Saturday, December 7, 2019

The Beginning of a Complex

Question: What would you do? What would you think? Would you tell people what you saw? Answer: What would I do? At first would be scared of what the individual was doing on the elevator. The scene of the event is scaring and would inquire of what the individual is doing all alone. My curiosity would get a better part of me and would ask what he is doing all along and why he is in the elevator. If the person refuses to tell me, l would get out of the elevator very fast because would not like to be caught up with whatever he was doing. What would I think? The first would think would the individual is either crazy or something is wrong with him. Looking closely would think is the art, since the events that surround him look as though it is just an act. If I would tell people of what I saw Definitely yes. The essence of such event needs to be shared to other so as to get them appreciate the art in more so in the times we live. This is so in that it has substantially changed over the times. Such an event demonstrate a performance art, it contains both the visual art and the drama more so where the tray with the pins and the sign written prick me. We all expect the individual to have the pins on him which are not the case. Such an experience ought to be remembered and to do so to share with others. Work Cited Aycock, Alice. A project Entitled "The Beginning of a Complex:" Notes, Drawings, photographs. New York: Lapp Princess Press, 1977. Lucie-Smith, Edward. Sculpture Since 1945. London: Phaidon, 1987. Tomkins, Calvin. The World of Marcel Duchamp. New York: Times-Life Books, 1966.

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