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Found object

A found object (a calque from the French objet trouvé), or found art,[1][2][3] is art created from undisguised, but often modified, items or products that are not normally considered materials from which art is made, often because they already have a non-art function.[4] Pablo Picasso first publicly utilized the idea when he pasted a printed image of chair caning onto his painting titled Still Life with Chair Caning (1912). Marcel Duchamp is thought to have perfected the concept several years later when he made a series of ready-mades, consisting of completely unaltered everyday objects selected by Duchamp and designated as art.[5] The most famous example is Fountain (1917), a standard urinal purchased from a hardware store and displayed on a pedestal, resting on its back. In its strictest sense the term "ready-made" is applied exclusively to works produced by Marcel Duchamp,[6] who borrowed the term from the clothing industry (French: prêt-à-porter, lit.'ready-to-wear') while living in New York, and especially to works dating from 1913 to 1921.

Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1917. Photograph by Alfred Stieglitz

Found objects derive their identity as art from the designation placed upon them by the artist and from the social history that comes with the object. This may be indicated by either its anonymous wear and tear (as in collages of Kurt Schwitters) or by its recognizability as a consumer icon (as in the sculptures of Haim Steinbach). The context into which it is placed is also a highly relevant factor. The idea of dignifying commonplace objects in this way was originally a shocking challenge to the accepted distinction between what was considered art as opposed to not art. Although it may now be accepted in the art world as a viable practice, it continues to arouse questioning, as with the Tate Gallery's Turner Prize exhibition of Tracey Emin's My Bed, which consisted literally of a transposition of her unmade and disheveled bed, surrounded by shed clothing and other bedroom detritus, directly from her bedroom to the Tate. In this sense the artist gives the audience time and a stage to contemplate an object. As such, found objects can prompt philosophical reflection in the observer ranging from disgust to indifference to nostalgia to empathy.

As an art form, found objects tend to include the artist's output—at the very least an idea about it, i.e. the artist's designation of the object as art—which is nearly always reinforced with a title. There is usually some degree of modification of the found object, although not always to the extent that it cannot be recognized, as is the case with ready-mades. Recent critical theory, however, would argue that the mere designation and relocation of any object, ready-mades included, constitutes a modification of the object because it changes our perception of its utility, its lifespan, or its status.

History edit

Antecedents edit

 
Alphonse Allais, Des souteneurs encore dans la force de l'âge et le ventre dans l'herbe boivent de l'absinthe, carnage curtain, before 1897.

One curator considers East Asian scholar's rocks to be early examples of found objects. Found and collected in natural settings, the rocks are changed only minimally for display, seldom beyond the addition of a display stand, and are meant to be contemplated as idealized representations of nature. Geological processes, chief among them erosion, give the rocks their distinctive qualities, rather than any modification by an artist or artisan.[7]

In 2017–2018, the French expert Johann Naldi [fr] found and identified seventeen unpublished works in a private collection, classified as a national treasure on May 7, 2021, by the French Ministry of Culture,[8] including Des souteneurs encore dans la force de l'âge et le ventre dans l'herbe by Alphonse Allais, consisting of a green carriage curtain suspended from a wooden cylinder.[9] This work was certainly exhibited at the Incoherents exhibitions in Paris between 1883 and 1893. According to Johann Naldi, this work is the oldest known readymade and was a source of inspiration for Marcel Duchamp.[10]

