I guess the answer is nature . I'm not sure .
Eva Hesse!
some facts about her:
-minimalist sculpture
-satire of Greenberg modernism
-Gaus-like bandaged strips wrapped around frame "need repairing"
-wire sticking out at the viewer to contrast Greenbergism "flat and pure"
-female artist; hard for a woman to break into abstract expressionism and she calls it out
-said she wanted her to work to be "non-art, nonconnotative, non-anthropomorphic, non-geometric, non-nothing, everything but of another kind, vision, sort"
<span>-express the strangeness and absurdity she considered the central conditions of modern life
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Answer:
"It was cool, but it was all pretend"
Explanation:
Answer:
Forget the association of the word "Gothic" to dark, haunted houses, Wuthering Heights, or ghostly pale people wearing black nail polish and ripped fishnets. The original Gothic style was actually developed to bring sunshine into people's lives, and especially into their churches. To get past the accrued definitions of the centuries, it's best to go back to the very start of the word Gothic, and to the style that bears the name.
The Goths were a so-called barbaric tribe who held power in various regions of Europe, between the collapse of the Roman Empire and the establishment of the Holy Roman Empire (so, from roughly the fifth to the eighth century). They were not renowned for great achievements in architecture. As with many art historical terms, “Gothic” came to be applied to a certain architectural style after the fact.