Box 329
Container
Contains 71 Results:
Arte, 1979
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22235-22657
Art for Art's Sake, 1974 - 1975
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22419-22843
Neutron Improved , 1981
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22426-22850
Homage to Leatherface, 1988
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-21906-22318
Halfound Poem N.1, 1983
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22015-22431
Halfound Poem N.2, 1983
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22017-22433
Halfound Poem N.3 , 1983
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22037-22453
Relic Variation #2, 1986
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22050-22466
BE-BOMB-A-LULATOMIC HOP!.., 1980
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22052-22468
A Blindrawing Variation, 1988
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22053-22469
Eye, 1982
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22056-22472
Dizzie Gillespie's Poem Of Love, 1990
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-22882-23318
momento mori, 1988
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-23192-23630
Scope and Contents
The work was based on a copy-art installation by Baroni for the "Ear Nerve" festival in Naples, Italy held in September 1988. Wikipedia: A memento mori (Latin 'remember that you will die is an artistic or symbolic reminder of the inevitability of death. Popular belief says the phrase originated in ancient Rome: as a Roman general was parading through the streets during a victory triumph, standing behind him was his slave, tasked with reminding the general that, although at his peak today, tomorrow he could fall, or "” more likely "” be brought down. The servant is thought to have conveyed this with the warning, "Memento mori.".It is further possible that the servant may have instead advised, "Respice post te! Hominem te esse memento! Memento mori!": "Look behind you! Remember that you are but a man! Remember that you'll die!", as noted by Tertullian in his Apologeticus. The thought came into its own with Christianity,whose strong emphasis on divine judgment, Heaven, Hell, and the...
Dates:
1988
Paradigm Shift , 2008
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-50068-71128
Mon Alias: La Simona, 2000
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-37551-39408
Scope and Contents
The rubberstamped words in a horizontal layout to form the lips of daVinci's appropriated Mona Lisa read, "Mona Lisa No Smile." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
2000
Doin' The Cavellini, 2014
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-59738-10002794
Word Game, 1983
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-21635-22046
Un Poeta..., 1983
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-21636-22047
[Auto-Portrait With Letters], 1986
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-21645-22056
Merry Xmas Ruth Marvin, 1984
Item — Box: 329
Identifier: CC-21646-22057