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Color + Modulation

via microcinema

Filed under  //   art   design   music   video  
Posted December 23, 2008
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Sand Artist Jim Denevan

Rather than sculpting, Jim Denevan's work with sand is freehand drawing, a process that involves a low tide, a long stick and a lot of walking. Each work takes him an average of 7 hours, and he often walks as much as 30 miles. No measuring aids whatsoever are used, and from above Denevan's drawings look almost like crop circles. Soon after he's through, the tide comes in and washes away all of his work.

         
Click here to download:
Sand_Artist_Jim_Denevan_tag_ar.zip (321 KB)

Filed under  //   art  
Posted December 19, 2008
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This Is Where We Live

A film for 4th Estate Publishers' 25th Anniversary. Produced by Apt Studio and Asylum Films.

The film was produced in stop-motion over 3 weeks in Autumn 2008. Each scene was shot on a home-made dolly by an insane bunch of animators; you can see time-lapse films of each sequence being prepared.

via 4th Estate

Thanks, Clementine!
 

Filed under  //   animation   art   books   literature   typography   video  
Posted December 18, 2008
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Happy Christmas from AKQA

via madeinakqa + ianlee

Filed under  //   art   installation   video  
Posted December 17, 2008
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Minako Abe

via everyoneforever

     
Click here to download:
Minako_Abe_tag_art.zip (758 KB)

Filed under  //   art  
Posted December 17, 2008
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Brion Gysin: Calligraffiti of Fire

Gysin said, "...it gives an extended vision of one's own interior capacities, which could also be overwhelming."
Featuring the first UK showing of Gysin's rarely-seen painting, the 16.4 metre-long Calligraffiti of Fire, his magnum opus and final work.
Gysin (1916-1986) had a lifelong fascination with the juncture of word and image, and Calligraffiti of Fire (1985) is the culmination of a long series of works inspired by hieroglyphics and calligraphy. He studied Japanese and Arabic calligraphy, and evolved his own style of word/image glyphs, supple as flames or tendrils of smoke. Calligraffiti of Fire embodies Gysin's explorations of his inner visions through the 'flicker' effect, and permutations of his personal calligraphic signature. The painting is meant to be 'read' from right to left. The show also includes a working Dreamachine fabricated to Gysin's specifications, as well as Gysin's paintings and drawings, and photographs by Gysin, William Burroughs, Ira Cohen and others. The exhibition runs concurrently with Royal Academy's Burroughs Live (GSK Contemporary), Riflemaker's Life File, featuring Burroughs' illustrated private files, and Maggs Rare Books' show of Barry Miles' collection of Burroughs and Gysin photographs. A radical cultural visionary, visual artist, writer and performer, Gysin introduced his lifelong friend, writer William S. Burroughs, to the techniques of "cut-ups" and "permutation". Together, they experimented in sound and image, using collage, tape recorder, light painting, writing and film. Their work has had a pervasive influence in the arts and on underground and popular culture, affecting figures such as David Bowie, Patti Smith, Genesis P. Orridge, Keith Haring, Michael Stipe, and Bill Laswell. In the '60's, Gysin created the Dreamachine, which he described as "the only work of art designed to be seen with closed eyes" and a "drugless psychedelic experience". The Dreamachine rotates and through a flicker effect, evokes brainwaves which can produce spontaneous waking dreams. Gysin said, "...it gives an extended vision of one's own interior capacities, which could also be overwhelming." It was his point of view that those "interior capacities" are the next art form, superceding painting.
Gysin's works are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Centre George Pompidou, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and numerous private collections. October Gallery first showed Gysin's work in 1981. Calligraffiti of Fire is curated by Kathelin Gray, and produced in collaboration with The Academy of Everything is Possible. For further information on Brion see www.briongysin.com via October Gallery Dreamachine photo by tim2ubh Dreamachine Dreamachine booklet 10111 How to

Filed under  //   art   literature   poetry  
Posted December 11, 2008
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Calligraffiti of Fire at October Gallery

Brion Gysin : Calligraffiti of Fire

11th December 2008 – 7th February 2009

Featuring the first UK showing of Gysin's rarely-seen painting, the 16.4 metre-long Calligraffiti of Fire, his magnum opus and final work.

