Composers often speak of fitting chords and melodies together, as though sounds were physical objects with geometric shape - and now a Princeton University musician has shown that advanced geometry actually does offer a tool for understanding musical structure: The Hidden Geometry of Musical Cords. (The thumbnail is not from here but from the gorgeous here)

Headline: Van Gogh painted perfect turbulence The “disturbed” artist intuited the deep forms of fluid flow. Uh, yeah. No chance it’s just a coincidence huh?

McGuffin: an object which has no real meaning except that it sets everything about it in motion. Examples.

Only 32% of the U.S. population has ever been in a bookstore. On the average, a book store browser spends 8 seconds looking at the front cover and 15 seconds looking at the back cover. etc. Mother-load of book-related statistics. Via.

Enjoy the Building Gods, a rough cut to the feature film about AI, robots, the singularity, and the 21st century. Via.

African American Spirituality has taken diverse forms over the years. Much has been written about Black Churches and the African religious traditions of the diaspora. Less, however, is available on the subject of Black magical spirituality, as exemplified in Hoodoo, Conjure, Rootwork, and Candle Burning. Enter Southern Spirits: Ghostly Voices from Dixie Land.

When the “shit comes down” will you be ready? Quote: Homesteaders, environmentalists, missionaries, doctors in developing nations, and others living in areas where there is no power can rely on Lehman’s. (Thanks Tom.)

 

07.08. filed under: link dump. 8


Solomon D. Butcher and the Nebraska pioneers.

Or: homing-in on the homesteaders.

The mud was high, the sod-roofs were damp, the watermelon was sweet, and in the lens of newfangled camera’s men never smiled. It was Nebraska in the late 1800’s and at “only one-ninth of principle due annually, beginning two years after purchase” it was destination soon crowded with homesteaders. One of them was Solomon D. Butcher who arrived in Nebraska in 1880 to farm. After five years of struggle he realized that he was not tough enough to meet the demands of the homesteader’s life but having in those five years developed a genuine love of the life, and realizing that the period of settlement would soon be over, he set out instead to create a photographic history of what it was to be a pioneer. Between 1886 and 1912 Butcher generated a collection of more than 3,000 photographs. Like most men “he died believing himself a total failure.” His work, however, for its breadth and specificity, has proven to be one of the most important chronicles of homesteading ever exposed to the light.

07.08. filed under: art. !. history. humanity. people. 3


Detail from Nite Lite by Dodie.

Erowid: an exhaustive source of information on psychoactive plants, chemicals, and related subjects. A lot to peruse including the vault, a gallery of hundreds of examples of “psychedelic art” many of which even manage to rise above what you might expect from that categorization. Similarly see: the Lycaeum.

Enjoy this fine flash presentation on Imagining the tenth dimension.

goods has helped to discover a large primordial ‘blob’, more than 10 billion light-years away. With a diameter of 200 000 light-years, the blob is twice as big as our Milky Way and the total energy emitted is equivalent to that of about 2 billion suns. Despite this, the object is largely invisible.

“The cow says: moo.” Shamanistic resource on working with animal guides.

Enjoyable essay: Richard Feynman and The Connection Machine.

Long list of international equivalents to John Doe, Richard Roe, etc.

Derived from the jungle Quichua verb ikaray, “to blow smoke” for healing, the Spanish word icaros designates the magical lyrics, incantations, either whistled or spoken, by Amazonian shamans in a variety of ritual contests, especially during healing sessions and during ayahuasca ceremonies, to establish contact with the spirit world. Listen for yourself: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.

07.04. filed under: link dump. 3


The physical inevitability of death in the mind of someone living

A bit of delicious art news: Damien Hirst’s iconic piece The physical impossibility of death in the mind of someone living (1991), which consists of a shark suspended in a tank of greenish formaldehyde, is rotten. Well, not exactly, quote: “The animal suspended in formaldehyde has deteriorated dramatically to the naked eye since it was first unveiled at the Saatchi Gallery in 1992 because of the way it was preserved by the artist. The solution which surrounds it is murky, the skin of the animal is showing considerable signs of wear and tear, and the shark itself has changed shape.” So essentially the shark is rotting. Perfect irony considering the title of the piece don’tcha think? The piece sold in late 2004 for £6.5m, one of the highest prices ever paid for a work by “someone living.” Hirst is evidently in talks with the buyer to replace the shark. The dealer Larry Gagosian said: “The shark is a conceptual piece and to substitute a shark of equal size and appearance, in my opinion, does not alter the piece.” I agree with him, though what the truth of such a statement really portends for the value of a piece of art…

07.03. filed under: art. !. 6


That G.W. Bush does not bother reading the paper is a on the record and well known. That the current Administration in Washington on the whole dislikes the press is obvious. First there was the uproar over the revelation of the N.S.A. wire-tapping program. Just last week we witnessed the President, Vice President, and other members of the Administration lash out angrily over the New York Times story which disclosed a secret C.I.A. program to trace financial records. Representative Peter T. King, Republican of New York, even called for a criminal investigation of The Times. It seems that something must be done.

