Articles

Robin Willis31 Jan 2008 @ 12:00
Wallpaper
Robin Willis22 Jan 2008 @ 08:49
Filthy Mcnasty
Robin Willis08 Jan 2008 @ 04:44
Post Ruffles & Rot
Robin Willis30 Dec 2007 @ 12:00
Ruffles & Rot Exhibition
Robin Willis29 Dec 2007 @ 06:24
My Architecture
Robin Willis01 Sep 2007 @ 11:48
Ecoliteracy
Robin Willis22 Aug 2007 @ 02:53
Summer 07
Robin Willis15 Aug 2007 @ 01:21
PROGRAM:nature Issue 1
Robin Willis07 Aug 2007 @ 12:09
Discussion Video Online
 
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Comments

maggie from Taiwan, 04 Aug 2008 @ 05:51
Comment by maggie from Taiwan on Dark Water 23
Devin, 20 Feb 2008 @ 05:26
Comment by Devin on Dark Water 23
Devin, 08 Feb 2008 @ 12:35
Comment by Devin on Wallpaper
FO$TER, 15 Jan 2008 @ 12:52
Comment by FO$TER on Post Ruffles & Rot

Something I came across -

 
By -Ned Rifkin

«A Fool, according to the dictionary, is» a person with little or no judgment, common sense, wisdom, etc.; a man formerly kept in the household of a nobleman or king to entertain by acting as a clown.« Central to this definition is the infinitive »to entertain,« which derives from the French »entre« meaning between, and »tenir,« meaning to hold. Thus, its literal definition (and the one which Webster's uses within its etymological brackets) is »to hold between.« In the case of a fool, what is held between is teh attention of the audience, involving a suspension of judgment which inevitably renders the fool's role comedic in nature. For an artist, »to entertain" is to hold his or her audience between two worlds - the private, subjective world of the artist's vision and the commonly held accepted conventions of a more universal, public world... (1983)

Published by Lena – 11 Jul 2007 @ 06:06

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