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vu une performance et vidéo de Steven Cohen
--------refs web intéressantes:
http://www.festival-automne.com/biographie/steven-cohen-251.html
http://www.oc-tv.net/steven-cohen.htm
!! ici il y a une belle vidéo où il explique ses raisons et ses choix
http://www.at.artslink.co.za/~elu/stevencohen/
http://www.cnac-gp.fr/Pompidou/Manifs.nsf/0/A47F38EEBB88CD3AC125745D0047DD07?OpenDocument
http://www.latitudescontemporaines.com/fr/latitudes-prod-steven-cohen/golgotha.html
http://www.artthrob.co.za/99nov/news.html#wash
Attention: il existe une star de la finance avec le même nom - à ne pas confondre !
[Max (textes)]
" Many Chinese artists complain that their system of education is overly focused on copying and reproducing artwork until it reaches perfection. In contrast, young artists from the West go to China for exactly that reason. They are looking for discipline and a counterweight to the freedom and lack of structure they encounter in many art schools in Europe and in the USA. "
"If you make a comparison between what people do in China and in Japan, the Chinese want to be the masters of the clay, they want to make it exactly the way they want it to go. They make such perfect shapes and amazing glaze such as celadon, which is technically perfect and very complicated. The Japanese go in another direction. They want the clay to have its own life. They have shapes that are not necessarily perfect. They have glazes that drip a little bit. When I learned the difference, I was more touched by this side of the ceramics, â'œpas trop rangéâ' (not too perfect), because I was pretty messy myself. But ceramics is a very rigorous technique as I realized later. The Chinese put a lot of attention into one piece. This allows you to put your soul in one piece also."
[Max (textes)]