-
Jake and Dinos Chapman Interview: Hitler Turning in his Grave
Death threats from neo-Nazis was just one of the many extreme responses to the English artist duo Jake and Dinos Chapman’s controversial and much debated exhibition of modified watercolours by Adolf Hitler. Hear their thoughts on the divisive project.
When choosing to work with Hitler’s watercolours, Jake and Dinos Chapman wanted to confront the idea that a work of art can reveal something about a person – that it has a latent sense of self-expression – and why then the presence of foreboding evil is in no way represented in Hitler’s paintings: “The work is blank.”
“Using My Little Pony to kick Adolf Hitler is entirely appropriate.” By adding little rainbows and other such motifs, Jake and Dinos Chapman sought not only to transgress the paintings’ metaphysical value of evil but also to a...
published: 30 Apr 2015
-
Jake and Dinos Chapman Interview: Offending Taste
Watch the artist duo with a flair for the bizarre, Jake and Dinos Chapman, on moulding set symbols into something quite surprising, how Ronald McDonald ended up becoming a pariah, and why they prefer to offend rather than create taste.
Ronald McDonald started out as an idealistic libertarian, because he offered cheap food to people who could not afford it. With time, however, the image of McDonald changed radically, and he became “the clown who lost his humour – and also responsible for the end of the world.” The irony of this drastic change is of great interest to Jake and Dinos Chapman, who like to take generic icons – such as smileys and swastikas – and twist them until they break: “We are overloading these symbolic icons to a point where they can no longer say anything.”
“If you add ...
published: 07 Sep 2015
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Jake and Dinos Chapman: The Chapman Family Collection
On first sight, The Chapman Family Collection is a selection of wooden carvings, collected on trips to foreign colonies. On closer look, you'll find cheeseburgers, fries and Ronald McDonald among the fetish objects. The collection was first exhibited at the White Cube, and was acquired by the Tate Britain in 2007 with the Art Fund's help. In our short film, Rosie Rockel meets the brothers to find out more. Film by Northern Town: http://www.northerntown.co.uk/
published: 16 Sep 2013
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JAKE & DINOS CHAPMAN – Back to the End of the Beginning of the End Again
kamel mennour (47, rue Saint-André des arts), Paris
14 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
kamel mennour (28, avenue Matignon), Paris
20 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
Réalisée par Erwann Lameignère
Musique par Jérôme Plasseraud. Courtesy the artist
Production : Collectif Combo pour kamel mennour, Paris
© ADAGP Jake & Dinos Chapman
Courtesy the artist and kamel mennour, Paris/London
published: 03 Nov 2016
-
Jake and Dinos Chapman - Th Grimm Brothers
Chapman brothers - Jake and Dinos - have become synonymous with controversial art, often having their work labelled as vulgar and offensive. But despite the labels and occasional spats with the press the Chapman brothers have been hugely important to British art and were nominated for the Turner prize in 2003. Here, Crane.tv talk to the brothers about their latest exhibition at the White Cube gallery, which for the first time they worked separately on, and finds out their message for fellow YBA Tracey Emin.
Address: 48 Hoxton Square, London, N1 6PB and 25-26 Mason's Yard, London, SW1Y 6BU
www.jakeanddinoschapman.com
published: 03 Aug 2011
-
2/2 Jake And Dinos Chapman - What Do Artists Do All Day ?
First broadcast: Nov 2014.
Episode 17/17 Jake and Dinos Chapman have built an international reputation with their provocative, morally unsettling art. From grotesque childlike mannequins with misplaced genitalia to apocalyptic dioramas of decapitated Nazi soldiers, their work has shocked and challenged audiences around the world.
This film follows the brothers as they prepare for a new show in their home town of Hastings, which will include some new works expected to generate controversy. We see them at work in their London studio, overseeing the painstaking, handcrafted work on their 'hellscape' installations, discussing their defaced Goya prints and new pieces including One Day You Will No Longer Be Loved, a series of old portraits they've sourced from junk shops and given a Chapman Bro...
published: 06 Nov 2014
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Jake and Dinos Chapman at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery
Art critic and writer Jacky Klein explores the Chapman brothers' exhibition, Come and See, at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery. Find out more: http://www.artfund.org/what-to-see/exhibitions/2013/11/29/jake-and-dinos-chapman-come-and-see-exhibition Film by Northern Town: http://www.northerntown.co.uk/
published: 09 Jan 2014
-
Jake and Dinos Chapman
New Past: Contemporary Art from UK exhibition in Tashkent
published: 22 May 2017
-
The Chapman Brothers - 'Come and See' at the Serpentine Gallery
Curator Jochen Volz takes us through the fantastic new show at the Serpentine Gallery, which covers the career of Britain's most notorious artistic siblings.
