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"Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - Printable Version

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Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - Silencio - 02-06-2014

Looks like a Fragonard at Abbesses station.

(Aside: when in Paris, don't take the stairs up from Abbesses unless you want a serious cardio workout. However, the mosaics are really pretty.)


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - BernDog - 02-06-2014

voodoopenguin wrote:
[quote=Ombligo]
great idea but I did notice the only image people were shown looking it was the one showing two females topless.
Modern society.. sigh.

First we are talking about France, the French are not particularly prudish about these things and secondly I guess those looking were Japanese tourists.

Paul
Third, that wasn't exactly "high art" when it was first painted. Porn, then and now.


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - eustacetilley - 02-07-2014

BernDog wrote:
[quote=voodoopenguin]
[quote=Ombligo]
great idea but I did notice the only image people were shown looking it was the one showing two females topless.
Modern society.. sigh.

First we are talking about France, the French are not particularly prudish about these things and secondly I guess those looking were Japanese tourists.

Paul
Third, that wasn't exactly "high art" when it was first painted. Porn, then and now.
No, it wasn't "Porn", then or now. It was political, and evoked symbols that are obscure to us now.
Here is a good discussion:

http://lorenaybe.hubpages.com/hub/Two-women-in-a-tub

I think that you may be confusing this with the _many_ depictions of "Leda And the Swan", which on occasion, could get quite frisky indeed.

"If correctly viewed, everything is lewd.
I could tell you things about Peter Pan,
And the Wizard of Oz,
There's a dirty old man!"
-T. Lehrer

Eustace


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - BernDog - 02-07-2014

eustacetilley wrote:
[quote=BernDog]
[quote=voodoopenguin]
[quote=Ombligo]
great idea but I did notice the only image people were shown looking it was the one showing two females topless.
Modern society.. sigh.

First we are talking about France, the French are not particularly prudish about these things and secondly I guess those looking were Japanese tourists.

Paul
Third, that wasn't exactly "high art" when it was first painted. Porn, then and now.
No, it wasn't "Porn", then or now. It was political, and evoked symbols that are obscure to us now.
Here is a good discussion:

http://lorenaybe.hubpages.com/hub/Two-women-in-a-tub

I think that you may be confusing this with the _many_ depictions of "Leda And the Swan", which on occasion, could get quite frisky indeed.

"If correctly viewed, everything is lewd.
I could tell you things about Peter Pan,
And the Wizard of Oz,
There's a dirty old man!"
-T. Lehrer

Eustace
I stand corrected.

But, many classic paintings of nudes were created more for titillation than for anything else. I just think it's funny how some people can be so prudish about modern sexuality, but then elevate something that was basically porn hundreds of years ago.


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - ka jowct - 02-08-2014

I'm guessing that one of them is an Ingres portrait; for some reason, Cranach has popped into my mind for the one of the two female figures that has a couple of us in a mild tizzy, but that's probably wrong.


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - eustacetilley - 02-08-2014

ka jowct wrote:
I'm guessing that one of them is an Ingres portrait; for some reason, Cranach has popped into my mind for the one of the two female figures that has a couple of us in a mild tizzy.



Martin Luther does not approve.

Eustace


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - jaine - 02-26-2014

Great to see! :goodone: Billboards will play a great role ahead. Creative billboards attracts people easily and they are going to rule in the future.


Re: "Street Artist Etienne Lavie Hijacks Billboards in Paris Replacing Ads with Classic Artworks" - eustacetilley - 02-26-2014

Hey Jaine, you are a pain.
You're spamming here is quite galling.
But what is worse, and the point of this verse,
Your English usage is appalling.


Eustace