The Cremaster Cycle is an art project consisting of five feature length films, together with related sculptures, photographs, drawings, and artist's books; it is the best-known work of American visual ...
Named for the muscle that turns your nutsack into a walnut when it gets cold, The Cremaster Cycle swings the biggest dick in contemporary art. Produced from 1994 through 2002, and last screened in ...
The Cremaster Cycle is an art project consisting of five feature length films, together with related sculptures, photographs, drawings, and artist's books; it is the best-known work of American visual ...
Thematically, the films tackle both the general process of artistic creation and the symbolically related descent of the human testicles (as controlled by the cremaster muscle). Do yourself a favor ...
The plot elliptically relates the conception and life of Utah’s Gary Gilmore (played by Barney), whose 1977 execution for a gas station murder received national attention and inspired Norman Mailer’s ...
Cinema 21 is going to show the entirety of Matthew Barney's "The Cremaster Cycle," from Sept. 24-30. The series of five films were made from 1995-2002 by the acclaimed Barney and last showed in ...
134.5 x 109.5 cm. (53 x 43.1 in.) Subscribe now to view details for this work, and gain access to over 18 million auction results. Purchase One-Day Pass ...
Arthouse Films, a new division created by Palm Pictures, will release artist/director Matthew Barney’s “Cremaster 3” this spring, the New York-based company announced Friday. Palm acquired the North ...
Matthew Barney’s “Cremaster 3” — which is actually the fifth and final installment in his quintet of highly personal, avant-garde fables — opens and closes with scenes set at Fingal’s Cave in Scotland ...
Matthew Barney delivers his masterpiece in "Cremaster 3," unquestionably the 35-year-old sculptor-performance artist-filmmaker's most linear, most narratively inclined work to date. Matthew Barney ...
Watch out everyone - it's coming! Take cover all those who think that movies are shrink-wrapped 90-minute modules, things you can see after dinner at a restaurant and still be home on time to pay off ...