Archive for December, 2006

Yahoo! Picks of 2006

December 19th, 2006

[Image: The interlocking circular network of compound arches beneath Rome’s Quattro Capi Bridge, engraved by G.B. Piranesi, patron saint of BLDGBLOG. Scanned from the insanely stimulating and highly recommended Complete Etchings].

If you’ll excuse a brief moment of celebratory self-reference, BLDGBLOG has just been named one of the Yahoo! Picks of the Year (right next to The Ricky Gervais Show, no less). So thank you, Yahoo!
And thanks to Alexander Trevi, as well, for pointing this out; don’t miss Alex’s own blog, Pruned – itself a former Pick of the Day.

Originally by Geoff Manaugh from BLDGBLOG on December 18, 2006, 1:04am

Posted by v on December 19th, 2006

an unordinary seam where sky and sand meet

December 12th, 2006


[Image: According to the photographers (foto + warner) who took this photo, it is of a beach on Lido Island, in Venice, Italy. That is all the info available, and perhaps all I need to make me love it. Yes, even this little blue stained plywood wall. Why? Well, it’s no secret I’m obsessed with Walls and their inherent political representation, even if this one isn’t a wall and just the side of some old weathered beach shelter. But, perhaps, because this one specifically is such a smooth almost marbled piece of the landscape, as if it were a kind of anti-wall by the way it is depicted. It becomes somehow inviting; like an unordinary seam where sky and sand meet that lusts after my attention.]

Originally by Bryan Finoki from Subtopia on December 9, 2006, 11:47am

Posted by v on December 12th, 2006

Great Wall Preservatives

December 12th, 2006

Starting Dec. 1, China will make it officially illegal to “remove bricks or stones from the Great Wall, to drive vehicles along it,” to “build houses right up against it,” and yes - get this: “to hold all-night rave parties on it.” This CS Monitor article has the scoop, and offers a good summation of the current physical state of the Wall and the preservation policy (or lack of) surrounding it today.


[Image: This is a sculpture by artist Colwyn Griffith is part of a series entitled I can’t believe it’s not Empire. The Great Wall here is reconstructed completely out of rice krispies. 2004.]Sitting on UNESCO’s list of World Cultural Heritage sites since 1987 “there is no single Great Wall” the author writes. Instead, “there are stretches of wall, built at different times to keep out different enemies, and some of them are not ‘walls’ at all, but rather earthwork mounds or even ditches.” Together – as a kind of replica of the infinitely expanding theoretical global nomadic fortress I am so obsessed with here on this site – the different sections add up to several thousand miles’ worth of defenses. Of which “some parts have been designated national treasures.”

From the article:

“Great Wall research is in a state of chaos,” adds Dong Yahui, vice president of the Great Wall Society, a group promoting greater care for the wall. “The government still doesn’t know how long even the [most recently built] Ming Dynasty wall is, how much is in good condition, or how much has collapsed. There is no central record.”After the collapse in 1644 of the Ming Dynasty the wall fell victim to neglect. China’s new rulers came from one of the northern tribes the wall had been built to repel, so they felt no need to maintain it.

Reuters reported that three workers in Inner Mongolia were detained for digging up part of the wall to use as landfill in a local construction project. “It’s just a pile of earth,” one village leader was quoted as saying, according to the Xinhua news agency. Next week, anyone following their example will risk a fine of up to $62,500.

Anyway - I got to thinking, maybe all border walls should be built using rice krispy treats. They don’t rot or really deteriorate, they’re super cheap. And if you think about it, they’re the ultimate preservative building block.
Those things are infinitely stackable and they last forever!
If you wanted to, you could build almost anything out of them. Though, this would probably open up a whole new era in illegal immigration. You might get masses of descending border-feeders instead of border-crossers, and the borders themselves would probably just be eaten away. What would that say about nation-states, or, say, the border fence and the food chain? Well, I don’t know.
Anyway, I’m done with this silliness.

Originally by Bryan Finoki from Subtopia on December 7, 2006, 10:45pm

Posted by v on December 12th, 2006

HOW TO - Use “Furoshiki” (cloth gift wrapping)

December 11th, 2006

060403-5
The Ministry of the Environment Government of Japan has a guide (PDF) on using cloth as opposed to paper for wrapping gifts to cut down on the wasted paper usually used in gift wrap, great idea - Link.

Originally from MAKE Magazine, ReBlogged by cat on Dec 7, 2006 at 11:19 AM

Originally by MAKE Magazine from microRevolt reBlog on December 7, 2006, 8:20am

Posted by v on December 11th, 2006

[Untitled]

December 11th, 2006

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»A carpet, a suspended ceiling, a chair and 22 office light fittings manipulated to create a space.« and »White Post-it Notes With Black Marker« folded to create a pattern, from the series »Bureaucratic Sonata«.

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The scheme »Bürolandschaft« enlarged to understand spaces, also from the series »Bureaucratic Sonata«. By Raul Ortega Ayala.

Originally by mail from VVORK on December 11, 2006, 3:15am

Posted by v on December 11th, 2006

[Untitled]

December 6th, 2006

private.jpg

»Private Stages«. Collages by Peter Freitag. Amateur photographs of nudes are taken from the internet and obscured with the application of “dots” that are made with punchhole irons using the colours and structures from the original image. The process of manipulation remains visible on the image plane with dots and circles forming a recognizable silhouette of the vanished nude, undermining the original intention of the images through a simple process of interference.

Originally by mail from VVORK on December 4, 2006, 12:05pm

Posted by v on December 6th, 2006

Another way to look at cartoons, from the inside

December 5th, 2006

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skelsys1.jpg

The artist Michael Paulus recently took 22 of the most iconic cartoon characters from children’s television in the 60’s and recreated (or more to the point, established) their skeletal systems.

