Found art Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Found art, or more commonly and less confusingly, 'Found Object' (French: objet trouvé) is a term used to describe art created from common objects not normally considered to be artistic (also assemblage). The idea behind found art is that the piece of art derives its significance from the context into which it is put. Found art blurs the traditional lines of what art is and questions the very nature of art itself.Marcel Duchamp's "readymades" are some famous and the earliest examples of found art: for one piece, Fountain, he signed a urinal with the pseudonym "R. Mutt" and mounted it face up. Another piece, Bottle Rack, is simply that: a bottle rack signed by Duchamp.
Picasso's Baboon and Young is a good example of a found object being used to create the basis of a larger piece of work.
Many contemporary artists have used found objects in their art work including
- Arman
- Joseph Cornell
- Tony Cragg
- Mark Divo
- Salvador Dalí
- Marcel Duchamp
- David Mach
- Cornelia Parker
- Giuseppe Penone
- Pablo Picasso
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Daniel Spoerri
- Kurt Schwitters
Found art features in Jean-Pierre Jeunet's film Amelie
See: List of found art
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