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Nikhil Sethi’s Ripple, 2020 Edition
Nikhil Sethi’s Ripple, 2020 Edition
Yes, we give feedback and encouragement and suggestions, but we also bond over our art, letting each other in on the oft-solitary process of figuring out our thoughts and our stories. We push each other, teach each other, and ultimately shape each other and our work. A page to remind everyone what art is — love from many sources, shaped by an individual, to be shared. You release your belief that everything has to do with you and that you are in complete control. This is not a passive act. It involves working in favor of things that you surrender to and accepting that the results of your actions are not in your control. Dropbox mirror: https://www.dropbox.com/s/cwujmj6y3ezn6lu/ripple01.pdf?dl=0
·splash.niksethi.com·
Nikhil Sethi’s Ripple, 2020 Edition
No time for despair
No time for despair
So, please: Keep making your art. Keep speaking the truth. We need your efforts, no matter how small and how trivial they may seem to you.
·austinkleon.com·
No time for despair
Pay attention up to the point where it’s useful, then stop. And please, […] don’t stop making art. Especially weird shit. We need you right now more than ever.
Pay attention up to the point where it’s useful, then stop. And please, […] don’t stop making art. Especially weird shit. We need you right now more than ever.
Pay attention up to the point where it’s useful, then stop. And please, please, please don’t stop making art. Especially weird shit. We need you right now more than ever.
·twitter.com·
Pay attention up to the point where it’s useful, then stop. And please, […] don’t stop making art. Especially weird shit. We need you right now more than ever.
how to do nothing
how to do nothing
When you collect marine animals there are certain flat worms so delicate that they are almost impossible to capture whole, for they break and tatter under the touch. You must let them ooze and crawl of their own will onto a knife blade and then lift them gently into your bottle of sea water. And perhaps that might be the way to write this book — to open the page and let the stories crawl in by themselves. ​ Her purpose in this project is to bring to the attention of the whole community, art that exists in its own context, ​ The artist creates a structure — whether that’s a map or a cordoned-off area — that holds open a contemplative space against the pressures of habit and familiarity that constantly threaten to close it. ​ Actually, I’ve always found it weird that it’s called birdwatching, because half if not more of birdwatching is actually birdlistening. I personally think they should just rename it birdnoticing. ​ That ended up being two years. I recently asked him how he spent that time, and his answer was that he read a lot, rode his bike, studied math ​ In nature, things that grow unchecked are often parasitic or cancerous. And yet, we inhabit a culture that privileges novelty and growth over the cyclical and the regenerative. Indeed our very idea of productivity is premised on the idea of producing something new, whereas we do not tend to see maintenance and care as productive in the same way.
·medium.com·
how to do nothing
'MTA Museum' Pays Tribute To Butt Imprints, Bubble Gum & Other Everyday Subway Sights
'MTA Museum' Pays Tribute To Butt Imprints, Bubble Gum & Other Everyday Subway Sights
It reads: "As a political statement on transit and the concept of rest, millions of New Yorkers collaborated over a period of decades to meticulously create these unique patterns using only their posteriors." ​ they've taken it upon themselves to try to curate our mass transit experience as if it were a living museum.
·gothamist.com·
'MTA Museum' Pays Tribute To Butt Imprints, Bubble Gum & Other Everyday Subway Sights
“Sometimes I think the things that makes art beautiful are the ways in which it represents reality. But other times, it is in the idiosyncratic way each artist’s world is not quite the same as the real one. (Drawing is by Egon Schiele.)”
“Sometimes I think the things that makes art beautiful are the ways in which it represents reality. But other times, it is in the idiosyncratic way each artist’s world is not quite the same as the real one. (Drawing is by Egon Schiele.)”
Sometimes I think the things that makes art beautiful are the ways in which it represents reality. But other times, it is in the idiosyncratic way each artist’s world is not quite the same as the real one. (Drawing is by Egon Schiele.) pic.twitter.com/zWuGNUZw21— Rowan Hisayo Buchanan (@RowanHLB) April 9, 2019
·twitter.com·
“Sometimes I think the things that makes art beautiful are the ways in which it represents reality. But other times, it is in the idiosyncratic way each artist’s world is not quite the same as the real one. (Drawing is by Egon Schiele.)”
Apple Is Now Commissioning Original Artwork for Apple Music Playlists
Apple Is Now Commissioning Original Artwork for Apple Music Playlists
Bijan Stephen, the Verge: Records should have good art. For albums as diverse as London Calling, Horses, and Fear of a Black, the images on their covers were as recognizable as the music on the wax. While Apple Music isn’t a record label (yet), it did recently decide to add original art to its playlists. […]
·pxlnv.com·
Apple Is Now Commissioning Original Artwork for Apple Music Playlists
BLOOMS: Strobe Animated Sculptures Invented by John Edmark
BLOOMS: Strobe Animated Sculptures Invented by John Edmark
Blooms are 3-D printed sculptures designed to animate when spun under a strobe light. Unlike a 3D zoetrope, which animates a sequence of small changes to objects, a bloom animates as a single self-contained sculpture. The bloom’s animation effect is achieved by progressive rotations of the golden ratio, phi (ϕ), the same ratio that nature employs to generate the spiral patterns we see in pinecones and sunflowers. The rotational speed and strobe rate of the bloom are synchronized so that one flash occurs every time the bloom turns 137.5º (the angular version of phi).* Each bloom’s particular form and behavior is determined by a unique parametric seed I call a phi-nome (/fī nōm/). -John Edmark John Edmark is an artist, designer, and inventor. He teaches at Stanford University. Website: www.JohnEdmark.com To learn how blooms are made visit: http://www.instructables.com/id/Blooming-Zoetrope-Sculptures/ Cinematography and editing by Charlie Nordstrom - www.charlienordstrom.com Music - "Plateau" by Lee Rosevere - http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Farrago_Zabriskie/Lee_Rosevere_-_Farrago_Zabriskie_-_03_-_Plateau *For this video, rather than using a strobe, the camera was set to a very short shutter speed in order to freeze individual frames of the spinning sculpture. ©2015 John Edmark
·vimeo.com·
BLOOMS: Strobe Animated Sculptures Invented by John Edmark
Programming is Performance Art
Programming is Performance Art
“The main way to prevent software from rotting, it seems, is to maintain it: update it so that it continues to work as the platforms supporting them change underneath. In this sense, though, it’s not the same software you started with, as it’s continuously changing.”
·nearthespeedoflight.com·
Programming is Performance Art
“....This reminds me of my fondest memories and makes me homesick for a world I have never been in.”
“....This reminds me of my fondest memories and makes me homesick for a world I have never been in.”
“Wow. Sometimes world-crafting with illustration is so powerful and evocative that it makes you want to live in the world the artist has drawn. This reminds me of my fondest memories and makes me homesick for a world I have never been in.”
·mobile.twitter.com·
“....This reminds me of my fondest memories and makes me homesick for a world I have never been in.”