From http://improveverywhere.com/, 50 Improv Everywhere agents create and art gallery opening on a subway platform.
Be sure to click "watch in high quality"!!!!
Edited by Matt Adams:
http://www.mattadamsapple.com/
Music by Erin Hall:
http://www.erinandhercello.com
This is one of over 80 different missions Improv Everywhere has executed over the past seven years in New York City. Others include Frozen Grand Central, the Best Buy uniform prank, and the famous U2 Rooftop Hoax, to name a few. Visit the website to see tons of photos and video of all of our work, including behind the scenes information on how this video was made.
http://www.improveverywhere.com
If you are interested in getting involved in New York you can sign the NY Agents List on the site. If you are interested in getting involved in your own town, join the Urban Prankster Network here: http://improveverywhere.ning.com
Be the first to find out about the next video we create by subscribing to our YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/subscription_cente...
RSS feed: http://www.improveverywhere.com/feed
You can also join our Facebook group:
http://www.new.facebook.com/pages/Imp...
We have a DVD for sale!
http://www.improveverywhere.com/dvd/
Category: Comedy
Tags: ImprovEverywhere Improv Everywhere Subway Platform NYC Art Gallery Opening funny prank
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Subway Art Gallery Opening
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Cairn_Song
found footage project 2, using clips from Andy Goldsworthy documentary and a clip from a video found in my house mates vid collection. Music by Meredith Monk, "Boat Song"
River and Tides (extraits 2)
A clip from the beautiful documentary on Andy Goldsworthy, "Rivers and Tides". If you enjoy this clip, please support his work by purchasing the dvd. In this clip he builds a sculpture out of driftwood and watches as the tide takes it out to sea. This is a good example of his wonderful work with time.
Rivers and Tides
A clip from the beautiful documentary on Andy Goldsworthy, "Rivers and Tides". If you enjoy this clip, please support his work by purchasing the dvd. In this clip he builds a sculpture out of driftwood and watches as the tide takes it out to sea. This is a good example of his wonderful work with time.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Ovation TV | Jackson Pollock
This OVATION original documentary follows his life, beginning with his Depression-era days working for the WPA through the optimism and Cold War paranoia that laced the 1950s. Pollock's relationships with both Ernest Hemingway and Pablo Picasso are explored. Archival footage, including Hans Namuth's famous cinematic rendering of the artist at work, is coupled with archival photos of Pollock's time, when atom bombs stunned the world, Kerouac addressed the Beat Generation and jazz permeated the airwaves.
With a mission to "Make Life Creative," Ovation TV is a multiplatform network focused on entertaining, inspiring and engaging the artist in all of us by offering original and acquired programming focused on art, culture and personal creativity. The network is distributed via cable, satellite and telco, and is complemented with its popular broadband website (www.OvationTV.com).
Pollock painting (1950)
It will work better using a SMALL SCREEN FORMAT. A fragment (going on a loop) of the film of Jackson Pollock painting - shot by Hans Namuth (1950) and released as "Jackson Pollock 51" (1951). Sound...
Chuck Close
A discussion with Chuck Close, Vincent Katz, and Matthew von Unwerth about the film "Chuck Close," directed by Marion Cajori
Monday, March 2, 2009
Dan Perjovschi, WHAT HAPPENED TO US?, at MoMA (Part 2)
In his first solo museum show in the United States, contemporary artist Dan Perjovschi creates site-specific wall drawings at The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Perjovschi, who lives and works in Bucharest, Romania, makes witty and incisive social and political images in response to current events. His work has been featured in Biennials from Venice to Istanbul to Moscow.
Projects 85: Dan Perjovschi, WHAT HAPPENED TO US?, is on view at The Museum of Modern Art from May 2 through August 27, 2007.
For more information on the exhibition, please visit http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/exhib...