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ACRUSH

Acrush works with contemporary artists, galleries, museums and collectors to realise some of the most ambitious projects in the field today

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15
2 weeks ago


Maison de Poupées

Fabian Marti and Pentti Monkkonen at Acrush, Zurich

My friend Fabian Marti showed me his recent paintings, which depict his poodle “Lutz” morphing into baroque squiggles. They reminded me a bit of Giacomo Balla’s “Dynamism of Dog on a Leash.”

I pictured Fabian in his trench coat, with Lutz on a leash, strolling around Paris and sitting in cafés.

This led me to envision remnants of a dinner: empty bottles, oyster shells, stubbed-out cigarettes, and dirty plates, much like in Daniel Spoerri’s “Snare Pictures.” I admire these works as snapshots of a specific time and place—Paris in the early ‘60s. Spoerri captured the chaos of the dinner table, complete with smeared sauces and discarded cigarette packs.

Similarly, Fabian’s paintings emerge from a swirl of the subconscious of large language model imagery, like Spoerri’s dinner tables, capturing the present moment with all its unique visual characteristics. One day, we may look back at early art of this genre, just as we now see the “Mail Art” of Spoerri’s Fluxus peers as both quaint and prescient. Robert Filliou even described it as an “Eternal Network,” developing alongside the early ARPANET.

During the height of the Vietnam War in 1969, Claes Oldenburg sculpted a plywood tank topped with an inflatable lipstick at Yale University. This exaggerated scale of the lipstick, set in a place traditionally reserved for military icons, conveyed a clear anti-establishment message. Oldenburg’s focus on enlarging everyday objects led to a successful career, resulting in public sculptures like “Spoonbridge and Cherry.”

Interestingly, inflatable “dummy” tanks have been used for deception in warfare from WWII to modern-day Ukraine.

The idea of transforming everyday objects by scaling them up was seen as early as Picasso’s “Glass of Absinthe” in 1914, where he used a spoon as part of the sculpture itself.

In espionage, mundane objects are also repurposed: weapons like the infamous “Bulgarian umbrella,” or pens turned into cameras. With smartphones and advanced software today, Fabian covertly scanned the “Jester” sculpture at the Musée Picasso, repurposing it into a finial for his own walking stick...


266
3
1 years ago

Maison de Poupées

Fabian Marti and Pentti Monkkonen at Acrush, Zurich

My friend Fabian Marti showed me his recent paintings, which depict his poodle “Lutz” morphing into baroque squiggles. They reminded me a bit of Giacomo Balla’s “Dynamism of Dog on a Leash.”

I pictured Fabian in his trench coat, with Lutz on a leash, strolling around Paris and sitting in cafés.

This led me to envision remnants of a dinner: empty bottles, oyster shells, stubbed-out cigarettes, and dirty plates, much like in Daniel Spoerri’s “Snare Pictures.” I admire these works as snapshots of a specific time and place—Paris in the early ‘60s. Spoerri captured the chaos of the dinner table, complete with smeared sauces and discarded cigarette packs.

Similarly, Fabian’s paintings emerge from a swirl of the subconscious of large language model imagery, like Spoerri’s dinner tables, capturing the present moment with all its unique visual characteristics. One day, we may look back at early art of this genre, just as we now see the “Mail Art” of Spoerri’s Fluxus peers as both quaint and prescient. Robert Filliou even described it as an “Eternal Network,” developing alongside the early ARPANET.

During the height of the Vietnam War in 1969, Claes Oldenburg sculpted a plywood tank topped with an inflatable lipstick at Yale University. This exaggerated scale of the lipstick, set in a place traditionally reserved for military icons, conveyed a clear anti-establishment message. Oldenburg’s focus on enlarging everyday objects led to a successful career, resulting in public sculptures like “Spoonbridge and Cherry.”

Interestingly, inflatable “dummy” tanks have been used for deception in warfare from WWII to modern-day Ukraine.

The idea of transforming everyday objects by scaling them up was seen as early as Picasso’s “Glass of Absinthe” in 1914, where he used a spoon as part of the sculpture itself.

In espionage, mundane objects are also repurposed: weapons like the infamous “Bulgarian umbrella,” or pens turned into cameras. With smartphones and advanced software today, Fabian covertly scanned the “Jester” sculpture at the Musée Picasso, repurposing it into a finial for his own walking stick...