Duchamp's "readymades" edit

Marcel Duchamp coined the term ready-made in 1915 to describe a common object that had been selected and not materially altered in any way. Duchamp assembled Bicycle Wheel in 1913 by attaching a common front wheel and fork to the seat of a common stool. This was not long after his Nude Descending a Staircase was attracting the attention of critics at the International Exhibition of Modern Art. In 1917, Fountain, a urinal signed with the pseudonym "R. Mutt", and generally attributed to Duchamp, confounded the art world. In the same year, Duchamp indicated in a letter to his sister, Suzanne Duchamp, that a female friend was centrally involved in the conception of this work. As he writes: "One of my female friends who had adopted the pseudonym Richard Mutt sent me a porcelain urinal as a sculpture."[11] Irene Gammel argues that the piece is more in line with the scatological aesthetics of Duchamp's friend, the Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, than Duchamp's.[12] The other possible, and more probable, "female friend" is Louise Norton (later Varèse), who contributed an essay to The Blind Man discussing Fountain.[13] Norton, who recently had separated from her husband, was living at the time in an apartment owned by her parents at 110 West 88th Street in New York City, and this address is partially discernible (along with "Richard Mutt") on the paper entry ticket attached to the object, as seen in Stieglitz's photograph.[14]

Research by Rhonda Roland Shearer indicates that Duchamp may have fabricated his found objects. Exhaustive research of mundane items like snow shovels and bottle racks in use at the time failed to reveal identical matches. The urinal, upon close inspection, is non-functional. However, there are accounts of Walter Arensberg and Joseph Stella being with Duchamp when he purchased the original Fountain at J. L. Mott Iron Works.[15]

Later development edit

 
An Oak Tree by Michael Craig-Martin; 1973

The use of found objects was quickly taken up by the Dada movement, being used by Man Ray and Francis Picabia who combined it with traditional art by sticking combs onto a painting to represent hair.[16] A well-known work by Man Ray is Gift (1921), which is an iron with nails sticking out from its flat underside, thus rendering it useless.[17] Jose de Creeft began making large-scale assemblages in Paris, such as Picador (1925), made of scrap metal, rubber and other materials.[citation needed]

The combination of several found objects is a type of ready-made sometimes known as an assemblage. Another such example is Marcel Duchamp's Why Not Sneeze, Rose Sélavy?, consisting of a small birdcage containing a thermometer, cuttlebone, and 151 marble cubes resembling sugar cubes.

By the time of the Surrealist Exhibition of Objects in 1936 a whole range of sub-classifications had been devised—including found objects, ready-made objects, perturbed objects, mathematical objects, natural objects, interpreted natural objects, incorporated natural objects, Oceanic objects, American objects and Surrealist objects. At this time Surrealist leader, André Breton, defined ready-mades as "manufactured objects raised to the dignity of works of art through the choice of the artist".

In the 1960s found objects were present in both the Fluxus movement and in pop art. Joseph Beuys exhibited modified found objects, such as rocks with a hole in them stuffed with fur and fat, a van with sledges trailing behind it, and a rusty girder.

In 1973, Michael Craig-Martin claimed of his work An Oak Tree, "It's not a symbol. I have changed the physical substance of the glass of water into that of an oak tree. I didn't change its appearance. The actual oak tree is physically present, but in the form of a glass of water."[18]

Other types of found objects edit

Commodity sculpture edit

In the 1980s, a variation of found objects emerged called commodity sculpture where commercially mass-produced items would be arranged in the art gallery as sculpture. The focus of this variety of sculpture was on the marketing, display of products. These artists included Jeff Koons, Haim Steinbach, and Ashley Bickerton (who later moved on to do other kinds of work).

One of Jeff Koons' early signature works was Two Ball 50/50 Tank, 1985, which consisted of two basketballs floating in water, which half-fills a glass tank.

Trash art edit

 
Junk art at Oak Street Beach
 
Art made from trash found on the streets of New York City by artist Bobby Puleo (2021)

A specific subgenre of found objects is known as trash art or junk art.[19] These works primarily comprise components that have been discarded. Often they come quite literally from the trash. One example of trash art is trashion, fashion made from trash. Marina DeBris takes trash from the beach and creates dresses, vests, and other clothes. Many organizations sponsor junk art competitions. Trash art may also have a social purpose, of raising awareness of trash.[20]

 
A permanent yet evolving example of junk art on Highway 66 near Amboy, California

