ART iT launched in 2003 as a bilingual Japanese-English quarterly print publication, the first of its kind in Japan. From its inception, the magazine's mission was to link contemporary art events happening in Japan to those taking place elsewhere in the region and around the world.
In 2009, ART iT began the next phase of its development by converting to an exclusively online publication and social networking site combining both editorial and user-generated content created by leading Japanese and international artists and art professionals as well as casual art enthusiasts.
ART iT intends to rethink the nature of online media. Rather than focusing on constantly updated information, the publication features in-depth, articulated ideas about contemporary art and culture.
http://www.art-it.asia/
David Hockney painting his pool
Ellen Berkenblit
Proun 6, 2012
RICHARD SERRA
ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG
Always been drawn to this piece…
Robert Rauschenberg, Inlet, 1959, Combine, oil, newspaper, paper,...
Cerith Wyn Evans
Valeska Soares at Frieze London
Galeria Fortes Vilaça, Sao Paulo
Luis Barragán
Photo by Luisa Lambri
Herzog & de Meuron’s Venice Biennale Exhibition
An exhibition of the Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg by Herzog & de Meuron focused on their 360...
Painting by Atsuko Tanaka.
Franz West, “The Ego and the Id” (2008), Central Park, 2009 (via Franz West Dies at 65 from Liver Cancer)
20 posts tagged paris
Rirkrit Tiravanija @Chantal Crousel Fiac 2009
“The Nomiya” on the roof of the Palais de Tokyo, Paris
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The Nomiya restaurant is replacing the Hotel Everland on the roof of the Palais de Tokyo for one year. Designed by the artist Laurent Grasso, the glass cube is part of the ‘Art Home’culinary project by the Palais de Tokyo and Electrolux. The Nomiya concept developed for the Palais de Tokyo is a project that’s both inspired and named after the tiny Japanese bars. In the creation of Nomiya, Laurent Grasso was assisted by his brother, Pascal Grasso, an architect. Nomiya Space is a rectangular glass box about the size of a shipping container. “We tried to create an overall impression of airiness, transparency, floating,” said the French artist Laurent Grasso.
b1b1:
Diner au palais de Tokyo , mais pas en bas
Oh those crazy kids at the Palais de Tokyo, always doing something innovative (or stupid and overly esoteric. Either one). Last year, they set up this ridiculous one room hotel on the roof of the museum as another experiment in “design” or whatever that term is supposed to mean these days. Now the the space will serve as a restaurant for the next year, a glass cube that can accommodate 12 diners. Meaning your chances of gaining a spot are 12x greater than they were for the hotel, but you’re probably still shit out of luck.
And yes, I’d kind of love to go. [Palais de Tokyo, Paris.unlike]
Spy Numbers, Palais de Tokyo: a machine for measuring the aurora borealis.
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