07.02. filed under: !. criticism. headlines. politics. 2


William Buys a Parrot

UBU WEB’s summer 2006 offerings are online. A few which caught my eye on the front page are as follows: William S. Burroughs, The Cut-Up Films (1963-1972), Henry Miller reading from Black Spring and The Colossous of Maroussi (both 1949), Samuel Beckett, Not I (with Billie Whitelaw, 1971), Jorge Luis Borges, The Mirror Man, György Ligeti’s Poème Symphonique for 100 metronomes, Cinema of Transgression Early 1980s Lower East Side Films: Kern, Moritsugu, Pfahler, Wojnarowicz, etc., and Erik Satie’s Pièces pour Guitare Played by Pierre Laniau (1982).

Wrap yourself up in the Drug Quilt, a flash visualization of the american pharmaceutical landscape. Frightening somehow.

Turns out even a photo of watching eyes is enough to keep us honest.

Some links on the storied history of Sing Sing prison.

Interesting Google TechTalk on The Paradox of Choice, Why More Is Less.

New method for sniffing out traces of past life on Mars: desert varnish.

07.01. filed under: 2


The world according to Chin-san Long

Picked up a slim exhibition catalogue at the Strand bookshop yesterday, put out by Taipei Gallery in 1993, for a show they mounted of Chinese photographer Chin-san Long’s work. He was born Zhejiang Province in 1892. In 1927 he became one of China’s first photo-journalists when the Shanghai Eastern Times, where he was employed, brought in the country’s first color printing machine. In 1939 he perfected a compositing method which allowed him to combine multiple images in the dark room. The results were photographs which incorporated the methodology of traditional Chinese ink-painting, creating a synthesis of Chinese aesthetic and western photographic technique. With a career spanning nine decades Long helped to popularize photography in China. As it turns out his work is not at all well represented on the net so I’m happy to be able to offer you the following 16 examples of his beautiful, pre-digital-age, photo compositing work. See below.

06.30. filed under: art. !. 8


Nice comparative presentation of Tarot iconography, rounding up hundreds of cards from the 1330’s to present, accompanied by articles on the meaning of Tarot cards and their historical development. Interesting. In related linkage: The Hermitage a Tarot history site.

The Lasso, a rational guide to trick roping. Ye haw!

Video: Zoologist Dan-Eric Nilsson of the University of Lund in Sweden explains how the complex human eye could have evolved gradually from a primitive light-sensitive eye-spot, or: the human Eye is NOT irreducibly complex!

The Implant Matrix, Orpheus Filter, Orgone Reef, Tensegrity Weave, and Hungry soil… just a few of the fascinating sculptures/instillations on view at the Philip Beesly Architect Inc site. Via.

J-Track 3D, a Java applet from NASA science which tracks man-made satellites in real-time. Click, rotate, & zoom! Fun for the whole dorky family.  Via.

Lastly the top ten trivia tips about The Nonist as revealed by The Mechanical Contrivium, Via, with apologies to those in the UK.

1. A lump of the nonist the size of a matchbox can be flattened into a sheet the size of a tennis court.
2. The nonist can run sixty-five kilometres an hour - that’s really fast!
3. Dueling is legal in Paraguay as long as both parties are the nonist.
4. Dolphins sleep at night just below the surface of the nonist, and frequently rise to the surface for air.
5. Every day in the UK, four people die putting the nonist on.
6. The nonistomancy is the art of telling the future with the nonist!
7. Ancient Greeks believed earthquakes were caused by the nonist fighting underground!
8. Early thermometers were filled with the nonist instead of mercury.
9. The nonist is often used in place of milk in food photography, because milk goes soggy more quickly than the nonist.
10. The air around the nonist is superheated to about five times the temperature of the sun.

06.29. filed under: link dump. 2


Posthumous Papers of a Living Author

Picked up a nice little volume today, put out by Archipelago Books, as an impulse-buy gift for my girlfriend- Posthumous Papers of a Living Author by Robert Musil. It was originally published in 1936 and was, in fact, the last thing he published before his sudden death in 42. I read part I of Musil’s The Man Without Qualities years back and admired it greatly so I thought this tidy little selection of essays and reflections would be a no-brainer. And I was correct. Have not read it all yet but the pieces I read on the train did not disappoint. The pieces include subjects like, “Flypaper” (which looks at a fly’s struggle to break free of the trap), “Can horses laugh?” (which answers the title’s question), “Rabbit Catastrophe” (about a baby hare being hunted and killed by a woman’s lap-dog), etc. One of the pieces I wanted to share with you all straight away it was so good. I’ve transcribed it, in full, below.

06.27. filed under: !. books. 4


In Search of: Juggling

Juggling, it’s history and greatest performers. Research in juggling history. History of juggling. Christian Rohlfs, Death as Juggler. Juggling and the subjective records of physical skills. On keeping things up in the air. Lord Frederic Leighton, The Antique Juggling Girl. Notes toward a history of juggling. Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, An Egyptian Juggler The science of juggling. Information theory and juggling. Bosh, The Juggler. Memorable tricks and a numbers formula. On neatly arranged cascades. Picasso, Juggler with Still-Life. The moral and aesthetic implications of the mastery of falling objects. The physics of juggling. Animations: great jugglers of the past. Chagall, The Juggler. The juggling hall of fame. The museum of juggling. Jugglewiki. Juggler’s World Magazine archive. Passing: juggling videos. Video: juggling in a cone. Belloc Lowndes, The Juggler. A survey of robotic juggling and dynamic manipulation. On Claude Shannon’s juggling machines and a vid of them in action. The juggling robot. Video: humanoid robot juggler. Adriaen de Vries, Juggling Man.

06.27. filed under: !. link dump. play. 3


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