David Shrigley sells 10 tonnes of old rope as art for £1m (www.independent.co.uk)
from LadyButterfly@reddthat.com to world@lemmy.world on 14 Nov 14:09
https://reddthat.com/post/54166468

#world

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ivanafterall@lemmy.world on 14 Nov 14:10 next collapse

Nice work if you can get it.

owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca on 14 Nov 14:11 collapse

Anyone can get it if you go find the island of it floating around in the Pacific Ocean (I think?).

kami@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 14 Nov 15:48 next collapse

Easy money!

Archer@lemmy.world on 15 Nov 02:08 collapse

That’s microscopic plastic

owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca on 15 Nov 18:11 collapse

Turns out most of it is bigger, but still not easily visible (I was definitely one of the people that thought it was giant heaps).

the patch is a widely dispersed area consisting primarily of suspended “fingernail-sized or smaller”—often microscopic—particles in the upper water column known as microplastics.[4]

While microplastics dominate the area by count, 92% of the mass of the patch consists of larger objects. Some of the plastic is over 50 years old, and includes items (and fragments of items) such as “plastic lighters, toothbrushes, water bottles, pens, baby bottles, cell phones, plastic bags, and nurdles”.

Wikipedia

k0e3@lemmy.ca on 16 Nov 09:37 collapse

I had to google what nurdles were. They’re pre-production plastic pellets.

phutatorius@lemmy.zip on 16 Nov 10:18 collapse

It’s surfer mispronunciation of “nodules.”

Source: used to surf, talked to other surfers about nurdles.

KoboldCoterie@pawb.social on 14 Nov 14:13 next collapse

The headline is a little misleading, no? He is offering for sale 10 tonnes of old rope as art for £1m; the article certainly does not mention him having found a buyer, which the headline implies.

CubitOom@infosec.pub on 14 Nov 15:00 next collapse

He’s pushing rope.

eleijeep@piefed.social on 14 Nov 22:57 collapse

Did you miss the actual joke of the piece?

blave@lemmy.world on 14 Nov 15:05 next collapse

While I fully appreciate abstract art, I’m a bit incensed that this is being sold for £1m.

[deleted] on 14 Nov 19:11 next collapse
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shalafi@lemmy.world on 15 Nov 03:06 collapse

No one has bought it for £1m.

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 14 Nov 15:53 next collapse

Don’t tell them about Joseph Beuys.

The end of the Fettecke
In 1986, a custodian in the Art Academy of Düsseldorf cleaned up the butter about nine months after Beuys’ death.

whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works on 14 Nov 15:58 collapse

I read the article 3 times now and still don’t understand

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 14 Nov 16:19 collapse

Fair enough, it’s a bit short. Joseph Beuys was an artist that worked with fat & felt a lot. He was famous and esp. after his death his artwork went for insane prices. One of his works was literally a corner of a room filled with fat (butter, apparently, but it’s called Fettecke = fat corner or grease corner). A cleaner accidentally cleaned it up, not knowing what it was. Or so the story goes.

Archer@lemmy.world on 15 Nov 02:09 collapse

Being a cleaner at a modern art museum has to be stressful

[deleted] on 14 Nov 16:04 next collapse
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LemmyBruceLeeMarvin@lemmy.ml on 14 Nov 23:58 next collapse

I gotta get in on this money laundering scam

Wilco@lemmy.zip on 15 Nov 01:10 collapse

Step 1: Buy old rope for 1m at gallery Step 2: Get same gallery to appraiser old rope for 20 million Step 3: Donate old rope to a museum and claim 20 million write-off on taxes Step 4: Repeat and win

Donebrach@lemmy.world on 15 Nov 00:37 next collapse

but its curated, in stark space and he’s waring all black! IT ART!

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 15 Nov 00:42 next collapse

And now please explain to me why this is “art” and not just human slop.

phutatorius@lemmy.zip on 16 Nov 10:15 collapse

Money for old rope, that’s how.

turdburglar@piefed.social on 15 Nov 01:05 next collapse

one of my three favorite artists.

phutatorius@lemmy.zip on 16 Nov 10:19 collapse

The big thumbs-up on the Trafalgar Square plinth was brilliant.

shalafi@lemmy.world on 15 Nov 03:09 next collapse

Silliness aside, old rope kinda fascinates me. Some lasts forever, some is rotten beyond use. I have a giant sack at camp, all kinds. Interesting to see how different materials last, stretch, rot, etc.

Friend gave me quite a bit of the thickest nylon rope pictured. Made a shitty rope bridge out of it that might outlast my old carcass.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 16 Nov 09:43 collapse

Sometimes fine art is an investment vehicle for the rich to store their wealth.