published: 01 Jan 2014
-
Jake & Dinos Chapman: The Disasters of Everyday Life
For their first exhibition with Blain|Southern, Jake & Dinos Chapman expand on their career-long preoccupation with Francisco Goya’s series of etchings, The Disasters of War. The Disasters of Everyday Life presents, for the first time, their latest body of sculptural work in a dialogue with three full sets of Goya’s prints, each set substantially reworked in a different way by the Chapman brothers.
Jake & Dinos Chapman: The Disasters of Everyday Life. Solo exhibition at Blain|Southern in London. Private View, October 3, 2017.
More videos on contemporary art, design, architecture:
http://vernissage.tv
Connect:
http://www.facebook.com/vernissagetv
http://twitter.com/vernissagetv
Browse our Archive:
http://vernissage.tv/archive/posts/
Find Artists, Designers, Architects:
http://vernissag...
published: 08 Oct 2017
11:04
Jake and Dinos Chapman Interview: Hitler Turning in his Grave
Death threats from neo-Nazis was just one of the many extreme responses to the English artist duo Jake and Dinos Chapman’s controversial and much debated exhibi...
Death threats from neo-Nazis was just one of the many extreme responses to the English artist duo Jake and Dinos Chapman’s controversial and much debated exhibition of modified watercolours by Adolf Hitler. Hear their thoughts on the divisive project.
When choosing to work with Hitler’s watercolours, Jake and Dinos Chapman wanted to confront the idea that a work of art can reveal something about a person – that it has a latent sense of self-expression – and why then the presence of foreboding evil is in no way represented in Hitler’s paintings: “The work is blank.”
“Using My Little Pony to kick Adolf Hitler is entirely appropriate.” By adding little rainbows and other such motifs, Jake and Dinos Chapman sought not only to transgress the paintings’ metaphysical value of evil but also to alter historical documents to the point where they became theirs rather than history’s: “The idea of Hitler turning in his grave because we painted rainbows on his pictures is fantastically pleasurable.”
Iakovos “Jake” (b. 1966) and Konstantinos “Dinos” (b. 1962) are English visual artists, often known as the Chapman Brothers, who began their collaboration in 1991. The brothers often use plastic models or fibreglass mannequins in their work, exploring the theme of the anatomical and pornographic grotesque. They are known for their deliberately shocking and controversial subject matter, including the series of works featured in this video, which appropriated 13 original watercolours by Adolf Hitler, to which they had added hippie motifs: ‘If Hitler Had Been a Hippy How Happy Would We Be’ (White Cube, 2008). Similarly, they had previously manipulated a selection of Spanish painter Francisco Goya’s drawings in the series ‘The Disaster of War’ (1999) with chilling and sometimes comic effect. They have exhibited extensively, including solo shows at Tate Britain (2007), Kunsthaus Bregenz (2005) and PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2000). Both live and work in London.
For more about Jake and Dinos Chapman see here: http://jakeanddinoschapman.com/everything/
Jake and Dinos Chapman were interviewed by Christian Lund at David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen in connection to the exhibition ‘Come, Hell or High Water’ in November 2014.
Among the works shown in the video are: 'Jake und Adolf III', 'Jake und Adolf IV', 'Jake und Adolf VI', 'Dinos und Adolf I', 'Dinos und Adolf V' and 'Dinos und Adolf VII' - all by Jake and Dinos Chapman, 2008.
Camera: Nikolaj Jungersen
Edited by: Kamilla Bruus
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
https://wn.com/Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman_Interview_Hitler_Turning_In_His_Grave
Death threats from neo-Nazis was just one of the many extreme responses to the English artist duo Jake and Dinos Chapman’s controversial and much debated exhibition of modified watercolours by Adolf Hitler. Hear their thoughts on the divisive project.
When choosing to work with Hitler’s watercolours, Jake and Dinos Chapman wanted to confront the idea that a work of art can reveal something about a person – that it has a latent sense of self-expression – and why then the presence of foreboding evil is in no way represented in Hitler’s paintings: “The work is blank.”
