Named for the muscle that turns your nutsack into a walnut when it gets cold, The Cremaster Cycle swings the biggest dick in contemporary art. Produced from 1994 through 2002, and last screened in ...
Named for the muscle that turns your nutsack into a walnut when it gets cold, The Cremaster Cycle swings the biggest dick in contemporary art. Produced from 1994 through 2002, and last screened in ...
Matthew Barney’s “Cremaster 3” — which is actually the fifth and final installment in his quintet of highly personal, avant-garde fables — opens and closes with scenes set at Fingal’s Cave in Scotland ...
The films have been buoyed by Barney’s show currently underway at the Guggenheim in New York. Werner continued to say the audiences tended to be 18-to-35-years old, and that Palm will open “Cremaster” ...
Thematically, the films tackle both the general process of artistic creation and the symbolically related descent of the human testicles (as controlled by the cremaster muscle). Do yourself a favor ...
CREMASTER CYCLE Just in case TBA didn't fill your artsy-fartsy quota. Cremaster 1 (1996)—Okay, so yes, it’s basically just this big bunch of ladies in frilly shit dancing around or whatever, but as ...
This weekend the Byrd Theatre will show Matthew Barney s Cremaster Cycle, a series of five films that have had the art world s knickers in a collective knot since their release in the '90s. I was ...
Cremaster 3 is the final installment of Matthew Barney’s five-part Cremaster cycle. If that reads like a typo, be informed that, over the last decade, Barney has been filming and releasing the ...
From the time he first came at us 12 years ago, Matthew Barney has been the great hope of an art world always looking for hope. By now, at 36, it’s routine for him to be called the best artist of his ...
The Cremaster Cycle is a series of five feature-length films, together with related sculptures, photographs, drawings, and artist's books, created by American visual artist and filmmaker Matthew ...
Watch out everyone - it's coming! Take cover all those who think that movies are shrink-wrapped 90-minute modules, things you can see after dinner at a restaurant and still be home on time to pay off ...