Driver's Seat – 1994
a delicate seat – 1994
Poly at bad water ;-)
when we were still fit ...
Grosse Röhre
Footage in der Waschküche.
Volleyball NLB (1977)
In the museum
Very young Poly
Helsinki, Finland
Poly for president! - Make Donald go again!* :-)
─┤
Schilthorn - "Piz Gloria"
look around
A small step for man, ...
panoramiae fragmentaris
reduced to the max ;-)
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confusing perplexity
Inside "Mirage Gstaad" by Doug Aitken.
"Mirage Gstaad" is a site-specific outdoor sculpture by the Los Angeles-based artist Doug Aitken and can be seen in Gstaad until spring 2021.
In the tradition of land-art as a reflection of the dreams and aspirations projected onto the American West, Mirage Gstaad presents a continually changing encounter in which subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux. With every available surface clad in mirror, it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a never-ending kaleidoscope of light and reflection. As Mirage Gstaad pulls the landscape in and reflects it back out, this classic one-story suburban house becomes a framing device, a perceptual echo-chamber endlessly bouncing between the dream of nature as pure uninhabited state and the pursuit of its conquest. Situated against the backdrop of Videmanette in Gstaad, Mirage Gstaad will bring the idea of the "Manifest Destiny" and the American West into contact with the European landscape and the tradition of the sublime.
Doug Aitken (born 1968 in Redondo Beach, California, USA)
(46.49760, 07.28590); [160°] – swisstopo map
"Mirage Gstaad" is a site-specific outdoor sculpture by the Los Angeles-based artist Doug Aitken and can be seen in Gstaad until spring 2021.
In the tradition of land-art as a reflection of the dreams and aspirations projected onto the American West, Mirage Gstaad presents a continually changing encounter in which subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux. With every available surface clad in mirror, it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a never-ending kaleidoscope of light and reflection. As Mirage Gstaad pulls the landscape in and reflects it back out, this classic one-story suburban house becomes a framing device, a perceptual echo-chamber endlessly bouncing between the dream of nature as pure uninhabited state and the pursuit of its conquest. Situated against the backdrop of Videmanette in Gstaad, Mirage Gstaad will bring the idea of the "Manifest Destiny" and the American West into contact with the European landscape and the tradition of the sublime.
Doug Aitken (born 1968 in Redondo Beach, California, USA)
(46.49760, 07.28590); [160°] – swisstopo map
Hubs 56, Nicolas Mertens, Boarischa Krautmo, Nouchetdu38 and 13 other people have particularly liked this photo
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polytropos club has replied to Gudrun clubpolytropos club has replied to ©UdoSm clubVielleicht begann es mit der Kunst, als der erste Neandertaler sein Steinbeil mit einer Vogelfeder schmückte und gipfelte in der Aussage von Tamino in der "Zauberflöte" in der Arie "Dies Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön."
Kunst ist zu nichts zu gebrauchen und trotzdem brauchen wir sie. Kunst schafft Abwechslung, Verbundenheit, Inspiration, Freude. Kunst kann sogar schön sein ;-) Kunst ist natürlich auch ein Abbild unserer Gesellschaft, und in diesem Beispiel hier auch ein Abbild unseres Wohlstandes, das hier zeigt, dass es uns in unseren Kulturkreis immer noch sehr gut geht.
Braucht es Ipernity? ;-)
Daniela Brocca club has replied to polytropos clubpolytropos club has replied to Daniela Brocca clubpolytropos club has replied to Annemarie clubpolytropos club has replied to Eva Lewitus clubGreetz, Christien.
polytropos club has replied to Chris10 clubpolytropos club has replied to Nouchetdu38 clubpolytropos club has replied to Hubs 56 clubSign-in to write a comment.