Creating and using trash art can expose people to hazardous substances. For instance, older computer and electronic components can contain lead (in solder and insulation). Jewelry made from these items may require careful handling. In France, trash art became known as "Poubellisme", art made from contents of "poubelles" (trash bins).[citation needed]

Artists who create art from trash include:

  • Spanish artist Francisco de Pajaro ("Art is trash" or "Arte es basura")[21]
  • Australian artist Paul Yore, who uses trash to create a kind of "kitsch queerness", "bad taste aesthetic", in order to challenge people's perceptions, and to examine excess consumption in society.[22]

In music edit

Found objects can also be used as musical instruments.[23] It is an important part of the musique concrète genre.

Found sounds have been used by acts including Cop Shoot Cop, Radiohead,[24] Four Tet,[25] The Books,[26] and Björk.[27] The musician Cosmo Sheldrake, who uses found sounds from the natural world in his music, has stated that incorporating the "soundscape" of ecosystems into music may be an effective means of communicating important messages about issues such as climate change.[28]

Criticism edit

The found object in art has been a subject of polarised debate in Britain throughout the 1990s due to the use of it by the Young British Artists. It has been rejected by the general public and journalists, and supported by public museums and art critics. In his 2000 Dimbleby lecture, Who's afraid of modern art, Sir Nicholas Serota advocated such kinds of "difficult" art, while quoting opposition such as the Daily Mail headline "For 1,000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces. Today, pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all". A more unexpected rejection in 1999 came from artists—some of whom had previously worked with found objects—who founded the Stuckists group and issued a manifesto denouncing such work in favour of a return to painting with the statement "Ready-made art is a polemic of materialism".[29]

