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Frida Orupabo
Big girl lI, 2024, collage: pigment print on acid-free cotton paper, mounting tape, split pins, mounted on aluminium, 260 x 127 cm
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Justin Matherly It'ok to limp, 2016 concrete, modified gypsom, modified ambulatory equipment, votive tooth (partial) 229,5 x 52,5 x 46,5 cm
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Camille Blatrix
La liberté, l'amour, la vitesse, 2015
Stainless steel, Reconstituted Ivory, Plexiglas, Polyester, Silver, Ipad, Speaker, Electronic system
Using advanced production techniques, finely-crafted materials and unique displays, Camille Blatrix endows his works —half art, half machine— with a very unusual existence. For the 2015 Biennale de Lyon the artist created La liberté, l’amour, la vitesse, a mournful cash machine with no money but full of emotions. It shares its thoughts with users about the inability to satisfy their desires, the disillusionment, and the sadness of the world. “Despite my love for them, cash machines have rarely been able to satisfy my needs”, says the artist, who, to alleviate his distress, created a machine endowed with feelings— a piece of technology that suddenly takes a real interest in the people who use it.
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Helen Frik
Egg and Spoon 1990 aluminium, gips, staal, nylon 200 x 140cn
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Liz Deschenes - Bracket 6 Silver toned silver gelatin print mounted to aluminium, 147.3 × 101.6 cm, 2013
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Angelika Loderer - Superspiria I
Aluminium, 50 × 25 × 25 cm, 2015
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Oscar Tuazon
Fun, 2011 Steel tubes, light-weight concrete, wood 220.5 x 200 x 350
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