Category:
1960s

Artwork Khrushchev Probably Would Not Have Liked 59

Remember my rule for this series? The artwork in question had to be made during Khrushchev's lifetime. Well, I thought 1968 was too late. But no! Nikita lived till 1971.


The artist's Wikipedia page.

Posted By: Paul - Tue Nov 12, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Art, Avant Garde, Television, Self-referentiality, Circularity, and Endless Loops, 1960s, Russia

One Dozen Phil Roses





Posted By: Paul - Sun Nov 10, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Fashion, Humor, Vinyl Albums and Other Media Recordings, 1960s

Heidi Bruhl

German pop of the Sixties. Was it as weird then as it is now?

Her Wikipedia page.













Posted By: Paul - Fri Nov 08, 2024 - Comments (3)
Category: Music, 1960s, Europe

Japanese Rice Festival

I haven't been able to figure out what the name of this festival was, but it included the feat of strength shown below.

But I gotta wonder, what would happen if the guy realized he couldn't actually support the 1000 lbs (or more) of weight they've got stacked on him? Were there occasional fatalities?

Des Moines Register - Dec 6, 1964

Posted By: Alex - Wed Nov 06, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Human Marvels, Parades and Festivals, 1960s, Asia

A Double Barrel Blast

Side 2 is particularly relevant to today's AI debate.



Posted By: Paul - Sun Nov 03, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Death, Technology, Vinyl Albums and Other Media Recordings, 1960s

The First Living Work of Art

In 1961, German artist Timm Ulrichs put himself on display inside a glass case and called himself the "first living work of art" (erstes lebendes Kunstwerk). He repeated this performance at various times throughout his career.



Artmap.com explains: "Instead of found objects, Ulrichs uses his own body. A simple and simultaneously great idea: whereas with Duchamp the producer and the work were still separated, in the case of Timm Ulrichs, the artist and the work are one and the same."

A "great idea" is one way to describe it.

Some more examples of Ulrich's art:

In 1962, Timm Ulrichs signed his own body. His name was engraved as a tattoo on his upper arm.
In 1963, he tracked his heartbeat with a stethoscope. He broadcast it on a loudspeaker and exhibited the medical record as a musical score.
In 1966, Timm Ulrichs showed the tanning of his skin as a filmic process for the first time. The covered, untanned areas of his back, in contrast to the tanned areas, slowly reveal the word “Hautfilm” [skin film].
In 1969, Timm Ulrichs became a sperm donor at the Bremen sperm bank – ironically referring to Walter Benjamin’s essay “The Work of Art in the Age of its Technological Reproducibility”.
In 1973, Timm Ulrichs ate for one year according to the average consumption of Germans, precisely observing the consumption of milk, bread, and cigarettes. Four cigarettes a day.
In 1978, using professional police equipment, Timm Ulrichs had a facial composite of his own face made.

Posted By: Alex - Mon Oct 28, 2024 - Comments (2)
Category: Art, Body, 1960s

The Ding Dong Dog of Cuminestone

Newport News Daily Press - Dec 15, 1963

Posted By: Alex - Fri Oct 25, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: School, Dogs, 1960s

George Carl—“French Pantomimist”—on The Ed Sullivan Show

Prime time humor was really different, way back when.

Posted By: Paul - Wed Oct 23, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Human Marvels, Humor, Television, 1960s, Europe

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Alex Boese
Alex is the creator and curator of the Museum of Hoaxes. He's also the author of various weird, non-fiction, science-themed books such as Elephants on Acid and Psychedelic Apes.

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