Art + Architecture + Design
Archive for December, 2006
3D RSS READER for WINDOWS VISTA
Dec 11th
a 3D RSS feed reader for the Windows Vista operating system, providing a "stunning way" of visualizing RSS feeds & their content. univeRSS consists of a full-screen 3D universe where galaxies represent the folders a RSS feed directory, & the stars are represented by the spinning cubes that hold the feed information. size & position of the feed cubes indicate how many unread items they contain.
see also 3d topic wall & 3d space browser.
[link: microsoft.com]
ART BASEL MIAMI: AQUA ART SCENE
Dec 9th
So, last night I nearly coughed-up the 600 bucks to take the red-eye down to Miami for Art Basel et. al., but I got drunk instead. Got up this morning, actually, this afternnon, and was hoping I would find some evidence the whole thing was a bust, but of course, only evidence to the contrary:
NYT article: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/09/arts/design/09fair.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Dennis Hollingsworth pics and movs:
And Flickr search:
JANUS IS BACK
Dec 9th
Hot-damn, Janus if back! A great, interdisciplinary zine. Thanks to those who’ve taken up the challenge and good luck!
From the press release:
The cult of Janus is back and again on the lookout for adepts that are willing to join this cross-disciplinary adventure. The magazine has been away from the scene for a while after Jan Fabre, who founded it in 1998, decided to interrupt its publication last year. In April 2006, Charlotte Bonduel, Luigi di Corato, Giovanni Iovane, Frank Maes, Nicola Setari and Marleen Wynants accepted Jan Fabre’s challenge to continue the project and compose the new editorial board. If you missed the launch of issue # 20 (it came out in June and was presented in Milan at the Pavilion for Contemporary Art, in Basel at the Contemporary Art Fair, in Antwerp at the Museum of Fine Arts, in Munich at the Lenbachhaus and in Turin at the Contemporary Art Fair) you cannot miss the launch of issue # 21 at Argos in Brussels.
"as Aristotle put it speaking of Plato: “Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas” . (Plato is dear to me, but dearer still is truth.”
via e-flux
more here: http://www.janusonline.net/
ART BASEL MIAMI: JONAS MEKAS
Dec 8th

Jonas looks like he’s having a great time! Wish we could be there…
LAB MAG NYC w/ VITO ACCONCI
Dec 8th
Don’t miss this!
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LAB ANNOUNCES LAUNCH OF LAB MAG |
(The launch will include a series of panel-style presentations -beginning at 6:30PM- by architect Vito Acconci of Acconci Studio, experimental-poet Jena Osman, artist Adam Pendleton and designers David Reinfurt and Sarah Gephart of O-R-G)
BIRDY THINGS; A STADIUM, A PERVERT, AN ARTIST, A CRIMINAL AND MORE!
Dec 7th
There is something happening in the blogosphere today; BIRDS!
Flippin’ the Berd:
Eagle-eyed fans of street and guerilla art have no doubt noticed a proliferation of these yellow birds dangling over major intersections throughout the city over the last few years. The person behind them has been quite a mystery, but bLA’s intrepid Will Campbell used some good ol’ fashioned investigatifying and managed to track the artist down. Don’t miss Will’s revealing Q&A with the bird-flipper.
via abLA
The Mockingbird Project:
Once programming was finished — completed entirely by Mutlu and Isaac as the first official project of the Allentium Lab — Isaac set to work on developing the visual animation for each of the layers. Mutlu integrated that into the design of the home page. Mike and Gunny finally settled on a name for the project — Mike’s idea had been to call it the Mockingbird Project.
And thus the Mockingbird was born.
via rhizome.org
2008 Olympic birdsnest :
These construction photos of Herzog & de Meuron’s new Beijing National Stadium – aka the 2008 Olympic birdsnest – were pointed out to me the other day; they combine the skewed angles and weird lighting of German Expressionist films with the stitched-together, black voided frame that I’ve commented on before.
So I decided to post them.
via BLDGBLOG
Hyungkoo Lee _ ANIMATUS
ARARIO gallery will show a new series of works by Hyungkoo Lee, September 1 through October 7, 2006.
The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema:
The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema takes the viewer on an exhilarating ride through some of the greatest movies ever made. Serving as presenter and guide is the charismatic Slavoj Zizek, the Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst. With his engaging and passionate approach to thinking, Zizek delves into the hidden language of cinema, uncovering what movies can tell us about ourselves.
