January 12, 2012
http://daneyalmahmood.com/ArtistsPages/ArsenSavadov.html

This Ukrainian artist is represented by Daneyal Mahmood, the brother of Kashya Hildebrand, who owns her own gallery and happens to be the wife of Philipp Hildebrand, the Swiss bank chief who was forced to resign because of his wife’s financial maneuverings. Although Kashya’s story is the one I find fascinating, here are some angels pictures.

January 12, 2012
http://

January 12, 2012
The Right Fit

lareviewofbooks:

ROSTEN WOO

on how the spacesuit was made.

Spaceman © Ed Emshwiller, courtesy of the Emshwiller family

Nicholas de Monchaux
Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo

The MIT Press, March 2011. 380 pp.

Not long ago, I spent an afternoon inside Biosphere II, a 3.14-acre vivarium designed as an experimental “self-contained” ecosystem. Biosphere II hosted two missions — the second aborted in 1994 — in which scientists lived in the dome for a period of two years and six months respectively, in the end learning more about the effects of voluntary human confinement than ecology. The ambitiously named structure (Earth being Biosphere I) was repurposed as a kind of laboratory and tourist attraction. Best known today as the inspiration for the Pauly Shore movie Biodome, the destination offers guided tours of thinly conceived ecosystems: a salty, brackish pond with a wave machine stands in for the ocean; huge vents cut into the site’s floor supply an arid desert with a warm breeze. Most impressive are the building’s soccer-field-sized “lungs”: structures outfitted with rubber diaphragms that stretch to accommodate the expansion and contraction of internal air over the course of an Arizona day. Today, Biosphere II is mostly compelling as a thought experiment — one that you can walk around in. It seems unlikely that the simulated ocean will yield particularly useful experimental data, but as an art project or a philosophical provocation, it’s pretty powerful. What does it mean to build a whole world? One inside of another? Standing in a constructed desert gazing through glass at a larger, surrounding desert, it’s easy to start thinking about insides and outsides, about the membranes that at once separate atmospheres and contain them.

Spacesuit, architect Nicholas de Monchaux’s wonderful material history, is mostly about these membranes. The book begins with that iconic photograph of Buzz Aldrin’s figure against the surface of the moon — along with a simple question: “Why is this spacesuit soft?” For an answer, de Monchaux finds it necessary to look as far back as 1783, pulling in examples from fields as far-flung as computer simulation, psychopharmacology, haute couture, and the work of Gil Scott-Heron.

De Monchaux has constructed Spacesuit (maybe slightly too cleverly) as a series of layers, each corresponding to the 21 layers that comprised the A7L space suit of the Apollo missions. The author revels in finding curious details from the material history of the world, and Spacesuit bursts with dinner-party fodder: Did you know that the U.S. government’s documentation of the Bikini Atoll nuclear tests created a worldwide film shortage? Or that the Apollo mission’s computer-backup system was crafted into a binary pattern that was then physically woven into ropes? And that only seamstresses could be called upon to do this work properly?

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(Source: lareviewofbooks)

November 29, 2011
Hi Mummy!

You can delete this when you start, but I’m just posting to show you how easy it is.  

first: login

then you get the view of your “Dashboard” which is like, where you can make stuff happen and see what other people you follow are doing.  kind of like Home on Fbonk.  

Then you chose what media you want to post, picture, video etc. you can post a picture and text together but it will either make the pic small (if you choose text and then upload a photo) or the text weird (if you choose photo and then write alot  for a caption). 

“Tags” which you see when you’re writing a post, on the right hand side its a little box),

is where you can tag what you’re posting. You can use it to make it easier for people to find stuff on your blog, like from google (like if you post a picture of me with a pumpkin on my head you can TAG “pumpkin” “stuff on head) or you can be more poetic about your tags (for the same picture you could TAG “sleepy hollow thanksgiving” or “paging dr. trier”) but it’s not the same as a caption.

When you want to see what you posted, you go back to dashboard and hit “Open Like a Drunk” which is a little tab on the right.  It’s not the same as the tab on the top which says Like a Drunk,  that’s just part of the dashboard.  

It’s very very easy once you get used to it.  

When you look at other people’s tumblrs you can click FOLLOW on the upper right hand corner

The other thing is Liking stuff and Reblogging but thats simple and we’ll talk about it when you’re ready.

Good Luck!

wink

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