“Using My Little Pony to kick Adolf Hitler is entirely appropriate.” By adding little rainbows and other such motifs, Jake and Dinos Chapman sought not only to transgress the paintings’ metaphysical value of evil but also to alter historical documents to the point where they became theirs rather than history’s: “The idea of Hitler turning in his grave because we painted rainbows on his pictures is fantastically pleasurable.”
Iakovos “Jake” (b. 1966) and Konstantinos “Dinos” (b. 1962) are English visual artists, often known as the Chapman Brothers, who began their collaboration in 1991. The brothers often use plastic models or fibreglass mannequins in their work, exploring the theme of the anatomical and pornographic grotesque. They are known for their deliberately shocking and controversial subject matter, including the series of works featured in this video, which appropriated 13 original watercolours by Adolf Hitler, to which they had added hippie motifs: ‘If Hitler Had Been a Hippy How Happy Would We Be’ (White Cube, 2008). Similarly, they had previously manipulated a selection of Spanish painter Francisco Goya’s drawings in the series ‘The Disaster of War’ (1999) with chilling and sometimes comic effect. They have exhibited extensively, including solo shows at Tate Britain (2007), Kunsthaus Bregenz (2005) and PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2000). Both live and work in London.
For more about Jake and Dinos Chapman see here: http://jakeanddinoschapman.com/everything/
Jake and Dinos Chapman were interviewed by Christian Lund at David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen in connection to the exhibition ‘Come, Hell or High Water’ in November 2014.
Among the works shown in the video are: 'Jake und Adolf III', 'Jake und Adolf IV', 'Jake und Adolf VI', 'Dinos und Adolf I', 'Dinos und Adolf V' and 'Dinos und Adolf VII' - all by Jake and Dinos Chapman, 2008.
Camera: Nikolaj Jungersen
Edited by: Kamilla Bruus
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
- published: 30 Apr 2015
- views: 17751
5:00
Jake and Dinos Chapman Interview: Offending Taste
Watch the artist duo with a flair for the bizarre, Jake and Dinos Chapman, on moulding set symbols into something quite surprising, how Ronald McDonald ended up...
Watch the artist duo with a flair for the bizarre, Jake and Dinos Chapman, on moulding set symbols into something quite surprising, how Ronald McDonald ended up becoming a pariah, and why they prefer to offend rather than create taste.
Ronald McDonald started out as an idealistic libertarian, because he offered cheap food to people who could not afford it. With time, however, the image of McDonald changed radically, and he became “the clown who lost his humour – and also responsible for the end of the world.” The irony of this drastic change is of great interest to Jake and Dinos Chapman, who like to take generic icons – such as smileys and swastikas – and twist them until they break: “We are overloading these symbolic icons to a point where they can no longer say anything.”
“If you add funny puppy dogs over an image of someone being tortured, then in a sense what we’re doing is that we’re asking whether the pathos of the Goya work can be taken seriously,” says Jake Chapman about their approach to Francisco Goya to whose surreal and dark paintings, brim-full of pathos, they add unexpected elements. The brothers argue that by “rectifying” works by such a revered artist they also “convert the pathos of Goya into something much more pessimistic and cynical, and much more brutally undermining.”
Iakovos “Jake” (b. 1966) and Konstantinos “Dinos” (b. 1962) are English visual artists, often known as the Chapman Brothers, who began their collaboration in 1991. The brothers often use plastic models or fibreglass mannequins in their work, exploring the theme of the anatomical and pornographic grotesque. They are known for their deliberately shocking and controversial subject matter, including the series of works featured in this video, which appropriated 13 original watercolours by Adolf Hitler, to which they had added hippie motifs: ‘If Hitler Had Been a Hippy How Happy Would We Be’ (White Cube, 2008). Similarly, they had previously manipulated a selection of Spanish painter Francisco Goya’s drawings in the series ‘The Disaster of War’ (1999) with chilling and sometimes comic effect. They have exhibited extensively, including solo shows at Tate Britain (2007), Kunsthaus Bregenz (2005) and PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2000). Both live and work in London.
For more about Jake and Dinos Chapman see here: http://jakeanddinoschapman.com/everything/
Jake and Dinos Chapman were interviewed by Christian Lund at David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen in connection to the exhibition ‘Come, Hell or High Water’ in November 2014.
Camera: Nikolaj Jungersen
Edited by: Roxanne Bagheshirin Lærkesen
Produced by: Christian Lund
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
https://wn.com/Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman_Interview_Offending_Taste
Watch the artist duo with a flair for the bizarre, Jake and Dinos Chapman, on moulding set symbols into something quite surprising, how Ronald McDonald ended up becoming a pariah, and why they prefer to offend rather than create taste.
