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PRISMATICA from Kit Webster on Vimeo.

Prismatica by Kit Webster

“Prismatica consists of an arrangement of pyramid-shaped crystals affixed to an LCD screen and illuminated with programmed geometric animation. The animated patterns are precisely mapped to the vertices of the crystals, illuminating them individually and in formation. The animations are further refracted through the geometry of the crystals in accordance with the shifting perspective of the observer, which in turn alters the way the illuminations appear and interact with reflections of surrounding lights within the space.”

Kit Webster

via: Today and Tomorrow

Melt by Simon Harsent

I recently stumbled across this gorgeous photo series by photographer Simon Harsent. I found similarly amazing iceberg images from another photographer last year (I think?), but these are pretty much on par.

“This portfolio begins with images of the massive icebergs as they enter Greenland’s Disco Bay from the Ilulissat Icefjord; it ends with the icebergs off the East Coast of Newfoundland, by which time they have travelled hundreds of miles, and have been so battered and broken down that they are little more than ghosts of what they once were. Seeing them first overpowering in grandeur and then, later, about to be absorbed back into the flux from which they came, is both beautiful and humbling: a metamorphosis that endows them with a life-span, each with it’s own personality, each with it’s own story.”

via: iGNANT

First Episode of Descending on CityTV

The first episode of Descending, a television program featuring some of my older music, is now available to watch on CityTV‘s website. Two of my songs can be heard in this episode, one of which is the closing track.

Watch here: Descending on CityTV

Books for Prisoners

I was recently informed that my friend and University of Windsor graduate student Mike DiRisio is starting a great new project called Books for Prisoners. The blog is also a good resource for news relating to the Canadian prison system.

“The Windsor based Books for Prisoners project is focused on promoting literacy and creativity in the Canadian prison system. We aim to establish greater access to educational and enriching reading material, while promoting the creativity and self expression of the incarcerated. As well, we hope that while doing this we can begin a dialogue about our prison system, which seems to be slipping more and more from public consciousness.”

People are taking the piss out of you everyday. They butt into your life, take a cheap shot at you and then disappear. They leer at you from tall buildings and make you feel small. They make flippant comments from buses that imply you’re not sexy enough and that all the fun is happening somewhere else. They are on TV making your girlfriend feel inadequate. They have access to the most sophisticated technology the world has ever seen and they bully you with it. They are The Advertisers and they are laughing at you. You, however, are forbidden to touch them. Trademarks, intellectual property rights and copyright law mean advertisers can say what they like wherever they like with total impunity. Fuck that. Any advert in a public space that gives you no choice whether you see it or not is yours. It’s yours to take, re-arrange and re-use. You can do whatever you like with it. Asking for permission is like asking to keep a rock someone just threw at your head. You owe the companies nothing. Less than nothing, you especially don’t owe them any courtesy. They owe you. They have re-arranged the world to put themselves in front of you. They never asked for your permission, don’t even start asking for theirs. -Banksy

Hi, 5 with Alex Asher Daniel

About the Hi, 5 Interview Series

Hi, 5 (5 Questions) is a web-only interview series which presents five questions to artists, activists, and creative thinkers alike. The project acts as an educational device which allows us to gain insight into the narratives that define successful individuals. We are interested in the motivations behind ambitious ideas and how change has been affected by those with the passion for progress in their practice.

About Alex Asher Daniel

Alex Asher Daniel is an American painter residing in New York City. Alex has a show of portraits coming up in March 2012 at the National Black Theatre in Harlem.

Alex Asher Daniel – London Head Number 11

Alex Asher Daniel

February 1/2012

If you had to describe your current self to a 16-year-old you, what would you say?

I still feel 16 at times, just with more battle scars. In many ways I am trying to reach back and find where I was as a child. There is a pure love of art and music when you are young, really letting it embrace you, an enchantment. I want the feeling again of loving a band and their music, before you actually met them and it ruined everything.

Could you describe an evolution in your work or way of thinking?

The work can not help but evolve if it is coming from a truthful place, because you yourself are ever changing. Even when I have made a point to work in a uniform series- each time I begin a new painting I feel as though I have never painted before. I have found myself consistently drawn to certain subject matter, but the approach to how I paint it is always changing. In my early work I was inspired by the figure, but I was intrigued by the shape of letters, numbers and blocks of colour. I incorporated that into my work, and it came across very graphic and two-dimensional. Today, I still explore the human body, but I am searching for meaning within the unseen space around my subject- it makes for a much more multidimensional experience.

Are there any people who have been instrumental in the development of your way of thinking and viewing the world?

That’s a big question. Off the top of my head… Of course, a great influence early on were my parents and their sensitivity for the arts and music, and their awareness of the human dynamic. The places I grew up in my youth, and the communities that surrounded me, especially the bay area and it’s social and spiritual consciousness.

The poet, Michael McClure, who was my English teacher in college, encouraged me to continue my studies in mysticism and the esoteric, both of which have been great influences on my work. There was a book I read when I was younger, an analysis of John Coltrane’s music by Bill Cole, which was a great inspiration at the time. My friendship with Caetano Veloso, who has such a beautiful heart, inspired me to have a more delicate approach to being. Around the time I first arrived in New York City, I met the designer Bill Katz. Bill let me use his studio, which is where I did my first series of portraits, so that was an important time for me. He also introduced me to my favorite scotch. There are so many more… but I will spare you.

How do your political beliefs inform or fuel your work as an artist?

I grew up in an environment surrounded by activism, and I feel that when done intelligently, the arts are the most powerful means of expression and education. I, however, am drawn to more ethereal explorations, so at times I was concerned with whether I should speak out more in my work, but then I realized that our works’ existence alone is revolutionary.

What do you feel a city should be or do for its inhabitants?

A city does nothing for its inhabitants but exist as a blank canvas for what you can manifest. Participate.

http://www.alexasherdaniel.com/

LadyMeta Presents: LeTwelve from LadyMeta Productions on Vimeo.

LeTwelve Project by LadyMeta Productions

The duo who produced the video for Kevin Echlin and I’s song “Olive Skin” are planning to make 12 music videos in 2012. Please contact them at ladymetaproductions(at)gmail.com if you are interested or know someone who is.

Flowers Series by Matthias Schade

I find these uprooted frozen-in-midair flower photographs pretty stunning. They were conceptualized and shot by German photographer Matthias Schade.

via: iGNANT

Buenos Aires - Inception Park from Black Sheep Films on Vimeo.

Inception Park by Black Sheep Films

I had envisioned a photo series of urban roller coasters in Windsor, but the idea never left my art ideas list. It’s nice to see what the idea would look like in motion and set in the beautiful streets of Buenos Aires.

via: Colossal

Held Within What Hung Open by Gregory Euclide

Does this look familiar to you? It might if you recall the album artwork for Bon Iver‘s self-titled album released last year. Both of these works were produced by American multimedia artist Gregory Euclide. The full title of the work shown is Held Within What Hung Open and Made to Lie Without Escape.

“It is set within a gilded frame that is interrupted by paper-as-water flowing from the canvas into the gallery space which then evaporates from a riverbed. Boulders are cast from the rocks taken from central park, while the grass is formed from glue, paint and hair. On the right side of the work, several cut plastic bottles are clustered together, existing as miniature isolated environments within the piece. Euclide created several dioramas constructed from found trash such as plastic, foam, sponge, and fertilizer he accrued while walking in a park. These items helped sculpt a world depicting what the artist sees as the ‘same kind of fake control over nature that allows us to be comfortable with the destruction of it‘.

via: Designboom

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