Ed Mieczkowski. Propelled by their rejection of the cult of the individual ego and automatic style of the Abstract Expressionists, the artists worked collaboratively on grid-based, spatially fluctuating drawings and paintings that were precise investigations of the scientific phenomena and psychology of optical perception. The work was accompanied by writings: proposals, projects and manifestos - socialist in nature - which the artists considered essential to the experience and understanding of their work.” anonimagroup


System of Knowing

by R. Justin Stewart (behance). Installation, sculpture, mixed media, colorful. Zip ties, teflon orings, ink on paper, wood, paint. 2009

via mariuswatz@twitter


unproductive: teste para uma nova série de imagens

via leonelcunha, unproductive


Subdivision: Goldenwood Shores

by Ross Racine, 2009. Models for planned communities, views of fictional suburbs, referencing the computer as a tool for urban planning.

“Drawn freehand directly on a computer and printed on a high-end inkjet printer. works do not contain photographs nor scanned material.”

via ffffound/architekturblog, ffffound/watz


Sol Lewitt: a wall drawing retrospective

A collaboration between Yale University Art Gallery, MASS MoCA, and the Williams College Museum of Art. listen to the podcast, or see one (wall drawing 1112) of many timelapse animations of Sol Lewitt’s drawings. the exhibition ” comprises 105 of LeWitt’s large-scale wall drawings, spanning the artist’s career from 1969 to 2007.”


sand drawings

“Jim Denevan makes freehand drawings in sand. At low tide on wide beaches Jim searches the shore for a wave tossed stick. After finding a good stick and composing himself in the near and far environment Jim draws— laboring up to 7 hours and walking as many as 30 miles”

via www.jimdenevan.com


godmode

by tim knapen. show during the ars electronica 2008 festival.

“a hacked photocopier, some paper, black markers and colored pencils. Using the markers and pencils, you can draw any creature you can come up with. The photocopier is then used to bring your creature to life.” tim knapen

via www.art-magazin.de


justin ashbee

“These drawings are executed purely by hand, using Sharpie pens. I begin with a curve, from which lines and forms begin to emerge, evolve, morph, and grow organically, in an intuitive flow, while maintaining delicate, elegant precision.”

via justineashbee.com