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Juxtapoz Magazine – Someone Turned Radiohead’s “In Rainbows” Into Super Mario 64 sounds

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It is Friday. Enjoy. Via Cracked Magazine: “Radiohead’s seventh album In rainbow – released in 2007 – was recreated using the sounds from the Super Mario 64 video game. Justified In Rainbow StreetsThe tracks are recreated with signature sound effects and music from the 1996 Super Mario game – including soundfonts from Bowser levels and the soundtrack for courses like Shifting Sands Land and Big Boo’s Haunt.” Created by on4word.

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Juxtapoz Magazine – Sweet Dreams & Beautiful Nightmares: Delisha @ Thinkspace Projects, Los Angeles

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Thinkspace Projects is honored to present delishas Sweet dreams and beautiful nightmares, on the walls of Gallery III. Delisha focuses on the “BEAUTIFUL MONSTER” and creates a range of childlike perspectives and narratives.

Influenced by the comics by Bill Watterson and Dr. Seuss, Delisha explores children’s dreams and nightmares, their potential and their sadness. She sees children as “little people who organize their emotions” and is able to convey their experiences in breathtaking ways, capturing the imaginations of all her viewers.

In this particular work, The BEAUTIFUL MONSTER acts as a security blanket to help us deal with life’s problems and block out the harshness of the world. It’s easier to tune out the judgment, abuse, neglect, and doubt while wrapped in the comfort of scarves. Manifesting from a cold world, A BEAUTIFUL MONSTER is also a reminder to embrace fear, for perhaps you will find solace in uncovering what is really there.”

About Delisha
Delisha currently resides on Chicago’s Westside, where she creates paintings with childlike perspectives and narratives. Inspired by Bill Watterson’s comics and the late great Dr. Seuss, Delisha is definitely doing it for the kids. She speaks of their dreams and nightmares, their potential and their sadness, and would rather see them as “little people organizing their feelings” rather than just “kids.” Her imagery of children and toys speaks in detail of those experiences that are hidden in the adult psyche; awakens the imagination in all of us.

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Vivan Sundaram, Veteran Indian Contemporary Artist, Dies at 79

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Indian contemporary artist Vivan Sundaram has died aged 79 of complications from a hemorrhagic stroke that occurred earlier this month. Sundaram, who has been creating work for nearly six decades, is best known for his multidisciplinary studio practice informed by activism and political awareness. Reports indicate that that the artist had been ill in the last few months before his death. News of his death was confirmed by Chemould gallery in Mumbai.

“To say that Vivan took risks is an understatement,” said Shireen Gandhy, Creative Director at Chermould Gallery Centre County Report. “If you look at his practice, there is a great connection to art history, but at the same time feels at ease when he addresses his problems with acute frankness.”

Sundaram was born in the northern Indian city of Shimla in 1943 to Kalyan Sundaram, India’s first post-partition legal secretary and second chief election commissioner, and Indira Sher-Gil, younger sister of the Hungarian-Indian modern artist Amrita Sher-Gil. Sundaram completed a bachelor’s degree in painting from Maharaja Sayajirao University in Vadodara, Gujarat between 1961 and 1965, followed by postgraduate studies as a Commonwealth Scholar at the Slade School of Fine Art in London from 1966 to 1968 under the tutelage of The American Artist RB Kitaj. Sundaram began studying the history of cinema in Slade and channeled this interest into his artwork throughout his life.

Vivan Sundaram, “Flowers/Fragments” (1991), charcoal and motor oil on handmade rag paper diptych, 30″ x 44″ (image courtesy of Gallery Chermould)

Sundaram was heavily influenced by his time in Europe, particularly the student-led protests in May ’68 against capitalism, imperialism and class discrimination in Paris, France. Sundaram returned to India in the early 1970s and began to address national and global disparities in his art practice, inspired by British pop art, kitsch and abstraction. Between the 70’s and 80’s the artist developed several series of works dealing with and showing solidarity with oppressed populations, including but not limited to Sikhs who suffered from the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in India and the Jewish Europeans who died or fled during the riots Holocaust. Sundaram invested in Marxism and also founded the Kasauli Art Center and the Journal of Arts and Ideas to provide artists and writers with more opportunities for collaboration and experimental work.

