Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ed_FornielesEd Fornieles - Wikipedia

    Edward Fornieles (born 6 April 1983) is an English artist. Fornieles uses film, social media platforms , sculpture, installation and performance to express the interaction of family, relationships, popular memes , language and the subcultures of the 21st century. [1]

  2. Aug 21, 2014 · Ed Fornieles is a British artist who creates web-based projects and installations inspired by online culture and the "post-internet" generation. His new exhibition at Chisenhale Gallery explores the theme of family and the American suburban lifestyle, influenced by his break-up with actress Felicity Jones.

  3. 31K Followers, 7,668 Following, 587 Posts - Ed Fornieles (@eddfornieles) on Instagram: "oom.fini.world/download".

  4. Aug 2, 2024 · Interview with Ed Fornieles, an artist whose work explores the digital age's complexities and the pervasive impact of online identities. Key works like "Dorm Daze" and "Animal House" involve online role-playing and data scraping, blending reality and ‘hyperstition’, a phenomenon in which fiction has very real impact on reality.

  5. Dec 12, 2022 · Ed Fornieles (British, 1983) is closely associated with the post-internet art movement. His work collapses distinctions between the online and the offline worlds, fact and fiction, working through a range of mediums including web-based art, sculpture and performance.

  6. Ed Fornieles. Ed Fornieles lives and works in London and Los Angeles. Recent solo exhibitions and projects include Despicable Me 2, Mihai Nicodim Gallery, Los Angeles (2013); The Dreamy Awards, Park Nights, Serpentine Gallery, London (2012); Characterdate, Frieze Frame, Frieze London (2012); and Happy Days in Basel, Theater Basel (2012).

  7. People also ask

  8. www.frieze.com › article › ed-fornielesEd Fornieles - Frieze

    The work of the young London and L.A.-based artist Ed Fornieles explores the interpenetration of URL and IRL in a socially networked world. His performances, staged events and ‘Facebook sitcoms’ enthusiastically embrace the dissembling aspects of online identity-management – selfies, avatars, twitterbots, Gchat melodrama – and walk a ...

  1. People also search for