Artists edit

Many modern artists are notable for their use of found objects in their art. These include the following:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Stribling, Mary Lou (1970). Art from Found Materials, Discarded and Natural. Crown Publishing Group. p. 2. ISBN 0-517-54307-9. Retrieved 25 June 2021. Found Art is a term coined to describe works which are composed in part or entirety of natural or salvaged objects.
  2. ^ Dayton, Eric (2 February 1999). Art and Interpretation: An Anthology of Readings in Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art. Broadview Press. p. 259. ISBN 1-551-11190-X. Retrieved 25 June 2021. On the surface, anyway, there is no mystery about the making of the great bulk of works of artifactual art; they are crafted in various traditional ways—painted, sculpted, and the like. (Later, I will attempt to go below the surface a bit.) There is, however, a puzzle about the artifactuality of some relatively recent works of art: Duchamp's readymades, found art, and the like. Some deny that such things are art because, they claim, they are not artifacts made by artists. It can, I think, be shown that they are the artifacts of artists. (In Art and the Aesthetic I claimed, I now think mistakenly, that artifactuality is conferred on things such as Duchamp's Fountain and found art, but I will not discuss this here.)
  3. ^ Tankersley, Leeana (14 June 2009). Found Art: Discovering Beauty in Foreign Places. Zondervan. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-310-56182-8. Retrieved 25 June 2021. ... That is what we call found art—a genre of art that started umpteen years ago with a guy in New York who took a urinal and cleverly refashioned it into a fountain. Found art is created when odd, disparate, unlikely, even long-abandoned castoffs are put together with other similarly unexpected remnants to create something new and, if all goes as planned, lovely.
  4. ^
  5. ^ Chilvers, Ian & Glaves-Smith, John eds., Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. pp. 587–588
  6. ^ Marcel Duchamp and the Readymade, MoMA Learning
  7. ^ Dodson, Donna (August 2021). "Interpreting the natural: contemporary visions of scholars' rocks". Creative Arts in Education and Therapy (CAET). 7 (1): 11–13. doi:10.15212/CAET/2021/7/1. S2CID 238719901. They embody the original impulse to elevate a found object to fine art status, not unlike a "readymade," where a commonplace artifact is viewed as art.
  8. ^ Philippe, Dagen (10 May 2021). "Dix-neuf œuvres des Arts incohérents classées trésor national". Le Monde.
  9. ^ Philippe, Dagen (3 February 2021). "17 œuvres des Arts incohérents : un trésor redécouvert dans une malle". Le Monde.
  10. ^ Johann, Naldi (April 2022). Arts incohérents, discoveries and new perspectives. Paris: Lienart. pp. 164–183. ISBN 978-2-35906-366-0.
  11. ^ Duchamp, Marcel trans. and qtd. in Gammel, Irene. Baroness Elsa: Gender, Dada and Everyday Modernity. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2002, 224.
  12. ^ Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 224–225.
  13. ^ "Buddha of the Bathroom", The Blind Man, no. 2, May 1917, pp. 5-6.
  14. ^ Francis M. Naumann, New York Dada, 1915-23 (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1994), p. 239, note 17.
  15. ^ Shearer, Rhonda Roland: "Marcel Duchamp's Impossible Bed and Other 'Not' Readymade Objects: A Possible Route of Influence From Art To Science", 1997.
  16. ^ . Tate Gallery. 16 May 2011. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  17. ^ "Gift (1921)". Man Ray Photo. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  18. ^ , The Independent, 25 June 2001
  19. ^ Marshall Raeburn Found Object Art: "Stuff I Made from Junk", 2009.
  20. ^ Heal the Bay. News and Blog feature story, no date given. "Styrofoam Cups: From Trash to Fashion."
  21. ^ "About". franciscodepajaro (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  22. ^ Heath, Nicola (6 November 2022). "Australian artist Paul Yore speaks about censorship in art, queer culture and Catholic kitsch as ACCA exhibition surveys his career". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  23. ^ See The Music of Man, Y. Menuhin and C. W. Davis, Methuen, Toronto, 1979
  24. ^ Randall, Mac (12 September 2000). Exit Music: The Radiohead Story. Delta. pp. 71–73. ISBN 0-385-33393-5.
  25. ^ "Four Tet Looks Back on 'Rounds'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  26. ^ "The Books: Making Music Through Found Sound". NPR. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
  27. ^ "Bjork emerges from her internal battle, with strings attached". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 December 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  28. ^ "At the Intersection of Art, Science and Community". Texas Geosciences. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  29. ^ Guru, Ella. "The Stuckists manifesto". www.stuckism.com.
  30. ^ "Arman, 76, Found-Object Sculptor, Dies" by Ken Johnson, The New York Times, 24 October 2005
  31. ^ Five Feet of Colorful Tools, 1962, MoMA collection
  32. ^ Official Louis (Lou) Hirshman website
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 31 December 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  34. ^ One and Three Chairs, 1965, MoMA collection
  35. ^ "Pablo Picasso's Bull's Head | A Magical Metamorphosis of the Ordinary | Masterpiece by Eric Gibson". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on 31 May 2023.

External links edit

  • "Found object" and "Readymade", defined by MOMA
  • "Found object" and "Readymade" defined by Tate
  • Betacourt, Michael:
  • Thompson, Charles: "A Stuckist on Stuckism" (See section "The medium modifies the message")
  • den Arend, Lucien: "Environmental Art and Land Art as objet trouvé"
  • Iverson, Margaret: – An extended examination of the subject
  • , paper magazine featuring internet image finders
  • fan scarf remix knitting pattern by Schalalala
  • Hopkins, David, A Companion to Dada and Surrealism, Volume 10 of Blackwell Companions to Art History, John Wiley & Sons, May 2, 2016, ISBN 1118476182