The results are absolutely fascinating. Michael writes on his website…

“Animation was the format of choice for children’s television in the 1960s, a decade in which children’s programming became almost entirely animated. Growing up in that period, I tended to take for granted the distortions and strange bodies of these entities.

These Icons are usually grotesquely distorted from the human form from which they derive. Being that they are so commonplace and accepted as existing I thought I would dissect them like science does to all living objects - trying to come to an understanding as to their origins and true physiological make up. Possibly to better understand them and see them in a new light for what they are in the most basic of terms.

I decided to take a select few of these popular characters and render their skeletal systems as I imagine they might resemble if one truly had eye sockets half the size of its head, or fingerless-hands, or feet comprising 60% of its body mass.


Originally
from Wooster Collective

by


reBlogged

by artcodex

to cartoon skeleton

Originally by

from Wooster Collective

Posted by v on December 5th, 2006

Resistant Maps (part 3) - Arturo Di Corinto

December 5th, 2006

0dicorinto.jpgI had never heard of Arturo Di Corinto before i saw him talk at Resistant Maps, artistic actions in the interconnected urban territory but, boy, that guy rocks! Di Corinto is a psychologist, he’s teaching Computer-mediated Communication at the University of Rome “La Sapienza” and Psychology of Online Communication at the Fine Art Academy in Carrara. He’s also writing for Italian newspapers La Repubblica, Il Manifesto, Liberazione, Aprileonline.

He started with a presentation of Voisietequi (You are here), a website that maps voters political position. A 10 minute test asks voters how much they are in favour (or against) of 25 themes (such as drugs, immigration, privatisation of state owned services, etc.) that get mentioned most often in the programmes of political parties or in political debates.

After having finished the test, voters can see how close or far away they are from political parties. 0doveseitu.jpg

The website had in fact a hidden goal. It was launched to shed the light on a more ambition project: openpolis which profiles Italian politicians. The profile would include the usual (who they are, where they’re from, when they were born, etc. data that can easily be obtained from the Ministry of Internal Affairs) but also their income tax return, pending cases in court, law they put forward in the past, lobbying actions they support, etc. A Big Brother-isation of politicians. By collecting as much information about them as possible, some connections and unsuspected relationships between politicians might emerge (a bit in the They Rule and Public Whip way!) The platform offers other features such as the possibility to “tag” a politician, del.icio.us-style; a button to directly send a message to the politician, the possibility to follow petitions online, etc.

Openpolis will be at BarCamp in Turin on December 2, 2006.


Originally
from we make money not art

by Regine


reBlogged

by artcodex

to political map

on Nov 29, 2006, 9:44AM
Originally by Regine from we make money not art on November 29, 2006, 1:44am

Posted by v on December 5th, 2006

Next2006: Vuk Cosic’s talk

December 4th, 2006

0minivuk.jpgThe NEXT2006 conference ended yesterday in Copenhagen. The exhibition is open till tomorrow, Sunday December 3.

I hardly ever opened my laptop to check my emails during the presentations which is a good sign. I’ll start with the art talk. Unsurprisingly.

Vuk Cosic gave a crash course in Vuk-ology (btw, he’s one of the first artists i interviewed for the blog.) After the golden days of net.art, he decided to become an ASCII artist. Why ASCII? For several reasons: because it existed before computing; not everyone takes it seriously, it’s rather ugly (won’t be recuperated by the art world very easily) and it’s sexy (infected by hacker virus).

He recalled the seven episodes of his ASCII period:
1. Moving Ascii: He passed several famous movies through the ASCII filter (includes some black and green clips from Deep Throat, Blow Up, Star Trek),
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2. Music video/vinyl with Alexei Shulgin
3. The Instant ASCII Camera which was presented at NEXT. The machine is working like the known instant cameras in the railway stations, with several differences, it’s quite small, very fast, free and it produces portraits in ASCII style. Just press a button and your ASCII portrait is printed on a supermarket type of receipt.
4. The ASCII History of Art for the Blind:
5. ASCII Unreal
6. ASCII Architecture which planned to fully cover the St. Georges Hall, a neo-classical monument in Liverpool, with the projection of ascii rendering of the same surface that it’s being projected on.
7. ASCII Sculptures, same as above but on sculptures.

He ended with a piece of advice: “Do something useless. Do it seriously. The You’ll do good easily” and with the presentation of his latest work: a series of game-inspired flags to be printed on his upcoming fashion collection (well, i’m not sure he’d put it exactly like that ;-)

I give you US Invader…

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and Pac Sweden.

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Check out the others on my flickr images.


Originally
from we make money not art

by Regine


reBlogged

by artcodex

to ascii artist

on Dec 2, 2006, 5:01PM

Originally by Regine from we make money not art on December 2, 2006, 9:01am

Posted by v on December 4th, 2006

Big octopus squeezes itself through a little hole - video

December 4th, 2006

Cory Doctorow:

This video of an octopus squeezing its large, rubbery body through a one-inch hole in a plexiglas box is positively eerie and entrancing. Octopi are freaking amazing, whether they’re running on two legs and impersonating a crab or strangling sharks or escaping from their cages in feats of mechanical derring-do.

Link

(via Digg)


Originally posted by noemail@noemail.org (Cory Doctorow) from Boing Boing, ReBlogged by Yael Kanarek on Dec 4, 2006 at 10:33 AM

Originally by noemail@noemail.org (Cory Doctorow) from Eyebeam reBlog on December 4, 2006, 7:33am

Posted by v on December 4th, 2006