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1 years ago

June 7, Zürich


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7
2 years ago

ANUSHKA CHKHEIDZE / Clean Clear White / isarecords.ch / MORN Sat April 6 / ACRUSH / Hohstrasse 408b / 8048 ZH / 19:30 ❤️🍾❤️


51
2 years ago

CYRIL KUHN
13 DEC 6 PM
HOHLSTR 408B


90
2 years ago

Urs Fischer's "Wave" has almost landed on Place Vendôme 🙌🏼

#UrsFischer #Gagosian @chaosursfischer @artbasel @helloacrush @ritzparis


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11
2 years ago

@This time of the year @Bye Bye Quiet Life @zurichartweekend @helloacrush


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2 years ago



41
1
3 years ago

44
2
3 years ago

Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h @helloacrush @miamarfurt @zuni_halpern @nnnn_or_aaaa @bastien_aubry


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2
3 years ago

Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h @helloacrush @miamarfurt @zuni_halpern @nnnn_or_aaaa @bastien_aubry


145
2
3 years ago

Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h @helloacrush @miamarfurt @zuni_halpern @nnnn_or_aaaa @bastien_aubry


145
2
3 years ago

Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h @helloacrush @miamarfurt @zuni_halpern @nnnn_or_aaaa @bastien_aubry


145
2
3 years ago

Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h @helloacrush @miamarfurt @zuni_halpern @nnnn_or_aaaa @bastien_aubry


145
2
3 years ago


Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h


106
3 years ago

Nuage Domestique until 14th of October / Monday to Friday / 11-17:00h @helloacrush @nnnn_or_aaaa @zuni_halpern @miamarfurt @bastien_aubry


43
1
3 years ago


ストーリー保存 - ストーリー、リール、写真、ビデオ、ハイライト、IGTVをスマホに保存する最良の無料ツール

Story-save.comは、インスタグラムからストーリー、写真、ビデオ、IGTVなどのさまざまなコンテンツをダウンロードして保存するための直感的なオンラインツールです。Story-Saveを使えば、インスタグラムから簡単に多様なコンテンツをダウンロードでき、インターネット接続なしでも後で見ることができます。インスタグラムで面白いコンテンツを見つけたときに、後で見るために保存したいときに最適です。Story-Saveを使用して、インスタグラムでのお気に入りの瞬間をお見逃しなく!

私たちの利点:

登録不要

アプリのダウンロードやサインアップなしで、ウェブでストーリーを保存。

高品質なコンテンツ

低品質なコンテンツにさようなら、解像度の高いストーリーだけを保存。

すべてのデバイスでアクセス可能

どのブラウザ、iPhone、AndroidでもInstagramのストーリーをダウンロード。

完全無料で使用

完全に無料で、どのストーリーもダウンロード可能。

よくある質問

Instagramストーリーのダウンロード機能は、インスタグラムのストーリーを安全かつ高品質でダウンロードする方法を提供するために設計されています。ユーザーフレンドリーで、登録やサインアップは不要です。リンクをコピーして貼り付けるだけで、コンテンツを楽しめます。
Instagramのストーリーをダウンロードする手順は簡単です。
  • 1. Instagramストーリーダウンロードツールにアクセス。
  • 2. Instagramのユーザー名を入力し、ダウンロードボタンをクリック。
  • 3. 現在の24時間内に利用可能なすべてのストーリーが表示されます。ダウンロードしたいものを選んで、ダウンロード。
選択したストーリーは迅速にデバイスのローカルストレージに保存されます。
残念ながら、プライベートアカウントからストーリーをダウンロードすることは、プライバシー制限によりできません。
Instagramストーリーのダウンロードサービスには回数制限はありません。無制限に使用でき、完全に無料です。
はい、商業目的で使用しない限り、他のユーザーのInstagramストーリーをダウンロードして保存することは合法です。商業的に使用する場合は、元のコンテンツ所有者の許可を得て、ストーリーを使用するたびにクレジットを付与する必要があります。
ダウンロードしたストーリーは、通常、Windows、Mac、またはiOSのコンピューターのダウンロードフォルダに保存されます。モバイルデバイスの場合、ストーリーは電話のストレージに保存され、ダウンロード後すぐにギャラリーアプリに表示されます。