found, object, readymade, redirects, here, other, uses, readymade, disambiguation, found, object, calque, from, french, objet, trouvé, found, created, from, undisguised, often, modified, items, products, that, normally, considered, materials, from, which, made. Readymade redirects here For other uses see Readymade disambiguation A found object a calque from the French objet trouve or found art 1 2 3 is art created from undisguised but often modified items or products that are not normally considered materials from which art is made often because they already have a non art function 4 Pablo Picasso first publicly utilized the idea when he pasted a printed image of chair caning onto his painting titled Still Life with Chair Caning 1912 Marcel Duchamp is thought to have perfected the concept several years later when he made a series of ready mades consisting of completely unaltered everyday objects selected by Duchamp and designated as art 5 The most famous example is Fountain 1917 a standard urinal purchased from a hardware store and displayed on a pedestal resting on its back In its strictest sense the term ready made is applied exclusively to works produced by Marcel Duchamp 6 who borrowed the term from the clothing industry French pret a porter lit ready to wear while living in New York and especially to works dating from 1913 to 1921 Marcel Duchamp Fountain 1917 Photograph by Alfred Stieglitz Found objects derive their identity as art from the designation placed upon them by the artist and from the social history that comes with the object This may be indicated by either its anonymous wear and tear as in collages of Kurt Schwitters or by its recognizability as a consumer icon as in the sculptures of Haim Steinbach The context into which it is placed is also a highly relevant factor The idea of dignifying commonplace objects in this way was originally a shocking challenge to the accepted distinction between what was considered art as opposed to not art Although it may now be accepted in the art world as a viable practice it continues to arouse questioning as with the Tate Gallery s Turner Prize exhibition of Tracey Emin s My Bed which consisted literally of a transposition of her unmade and disheveled bed surrounded by shed clothing and other bedroom detritus directly from her bedroom to the Tate In this sense the artist gives the audience time and a stage to contemplate an object As such found objects can prompt philosophical reflection in the observer ranging from disgust to indifference to nostalgia to empathy As an art form found objects tend to include the artist s output at the very least an idea about it i e the artist s designation of the object as art which is nearly always reinforced with a title There is usually some degree of modification of the found object although not always to the extent that it cannot be recognized as is the case with ready mades Recent critical theory however would argue that the mere designation and relocation of any object ready mades included constitutes a modification of the object because it changes our perception of its utility its lifespan or its status Contents 1 History 1 1 Antecedents 1 2 Duchamp s readymades 1 3 Later development 2 Other types of found objects 2 1 Commodity sculpture 2 2 Trash art 2 3 In music 3 Criticism 4 Artists 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editAntecedents edit nbsp Alphonse Allais Des souteneurs encore dans la force de l age et le ventre dans l herbe boivent de l absinthe carnage curtain before 1897 One curator considers East Asian scholar s rocks to be early examples of found objects Found and collected in natural settings the rocks are changed only minimally for display seldom beyond the addition of a display stand and are meant to be contemplated as idealized representations of nature Geological processes chief among them erosion give the rocks their distinctive qualities rather than any modification by an artist or artisan 7 In 2017 2018 the French expert Johann Naldi fr found and identified seventeen unpublished works in a private collection classified as a national treasure on May 7 2021 by the French Ministry of Culture 8 including Des souteneurs encore dans la force de l age et le ventre dans l herbe by Alphonse Allais consisting of a green carriage curtain suspended from a wooden cylinder 9 This work was certainly exhibited at the Incoherents exhibitions in Paris between 1883 and 1893 According to Johann Naldi this work is the oldest known readymade and was a source of inspiration for Marcel Duchamp 10 Duchamp s readymades edit