2012-02-02
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012 of 366
From a prepared Kodak DC215 1 megapixel digital camera.
’56. What makes good glitch art good is that, amidst a seemingly endless flood of images, it maintains a sense of the wilderness within the computer.’ — Hugh S. Manon and Daniel Temkin, Notes on Glitch (via)
2012-01-27
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From the series A Tale of Obsession: David C. Nolan and Marilyn Monroe, by Jacinda Russell, June 2011.
2012-01-19
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Creative Review: Photo50: The New Alchemists:
Julie Cockburn, whose work is shown above, uses found photographs as a basis for her artworks, but then defaces and redesigns them by cutting, sewing or adding objects until a new image is formed
The objects in this case are pieces from the board game Skirrid, which is a sort of mathematical version of Scrabble. I remember it fondly. (via)
2011-12-03
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“pure vernunft darf niemals siegen” by Thomas Weidenhaupt (found in the Boston Review).
2010-04-26
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2009-07-09
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Fulgurator can be used anywhere where there is another camera nearby that is being used with a flash. It operates via a kind of reactive flash projection that enables an image to be projected on an object exactly at the moment when someone else is photographing it
A camera can be used as a personal memory tool, since people do not doubt the veracity of their own photographs. Hence, photos can reproduce the reality of an individual environment or public space. At sacred or popular locations, or those having a political connotation, an intervention with the Fulgurator can be particularly effective.







