Picasso and Braque incorporated paper collage and mixed drawing (materials) with paint. In the 1960s Rauschenberg[?] included 3-D elements like tires and stuffed animals as well as using discarded materials like crushed or flattened cardboard boxes. Dan Flavin[?] used electric fluorescent lights and ballasts to create sculpture. Chamberlin[?] used crushed auto parts for sculpture. Frank Stella introduced honeycombed aluminum and glitter.
Others have tried mud, excrement, tar, soils and even blood with varying degrees of success.
See also: Body fluids in art, Plastics in art
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