The Birdman of Alcatraz:
Robert Stroud, who was better known to the public as the "Birdman of Alcatraz," was probably the most famous inmate ever to reside on Alcatraz. In 1909 he brutally murdered a bartender who had allegedly failed to pay a prostitute for whom Stroud was pimping in Alaska. After shooting the bartender to death, Stroud took the man’s wallet to ensure that he and the prostitute would receive compensation for her services.
via Alcatraz History
Charlie "Bird" Parker:
During the late 1940s Parker toured in Europe, and by 1951, he rose to the status of the most influential jazz musician in the world. His notoriety as a heroin addict had also become legendary, and the New York police eventually withdrew his cabaret card (a requisite to working in New York nightclubs). Thereafter, he adopted a more itinerant lifestyle, playing with pick-up groups in Boston, Newark, Philadelphia, Chicago, and in California. His cabaret card was reinstated in 1953, but by then he was beset by sporadic employment, debt, and failing physical and mental health. He twice attempted suicide in 1954 and voluntarily committed himself to New York’s Bellevue Hospital. His last public appearance was on March 5, 1955, at Birdland, the club named in his honor in 1949.
via Sinewaves.it
AVIAN FLU:
The World Bank is calling for an additional $1.5 billion to fight avian flu. One-third of the funds are to be directed to sub-Saharan Africa during the next few years.
This year $96 million has been spent on bird flu prevention in Africa.
The H5N1 virus has been detected in eight countries on the continent since February and African Union officials announced during the conference that new outbreaks are still occurring in Nigeria, Egypt and Sudan.
via Favbuzz
Operation Mockingbird :
Operation Mockingbird is a Central Intelligence Agency operation to influence domestic and foreign media, whose activities were made public during the Church Committee investigation in 1975 (published 1976).
The word Mockingbird was first used by Deborah Davis in Katharine the Great (1979). There is no evidence that the CIA called it this. Cord Meyer said that when he joined the operation in 1951 it was so secret that it did not have a name.
via Wikipedia
ART BASEL MIAMI; DIANA THATER & MORE
Dec 7th
Some highlights from our favorite man on the street, Critical Miami
Diana Thater’s video installation
Jacob Hashimoto; cocktail umbrellas, string, 4 layers deep.
Richard Jackson (my 4-year-old son’s favorite)
Bethan Huws (my favorite-the text reads, “WHAT’S THE POINT OF GIVING YOU ANY MORE ARTWORKS WHEN YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND THE ONES YOU’VE GOT?”)
stay tuned for more…
TERRY EAGLETON TO THE RESCUE
Dec 6th
"Contrary to Said, Irwin reveals, the towering figures of Oriental scholarship tended to be unworldly, solitary figures, who, far from demonizing the Arab world or Islam, were sympathetic to it and were often regarded as suspiciously un-Christian by their contemporaries. Many were opposed to Western imperial designs on the Near East. Like scholars through the ages, they spent most of their time working diligently on often dry-as-dust textual or linguistic problems. They were also often slightly loony. The father of Orientalism, Guillaume de Postel (1510-1581), was, Irwin notes, "quite barmy": The "foremost expert on Arabic and Islam in Europe" also believed that a woman named Johanna was the angelic pope, the new Eve, the mater mundi who possessed X-ray vision that allowed her to "see Satan sitting at the center of the earth." Postel’s weird ideas led the Inquisition to investigate him, but the Holy Office, in a kinder, gentler moment, decided that he "was not a heretic, merely insane…
"Terry Eagleton argues that he does not, that Said was wrong about details but right about what really mattered. Eagleton mocks Irwin’s "gentle, ivory-tower" belief that Orientalism "is mostly a story of individual scholars" and derides what he claims is Irwin’s inability to comprehend Foucault’s ideas: "He gives the impression that he could recognise an ideological formation about as readily as he could identify Green Day’s greatest hits."
read the rest: http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2006/12/06/orientalism/index.html
As "Orientalism" was a foundational text at the school I attended in the 90s, I am glad to hear it is coming under some scrutiny, and even more glad that Eagleton is defending it still.
JENNIFER MAESTRE PENCIL SCULPTURE
Dec 6th
First crayons; now pencils. Check out these fantastic sculptures by Jennifer Maestre who works with nails, beads and pins, in addition to pencils.
Here is a statement from her show at Mobilia:
"Many creative endeavors begin with a nicely sharpened pencil and a two dimensional surface. My obsession with the point has led me from two dimensions to three. The texture created by a mass of pointed ends is alluring, but is intimidatingly sharp and hard. A tension thus arises between desire and repulsion. The opposing blunt ends offer a different aesthetic experience: a delicate mosaic, a smooth spotted skin.
"Although the sculptures appear rigid, they are actually their own unique fabric. Pencil points are transformed into beads by drilling holes into each. Thousands of points are woven together with thread or wire, creating flexible forms reminiscent of the organic shapes of animals and nature. Pencils represent to me creativity, inspiration, striving, work potential, and fun. Each sculpture is a manifestation of one or more of these qualities."
click here for more: http://www.jennifermaestre.com/welcome.html
via Neatorama


































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