Just saw this article from Fast Company and thought of this thread.
"Everything but the Paper Cut: Eye-popping Ways Artists Use Paper"
"In the year since the Museum of Art and Design reopened [1] in its new digs on Columbus Circle, they've been delivering consistently compelling shows--from punk-rock lace to radical knitting experiments. The newest, "Slash: Paper Under the Knife" [2], opened last weekend and runs through April 4, 2010.
The focus is paper--and the way contemporary artists have used paper itself as a medium, whether by cutting, tearing, burning, or shredding. In all, the show features 50 artists and a dozen installations made just for the show, including Andreas Kocks's Paperwork #701G (in the Beginning), seen above. Here's a sampling of the other works on display:
		
		
	
	
		 
	
Mia Pearlman's Eddy:
		 
	
Ferry Staverman, A Space Odesey:
		 
	
A detail of a sprawling work by Andrew Scott Ross, Rocks and Rocks and Caves and Dreams:
		 
	
Lane Twitchell's Peaceable Kingdom (Evening Land
		 
	
Béatrice Coron, WaterCity:
		 
	
Between the Lines, by Ariana Boussard-Reifel: A book with every single word cut out:
		 
	
Famed Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson's Your House is a laser-cut negative impression of Eliasson's actual house; as you flip through the pages, you get a tour of the house in cross section:
		 
	
Chris Kenny's Grand Island, part of a series of "maps" depicting a fictional city:
		 
	
Some images from it (source is fastcompany.com )
				
			"Everything but the Paper Cut: Eye-popping Ways Artists Use Paper"
"In the year since the Museum of Art and Design reopened [1] in its new digs on Columbus Circle, they've been delivering consistently compelling shows--from punk-rock lace to radical knitting experiments. The newest, "Slash: Paper Under the Knife" [2], opened last weekend and runs through April 4, 2010.
The focus is paper--and the way contemporary artists have used paper itself as a medium, whether by cutting, tearing, burning, or shredding. In all, the show features 50 artists and a dozen installations made just for the show, including Andreas Kocks's Paperwork #701G (in the Beginning), seen above. Here's a sampling of the other works on display:
 
	Mia Pearlman's Eddy:
 
	Ferry Staverman, A Space Odesey:
 
	A detail of a sprawling work by Andrew Scott Ross, Rocks and Rocks and Caves and Dreams:
 
	Lane Twitchell's Peaceable Kingdom (Evening Land

 
	Béatrice Coron, WaterCity:
 
	Between the Lines, by Ariana Boussard-Reifel: A book with every single word cut out:
 
	Famed Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson's Your House is a laser-cut negative impression of Eliasson's actual house; as you flip through the pages, you get a tour of the house in cross section:
 
	Chris Kenny's Grand Island, part of a series of "maps" depicting a fictional city:
 
	Some images from it (source is fastcompany.com )
			
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