Assemblages (226)

Page 8 of 8
Bruno Mezic, Wiola Anyz offering original Assemblage artworks.


Contemporary Art / Assemblage / Previous / Next
Bruno Mezic: 'The First One', 2008 Assemblage, Ecological.
Ecological - Assemblage
16 x 26 cm (6.3 x 10.2 inches)
Bruno Mezic: 'Sharp', 2008 Assemblage, Ecological.
, 2008
Ecological - Assemblage
41 x 19 inches (104.1 x 48.3 cm)
Bruno Mezic: 'Bluey', 2009 Assemblage, Ecological. Artist Description:  I enjoy and suffer when I am walking on the beach watching and collected all those pieces spitted from the sea and after when I create something of it.Picking up those pieces I just can imagine who throw it away and also in which situations.Playing with ...
, 2009
Ecological - Assemblage
30 x 30 cm (11.8 x 11.8 inches)
Bruno Mezic: 'Platy', 2008 Assemblage, Ecological.
, 2008
Ecological - Assemblage
16 x 29 cm (6.3 x 11.4 inches)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage7', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
50 x 50 inches (127.0 x 127.0 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage5', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
120 x 80 inches (304.8 x 203.2 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage6', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
50 x 50 inches (127.0 x 127.0 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage8', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
50 x 50 inches (127.0 x 127.0 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage1', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
80 x 80 inches (203.2 x 203.2 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage 2', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
80 x 80 inches (203.2 x 203.2 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage3', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
80 x 80 inches (203.2 x 203.2 cm)
Wiola Anyz: 'assemblage4', 2009 Assemblage, Abstract.
Abstract - Assemblage
80 x 80 inches (203.2 x 203.2 cm)
(Page 8 of 8) - MORE ARTWORKS

Artists Describing Their Art:

Bruno Mezic - Junk Fleet (Word History: The word junk is an example of the change in meaning known as generalization, and very aptly too, since the amount of junk in the world seems to be generalizing and proliferating rapidly. The Middle English word jonk, ancestor of junk, originally had a very specific meaning restricted to nautical terminology. First recorded in 1353, the word meant "an old cable or rope." On a sailing ship it made little sense to throw away useful material since considerable time might pass before one could get new supplies. Old cable was used in a variety of ways, for example, to make fenders, that is, material hung over the side of the ship to protect it from scraping other ships or wharves. Junk came to refer to this old cable as well. The big leap in meaning taken by the word seems to have occurred when junk was applied to discarded but useful material in general. This extension may also have taken place in a nautical context, for the earliest, more generalized use of junk is found in the compound junk shop, referring to a store where old materials from ships were sold. Junk has gone on to ...