The Batman Evolution

2 Aug






Anthony Geoffroy

Sigur Ros: “Varuo” by Ryan McGinley

2 Aug


Sigur Ros‘ latest single Varúð to Manhattan to follow a young girl jovially skipping about between buildings in Chinatown. As the music crescendos and falls in time with the girl, McGinley punctuates the video by ‘stopping’ everything around her and turning the bustling streets into a surreal backdrop strangely befitting of Sigur Ros’ soaring, ethereal sound”.

PUNKS, CALIFORNIA, 1970S

1 Aug


Images by Jim Jocoy from We’re Desperate: The Punk Rock Photography of Jim Jocoy, SF/LA 1978-1980








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ANDY WARHOL AND NICO AS BATMAN AND ROBIN, 1967

1 Aug


Cello Speaker Box

1 Aug






Functional speaker box made from a used cello and a high quality 3-way speaker system.
Subwoofers are 8.5″
Mid 4.5″
Tweeters 2″.
Must have receiver to operate.
At 160 watts and 8 ohms, these speakers sound great and also compliment the varnish of the cello very well.
Measurements are estimates and may vary just slightly.

cost 800.00
BUY HERE

Glowing Angler Fish Bicycles byGroup D Collective

1 Aug


During the annual VIVID sydney light event, group d collective, an australian multidisciplinary studio, built multiple illuminated ‘Angler fish’ to take part in the festival. the glowing structures are in fact bicycles that were able to be ridden around the city, creating a colorful aquatic spectacle to adorn the grey urban landscape. The three deep-sea creatures were fabricated with custom frames that then had digitally-printed lycra and chiffon skins pulled tightly over. The radiant purple, blue and green tones coordinated well with the theme of the vibrant carnival, bringing a marine glow to its audience.





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Jean-Paul Bourdier by Bodyscapes

1 Aug


“California-based photographer Jean-Paul Bourdier has sent designboom images of his collection of photographs entitled ‘bodyscapes’, of which he is gathering funding for a book of 240 works titled ‘leap into the blue’ in a kickstarter campaign you can find here. Bourdier concentrates on the beauty and geometry of the human body, combining landscape and flesh as a canvas to create a visual union, with all of the images having been shot on site in analog photography, without the use of digital manipulation. He explains his understanding, motivation and expression of the human form behind his compositions:

‘Arising in each visual event conceived are the geometries generated by the body as a determinant of ‘negative space’— not the background of the figure and the field surrounding it, but the space that makes composition and framing possible in photography. As an organizer of space, the body also serves as a primary measuring unit, by which one perceives and constructs one’s environment.
such an approach can be linked to the practices of literally using the body as a first unit of measurement, which were not only common to the building of vernacular architecture around the world but were also at work in the temples of India, Egypt and Greece, for example.’

Intersecting many disciplines – photography, sculpture, performance, dance, land art, body art, design and acrobatics – the artist creates and choreographs each vibrant piece with a strong philosophy directing each scene, using the medium of photography, known to capture the ‘real’, to achieve the seemingly impossible, with thoughtful and surreal outcomes:

‘In working with the bare and painted body, I am also working with the demands and challenges of a body-mind state that I call ‘not two—many twos’. For example, without clothes the body regains its undivided primary nature, being intricately part of the forces of the universe. One and many. the visual works I come up with are thus a continual experiment of how we physically, rhythmically relate to this universe from the specific, intimate bodyhouse.’

‘Rather than being a mere recording of an encounter between event and photographer, the photograph is an event of its own: long prepared, and yet full of unexpected moments; a still manifestation of an encounter between desert light, body light and camera eye.’ The ‘bodyscapes’ project, to now be documented in a publication, establishes a clear and unadulterated reverence to something shared by all, creating corporeal experiences that extend beyond to that of the natural cosmos and defining the sometimes forgotten innate relationship with the two.








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Andreas Franke – Underwater Photography Exhibition

26 Jul


“Austrian photographer andreas franke took a diving expedition down into hulk of the artificial reef general hoyt s. Vandenberg located 100 feet below sealevel, approximately seven miles south of key west. Having documented the trip and the shipwreck site, franke digitally manipulated the images he captured to depict surreal everyday scenes from the past, taking place in the underwater locale.
the series of 12 photographs entitled ‘life below the surface’ can be viewed installed at the location of the sunken ship of which the images take place.

To withstand the more than wet conditions, each piece print is encased between sheets of plexiglas encased by a stainless steel frame whereby a silicon seal helps deter water from entering. the artworks are attached to the ship by strong magnets which offer a damage free removal at the end of the exhibition.

‘Mystified scenes of the past that play in a fictional space. dreamworlds, where you can get lost or you can identify with. This makes new and unexpected atmosphere.’ – andreas franke.











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Sushi Bazooka Shoots Instant Sushi Rolls

25 Jul


“The ‘sushi bazooka’, offered by japanese distributor strapya, is a plastic device that makes perfectly rolled sushi. The three piece unit works by simply filling each half of the tube with rice and other ingredients, where they are compressed
using a cylindrical plunger”.


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Music boxes for iPad by Joelle Aeschlimann

23 Jul

“As a part of her studies at ECAL, joelle aeschlimann has created a music box prototype for the iPad. the ‘little boxes’ project consists of three separate devices that interact with the tablet to create melodies and animations. replicated to work like the traditional player, the new digital iteration is constructed using rubber tips from commercially available pens, and a conductive metal crank. The adobe air for iOS software recognizes when pressure is applied to the iPad, and when the rotating mechanical movements are turned by the lever, music and visual content are generated.




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