Ladies and gentlemen, for your viewing pleasure, I’ve found the dance in which our favorite New School sculpture is used. It is a dance in performed in three movements, score composed by Aaron Copland. It premiered in 1944.
Ladies and gentlemen, for your viewing pleasure, I’ve found the dance in which our favorite New School sculpture is used. It is a dance in performed in three movements, score composed by Aaron Copland. It premiered in 1944.
Rock it out, Andie!
Andie, Excellent. Will watch (for scuffing.) John, I get your pun. –JZ
So apparently, one can sit on it. Form and function. It must be bolted to the ground somehow because it is not wide enough to balance on its own.
What a romanticized version of Appalachia! Very Graham, but kind of ironic for me after watching a documentary last semester on the results of the fall of the Appalachian coal mining industry.
Yes, very funny to see it in use, now that we have already viewed it solely as a visual (abstract) form.