Ronald McDonald started out as an idealistic libertarian, because he offered cheap food to people who could not afford it. With time, however, the image of McDonald changed radically, and he became “the clown who lost his humour – and also responsible for the end of the world.” The irony of this drastic change is of great interest to Jake and Dinos Chapman, who like to take generic icons – such as smileys and swastikas – and twist them until they break: “We are overloading these symbolic icons to a point where they can no longer say anything.”
“If you add funny puppy dogs over an image of someone being tortured, then in a sense what we’re doing is that we’re asking whether the pathos of the Goya work can be taken seriously,” says Jake Chapman about their approach to Francisco Goya to whose surreal and dark paintings, brim-full of pathos, they add unexpected elements. The brothers argue that by “rectifying” works by such a revered artist they also “convert the pathos of Goya into something much more pessimistic and cynical, and much more brutally undermining.”
Iakovos “Jake” (b. 1966) and Konstantinos “Dinos” (b. 1962) are English visual artists, often known as the Chapman Brothers, who began their collaboration in 1991. The brothers often use plastic models or fibreglass mannequins in their work, exploring the theme of the anatomical and pornographic grotesque. They are known for their deliberately shocking and controversial subject matter, including the series of works featured in this video, which appropriated 13 original watercolours by Adolf Hitler, to which they had added hippie motifs: ‘If Hitler Had Been a Hippy How Happy Would We Be’ (White Cube, 2008). Similarly, they had previously manipulated a selection of Spanish painter Francisco Goya’s drawings in the series ‘The Disaster of War’ (1999) with chilling and sometimes comic effect. They have exhibited extensively, including solo shows at Tate Britain (2007), Kunsthaus Bregenz (2005) and PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2000). Both live and work in London.
For more about Jake and Dinos Chapman see here: http://jakeanddinoschapman.com/everything/
Jake and Dinos Chapman were interviewed by Christian Lund at David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen in connection to the exhibition ‘Come, Hell or High Water’ in November 2014.
Camera: Nikolaj Jungersen
Edited by: Roxanne Bagheshirin Lærkesen
Produced by: Christian Lund
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
- published: 07 Sep 2015
- views: 26422
3:47
Jake and Dinos Chapman: The Chapman Family Collection
On first sight, The Chapman Family Collection is a selection of wooden carvings, collected on trips to foreign colonies. On closer look, you'll find cheeseburge...
On first sight, The Chapman Family Collection is a selection of wooden carvings, collected on trips to foreign colonies. On closer look, you'll find cheeseburgers, fries and Ronald McDonald among the fetish objects. The collection was first exhibited at the White Cube, and was acquired by the Tate Britain in 2007 with the Art Fund's help. In our short film, Rosie Rockel meets the brothers to find out more. Film by Northern Town: http://www.northerntown.co.uk/
https://wn.com/Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman_The_Chapman_Family_Collection
On first sight, The Chapman Family Collection is a selection of wooden carvings, collected on trips to foreign colonies. On closer look, you'll find cheeseburgers, fries and Ronald McDonald among the fetish objects. The collection was first exhibited at the White Cube, and was acquired by the Tate Britain in 2007 with the Art Fund's help. In our short film, Rosie Rockel meets the brothers to find out more. Film by Northern Town: http://www.northerntown.co.uk/
- published: 16 Sep 2013
- views: 14890
8:34
JAKE & DINOS CHAPMAN – Back to the End of the Beginning of the End Again
kamel mennour (47, rue Saint-André des arts), Paris
14 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
kamel mennour (28, avenue Matignon), Paris
20 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
Réa...
kamel mennour (47, rue Saint-André des arts), Paris
14 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
kamel mennour (28, avenue Matignon), Paris
20 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
Réalisée par Erwann Lameignère
Musique par Jérôme Plasseraud. Courtesy the artist
Production : Collectif Combo pour kamel mennour, Paris
© ADAGP Jake & Dinos Chapman
Courtesy the artist and kamel mennour, Paris/London
https://wn.com/Jake_Dinos_Chapman_–_Back_To_The_End_Of_The_Beginning_Of_The_End_Again
kamel mennour (47, rue Saint-André des arts), Paris
14 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
kamel mennour (28, avenue Matignon), Paris
20 octobre – 26 novembre 2016
Réalisée par Erwann Lameignère
Musique par Jérôme Plasseraud. Courtesy the artist
Production : Collectif Combo pour kamel mennour, Paris
© ADAGP Jake & Dinos Chapman
Courtesy the artist and kamel mennour, Paris/London
- published: 03 Nov 2016
- views: 4117
2:41
Jake and Dinos Chapman - Th Grimm Brothers
Chapman brothers - Jake and Dinos - have become synonymous with controversial art, often having their work labelled as vulgar and offensive. But despite the lab...