An installation view of GARBAGE (2008) (Image courtesy of Gallery Chermould)

It wasn’t until the early 1990’s that Sundaram began to incorporate more unconventional materials into his practice. While theming the Gulf War, the artist began pairing engine oil traces with charcoal markings in an eponymous series of 40 works situated at the triangular interface between drawing, painting and installation. This material transition sparked Sundaram’s interdisciplinary interest in combining film, photography, collage, printmaking, and sculpture throughout his practice, culminating in mixed-media installation exhibitions such as Collaboration/Combine (1992), monument (1993) and houseboat (1994). Sundaram’s practice continued to respond to current events and ongoing injustices through the use of archival information and upcycled materials on his research topics. 12 bed ward (2005) delved into the stories and practices of Indian waste collectors through the use of worn shoe soles and rusted cot frames, an interest that has been further explored Garbage (2008).

Sundaram also explored his own lineage through his work, examining and remixing the documentation and archival information of his aunt Amrita Sher-Gil and maternal grandfather and amateur photographer Umrao Singh, both artists in their own right before India’s independence. These deconstructions and reassessments of his family are observed in The Sher Gil Archive (1995) and Re-recording of Amrita (2001).

Vivan Sundaram, Six Stations of a Life Pursued: Suture, Untitled, II (2018), Pigment print, 15 1/2 in. x 17 in. (Photo by Gireesh NV, Courtesy Gallery Chermould)

Sundaram was celebrated in two 50-year retrospectives in 2018: Enter and you are no longer a stranger at the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art in New Delhi and interruptions at the Haus der Kunst in Munich, both of which commemorated his conceptual and material development while praising his lifelong commitment to activism and social awareness.

“He was unique in his creative and intellectual energy,” lamented Roshini Vadehra, director of the Vadehra Art Gallery, who also worked with Sundaram. “His political and activist side was one that we all admired and drew strength from.”

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Sundaram is survived by his wife, art critic and historian Geeta Kapur. His last rites and cremation will take place tomorrow at noon at Lodhi Crematorium in New Delhi. A series of drawings from Sundaram Heights of Machu Pichu (1972) is currently on view at the Kochi Biennale in Kochi, India.

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Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova Placed on Russian “Wanted” List

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Nadya Tolokonnikova was a co-founder, activist and conceptual artist of Pussy Riot placed on Russia’s most wanted list for “criminal activity” after news broke earlier this year of her latest performing work linked to Vladimir Putin. Tolokonnikova filmed their joint performance “Putin’s Ashes” (2022) last August, in which she showed herself and 11 other women in balaclavas setting fire to a 10-foot portrait of the Russian President in the desert.

After she and the group cast spells together to oust Putin from his post, Tolokonnikova bottled the ashes of his cremated portrait and presented them with the short film during her first solo show at Jeffrey Deitch’s gallery in Los Angeles last January .

“Coincidentally, my Instagram profile disappeared and this new criminal case was announced within a week of the show,” the artist said in a press release upon finding out she was on the list. “The police arrested friends and family and my lawyers sent me the documents they found.”

Nadya Tolokonnikova’s bottles of Putin’s ashes from her performance in August 2022

In 2012, Tolokonnikova and two others were members of Pussy Riot sentenced to two years in prison for “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” for an impromptu concert at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow.

According to reports earlier this month Russia opened a criminal investigation against Tolokonnikova on the grounds that an NFT she sold in 2021 “offended religious sensibilities”. The NFT was a picture of a hand drawn Virgin Mary resembling a vulva at the top of the digitized records of Tolokonnikova’s prison sentencing documents.

“Any truly political artist risks their personal security for their art,” Tolokonnikova said. “It’s not a new concept for me. They threaten us, but we cannot show fear.”

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“I will use the tools I have as an artist and crypto enthusiast to keep fighting,” she added. “I’m not a soldier, I’m an artist, art is my weapon. I’m glad to see they’re scared.”

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