Kafouillisme

Mouvement artistik revendiquant l'erreur et le desordre.
floydinium:

Buffalo ‘66 - Vincent Gallo [1998] We’re taking pictures like we’re a couple  Like we like each other Like we’re husband and wife We span time together We span time together as a couple ‘Cause we’re a loving couple spanning time These photos are us in love spanning time  No bullshit faces No funny faces Just look like you like me That’s all l want Just look like you like me

floydinium:

Buffalo ‘66 - Vincent Gallo [1998]

We’re taking pictures
like we’re a couple
Like we like each other
Like we’re husband and wife
We span time together
We span time together as a couple
‘Cause we’re a loving couple
spanning time
These photos are us in love
spanning time
No bullshit faces
No funny faces
Just look like you like me
That’s all l want
Just look like you like me

diarrheaworldstarhiphop:

‘Emperor Haute Couture’ - Margaret Sutherland
~

‘Nude’ Stephen Harper painting causes a stir 
—————————————————
It takes political transparency to a whole new level.
Canadians got an eyeful Friday as images of a painting depicting the prime minister in the nude went viral.
The large oil on canvas, which Stephen Harper did not pose for, is by Kingston, Ont.,-based artist Margaret Sutherland.
It shows the prime minister reclining on a chaise lounge wearing nothing but a subtle smile, surrounded by people in suits, whose faces can’t be seen. A dog rests at his feet as a woman in business attire offers him what looks like a Tim Hortons cup on a silver platter.
The piece appeared to draw out the art critic in many Canucks.
“This is just too funny - think she painted him a bit skinny - he should really be wearing his vest,” Myrtle Graham posted on Facebook.
“This made my day. Nude Stephen Harper is ART,” tweeted Denise Balkissoon.
Other’s weren’t as amused: “Oh dear lord: may have to pluck eyes out now,” tweeted Paula Schuck. “I don’t know whether to laugh or be horrified,” added Kelsey Rolfe.
The Prime Minister’s Office also took to Twitter to voice a reaction to the piece.
“On the Sutherland painting: we’re not impressed. Everyone knows the PM is a cat person,” tweeted Harper spokesman Andrew MacDougall, referring to the canine on the canvas.
Others on Parliament Hill took a similar tongue-in-cheek approach.
“This is one case where I think we really do need a Conservative cover-up,” said Liberal MP Scott Brison. “I guess you could say in this painting it’s quite obvious that the Prime Minister has very little to hide.”
For Ms. Sutherland, who completed the painting last year, the point of her piece was a satirical one.
“It was a sort of a culmination of some general frustrations of the federal government’s policies and what they were telling us,” said Ms. Sutherland, who has been particularly peeved with the government’s elimination of the long form census and its closure of certain prison farms.
“The political message is to look for yourself and don’t necessarily believe the party line.”
The painting’s title — Emperor Haute Couture — is also part of the pun as it carries a reference to “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” a tale by Hans Christian Andersen in which a vain king parades around naked, believing his new suit is so superior that it is invisible to those unfit for their positions in life.
“Satire is a great way to make valid social comment and have some fun at the same time,” said Ms. Sutherland.

diarrheaworldstarhiphop:

‘Emperor Haute Couture’ - Margaret Sutherland

~


‘Nude’ Stephen Harper painting causes a stir

—————————————————

It takes political transparency to a whole new level.

Canadians got an eyeful Friday as images of a painting depicting the prime minister in the nude went viral.

The large oil on canvas, which Stephen Harper did not pose for, is by Kingston, Ont.,-based artist Margaret Sutherland.

It shows the prime minister reclining on a chaise lounge wearing nothing but a subtle smile, surrounded by people in suits, whose faces can’t be seen. A dog rests at his feet as a woman in business attire offers him what looks like a Tim Hortons cup on a silver platter.

The piece appeared to draw out the art critic in many Canucks.

“This is just too funny - think she painted him a bit skinny - he should really be wearing his vest,” Myrtle Graham posted on Facebook.

“This made my day. Nude Stephen Harper is ART,” tweeted Denise Balkissoon.

Other’s weren’t as amused: “Oh dear lord: may have to pluck eyes out now,” tweeted Paula Schuck. “I don’t know whether to laugh or be horrified,” added Kelsey Rolfe.

The Prime Minister’s Office also took to Twitter to voice a reaction to the piece.

“On the Sutherland painting: we’re not impressed. Everyone knows the PM is a cat person,” tweeted Harper spokesman Andrew MacDougall, referring to the canine on the canvas.

Others on Parliament Hill took a similar tongue-in-cheek approach.

“This is one case where I think we really do need a Conservative cover-up,” said Liberal MP Scott Brison. “I guess you could say in this painting it’s quite obvious that the Prime Minister has very little to hide.”

For Ms. Sutherland, who completed the painting last year, the point of her piece was a satirical one.

“It was a sort of a culmination of some general frustrations of the federal government’s policies and what they were telling us,” said Ms. Sutherland, who has been particularly peeved with the government’s elimination of the long form census and its closure of certain prison farms.

“The political message is to look for yourself and don’t necessarily believe the party line.”

The painting’s title — Emperor Haute Couture — is also part of the pun as it carries a reference to “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” a tale by Hans Christian Andersen in which a vain king parades around naked, believing his new suit is so superior that it is invisible to those unfit for their positions in life.

“Satire is a great way to make valid social comment and have some fun at the same time,” said Ms. Sutherland.


Images tirées de “Marquis” (1989), un délicieux film de Henri Xhonneux, mettant en vedette le Marquis de Sade et son pénis parlant.

(Source : ahro)


Hans Bellmer Untitled (study for “L’Histoire de l’oeil” by Georges Bataille), (p. 106)

Hans Bellmer Untitled (study for “L’Histoire de l’oeil” by Georges Bataille), (p. 106)

(Source : slug-girl, via moth-tea)

Roussel on Light

mythologyofblue:

“Whatever I wrote was surrounded by rays of light,” a young Raymond Roussel told his psychoanalyst, Pierre Janet. “I used to close the curtains, for I was afraid that the shining rays emanating from my pen might escape into the outside world through even the smallest chink; I wanted suddenly to throw back the screen and light up the world.”

-Alice Gregory, “New Impressions: Raymond Roussel and the upside of crazy” +

[light defined]

Christine Boisson, in “Emmanuelle” (1974), masturbating over a picture of Paul Newman.

Christine Boisson, in “Emmanuelle” (1974), masturbating over a picture of Paul Newman.

(Source : romanoid)