[44990] in linux-announce channel archive
Discover the Secret to Quick Pain Relief Try This 11-Second Ritual!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Pain Relief)
Fri Mar 1 11:08:24 2024
Date: Fri, 1 Mar 2024 17:08:21 +0100
From: "Pain Relief" <PainRelief@septifix.best>
Reply-To: "Pain Relief" <PainRelief@septifix.best>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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Discover the Secret to Quick Pain Relief Try This 11-Second Ritual!
http://septifix.best/lCwr8Fjb1K04c26eVkgOrxNYKd1ctSfh_xRb0zdE3JVfzeWSeA
http://septifix.best/onXQevoLNRZQoked3klWUKg63A7CgOJk6svMoNH8BHf1W2JKvA
is a series of art installations by Belgian artist Wim Delvoye. The installations are computerised machines that recreate the human digestive process. The machine takes in food which it moves through a series of pipes and containers where digestive processes are performed following which the machine excretes the digested material at a time advertised to gallery viewers. This digested material has both the look and smell of faeces. Each installation has its own name, logo and technical drawings.
Delvoye began working on the project in the early 1990s but did not produce a working installation until 2000 at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp. Since the first installation, Cloaca Original, Delvoye has exhibited a further nine Cloaca installations with the final machine, Cloaca Professional, being exhibited in 2010. With each installation the machinery has become more technologically advanced and efficient. Cloaca deals with ideas surrounding biological processes and commercialism, and the aesthetics of the series draws from laboratories, production lines and consumer products. Cloaca has received both positive and negative reviews from critics. Critics also have discussed whether or not the installations can be considered as performing digestion. The general public frequently has a strong reaction to the installations, yet data gathered by the Museum of Old and New Art demonstrated that Cloaca Professional was the work of art visitors spent the most time with during their visit to the gallery.
Background
Faeces produced by Cloaca
The Belgian artist Wim Delvoye began working on the Cloaca project in 1992 intending to create installations that reproduced the human digestive process. In an interview, Delvoye said that he has always been "interested in the scatological". Delvoye designed the machine in consultation with scientists from the University of Antwerp.:?217? The first working installation was shown in 2000. The title of series the refers to the Roman sewage sys
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">is a series of art installations by Belgian artist Wim Delvoye. The installations are computerised machines that recreate the human digestive process. The machine takes in food which it moves through a series of pipes and containers where digestive processes are performed following which the machine excretes the digested material at a time advertised to gallery viewers. This digested material has both the look and smell of faeces. Each installation has its own name, logo and technical drawings. Delvoye began working on the project in the early 1990s but did not produce a working installation until 2000 at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp. Since the first installation, Cloaca Original, Delvoye has exhibited a further nine Cloaca installations with the final machine, Cloaca Professional, being exhibited in 2010. With each installation the machinery has become more technologically advanced and efficient. Cloaca deals with ideas surrounding biological processes and commercialism, and the aesthetics of the series draws from laboratories, production lines and consumer products. Cloaca has received both positive and negative reviews from critics. Critics also have discussed whether or not the installations can be considered as performing digestion. The general public frequently has a strong reaction to the installations, yet data gathered by the Museum of Old and New Art demonstrated that Cloaca Professional was the work of art visitors spent the most time with during their visit to the gallery. Background Faeces produced by Cloaca The Belgian artist Wim Delvoye began working on the Cloaca project in 1992 intending to create installations that reproduced the human digestive process. In an interview, Delvoye said that he has always been "interested in the scatological". Delvoye designed the machine in consultation with scientists from the University of Antwerp.:?217? The first working installation was shown in 2000. The title of series the refers to the Roman sewage sys</div>
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