h a l f b a k e r yViva los semi-panaderos!
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Since Campbells soup cans have been featured extensively in art by Warhol and follow-ups, its payback time and to promote art appreciation, Campbell should reproduce paintings on its soup can labels. For example renderings of food in art or fruit and vegetable still lifes could be featured with small
arrows pointing to the ingredients. Or why not Leonardos Last Supper on a can of kosher Bean with Ham and Bacon soup?
Knock yourself out.
http://www.findagra...ge/ingredients.html Just don't eat it. [angel, Jun 26 2002, last modified Oct 21 2004]
The famous Twinkies site
http://www.twinkiesproject.com/about.html "Golden Sponge Cake with Creamy Filling", but check the small print. [angel, Jun 26 2002, last modified Oct 21 2004]
but is it art?
http://www.ratrobot.com/writing/art/ [mrthingy, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
Canned Art
http://en.wikipedia.../wiki/Artist's_shit [spidermother, Dec 11 2011]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
|
Who owns the copyright on great works of art ? |
|
|
And I don't think Damien Hirst's stuffed-sheep-in-formaldehyde would do much for any food product. |
|
|
I prefer simple, distinctive, consistant labelling that one can spot from a distance each time the wretched supermarket decides to re-arrange all its shelves. |
|
|
I'd love this on the back of cereal boxes. |
|
|
Yeah, probably so. I do that too. I just like the names of things. Polysorbate-60, fatty acid esters, disodium edta, and of course, my all-time favorite, butylated hydroxtoluene. (More things should be butylated, I think.) |
|
|
Waugsqueke: If you want to really scare yourself, take a close look at some of the stuff they put in women's hair-care (!) products like perms and setting lotions .... Low molecular weight polyalkylene glycols, polyols, chlorinated aryl compounds, phosphorylated esters, the list goes on and on. Stuff that I'd expect in a hydraulic oil or a brake fluid ...... |
|
|
Those things aren't as interesting, though. I prefer the stuff we eat. Care for a stick of xanthan gum? (Which is what they chew in Piers Anthony novels, right?) |
|
|
Bummer, when I saw 'canned art', I thought it might be "Last Supper in a Spray Can". Would give a nice retro feel to tagging. |
|
|
Sacharine in the morning, Aspartame in the evening, Sorbitol at suppertime. Be my Xanthan gum, and I'll chew you all the time. |
|
|
[8th of 7] I was under the impression that technically pre-1900 great works of art are public domain copyright-wise, even with the new copyright extension laws in place <grin>. |
|
|
[8th of 7] reading shampoo bottles. Who among us
has not found ourselves in the toilet without a
magazine? |
|
|
The Borg are never without a suitable selection of
periodicals. |
|
|
Seriously, have you ever been in one of those cubes? They
had us (the Heathen Consortium) over for temporary
armistice negotiations last Sunday, and there are magazine
racks practically everywhere you sit down. We're talking
really interesting titles, too, like NatGeo, the New Yorker,
and PopSci, that kind of stuff. Say what you will about
assimilation, you'll never want for browsables. |
|
| |