Inverto Logo
Super Clean Personal Portfolio
Hey, I am Inverto. Super Clean Personal Portfolio WordPress Theme. Built with emphasis on clean, content oriented, modern & minimalistic design.

Follow me
[ish_icon icon="ish-icon-twitter" icon_url="//twitter.com/ishyoboydotcom" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Twitter" tooltip_color="color5" tooltip_text_color="color4" size="20"][ish_icon icon="ish-icon-facebook" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Facebook" tooltip_color="color5" tooltip_text_color="color4" icon_url="//www.facebook.com/ishyoboydotcom" size="20"][ish_icon icon="ish-icon-dribbble" icon_url="//dribbble.com/MattImling" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Dribbble" tooltip_color="color5" tooltip_text_color="color4" size="20"][ish_icon icon="ish-icon-behance" icon_url="//www.behance.net/MattImling" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Behance" tooltip_color="color5" tooltip_text_color="color4" size="20"][ish_icon icon="ish-icon-email" icon_url="//eepurl.com/C-X7v" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Subscribe to our newsletter" tooltip_color="color5" tooltip_text_color="color4" size="20"]
[ish_headline tag_size="h3" color="color4" icon_align="left" tag="h" tooltip_color="color1" tooltip_text_color="color3" global_atts="yes" style="margin-bottom: 5px !important;"]Expandable Widgetized Area[/ish_headline][ish_headline tag_size="h5" icon_align="left" tag="h" color="color4" tooltip_color="color1" tooltip_text_color="color3" global_atts="yes" style="margin-bottom: 0 !important;"]Use all default WordPress widgets or bring the area to life with custom shortcodes.[/ish_headline]
About Me

Inverto Logo
Multi Creative Freelance Portfolio
Hey, I am Inverto. Multi Creative Freelance Portfolio WordPress Theme. Built with emphasis on clean, content oriented, modern & minimalistic design.

[ish_icon icon="ish-icon-facebook" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Facebook" tooltip_color="color13" tooltip_text_color="color4" icon_url="//www.facebook.com/ishyoboydotcom" text_color="color4" active_text_color="color13" size="20"]

[ish_icon icon="ish-icon-gplus" icon_url="//https://plus.google.com/" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Google+" tooltip_color="color16" tooltip_text_color="color4" text_color="color4" active_text_color="color16" size="20"]

[ish_icon icon="ish-icon-behance" icon_url="//www.behance.net/MattImling" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Behance" tooltip_color="color15" tooltip_text_color="color4" text_color="color4" active_text_color="color15" size="20"]

[ish_icon icon="ish-icon-dribbble" icon_url="//dribbble.com/MattImling" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Dribbble" tooltip_color="color14" tooltip_text_color="color4" text_color="color4" active_text_color="color14" size="20"]

[ish_icon icon="ish-icon-twitter" icon_url="//twitter.com/ishyoboydotcom" global_atts="yes" tooltip="Twitter" tooltip_color="color17" tooltip_text_color="color4" text_color="color4" active_text_color="color17" size="20"]

Recent Posts
Optica Mision

Peter Fischli & David Weiss

Fischli/Weiss

Their best-known work is the film Der Lauf der Dinge (The Way Things Go, 1987), described by The Guardian as being “post apocalyptic”, as it concerned chain reactions and the ways in which objects flew, crashed and exploded across the studio in which it was shot. Fischli lives and works in Zurich; Weiss died on 27 April 2012.

August 3, 2015/Art/2 min. read
Home/Blog/Art/Peter Fischli & David Weiss

[vc_row vertical_align=”middle” responsive_point=”960″ bg_color=””][vc_column width=”1/2″][ish_image image=”194″ size=”theme-third” stretch_image=”yes” link_type=”image”][/vc_column][vc_column width=”1/2″][ish_box color=”none” text_color=”none” border_color=”none” inner_padding=”30#30#30#30″][vc_row_inner][vc_column_inner width=”1/1″][ish_headline tag_size=”h3″ align=”left” color=”color5″]Peter Fischli and David Weiss[/ish_headline][vc_column_text]Peter Fischli (born 8 June 1952) and David Weiss (21 June 1946 – 27 April 2012), often shortened to Fischli/Weiss, were an artist duo that had been collaborating since 1979. They were among the most renowned contemporary artists of Switzerland.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner][/ish_box][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row bg_color=””][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]Their best-known work is the film Der Lauf der Dinge (The Way Things Go, 1987), described by The Guardian as being “post apocalyptic”, as it concerned chain reactions and the ways in which objects flew, crashed and exploded across the studio in which it was shot. Fischli lives and works in Zurich; Weiss died on 27 April 2012.[/vc_column_text][ish_separator color=”color2″ opacity_percent=”20″][/ish_separator][ish_quote author=”Confucius” size=”h3″ align=”center” color=”color5″]”Choose a job you love,
and you will never have to work a day in your life.”[/ish_quote][ish_separator color=”color2″ opacity_percent=”20″][/ish_separator][vc_column_text]David Weiss (21 June 1946 – 27 April 2012) grew up as the son of a parish priest and a teacher. After discovering a passion for jazz at the age of 16, he enrolled in a foundation course at the Kunstgewerbeschule, Zurich, where in his first year of study he befriended fellow artist Urs Lüthi.[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]Having rejected careers as a decorator, a graphic designer and a photographer, Weiss soon came to view a career as an artist as a realistic prospect. He studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule, Zurich (1963–4), and the Kunstgewerbeschule, Basel (1964–5); he subsequently worked as sculptor with Alfred Gruder (Basel) and Jaqueline Stieger (England). In 1967, he worked at the Expo 67 in Montreal, before travelling to New York, where he got to know the important minimalist art of the time. Between 1970 and 1979 he published books in collaboration with Lüthi. For most of 1975-78, he spent a great deal of time drawing in black ink, and had exhibitions at galleries in Zürich, Amsterdam, Cologne, and Rotterdam.[/vc_column_text][ish_image image=”200″ stretch_image=”yes” link_type=”image” show_caption=”yes”][ish_headline tag_size=”h3″ align=”left” color=”color5″]Works[/ish_headline][vc_column_text]Art critics often see parallels to Marcel Duchamp, Dieter Roth or Jean Tinguely in Fischli and Weiss’ parody bearing work.[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]Wurstserie (1979) was Fischli and Weiss’ first collaborative project, setting the tone for their future work. In the series, ordinary sausages and slices of sausages became the protagonists of scenarios, alluding to situations such as cars in a traffic accident in an urban setting, layers of carpets and other situations. By the end of the 1980s, the duo had expanded their repertoire to embrace an iconography of the incidental, creating deadpan photographs of kitsch tourist attractions and airports around the world. For their contribution to the 1995 Venice Biennale, at which they represented Switzerland, Fischli & Weiss exhibited 96 hours of video on 12 monitors that documented what they called “concentrated daydreaming”—real-time glimpses into daily life in Zurich: a mountain sunrise, a restaurant chef in his kitchen, sanitation workers, a bicycle race, and so on. For the Skulptur Projekte Münster (1997), Fischli and Weiss planted a flower and vegetable garden conceived with an ecological point of view and documented its periodic growth through photographs.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Add comment

Mision Optica/ Exclusivo para Optica Mision / Created by Opticamision.com