Gysin (1916-1986) had a lifelong fascination with the juncture of word and image, and Calligraffiti of Fire (1985) is the culmination of a long series of works inspired by hieroglyphics and calligraphy. He studied Japanese and Arabic calligraphy, and evolved his own style of word/image glyphs, supple as flames or tendrils of smoke. Calligraffiti of Fire embodies Gysin's explorations of his inner visions through the 'flicker' effect, and permutations of his personal calligraphic signature. The painting is meant to be 'read' from right to left.

The show also includes a working Dreamachine fabricated to Gysin's specifications, as well as Gysin's paintings and drawings, and photographs by Gysin, William Burroughs, Ira Cohen and others. The exhibition runs concurrently with Royal Academy's Burroughs Live (GSK Contemporary), Riflemaker's Life File, featuring Burroughs' illustrated private files, and Maggs Rare Books' show of Barry Miles' collection of Burroughs and Gysin photographs.

A radical cultural visionary, visual artist, writer and performer, Gysin introduced his lifelong friend, writer William S. Burroughs, to the techniques of "cut-ups" and "permutation". Together, they experimented in sound and image, using collage, tape recorder, light painting, writing and film. Their work has had a pervasive influence in the arts and on underground and popular culture, affecting figures such as David Bowie, Patti Smith, Genesis P. Orridge, Keith Haring, Michael Stipe, and Bill Laswell.

In the '60's, Gysin created the Dreamachine, which he described as "the only work of art designed to be seen with closed eyes" and a "drugless psychedelic experience". The Dreamachine rotates and through a flicker effect, evokes brainwaves which can produce spontaneous waking dreams. Gysin said, "...it gives an extended vision of one's own interior capacities, which could also be overwhelming." It was his point of view that those "interior capacities" are the next art form, superceding painting.

Gysin's works are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Centre George Pompidou, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and numerous private collections. October Gallery first showed Gysin's work in 1981.

Calligraffiti of Fire is curated by Kathelin Gray, and produced in collaboration with The Academy of Everything is Possible. For further information on Brion see www.briongysin.com

via October Gallery

                   
Click here to download:
Calligraffiti_of_Fire_at_Octob.zip (4283 KB)

Filed under  //   art   literature   poetry  
Posted December 11, 2008
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Deanne Cheuk

Deanne Cheuk | neomu

via wooster collective

Filed under  //   art   collage   design  
Posted December 9, 2008
// 3 Comments

Cecily Brown

Cecily Brown at Gagosian Gallery
via Marissa

   
Click here to download:
Cecily_Brown_tag_art.zip (1035 KB)

Filed under  //   art  
Posted December 8, 2008
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Avant-Garde Japanese Postcards

Modernizing Propaganda:
Avant-Garde Postcards

One of the most stunning revelations of the picture postcards that the Japanese produced en masse is how extraordinarily “modern” and even avant-garde many of them were. Japan’s great tradition of exquisite graphic craftsmanship obviously is reflected here—but so also is the degree to which aesthetic sensibility had been modernized, “Westernized,“ and commercialized in ways unimagined only a decade or so earlier.

Explosions, hot-air military observation balloons, Russian and Japanese war flags, enemy gunboats, even sinking warships and landmines became transformed into emblems of beauty, modernity, and cutting-edge creativity. And all—in this case—for a popular audience and a practical purpose. The “blank” spaces on most graphics—often aesthetically attractive in themselves—were where messages were written. In some cases, the personal message was handwritten right over the image.

via Visualizing Cultures | MIT and Wrong Distance

Images from the Leonard A. Lauder Collection of
Japanese Postcards at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

“Asia Rising” by John W. Dower

         
Click here to download:
Avant-Garde_Japanese_Postcards.zip (370 KB)

Filed under  //   art   design  
Posted December 8, 2008
// 1 Comment