Sunday, September 27, 2009
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Andy Warde
http://www.andywarde.com/
"Andy's paintings surprise and puzzle their audience. He creates a webbed and illusional story that cannot be fully grasped with one visual appraisal. Andy combines geometric shapes, buildings, people, animals and even plants as an interpretation of himself."
"Andy's paintings surprise and puzzle their audience. He creates a webbed and illusional story that cannot be fully grasped with one visual appraisal. Andy combines geometric shapes, buildings, people, animals and even plants as an interpretation of himself."
Labels:
art,
illustration
Monday, September 21, 2009
Friday, September 18, 2009
Cadaver Cathedral
via BLDGBLOG:
"A few weeks ago I mentioned some 3D-printed work by Yousef Al-Mehdari ... The project explores religious ritual and the human body, alongside an interest in 'transitory sculptures,' processional routes, and a kind of body-futurist rediscovery of architectural ornament. Vortices of limbs ossify into cathedrals; overlapping anatomies become windows and valves.
Al-Mehdari suggests that a careful – even mathematically exact – study of human bodily movement could serve as a basis for generating new types of architectural form. As if we could take conic sections through Merce Cunningham, say, and turn the resulting diagrams into churches.
...
The use of the human body as a generator for architectural ornament reminds me, in an admittedly tangential way, of the "cadaver cathedral" by Jeff VanderMeer – the description of which is worth quoting in full:
"A few weeks ago I mentioned some 3D-printed work by Yousef Al-Mehdari ... The project explores religious ritual and the human body, alongside an interest in 'transitory sculptures,' processional routes, and a kind of body-futurist rediscovery of architectural ornament. Vortices of limbs ossify into cathedrals; overlapping anatomies become windows and valves.
Al-Mehdari suggests that a careful – even mathematically exact – study of human bodily movement could serve as a basis for generating new types of architectural form. As if we could take conic sections through Merce Cunningham, say, and turn the resulting diagrams into churches.
...
The use of the human body as a generator for architectural ornament reminds me, in an admittedly tangential way, of the "cadaver cathedral" by Jeff VanderMeer – the description of which is worth quoting in full:
"Where the sculptures of saints would have been set into the walls, there were instead bodies laid into clear capsules, the white, white skin glistening in the light – row upon row of bodies in the walls, the proliferation of walls. The columns, which rose and arched in bunches of five or six together, were not true columns, but instead highways for blood and other substances: giant red, green, blue, and clear tubes that coursed through the cathedral like arteries. Above, shot through with track lighting from behind, what at first resembled stained-glass windows showing some abstract scene were revealed as clear glass within which organs had been stored: yellow livers, red hearts, pale arms, white eyeballs, rosaries of nerves disembodied from their host."
Labels:
aethestics,
anatomy,
architecture,
art,
Ballardian,
Nature,
sublime
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Urban Modern
via Bill Wasik via Leon Wieseltier:
"[W]hat is being celebrated here is the ideology of no ideology—the ascendancy of the Nora Ephron view of the world, which may be succinctly described as “food and drink and bathroom fixtures.” What moves such a heart most (aside from children, the poor, and the homeless) are amenities and trivialities. The conferring of importance upon the unimportant, and of unimportance upon the important: this is a mark of decadence, the cognitive inversion of people who live “mostly in aesthetic terms” because they have secured themselves materially—or so they would like to believe—against philosophy and pain. They live for lightness and distraction. Their laughter is the sound of luck. They acquit themselves of their intellectual obligations with opinions."
— Washington Diarist: Against The Plane | The New Republic
"[W]hat is being celebrated here is the ideology of no ideology—the ascendancy of the Nora Ephron view of the world, which may be succinctly described as “food and drink and bathroom fixtures.” What moves such a heart most (aside from children, the poor, and the homeless) are amenities and trivialities. The conferring of importance upon the unimportant, and of unimportance upon the important: this is a mark of decadence, the cognitive inversion of people who live “mostly in aesthetic terms” because they have secured themselves materially—or so they would like to believe—against philosophy and pain. They live for lightness and distraction. Their laughter is the sound of luck. They acquit themselves of their intellectual obligations with opinions."
— Washington Diarist: Against The Plane | The New Republic
Labels:
Aesthetics,
ethics,
philosophy
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Sweetwater Defense
I did the soundtrack for werebear games' premiere release on the iPhone "Sweetwater Defense". Includes about 7 tracks from various projects. Check it out:
http://www.werebeargames.com/
http://www.werebeargames.com/
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