Chapman brothers - Jake and Dinos - have become synonymous with controversial art, often having their work labelled as vulgar and offensive. But despite the labels and occasional spats with the press the Chapman brothers have been hugely important to British art and were nominated for the Turner prize in 2003. Here, Crane.tv talk to the brothers about their latest exhibition at the White Cube gallery, which for the first time they worked separately on, and finds out their message for fellow YBA Tracey Emin.
Address: 48 Hoxton Square, London, N1 6PB and 25-26 Mason's Yard, London, SW1Y 6BU
www.jakeanddinoschapman.com
https://wn.com/Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman_Th_Grimm_Brothers
Chapman brothers - Jake and Dinos - have become synonymous with controversial art, often having their work labelled as vulgar and offensive. But despite the labels and occasional spats with the press the Chapman brothers have been hugely important to British art and were nominated for the Turner prize in 2003. Here, Crane.tv talk to the brothers about their latest exhibition at the White Cube gallery, which for the first time they worked separately on, and finds out their message for fellow YBA Tracey Emin.
Address: 48 Hoxton Square, London, N1 6PB and 25-26 Mason's Yard, London, SW1Y 6BU
www.jakeanddinoschapman.com
- published: 03 Aug 2011
- views: 15696
14:07
2/2 Jake And Dinos Chapman - What Do Artists Do All Day ?
First broadcast: Nov 2014.
Episode 17/17 Jake and Dinos Chapman have built an international reputation with their provocative, morally unsettling art. From grot...
First broadcast: Nov 2014.
Episode 17/17 Jake and Dinos Chapman have built an international reputation with their provocative, morally unsettling art. From grotesque childlike mannequins with misplaced genitalia to apocalyptic dioramas of decapitated Nazi soldiers, their work has shocked and challenged audiences around the world.
This film follows the brothers as they prepare for a new show in their home town of Hastings, which will include some new works expected to generate controversy. We see them at work in their London studio, overseeing the painstaking, handcrafted work on their 'hellscape' installations, discussing their defaced Goya prints and new pieces including One Day You Will No Longer Be Loved, a series of old portraits they've sourced from junk shops and given a Chapman Brothers makeover.
We discover who does what in this artistic partnership and hear their views on the criticism they have faced. As they return to Hastings to open the exhibition, we find out how they feel to be bringing their art home.
https://wn.com/2_2_Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman_What_Do_Artists_Do_All_Day
First broadcast: Nov 2014.
Episode 17/17 Jake and Dinos Chapman have built an international reputation with their provocative, morally unsettling art. From grotesque childlike mannequins with misplaced genitalia to apocalyptic dioramas of decapitated Nazi soldiers, their work has shocked and challenged audiences around the world.
This film follows the brothers as they prepare for a new show in their home town of Hastings, which will include some new works expected to generate controversy. We see them at work in their London studio, overseeing the painstaking, handcrafted work on their 'hellscape' installations, discussing their defaced Goya prints and new pieces including One Day You Will No Longer Be Loved, a series of old portraits they've sourced from junk shops and given a Chapman Brothers makeover.
We discover who does what in this artistic partnership and hear their views on the criticism they have faced. As they return to Hastings to open the exhibition, we find out how they feel to be bringing their art home.
- published: 06 Nov 2014
- views: 51630
2:32
Jake and Dinos Chapman at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery
Art critic and writer Jacky Klein explores the Chapman brothers' exhibition, Come and See, at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery. Find out more: http://www.artfund....
