Some ramblings about appearances

Shabby-chic or just plain shabby?

How is it that the average man of the 21st century has been raised up, in wealth, in holdings, in leisure time, in education, in rights, to levels on par with court members and landed gentry of earlier ages, but in respect to finery has sunk to the level of serf? Were even the least noble member of the humblest nation’s aristocracy of 5 centuries ago to meet a working man of today, though perhaps on par with him in wealth and below him in education, the noble would be forgiven for mistaking this average Joe for a barrowman.

06.17. filed under: !. humanity. inquiries. observations. 2


SuperFormula is a generic geometric transformation equation that encompasses a wide range forms found in nature. Dataisnature points us to some beatiful 3d renderings of the equations including the newest destrukt set in which the Supershapes are broken apart. My primitive 2d thinking brain was instantly reminded of the dynamyte late-nineties work of graffiti phenom Boris Tellegen, a.k.a. Delta. Here are some perfect examples scanned from the book Scrawl, dirty graphics & strange characters: 1 2 3 4.

PZ Meyers and Chris Clarke sound off on Stephen Hawking’s recent prophesy of humanity’s doom and his accompanying plea for off-world colonies.

BLDGBLOG on Urban Sound Walks in which specially built headphones receive electromagnetic signals from the environment and transform them into sound, creating an mp3 map of a city’s electromagnetic hot-spots. Listen to them yourself at Cabinet.

The Style of Numbers Behind a Number of Styles in which stylometry, the mathematical analysis of litterature, is looked at in terms of its application to the visual arts.

The Daily Growler offers a nice, in-depth piece on Erik Satie. Via.

Reaserchers are surprised to find that women’s brains react so fast to erotic images, the common wisdom being that men respond more strongly to sexual imagery. (Sure the women’s brain reacted strongly but what the researchers failed to recognize was the particulars of the reaction involved: namely the activation of the highly developed “must obsessively compare that bitch’s body to my own” region of the female brain.)

06.15. filed under: link dump. 1


Endless battle of the Monkeys and the Crabs

Or: no blood for persimmon juice!

There is an old story in Japanese folklore which is told to teach the following lesson: “If a man thinks only of his own profit, and tries to benefit himself at the expense of others, he will incur the hatred of Heaven.” The story is called Battle of the Monkey and the Crab and there are many versions, which though different in their particulars, share that same nugget of implied wisdom. Just recently I came upon a version of the story which deviates from the norm enough to be not only a broad lesson in human nature but strangely applicable to modern events as well. Creepily applicable you might say. I’ve transcribed it below…

06.15. filed under: art. !. books. death. fiction. lies. politics. 6


I never reared a young Wombat to glad me with his pin-hole eye, but when he was most sweet & fat and tail-less; he was sure to die!

The Rossetti Archive which facilitates the scholarly study of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, the painter, designer, writer, and translator. Contains a slew of his artworks. Above: a detail from Death of a Wombat, 1869.

Enjoy the The C. Warren Irvin, Jr., Collection of Charles Darwin and Darwiniana.

What is more deserving of tribute in the form of a Tom Waits song or a Wallace Stevens poem than two Circus trains colliding? Great Circus Train Wrecks and the resultant symbolism of elephants with down-turned trunks.

He who destroyes a good Booke, kills reason it selfe an exhibition of books which have survived Fire, the Sword, and the Censors. (Scroll down for navigation.)

Joseph Leidy Father of American Vertebrate Paleontology and The Bone Wars.

Decameron Web: A growing hypermedia archive of materials dedicated to Boccaccio’s masterpiece, presented by the of the Department of Italian Studies at Brown University. Impressive.

06.13. filed under: link dump. 1


Casualties of Knowledge.

Progress, the expansion of knowledge, the continual narrowing of possibility toward truth: wonderful things all. But what of the casualties? That is, what of the once enthusiastically propagated facts which, proven false, are cast aside? Since the invent of written history our disproved facts have been allowed to linger on well past their halcyon days of import, muzzled castrati shoved unceremoniously behind the curtain and stricken from the handbills. What are we to do with them?

06.11. filed under: art. belief. !. history. ideas. 8


Forensic: 1581, adjective, from the Latin forensis, related to the noun forum; the space in ancient Rome where public discussion and disputation was held. Used in sense of “pertaining to legal trials,” as in forensic medicine… Visible Proofs a forensic view of the body.

Surnateum or: the Museum of Supernatural History.

623 poems and 72 letters straight from Bukowski’s “machine” are among the offerings at Bukowski.net. Via.

So what exactly is a planet anyway? We’ll finally get a definition in september.

Some theories on the origins of applause: The Help of Your Good Hands: Reports on Clapping.

64 examples from Collin de Plancy’s 1818 book on demonology Dictionnaire Infernal. Some better images here.

 

 

06.11. filed under: link dump.


Squelettes se disputant un hareng-saur by James Ensor

Translated as “Skeletons Fighting for a Smoked Herring.” The herring was Ensors personal symbol for his own art, appearing in many paintings. It is sarcastic word-play. In French “Hareng-saur” sounds like “Art Ensor.”  Here, the two skeletons represent two critics who, fighting over Ensor’s art, want to literally tear it apart, each wanting to be the one who does him in. His first major exhibition, in Paris in 1898, was a failure you see, with the critics calling him “mad, foolish and nasty.” More here.

06.10. filed under: art. people.


Updating an old standard for a new century

A year or so ago I sent away for the Art Instruction Schools art test. You know the one, you’ve probably been seeing ads for it since you were a child. If you can draw the turtle or pirate or whatever other spot-illustration example they offer “you might have what it takes for a rewarding and successful career in the field of art!” When I was a kid I yearned to draw that turtle but I never did. I received the fabled test a year or so ago, as I said, but I realized almost immediately that even though the likes of Charles Shulz were counted among the Art Instruction Schools’ alumni this test was perhaps a bit out of step with the art world of today. It sat on my desk untouched until this afternoon, when I took the liberty of giving it a nonist style overhaul which I think updates this classic nicely. Look below to see whether you have what it takes for a rewarding and successful career in the art world of the 21st century!

06.09. filed under: art. !. criticism. play. 3


Surely one of the coolest stories making the rounds right now is the body mod piece from Wired about magnetic fingertip implants which alow one to “sense” electromagnetic fields: A Sixth Sense for a Wired World. (Thanks for the heads-up Rich.) Also check out The Gift of Magnetic Vision.

Continuing in a similar vein Slate offers: Among the Transhumanists Cyborgs, self-mutilators, and the future of our race. Via.

Scientists have recovered DNA from a Neanderthal that lived 100,000 years ago - the oldest human-type DNA so far. More here and here (well, that last is not exactly related but I do so love it.)

Mesmerized! a nice exhibit on Franz Anton Mesmer and mesmerizm at The Bakken Library and Museum.

Am I allowed to write that I would like to hunt down George W. Bush, the president of the United States, and kill him with my bare hands? On Simple Human Decency. Via.

06.08. filed under: link dump.


Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is dead.

He’s not only merely dead, he’s really most sincerely dead.

Wake up you sleepyhead. Rub your eyes, get out of bed. Wake up Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s dead. Tra la la… This morning the news was a-buzz with the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in an air strike. The reporters were all just possitively a-twitter. “Death, Terrorism, and ‘good news’ all in one story?! Whoopee!” I believe I actually saw one correspondent wet himself. I can’t help but react exactly as I did when it was reported that Saddam Hussein was captured, with a resounding “...AND?” It changes nothing.

06.08. filed under: !. death. headlines. politics. 5


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