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Red And White Plastic Tablecloths - Bath Linen Stores. Red And White Plastic Tablecloths
Burri, Alberto (1915-1995) - 1965 Large White Plastic (Sotheby's London, 2008) Burned plastic and acrylic on panel; 143.6 x 242.8 cm. Alberto Burri was an Italian artist known for his adventurous use of new materials. Burri was trained as a physician and began to paint only in 1944, while in a prisoner-of-war camp in Texas. About 1946 he moved to Rome and began to paint seriously. His early works—rags splashed in red paint to simulate blood-soaked bandages—grew directly out of his experiences as a doctor in the Italian army. He then began to produce works grouped into series according to the material used. The works of the earliest series (c. 1953) were made of coarse cloth stitched together. After 1956 he employed thin pieces of burned wood and layers of polyethylene in which holes were burned, creating a rich spatial network within the layers of plastic. The humble and sometimes crude materials used in these works contrast effectively with their elegant designs, and the easily destroyed materials form a perforated network over an impinging background field. In his series of metal works done after 1959, however, the solid material completely encloses the background field, although the metal is hammered from behind as if the imprisoned field were trying to break out. Iconic of our time - the white plastic chair
I have been thinking for a while about some of the things that surround us which we take for granted and are seen everywhere, iconic of our time therefore. The white plastic chair, found everywhere, ugly, utilitarian in the extreme. Here it is in some reincarnations. Chloe's nanny had a stroke on Thursday evening so we are picking up the slack and of course we are all praying for Victoria to make a quick recovery See also: round table linen italian bed linen irish linen centre linen like paper table covers velvet placemat red beverage napkins terry tablecloth leopard tablecloth valentines tablecloths how to fold paper napkin |