Art critic and writer Jacky Klein explores the Chapman brothers' exhibition, Come and See, at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery. Find out more: http://www.artfund.org/what-to-see/exhibitions/2013/11/29/jake-and-dinos-chapman-come-and-see-exhibition Film by Northern Town: http://www.northerntown.co.uk/
https://wn.com/Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman_At_The_Serpentine_Sackler_Gallery
Art critic and writer Jacky Klein explores the Chapman brothers' exhibition, Come and See, at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery. Find out more: http://www.artfund.org/what-to-see/exhibitions/2013/11/29/jake-and-dinos-chapman-come-and-see-exhibition Film by Northern Town: http://www.northerntown.co.uk/
- published: 09 Jan 2014
- views: 5624
0:44
Jake and Dinos Chapman
New Past: Contemporary Art from UK exhibition in Tashkent
New Past: Contemporary Art from UK exhibition in Tashkent
https://wn.com/Jake_And_Dinos_Chapman
New Past: Contemporary Art from UK exhibition in Tashkent
- published: 22 May 2017
- views: 142
3:13
The Chapman Brothers - 'Come and See' at the Serpentine Gallery
Curator Jochen Volz takes us through the fantastic new show at the Serpentine Gallery, which covers the career of Britain's most notorious artistic siblings.
Curator Jochen Volz takes us through the fantastic new show at the Serpentine Gallery, which covers the career of Britain's most notorious artistic siblings.
https://wn.com/The_Chapman_Brothers_'Come_And_See'_At_The_Serpentine_Gallery
Curator Jochen Volz takes us through the fantastic new show at the Serpentine Gallery, which covers the career of Britain's most notorious artistic siblings.
- published: 01 Jan 2014
- views: 7612
3:24
Jake & Dinos Chapman: The Disasters of Everyday Life
For their first exhibition with Blain|Southern, Jake & Dinos Chapman expand on their career-long preoccupation with Francisco Goya’s series of etchings, The Dis...
For their first exhibition with Blain|Southern, Jake & Dinos Chapman expand on their career-long preoccupation with Francisco Goya’s series of etchings, The Disasters of War. The Disasters of Everyday Life presents, for the first time, their latest body of sculptural work in a dialogue with three full sets of Goya’s prints, each set substantially reworked in a different way by the Chapman brothers.
Jake & Dinos Chapman: The Disasters of Everyday Life. Solo exhibition at Blain|Southern in London. Private View, October 3, 2017.
More videos on contemporary art, design, architecture:
http://vernissage.tv
Connect:
http://www.facebook.com/vernissagetv
http://twitter.com/vernissagetv
Browse our Archive:
http://vernissage.tv/archive/posts/
Find Artists, Designers, Architects:
http://vernissage.tv/archive/artists/
Art TV pioneer Vernissage TV provides you with an authentic insight into the world of contemporary fine arts, design and architecture. With its two main series "No Comment" and "Interviews", art tv channel VernissageTV attends opening receptions of exhibitions worldwide, interviews artists, designers, architects. VTV provides art lovers with news, reports and features from the international art scene. VernissageTV: the window to the art world. Das Fenster zur Kunstwelt. La fenêtre sur le monde de l'art. A janela para o mundo da arte. La ventana al mundo del arte. نافذة على عالم الفن. 到艺术世界的窗口。Окно в мир искусства. Since 2005.
https://wn.com/Jake_Dinos_Chapman_The_Disasters_Of_Everyday_Life
For their first exhibition with Blain|Southern, Jake & Dinos Chapman expand on their career-long preoccupation with Francisco Goya’s series of etchings, The Disasters of War. The Disasters of Everyday Life presents, for the first time, their latest body of sculptural work in a dialogue with three full sets of Goya’s prints, each set substantially reworked in a different way by the Chapman brothers.
Jake & Dinos Chapman: The Disasters of Everyday Life. Solo exhibition at Blain|Southern in London. Private View, October 3, 2017.
More videos on contemporary art, design, architecture:
http://vernissage.tv
Connect:
http://www.facebook.com/vernissagetv
http://twitter.com/vernissagetv
Browse our Archive:
http://vernissage.tv/archive/posts/
Find Artists, Designers, Architects:
http://vernissage.tv/archive/artists/
Art TV pioneer Vernissage TV provides you with an authentic insight into the world of contemporary fine arts, design and architecture. With its two main series "No Comment" and "Interviews", art tv channel VernissageTV attends opening receptions of exhibitions worldwide, interviews artists, designers, architects. VTV provides art lovers with news, reports and features from the international art scene. VernissageTV: the window to the art world. Das Fenster zur Kunstwelt. La fenêtre sur le monde de l'art. A janela para o mundo da arte. La ventana al mundo del arte. نافذة على عالم الفن. 到艺术世界的窗口。Окно в мир искусства. Since 2005.
- published: 08 Oct 2017
- views: 4079