Main article Readymades of Marcel Duchamp Marcel Duchamp coined the term ready made in 1915 to describe a common object that had been selected and not materially altered in any way Duchamp assembled Bicycle Wheel in 1913 by attaching a common front wheel and fork to the seat of a common stool This was not long after his Nude Descending a Staircase was attracting the attention of critics at the International Exhibition of Modern Art In 1917 Fountain a urinal signed with the pseudonym R Mutt and generally attributed to Duchamp confounded the art world In the same year Duchamp indicated in a letter to his sister Suzanne Duchamp that a female friend was centrally involved in the conception of this work As he writes One of my female friends who had adopted the pseudonym Richard Mutt sent me a porcelain urinal as a sculpture 11 Irene Gammel argues that the piece is more in line with the scatological aesthetics of Duchamp s friend the Baroness Elsa von Freytag Loringhoven than Duchamp s 12 The other possible and more probable female friend is Louise Norton later Varese who contributed an essay to The Blind Man discussing Fountain 13 Norton who recently had separated from her husband was living at the time in an apartment owned by her parents at 110 West 88th Street in New York City and this address is partially discernible along with Richard Mutt on the paper entry ticket attached to the object as seen in Stieglitz s photograph 14 Research by Rhonda Roland Shearer indicates that Duchamp may have fabricated his found objects Exhaustive research of mundane items like snow shovels and bottle racks in use at the time failed to reveal identical matches The urinal upon close inspection is non functional However there are accounts of Walter Arensberg and Joseph Stella being with Duchamp when he purchased the original Fountain at J L Mott Iron Works 15 Later development edit nbsp An Oak Tree by Michael Craig Martin 1973 The use of found objects was quickly taken up by the Dada movement being used by Man Ray and Francis Picabia who combined it with traditional art by sticking combs onto a painting to represent hair 16 A well known work by Man Ray is Gift 1921 which is an iron with nails sticking out from its flat underside thus rendering it useless 17 Jose de Creeft began making large scale assemblages in Paris such as Picador 1925 made of scrap metal rubber and other materials citation needed The combination of several found objects is a type of ready made sometimes known as an assemblage Another such example is Marcel Duchamp s Why Not Sneeze Rose Selavy consisting of a small birdcage containing a thermometer cuttlebone and 151 marble cubes resembling sugar cubes By the time of the Surrealist Exhibition of Objects in 1936 a whole range of sub classifications had been devised including found objects ready made objects perturbed objects mathematical objects natural objects interpreted natural objects incorporated natural objects Oceanic objects American objects and Surrealist objects At this time Surrealist leader Andre Breton defined ready mades as manufactured objects raised to the dignity of works of art through the choice of the artist In the 1960s found objects were present in both the Fluxus movement and in pop art Joseph Beuys exhibited modified found objects such as rocks with a hole in them stuffed with fur and fat a van with sledges trailing behind it and a rusty girder In 1973 Michael Craig Martin claimed of his work An Oak Tree It s not a symbol I have changed the physical substance of the glass of water into that of an oak tree I didn t change its appearance The actual oak tree is physically present but in the form of a glass of water 18 Other types of found objects editCommodity sculpture edit In the 1980s a variation of found objects emerged called commodity sculpture where commercially mass produced items would be arranged in the art gallery as sculpture The focus of this variety of sculpture was on the marketing display of products These artists included Jeff Koons Haim Steinbach and Ashley Bickerton who later moved on to do other kinds of work One of Jeff Koons early signature works was Two Ball 50 50 Tank 1985 which consisted of two basketballs floating in water which half fills a glass tank Trash art edit nbsp Junk art at Oak Street Beach nbsp Art made from trash found on the streets of New York City by artist Bobby Puleo 2021 A specific subgenre of found objects is known as trash art or junk art 19 These works primarily comprise components that have been discarded Often they come quite literally from the trash One