Thursday, May 21, 2009
FreeDarko does Adidas
FreeDarko offers postmodern analysis of the NBA, it's culture, it's industry. They have brilliant illustrations by Bethlehem Shoals, a.k.a. Jacob Weinstein.
Boxing Cats, 1894
The Edison company produced stuff like this when they were, uh, inventing the medium of film. Just for point of reference, this film of boxing cats was made 111 years before YouTube was invented.
The Library of Congress has a vintage film archive on YouTube. They also have a vintage photo archive on Flickr.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Pupusa del Coyote, by Irvin Morazan
From Bartered States: Contemporary Art from El Salvador at the Bronx River Art Center.
Images lifted from Tattfoo.
Labels:
art,
El Salvador,
installation,
Latin America,
masks,
New York
The end of the world
Clive Thomson writes for Wired sometimes, and his blog Collision Detection deals with science and culture, with an emphasis on technology. Here is his review of the end of the world (sort of).
He drops a couple of $5 words:
He drops a couple of $5 words:
eschatology: a branch of theology concerned with the final events in the history of the world or of humankind
ludology: the study of games and other forms of play. More specifically today, the study of video games, in an academic or critical light.
Friday, May 15, 2009
David Gentleman
Illustrator/designer David Gentleman, from the New Penguin Shakespeare series in the 70s.
Some close ups (from Tolstoy2007's archive of paperbook covers):
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Electrostatic interface
3D interface based on electrostatic fields, developed by students at Northeastern University in Boston.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Shuttle Launch
The launch of the shuttle Atlantis, in Cape Canaveral, FL.
...from the New York Times.
Photo by Matt Stroshane/Getty Images.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
ZUI @ sofake
Jordan Stone did the music for Mark Essen's Flywrench.
His web design firm sofake has a zooming user interface (ZUI). It takes a second to get accustomed, but it's worth poking around. At the bottom level (zoomed in all the way) you can load different apps, and then zoom into them to use them.
His web design firm sofake has a zooming user interface (ZUI). It takes a second to get accustomed, but it's worth poking around. At the bottom level (zoomed in all the way) you can load different apps, and then zoom into them to use them.
Amy Bennett
Amy Bennett paints from small scale models of imagined towns. In her own words (highlighting is mine):
"For my previous project I constructed a fictional model neighborhood. I considered who lived in each home, their family dramas, and the way their private lives might spill into view of their neighbors. The model became a stage on which to develop the psychological implications of belonging to a particular family, with all of its dramas, struggles and familiar routines. I thought: this tree will be taken down after an old man crashes into it; a father will transform this lawn into an ice skating rink; this house will be abandoned after its residents are scandalized on the evening news. As I transitioned my model into winter, snowbanks of increasing depth seemed to fortify a sense of isolation and quietness. The paintings portray both the magical and suffocating potential of snow, wonder at its stark beauty and hopelessness that spring might never come."
Monday, May 4, 2009
Windosill
This is Patrick Smith.
He just released Windosill, which is like Myst done by Salvador Dali. Simply weird, yet weirdly simple.
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