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Lo primordial, hermanos míos, no es nuestro sufrimiento, sino cómo lo llevamos a lo largo de la vía.

el Cristo de Elqui


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Monday, June 7th, 2010

🦋 Mesmerizing Monday Morning

Start your week off right: some hypnotic animation loops from Diana Magallón, at The New Post-Literate:

Update: Ooh, and butterflies! (via The Wooster Collective)

posted morning of June 7th, 2010: Respond
➳ More posts about Pretty Pictures

Thursday, June third, 2010

🦋 Ah... Springtime in Paris

This picture (via The Wooster Collective) of a wheatpasted painting by Yz in Paris, is about the most soothing, beautiful image I can imagine right now:

You can follow Yz's progress at her Facebook page, Vous Êtes Ici.

posted evening of June third, 2010: Respond

Monday, May 31st, 2010

🦋 Blu in Lisbon

UNURTH has the latest work from Blu (thanks for the link, Todd!) -- it is a collaboration with São Paulo artists Os Gémeos, on Lisbon's Avenida Fontes Pereira de Melo:

posted morning of May 31st, 2010: Respond

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

🦋 Distrito Federal

At The Wooster Collective today I found news of a fantastic street art intervention, Said Dokins' "Avionazo en la plazuela", "Plane crash in the square" -- wheat-pasted paper airplanes flying on the walls of the buildings around Plaza del Aguilita in Mexico City, and a metal and fiberglass sculpture in the center of the plaza. Beautiful! And it reminded me that I should ask: Ellen and I are thinking of taking a trip to Mexico City this summer, I'd love to get suggestions of things to do and see and avoid.

(And wondering if there is any way to track down the real location of this mural so we could see it in person -- Google Maps doesn't know about Plaza del Aguilita, and I'm thinking from the context in Dokins' post -- "the newest Plaza del Aguilita in México City" -- that it is a generic term rather than a proper name, maybe a way of referring to squatter camps. Also strange: Dokins translates the name of the project which Avionaza is part of, Habitar: no autorizado, as "Living: There is authorized" when it seems pretty clearly to mean "Living: without authorization" or "unauthorized".)

Update -- after looking at the Habitar: no autorizado web site (which is Flash, so I can't link to internal pieces of it; but click on Artistas | Said Dokins), I believe I've misunderstood -- it looks like Dokins is installing this mural in a number of places in the city; maybe Plaza del Aguilita is just a way of referring to somewhere that he has installed it. Do check the site, the photography there is very well done. ...And, yes! The site has a map of where the installations are located.

posted evening of April 21st, 2010: Respond

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

🦋 Climbing the walls

Another utterly spectacular production from Blu -- this one is in collaboration with David Ellis.

I linked to a previous video of theirs last year; I see from their website that they also did a short piece in Gdansk playing with ideologies...

posted morning of September 26th, 2009: Respond
➳ More posts about Animation

Wednesday, September second, 2009

🦋 Monk in Union Square

By way of the Wooster Collective I see that street artist Elbow-Toe has a new painting in Union Square, based on Rembrandt's drawing "Monk in a Cornfield" -- beautiful, I hope it is still there next time I am in the city! The Rembrandt drawing really captured my imagination when I saw it a few years ago at the Pierrepont-Morgan Library.

posted evening of September second, 2009: Respond

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

🦋 In which I embed two very fine but unrelated videos:

All they have in common is both being accessed from Crooked Timber this evening. The first is an Argentinian art video by BluBlu* that Kieran Healy posted without comment -- living graffiti!:

And the second is of a band recommended by xboy in comments to this post: Dr. Michael White's New Orleans jazz band plays some sweet sounding traditional jazz. Check out the "Christopher Columbus"** reference in the trombone solo. Right up my alley.

* Be sure to visit their web site if you enjoy this video -- there is lots more great stuff there including more videos of similar installations.

** And hey, I found a recording online of Jim Kweskin and the Jug Band doing "Christopher Columbus" -- the first version I ever heard, from a band close to my heart. It is the first couple of minutes of this podcast from Mike Pell.

posted evening of May 25th, 2008: 2 responses

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