| Sisters of Mute | Openmute - Linkme2 - More is More - independent media distribution | |||
|
|||
|
Editorial content |
Submitted by Ben on Tuesday, 22 July, 2008 - 02:52
Anne Fifield 'South Korean companies are sending employees on "fake funeral" courses to help prevent suicide. The "well-dying craze" has become an integral part of training at Samsung, which has built its own fake funeral centre' subject: Business | Dada | Financial Crisis | Futurist | Pathopraxis | Performance | Strategy
mariposa
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by mariposa on Friday, 2 March, 2007 - 17:10
subject: Artivism | Conceptual | Dada | Fluxus | Futurist | Institutional Critique | Net Art | New Media Art | Performance | Relational Aesthetics | Site-Specific | Situationist | Socially Engaged | Surrealist
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Monday, 26 April, 2004 - 23:00
Esther Leslie In her recent book, Irrational Modernism, Amelia Jones advances a ‘neurasthenic’ reading of the New York Dada scene, centred on the marginalised figure of the Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven whose eccentricities, bizarre dress code and self-ostracising stench embodied and challenged the spirit of Dada.
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Sunday, 9 September, 2001 - 23:00
Stewart Home After Guy Debord, Raoul Vaneigem is one of the more celebrated situationist theorists. This short sketch of a forerunner to the group of which he was once a leading light, says more about Vaneigem’s theoretical weaknesses than it does about his ostensible subject. Vaneigem usefully stresses the specificity of surrealism, concentrating on its differences to dada. subject: Dada | Surrealist | Theory & Philosophy
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mute publishing Ltd - Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Licence | Site by OpenMute |