A nice response to the “Art or Hokum?” editorial that ran in the Post-Standard on the eve of Yoko Ono’s initial show at the Everson. The tone of the Post Standard piece is hilarious– the frequency of “mockingly verbatim” quotes from the museum reeks of the hackery that is now only (well, mostly) evidenced in user comments posted to the Post-Standard on stories dealing with politics or race.
Archive for the 'art' Category
YouTube – My Generation live in Lyon, Feb 15 2007.
In late 2006, I sold my Mexican Fender Starburst Jazz Bass to an artist in New York. He didn’t care that I didn’t have an amp for him to test it on, and told me he needed it for an art installation in Lyon about the Who. He neglected to mention that the bass would be destroyed– he must not have known that I’d have given him a discount for that.
Incidentally, the artist, Christoph Draeger, created a series of works about disasters like plane crashes. One of his works features a plane crash that happened in the early 60s about a block from my apartment, where he bought the bass from me.
Barbara Kruger Covers Up the Lever House – ANIMAL.
This looks like a pretty amazing installation– Lever House, at 390 Park Ave, was just a few buildings away from where I first worked in NYC (which I came to refer to as “Dark Tower”). I often sat a cross this building and just stared at it over my food-cart lunch. If I were there now, I’d have something to read.
1975 – 1979 | The Movie title stills collection. With loglines!
The two students, from the Strasbourg School of Decorative Arts, were handed their €5,000 cheque, which was later blocked by Paris Match.
via Student hoax wins magazine’s top prize – Europe, World – The Independent.
Great random archive at public collectors. Lots of art, design, and punk rock stuff. Many fully scanned works, like the sweet Dome Book below, as well as some more disembodied art projects.
Documentation of Complete Publications in PDF form.
via ManyStuff.org
I got painted by someone I’ve never met. I think she did a great job– from this image. Details here: SEND ME YOUR HEAD.
“Fully working, manual record player made entirely of paper. To play the record the handle needs to be turned in a clockwise direction at a steady 331/3rpm. The paper conethen acts as a pickup, amplifying the sound enough to make it audible. (Record shown,
The Sound of Music 1965). – Simon Elvins. via KOMPAKT blog.
Amazon.com: Revol Pill PI001 Black and White Espresso Cups with Silicone Ring: Home & Garden.
Would go nicely with the stovetop Espresso maker I just bought with the Starbucks cards I got for leaving my old job.
Just a quick update. Kelly and I checked out the Banksy show this weekend (photoset on flickr), and also hit the Guggenheim. The Catharine Opie photographs were pretty spectacular, but the museum seemed mostly empty otherwise. I returned from Austin exhausted and relieved, and will take my oral exams by video conference before thanksgiving. We’re looking forward to lots of visitors: my folks this week, Libby and J next week, Bob and Sabia the following week, then down to Charlotte for Thanksgiving. It’s a whirlwind until Christmas.
I’m planning to get back to running this week, at least on the treadmill… the weather is getting perfect for long runs in the park though.
It may only be the recent trip to Texas, but Kelly and I are now addicted to Friday Night Lights.
We’ve done another round of self portraits… Feel free to submit others. Greg and I look considerably different now than we did last time around. Thinking we may make this a more frequent occurrence. Anyway, take a look:
I couldn’t sleep tonight, so I finished helping my computer recover from a long semester of incredibly disorganized use, and spent some time playing around with photos. Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about animated gifs… seems like people are sick enough of them that we oughta bring them back. I heard someone making a joke about them recently, and everyone laughed on cue like it was a joke about the president (don’t get me wrong, I’ve been known to drop an animated gif bit or two myself).
The punchline of this and similar jokes concerned, of course, how obviously unsophisticated the people who use them must be. Animated gifs are certainly the unofficial seal of crappy clipart web design, but, can they be anything more? Tom Moody’s done some interesting things with them, as have others, I’m sure. Here’s my attempt…

This one is composed of three images, one from Iceland, one from Austin, and one of a Flavin piece at MOMA in NYC, which I haven’t altered other than to play with the transparency. See if you get hypnotized or irritated (you can also view the huge [11mb!], slow-loading version, but give it a second to get its rhythm). It’ll be interesting to see what flickr thinks of it, or maybe my cellphone.
I really like the pebbly effect, and think that the jerky animation has lots of potential. I think I’ll try a few more, perhaps attempting less smoothed-out transitions. Fun!
I’d be Jason Freeman’s iTunes Music Signature Maker (via createdigitalmusic.com). When you run this application, it goes into your library, figures out what you’ve been listening to, and creates a short collage to represent your taste.
This is the same person responsible for the Network Aurlization for Gnutella that I posted about a couple of years ago. iTSM is great, a kind of hyperlocal, meaning-loaded version of that, with much more fun results.
Here’re two signatures from my iTunes Library, one w/ the defaults, one messing with the settings a little.
You’ll notice this is better than any of the songs by themselves. Please make one of your own.
More interesting stuff:
from the post at createdigitalmusic:
…uses an FFT to merge spectrally similar audio, mixing down your audio smoother than a baby’s bottom.
from the application documentation:
Maybe you’ll load your iTunes signature onto your iPod, e-mail it to some friends, share it in our signature gallery, or stick it on your home page. Maybe it will help you gauge your compatibility with your next blind date: "She seems nice enough, but her iTunes signature is just so atonal! Should I go with my heart or with my ear?" Or maybe an iTunes signature will figure prominently into a political attack ad: "If you’re mad at him for raising your taxes, polluting our environment, and cutting the education budget, just wait until you hear the music he listens to…"













