Robleto's work reminds me some works from a brazilian artist called Farnese de Andrade (http://www.annamarianiemeyer.com.br/FARNESE%20DE%20ANDRADE/outras%20fotos%20farnese.htm) (unfortunately references only in portuguese and small photos). Seemed to me at least being a similar kind of poetics.
The first site uses a table chart to construct the page... it is an ancient idea that I believe still works very well
Your way to cut your CV in "verses" also hooked my attention... I was wondering what are the future of a memorial writing based on verses, kind of a individual epic style... just thinking loud...
best
Lucio BR
On 1/22/06, Peter Ciccariello <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Robleto's work is utterly fascinating. Thanks for the links.
-Peter Ciccariello
ARTIST'S BLOG - http://invisiblenotes.blogspot.com/
-----Original Message-----
From: Alan Sondheim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, 21 Jan 2006 02:33:58 -0500
Subject: Re: introduction
Also - why not post the essays here unless they're too large? (They'd
have
to be text format) - otherwise, please send me copies back-channel.
Thanks, Alan
On Fri, 20 Jan 2006, John Lowther wrote:
> hello Alan
>
> well, assuming i get in, it will be at the concrete campus of GA
state
> university -- downtown ATL.
>
>> I think btw you'll find a lot of good work here - there's not
always
>> that much discussion but the quality of that presented seems always
of
>> great interest.
>
> too bad, i like discussion. but i am up for what comes.
>
>> Do the essays you've written have images? Or can the magazine be
>> obtained
>> here? The reviews otherwise might be difficult to interpret?
>
> the essay that i am most inclined to trumpet -- or rather the artist
> (Dario Robleto) -- has links to a pair of wonderful online
> presentations of shows -- some of the best i have seen for object
art
> on line. the magazine will have one image i believe but i urge all
> readers of it to visit the two online sites.
>
> and here as a teaser for anyone at all curious, are the sites in
> question -- my 1st of two footnotes;
>
> [1] Virtually all of my experience of Robleto's work has been
through
> the two sites listed below. Both are wonderful presentations and I
urge
> anyone reading this to have a look at them. The piece that consumes
> virtually all of my attention in this essay, The Melancholic Refuses
To
> Surrender is found on the Acme Los Angeles site.
> http://www.praz-delavallade.com/dariorobleto/expo2004.html &
> http://www.acmelosangeles.com/artists/dr/dr.html Click on any of the
> thumbnails to bring up a scroll that contains larger shots of all of
> works.
>
> kind regards
> John
For URLs, DVDs, CDs, books/etc. see
http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt .
Contact: Alan Sondheim, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED].
General
directory of work: http://www.asondheim.org .
