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==In art== {{Original research|section|date=April 2015}} A remix in art often takes multiple perspectives upon the same theme. An artist takes an original work of art and adds their own take on the piece, creating something completely different while still leaving traces of the original work. It is essentially a reworked abstraction of the original work while still holding remnants of the original piece, letting the true meanings of the original piece shine through. Famous examples include ''[[Marilyn Diptych|The Marilyn Diptych]]'' by Andy Warhol (modifies colors and styles of one image), and ''[[The Weeping Woman]]'' by Pablo Picasso (merges various angles of perspective into one view). Some of Picasso's other famous paintings also incorporate parts of his life, such as his love affairs, into his paintings. For example, his painting ''Les Trois Danseuses'', or ''The Three Dancers'', is about a love triangle. Other types of remixes in art are [[parody|parodies]]. A parody in contemporary usage is a work created to mock, comment on, or make fun at an original work, its subject, author, style, or some other target, by means of humorous, satiric or ironic imitation. They can be found all throughout art and culture from literature to animation. Famous song parody artists include ''[["Weird Al" Yankovic]]'' and ''[[Allan Sherman]]''. Several current television shows are filled with parodies, such as ''[[South Park]]'', ''[[Family Guy]]'', and ''[[The Simpsons]]''. The internet has allowed for art to be remixed quite easily, as evidenced by sites like memgenerator.net (provides pictorial template upon which any words may be written by various anonymous users), and Dan Walsh's Garfieldminusgarfield.net<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://garfieldminusgarfield.net/?og=1|title=garfield minus garfield|website=garfieldminusgarfield.net}}</ref> (removes the main character from various original strips by ''[[Garfield]]'' creator [[Jim Davis (cartoonist)|Jim Davis]]). A feminist remix is a creative resistance and cultural production that talks back to patriarchy by reworking patriarchal hierarchical systems privileging men.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Keifer-Boyd|first1=Karen|last2=Liao|first2=Christen|title=Feminism. In Keywords in Remix Studies.|date=2018|publisher=Routledge|location=New York:NY|pages=147β157}}</ref> Examples include [[Barbara Kruger]]'s ''You are not yourself'' (1982), ''We are not what we seem'' (1988), and ''Your body is a battleground'' (1989); [[Orlan]]'s ''Self-Hybridizations'' (1994); [[Evelin Stermitz]]'s remix ''Women at War'' (2010); and ''Distaff'' [Ain't I Redux] (2008) by artist [[Sian Amoy]].
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