example of trash art is trashion fashion made from trash Marina DeBris takes trash from the beach and creates dresses vests and other clothes Many organizations sponsor junk art competitions Trash art may also have a social purpose of raising awareness of trash 20 nbsp A permanent yet evolving example of junk art on Highway 66 near Amboy California Creating and using trash art can expose people to hazardous substances For instance older computer and electronic components can contain lead in solder and insulation Jewelry made from these items may require careful handling In France trash art became known as Poubellisme art made from contents of poubelles trash bins citation needed Artists who create art from trash include Spanish artist Francisco de Pajaro Art is trash or Arte es basura 21 Australian artist Paul Yore who uses trash to create a kind of kitsch queerness bad taste aesthetic in order to challenge people s perceptions and to examine excess consumption in society 22 In music edit Found objects can also be used as musical instruments 23 It is an important part of the musique concrete genre Found sounds have been used by acts including Cop Shoot Cop Radiohead 24 Four Tet 25 The Books 26 and Bjork 27 The musician Cosmo Sheldrake who uses found sounds from the natural world in his music has stated that incorporating the soundscape of ecosystems into music may be an effective means of communicating important messages about issues such as climate change 28 Criticism editThe found object in art has been a subject of polarised debate in Britain throughout the 1990s due to the use of it by the Young British Artists It has been rejected by the general public and journalists and supported by public museums and art critics In his 2000 Dimbleby lecture Who s afraid of modern art Sir Nicholas Serota advocated such kinds of difficult art while quoting opposition such as the Daily Mail headline For 1 000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces Today pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all A more unexpected rejection in 1999 came from artists some of whom had previously worked with found objects who founded the Stuckists group and issued a manifesto denouncing such work in favour of a return to painting with the statement Ready made art is a polemic of materialism 29 Artists editFurther information List of found objects Many modern artists are notable for their use of found objects in their art These include the following Saadane Afif Arman 30 Joseph Beuys Guillaume Bijl George Brecht Jake and Dinos Chapman Greg Colson Joseph Cornell Tony Cragg Salvador Dali Jack Daws Marina DeBris Jim Dine 31 Mark Divo Jose de Creeft Marcel Duchamp Tracey Emin Tom Friedman Victoria Fuller Jim Gary Genco Gulan Louis Hirshman 32 Damien Hirst Lonnie Holley Irma Hunerfauth Jasper Johns 33 Edward and Nancy Kienholz Joseph Kosuth 34 Pawel Kowalewski John Lefelhocz Sarah Lucas David Mach Michael Craig Martin Rodney McMillian Louise Nevelson Nam June Paik Niki de Saint Phalle Pablo Picasso 35 Robert Rauschenberg Man Ray Joe Rush Leo Sewell Daniel Spoerri Kurt Schwitters Michelle Stitzlein Tomoko Takahashi Elsa von Freytag Loringhoven Wolf Vostell Paul YoreSee also editAltered book Anti art Assemblage Appropriation art Classificatory disputes about art Collage Decollage Found object music Found poetry Found footage disambiguation Fluxus an art movement Happening Root carving ancient Chinese art inspired by the shape of found roots Sound objectReferences edit Stribling Mary Lou 1970 Art from Found Materials Discarded and Natural Crown Publishing Group p 2 ISBN 0 517 54307 9 Retrieved 25 June 2021 Found Art is a term coined to describe works which are composed in part or entirety of natural or salvaged objects Dayton Eric 2 February 1999 Art and Interpretation An Anthology of Readings in Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art Broadview Press p 259 ISBN 1 551 11190 X Retrieved 25 June 2021 On the surface anyway there is no mystery about the making of the great bulk of works of artifactual art they are crafted in various traditional ways painted sculpted and the like Later I will attempt to go below the surface a bit There is however a puzzle about the artifactuality of some relatively recent works of art Duchamp s readymades found art and the like Some deny that such things are art because they claim they are not artifacts made by artists It can I think be shown that they are the artifacts of artists In Art and the Aesthetic I claimed I now think mistakenly that artifactuality is conferred on things such as Duchamp