August 19, 2008

Best DU OP of the Month

What if huge oil reserves were discovered up dick cheney's *ss?

Would we invade and occupy? Would the ol' face shooter move to an undisclosed location to protect his assets?

Would we drill there, drill now?

As one respondent said, "Shock and Ow!"

Thanks, Philosoraptor!

August 18, 2008

Why I'm not sure I can ever stay on Manhattan again, unless it's for free.


The cupcakes are cool; but.

If only the implicit promise were true, that you'll be cute if what you eat is cute!

For What It's Worth

Some work I'd have liked to have included in The Program, if we'd had the means, by the Russian collective, AES+F: see here et seq. (from the 2007 Venice Biennial; as usual, I felt like I missed getting the best parts) and here.

Sharp Intake of Breath

1,503,631 views so guess I'm the only one who missed this. If you haven't seen it, it's a must:



Ever-erect hair forever!

August 16, 2008

UPDATE: The Program, Week Four

So click here for full details regarding this week's exhibition, which includes two more pieces by Nathalie Djurberg, Stealing Beauty by Guy Ben-Ner, and iMirror (A Second Life Documentary Film by China Tracy a.k.a. Cao Fei).

But here's the
scoop on one installation new this week. In Second Life, eteam has created a dumpster for the virtual things people there decide to delete. At right, see a bunch of "virtual-virtual" objects selected by me, Danette Dufilho, and AC Abbott per eteam's guidelines to resemble such discarded items (which were of course originally designed to look real). These objects were then photographed by Ben Britt and me from multiple angles, and eteam used the photographs to construct virtual-virtual-virtual objects, which they placed in their dumpster in Second Life -- see the following virtual photographs of the objects they made and put there (if you see the objects in "Real Life," eteam's work is even more impressive -- nice work, eteam!). Next, eteam "filmed" the programmed decay of these objects, sent me the file, and it's playing on the tv included in the installation.

The artists see Second Life Dumpster as "a continuation of their interest in the value of property, possibilities of land use, (web) site specificity, ownership, and investment."

I also see this project as, among other things, part of a trend toward art as mad scientist-experiment. See more of eteam's findings from this research here.



Police Plan to Track Every Vehicle that Enters Manhattan

Via cryptogon (thanks, Ben!) Like, wow, that "Ring of Steel" really helped London prevent the 7-7-05 bombings.

Paul McCarthy Turd Rampage

"A giant inflatable . . . turd created by the American artist Paul McCarthy was blown from its moorings at [the Paul Klee Centre in Berne, Switzerland], bringing down a power line and breaking a window before landing in the grounds of a children's home.

"The exhibit, entitled Complex Shit, is the size of a house."

McCarthy was selling butt plugs for X-mas; but who knew?

Test via The Guardian UK; photo via The Mayor of Mitchieville.

Velvet Portrait of Stephen Hawking

Hand-painted by professional artist ARGO in Tijuana, Mexico for Indignico Inc. and The Toy Baroness (2008). Personally, I think Hawking's physical reality is more grueling than this conveys, and I'd like the painting better if it did convey that; but still too cool to resist. Via boingboing.