Results for ‘cat break’
66 Results
VA
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via lacma.tumblr.com
Mar 2012
LACMA has been getting in on the Cat Break action, posting images like an 1875 depiction by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi of a cat busting up a dogfight, Aoyama Masaharu’s Cat on Roof, and Otto Dix’s 1920 woodcut Katzen to its Tumblr blog.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via nekofont.upat.jp
Mar 8
In honor of our own Scott Stulen’s SXSW presentation Friday on #catvidfest (“Is This the End of Art?”) and festival tickets going on sale March 9, we revive Cat Break. Behold: NekoFont’s site that allows users to try out custom cat-based typography.
FV
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via artforum.com
Aug 2012
Chris Marker fans are no doubt familiar with Guillaume-en-Egypte, the filmmaker’s cartoon cat and alter ego. To commemorate Marker’s passing this week, here’s a 1994 Marker short featuring the real-life Guillaume vegging out to a piano sonata by Federico Mompou.
EC


Art News from Elsewhere



Cat Break
Via writersandkitties.tumblr.com
Jul 2012
This week’s feline foray goes literary: a blog dedicated entirely to photos of writers and their kitties. Atwood, Burroughs, Bukowski, Colette, Foucault, Lessing, Sartre—cat lovers all. Our fave: Aldous Huxley and cat contemplating a brave new world.
VA
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via twitter.com
Feb 2012
Another Jenny Holzer–themed Twitter account gives us today’s Friday Cat Break: @jennyholzercat, which tweets “truisms” like, “ANGER OR HATE CAN BE A USEFUL MOTIVATING FORCE. BTW I THREW UP ON YOUR COUCH.”
PA
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via youtube.com
May 2012
Despite the cuteness of the scene—a DJ cat mixing the Beastie Boys!—today’s Cat Break comes with sincere sadness: Rest in peace, Adam Yauch (aka MCA), director, activist, and Beasties cofounder, who passed away at age 47 after a three-year battle with cancer.
FV
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via archive.org
Feb 2012
“Why did the brilliant men who worked for Thomas Edison feel that they needed to use this new technology to show the world ‘boxing cats’ is a question that has boggled the minds of film historians for over 100 years.”

