Mimas and Enceladus beside Saturn.

Looking at this photo taken 4 days ago by the Cassini orbiter It strikes me just what a poor job NASA has done in making actual human space-flight compelling for the Earthbound. We have astronauts up there in the great black yonder at this very moment and yet I find myself more interested in the various other projects (Shooting the moon, Flying over the cloudy world, Out on the Horizon, STEREO, Bigelow’s inflatable habitat, etc.) undertaken from the ground. The only angle represented in the media during the recent trip to the ISS seems to be: “Will the astronauts blow-up?!” which frankly should be the least interesting angle of space-flight as far as I’m concerned. The danger is a given, the risks accepted by all involved. Is it just the media’s omnipresent suckitude or has NASA fumbled the P.R. ball? I should think that by now, in the year 2006, people would be gladly lining up for one-way missions without batting an eyelash, with the rest glued to their 24 hour space network rather than looped footage of falling foam.

George rounds up a few Links on the recent “rulings” on the SNES Challenge.

Check out Paul Davies Prayer Antenna (Via) the artists who also brought us, as you may recall, The Curious Furniture of Ned Troide.

As artificial intelligence research celebrates its 50th birthday Marvin Minsky asks “what makes the minds of three-year-olds tick?” Meanwhile the Times UK touches on the idea of technology dividing us into digital natives and digital immigrants.

Full pilot episode of Mike Mignola’s quirky The Amazing Screw-on Head.

Seed offers a short video tour of the underground accelerator at CERN (previously searching for the god particle, finding art.)

Lastly Monocrom points us toward two interesting nuggets at Nature- Should we flood the air with sulphur? and What shape is a pebble?

 

07.15. filed under:


City Metaphors from the vaults of the Cooper-Hewitt

What follows are four plates from architect O.M. Ungers’ City Metaphors which were included in a larger exhibit on view in 1976 at the Cooper-Hewitt called MAN transFORMS. It was the kick-off show of the institutions’ rebirth as the Smithsonian Institution’s Nation Museum of Design. I’m lucky enough to have procured the exhibition catalog, which is just chock full of goodies, and the tiny taste which follows are taken from it’s pages.

07.14. filed under: art. !. design. ideas. 6



Nightsong of the Fishes. Created by Mr.Christian Morgenstern in the year 1905.


07.14. filed under: art. play.


What shall we use to fill the empty spaces?

I took this picture what seems a thousand years ago, when I was still a lad and my father was working on the 72nd floor of the Empire State Building. (You could actually just walk over and open the widows like they were the little sliver of a bathroom window in your apartment.) At the time it was just a bad photograph. Not quite perfectly exposed, not quite perfectly framed. A couple of buildings and a shroud of thick fog. Fwap! Onto the pile. But now? Well, with that whole “buildings in heaven” look it got going on perhaps it’s found a new relevance?

07.13. filed under: !. ideas. life. op-ed. politics. 12


Dottie Lux sketched by Fred Harper

The Village Voice offers: Model Behavior. A short interview with Molly Crabapple, founder of Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School. I, for one, love the idea and yet it seems slightly inadequate somehow. Can it avoid the stain of hipster trendiness which ultimately relegates so many good ideas to fad-status in short order? I would prefer a noon to 4 a.m. establishment with continuous model-sitting and booze. A sort of dive bar for life-drawing. Imagine the monday afternoon crowd at such a place!

Related to the above: Uwe Scheid’s 1000 historical Nudes in 13 categories.

Non-Errors: Those usages people keep telling you are wrong but which are actually standard in English. Highly interesting for the “language-minded.” Via.

Regrets Only. On the curious political statement of 6 graphic designers honored by the National Design Awards, and the dissenting voice of Chip Kidd.

Some vids of Mark Jenkins’ most recent pieces.

CSICOP on The Tautology Objection.

“A curious, exciting sight greeted my eyes. Lines, circles and squares in a geometrical, abstract arrangement of symbols. If I were an alien, I’d land here!” Over Roswell - 2002. Via.

07.13. filed under: link dump. 4


self portrait, 1992

When you are young you know nothing but are convinced you know everything. And that’s its charm. It’s what makes foolhardy youth passionate and beautiful. When you are old you know nothing and are well aware you know nothing. After all the trial and error and revolving 3 a.m. philosophies you are still naked and lost. It’s exactly this which tinges age with sadness.

07.12. filed under: !. observations. 5


Postcard from a lifetime away

While going through a box of old photos just now I came across a misplaced postcard which very nearly had me in tears. It was from a friend of mine who died some years back. He was a wonderful guy and I miss him terribly. The saddest thing about coming upon this card for me is the fact that I didn’t just forget about it… no, I can’t even remember ever receiving it. I can’t remember him handing it to me, which he surely did, probably while sidled up next to me at the Library Bar on Avenue A and 1st street. He almost never mailed me anything, preferring instead to just hand over his missives face-to-face. When I pulled it from the box it was like I only just received it… from a lifetime and a trillion miles away. For the benefit of those of you who knew him I’m posting it here. Without doubt you’ll know who it was from instantly.

07.12. filed under: !. personal. 2


What if I wrote a single sentence each day? Would the sentences add up to a novel? No.  A poem? No. And why does escape seem impossible? What if I retreated into non-sequiturs? What if I scribbled on paper and hooted in guttural bursts? Why can’t I? You can. And why the tendency to align, to repeat, to perpetuate? Why does it naturally become this and not something totally different? Why couldn’t it be something nimble enough to avoid the pin and the shadow box? I can’t say. And what if I wanted to tear it all down? You have. You’ve torn it down and built it up again. So why doesn’t it change? Because it is you.

07.09. filed under: !. inquiries. personal. 7


Gensou Hyouhon Hakubutsukan or the Museum of Fantastic Specimens is an online collection of creatures “curated” by Hajime Emoto. All of the creatures showcased in the museum are sculpted from paper, modeling paste and bamboo. The site is in Japanese but certainly worth a slightly confused browse. Via.

A Search for Comity in the Intellectual Property Wars: Comedies of Fair U$e. The entire symposium is now available for your free listening delight.

Science and the Theft of Humanity. In science’s renewed interest in the human condition, a humanist sees the promise of a dialogue and a new golden age.

Political dump: Why Conservatives Can’t Govern, The legal mind behind the White House’s war on terror, The military’s problem with the President’s Iran policy, Iran: Consequences of WarThat Honorable Determination.

Great Mother Plane? Pop Culture Blog offers some nuggets on The Nation of Islam’s UFO teachings. Via.

The Industrial Design Society of America’s 2006 IDEA award winners. Via.

07.09. filed under: link dump. 4


Compare the silent rose of the sun and rain, the blood-rose living in its smell, with this paper, this dust.
That states the point.

With only the flimsiest of pretext I offer a Saturday afternoon selection from one of my favorite poets. I do this for my enjoyment as much as your own. See below for poetry or quail and click away with a marksman-clean scoff. What do I care?

07.08. filed under: !. books.


| page 20 |