s Fountain and found art but I will not discuss this here Tankersley Leeana 14 June 2009 Found Art Discovering Beauty in Foreign Places Zondervan p 2 ISBN 978 0 310 56182 8 Retrieved 25 June 2021 That is what we call found art a genre of art that started umpteen years ago with a guy in New York who took a urinal and cleverly refashioned it into a fountain Found art is created when odd disparate unlikely even long abandoned castoffs are put together with other similarly unexpected remnants to create something new and if all goes as planned lovely definition of Objet trouve at the MoMA Art Terms page Chilvers Ian amp Glaves Smith John eds Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art Oxford Oxford University Press 2009 pp 587 588 Marcel Duchamp and the Readymade MoMA Learning Dodson Donna August 2021 Interpreting the natural contemporary visions of scholars rocks Creative Arts in Education and Therapy CAET 7 1 11 13 doi 10 15212 CAET 2021 7 1 S2CID 238719901 They embody the original impulse to elevate a found object to fine art status not unlike a readymade where a commonplace artifact is viewed as art Philippe Dagen 10 May 2021 Dix neuf œuvres des Arts incoherents classees tresor national Le Monde Philippe Dagen 3 February 2021 17 œuvres des Arts incoherents un tresor redecouvert dans une malle Le Monde Johann Naldi April 2022 Arts incoherents discoveries and new perspectives Paris Lienart pp 164 183 ISBN 978 2 35906 366 0 Duchamp Marcel trans and qtd in Gammel Irene Baroness Elsa Gender Dada and Everyday Modernity Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press 2002 224 Gammel Baroness Elsa 224 225 Buddha of the Bathroom The Blind Man no 2 May 1917 pp 5 6 Francis M Naumann New York Dada 1915 23 New York Harry N Abrams 1994 p 239 note 17 Shearer Rhonda Roland Marcel Duchamp s Impossible Bed and Other Not Readymade Objects A Possible Route of Influence From Art To Science 1997 Tate Collection The Handsome Pork Butcher by Francis Picabia Tate Gallery 16 May 2011 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 6 November 2022 Gift 1921 Man Ray Photo Retrieved 6 November 2022 There s No Need to be Afraid of the Present The Independent 25 June 2001 Marshall Raeburn Found Object Art Stuff I Made from Junk 2009 Heal the Bay News and Blog feature story no date given Styrofoam Cups From Trash to Fashion About franciscodepajaro in Spanish Retrieved 3 February 2021 Heath Nicola 6 November 2022 Australian artist Paul Yore speaks about censorship in art queer culture and Catholic kitsch as ACCA exhibition surveys his career ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 6 November 2022 See The Music of Man Y Menuhin and C W Davis Methuen Toronto 1979 Randall Mac 12 September 2000 Exit Music The Radiohead Story Delta pp 71 73 ISBN 0 385 33393 5 Four Tet Looks Back on Rounds Rolling Stone Retrieved 2 March 2016 The Books Making Music Through Found Sound NPR Retrieved 21 March 2016 Bjork emerges from her internal battle with strings attached The Sydney Morning Herald 9 December 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2016 At the Intersection of Art Science and Community Texas Geosciences Retrieved 8 September 2021 Guru Ella The Stuckists manifesto www stuckism com Arman 76 Found Object Sculptor Dies by Ken Johnson The New York Times 24 October 2005 Five Feet of Colorful Tools 1962 MoMA collection Official Louis Lou Hirshman website Fool s House 1962 Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 7 September 2012 One and Three Chairs 1965 MoMA collection Pablo Picasso s Bull s Head A Magical Metamorphosis of the Ordinary Masterpiece by Eric Gibson The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 31 May 2023 External links edit Found object and Readymade defined by MOMA Found object and Readymade defined by Tate Betacourt Michael The Richard Mutt Case Looking for Marcel Duchamp s Fountain Thompson Charles A Stuckist on Stuckism See section The medium modifies the message den Arend Lucien Environmental Art and Land Art as objet trouve Iverson Margaret Readymade found object photograph An extended examination of the subject FAUND paper magazine featuring internet image finders READYMADE fan scarf remix knitting pattern by Schalalala Hopkins David A Companion to Dada and Surrealism Volume 10 of Blackwell Companions to Art History John Wiley amp Sons May 2 2016 ISBN 1118476182 Portal nbsp Visual arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Found object amp oldid 1215235918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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