SPITBALL
The blog where we ponder on the state of the industry, chat with pros, and muse over trends
Game changers: Frida Kahlo
Kahlo gained global recognition as an artist with her sentimental and autobiographical self-portraits, and earned her title as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century with both her artwork and integral involvement in social movements.
Game changers: Albert Namatjira
Founder of the Indigenous art movement in Australia, Albert Namatjira is the most famous and most influential Indigenous Australian artist of all time.
Game changers: Pablo Picasso
There was barely an art movement in the 20th century that Picasso didn’t inspire, create or contribute to.
Game changers: Henrik Ibsen
On return to his native Norway, Ibsen began writing and producing plays that challenged the norm of how plays were written, the themes and subject matter explored, and how social issues could be addressed in theatre productions.
Game changers: Edith Head
It was her style that inspired the fictional character ‘Edna Mode’ in the animated movie, The Incredibles (2004).
Game changers: The Everly Brothers
According to Bob Dylan, The Everly Brothers ‘started it all’.
Game changers: Yayoi Kusama
Our earth is only one polka dot among a million stars in the cosmos. Polka dots are a way to infinity. When we obliterate nature and our bodies with polka dots, we become part of the unity of our environment.
Game changers: Louise Bourgeois
I need to make things. The physical interaction with the medium has a curative effect. I need the physical acting out. I need to have these objects exist in relation to my body.
Game changers: Christo and Jeanne-Claude
Do you know that I don't have any artworks that exist? They all go away when they're finished.
Game changers: Kwame Brathwaite
A New York City based photographer, Kwame Brathwaite is best known for capturing the early stages of, and helping cement, the development of the ‘black is beautiful’ movement, in the 1960s in the USA. He was born in Brooklyn in 1938.