precursors of solo jazz appropriation

flowers_jazz_install650

I tweeted last year* to Michael Bell-Smith that dump.fm-ers had done about 100,000 riffs on the '80s style "solo jazz" paper cup design (example) not realizing he'd done the work above, "Flowers/Jazz," in 2010. The image is from his website; according to Foxy Production they are ink jet prints on canvas, 30 x 20 in.
A detail of the above photo shows these are smashed or flattened cups:

flowers_jazz_install_detail

These are quite elegant but somehow lacking the gritty street panache of melipone's Master Shake Solo Jazz cup, ben_dover's Brute solo jazz and copulating solo jazz corn ears, cloroxxx's solo jazz headphones, etc etc.

*am not proud to use that phrase but don't know how else to describe what happened

it's a bird, it's a plane, it's Agostino Novello

Simone_Martini-Agostino_Novello_Altarpiece_2

Daniel Albright, in his highly recommended new book Panaesthetics, discusses this pair of 14th Century altarpiece paintings by Simone Martini, in Siena, Italy. Albright considers how Martini treats time in the paintings. The top image doesn't show a single event, or scene, but works rather like a series of comic book panels. On the left, a vicious dog mauls a little girl. In the center, the Blessed Agostino Novello (who was being promoted as a candidate for sainthood in Siena) swoops down from the ceiling, with his "jet trail" somewhat awkwardly hidden behind a building. On the right, the girl is saved and in the bosom of her thankful family.

Simone_Martini-Agostino_Novello_Altarpiece_1

A second example employs a similar narrative logic, with Agostino displayed much more prominently as he saves a falling girl -- and even grabs the plank from her balcony lest it strike a passerby (Spider-Man would use his webbing for that latter bit). Renaissance perspective hadn't been invented yet, and the odd jumble of buildings contributes to the cockeyed strangeness, but also charm, of this scenario. These are two of the most beguiling paintings I've seen, in jpeg form or otherwise -- nice to look at, and as fun as a summer blockbuster (more fun because they are quiet).