Second Lives: Remixing the Ordinary
The relationship between the part and the whole
The exhibition, Second Lives: Remixing the Ordinary, located at the Museum of Art and Design has artists taking the most menial things such as buttons, eyeglasses, shopping bags, thread spools, coins, toys, etc. and turned them into portraits, statues, and furniture. In our lives we see things and objects as they are, most times not bothering to wonder what goes in to making them. For example at first glance we see a computer and just see a computer but not notice the processors, drives, chips, or bytes of memory that make up the basis of it. It is the same thing with all the things in our lives that we take for granted. The artists of Second Lives have taken objects like the ones mentioned before and were able to transform them into things that most of us on a daily basis, as well as images we can only hope to see in the near future. The main topic here is basically the relationship between the part and the whole, in short, the whole is more apparent then the parts that are used to make them. Continue reading →