The Emperor of Presumption

History has seen to it that the number of artists we’ve never heard of far outweighs those which we have, and positively dwarfs, like a supercluster to a matchbook, the number which we revere. This is doubtless as it should be since every aimless young person without quantifiable interests or skills seem to eventually shuffle (or be herded) into the arts seeking refuge from reality. From among these ranks of artists destined to be forgotten I bring you the somewhat interesting case of Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, the self-styled “emperor of presumption,” who undertook a determined campaign to be remembered in the annals of art history.



Ah! Cavellini! This really brings me back, thanks for posting it. I remember one of his performances in which he covered naked models with his repeated signature.
All his work carries the birth and death dates (1914-2014). He was a bit optimistic on the latter.

posted on 01.28 at 02:55 AM.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)


Never heard of him. But who’s heard of me?

Q.  Are you an artist if no one knows your work? Or more importantly, when do you *stop* being an artist? Are you an artist if no one pays for, or sees your work? Or is it up to the critics? (crickets?)

Going to cut down a tree in the woods now.

VR/

posted on 01.28 at 04:37 AM.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)


This reminds me of our Christmas conversation. How strange. Happy to know ones’s insanity on this subject [self historification] goes much deeper than my thoughts on the same.

Suggestion:
If Cavellini had realized that a body work such as this immediately followed by a perhaps an assassination attempt of a UN Security Council or even a slew of bank robberies could have added an interesting true piece of actual history to his life.

He may have even made it on the History Channel.  Ide watch!

posted on 01.31 at 06:01 PM.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)


To me he seems heroic but only in the subtle, flawed, twisted way that Melville’s characters are: Ahab, Bartleby, Pierre, the Lightning Rod Salesman…  Not as dramatic, of course.

posted on 02.11 at 03:23 PM.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)


The pictures has humor and seriousness at the same time. But I can’t help to think of the pictures parents take to their children with multiple faces. Those are hilarious!!

posted on 09.12 at 08:29 PMMotorcycle Fairings

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