Beano and Boxcar, are taking a hiatus from the blog. We will back soon enough, but for now we are pursuing solo/independent ideas.
Boxcar can be found over at her name was boxcar, continually sharing things he finds interesting from his world around him.
Rumors surround Beano and something about interesting weather patterns. Stay tuned.
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Where's My Flux Capacitor, Doc?
Magnetic Movie from Semiconductor on Vimeo.
I copped this from Paul Hornschemeier's blog News and/or Head Lice . I really do feel like I need to spark one up to watch this through the whole way & 'get' its true essence. Haha!
It's actually an excellent artpiece slash scientific doc called Magnetic Movie. I'm far too sunkissed and beaten from a wrestling session I had with my bike and some streetcar tracks this afternoon to give this film the intro it deserves. But please do check it out. It's mesmerizing. Audio on high/headphones is recommended... Maybe not 11 11 11 high, but... you know... High enough to annoy the neighbours & make dogs run around deliriously chasing their tails.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
fact unchecked

This and many more fun facts can be found and challenged over at Justin Feinstein's newest web creation. As he explains "... fact unchecked is the after dinner breath-mint to the information saturation buffet. Any similarity to actual truth is coincidental, unintentional, and gravely unfortunate."
Awkward Family Photos

via swissmiss
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
A band not to miss :: Crystal Antlers

They are back in Toronto for NXNE so make sure not to miss them this time around.
Photo courtesy of Matthew Neufeld
Björk plays Dirty

via flavorwire
Friday, May 8, 2009
From Tapes To Texts

Supposedly the internet is abuzz with excited reviews of Iri5's series Ghost In the Machine. Portraits of famous artists (musicians mostly, by the looks of what's out there) done with manipulated cassette tape tape (old film reels as well). I quite enjoyed this Robert Smith number.
But it got me to thinking about another artist whose art is molded out of cassette tapes. His name is Brian Dettmer. And if I'd never stumbled across a tiny little blurb about him once in a magazine, I would have surely missed out on this insanity.




Labels:
Art,
awesome,
Brian Dettmer,
Chicago,
Iri5,
Packer Schopf Gallery
Pop Sandbox launch party - May 9th

I will let Sarah's voice explain the rest, "The first project that Alex is publishing is a graphic novel about Igor Kenk; the notorious bike thief. He and my friend Jason were filming and interviewing Igor for over a year, right up until his arrest in 2008. Interesting stuff."
Do make an appearance, and make sure you make it over to the Toronto Reference Library this weekend and take as many pictures as you can of Beano in her attractive TCAF t-shirt. I know she will love it.

Labels:
beano,
igor kenk,
pilot taveren,
pop sandbox,
seth,
TCAF
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
NYC Souvenir

The talented people over at BROOKLYNrehab have lots of other fun stuff over at their etsy site.
Check them out!
Pigeon Feather Art

Simply stunning!
Monday, May 4, 2009
Sunday, May 3, 2009
TCAF 2009
If you dig small press, graphic novels and/or comics, you should definitely check out the Toronto Comic Arts Festival next weekend (May 9th & 10th)! Even if you don't think it's your bag, you should drop by because you might see something there that changes your mind.
For those of you with ankle-biters -- there's gonna be a whole kids section w/Owl Magazine on site & a presentations/activities room on the Sunday.
I'm not even going to bother listing some of the guests (there are craploads). Just go here: TCAF '09
TCAF '09 is going to be the biggest TCAF to date. So please, please, please try not to miss out!
And it's FREE!!
(Yoshihiro Tatsumi)
This year, I have volunteered myself for the event. So, if you do show, you'll be able (at the very least) to heckle me while I run about in my bright red TCAF shirt -- ushering co-dorks to and fro.For those of you with ankle-biters -- there's gonna be a whole kids section w/Owl Magazine on site & a presentations/activities room on the Sunday.
I'm not even going to bother listing some of the guests (there are craploads). Just go here: TCAF '09
TCAF '09 is going to be the biggest TCAF to date. So please, please, please try not to miss out!
Labels:
Aaron Costain,
Anime,
Art,
Bryan Lee O'Malley,
Emily Holton,
Gabrielle Bell,
TCAF,
Yoshihiro Tatsumi
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Happy Earth Day You Consumer Slob


Running the Numbers: An American Self-Portrait
Running the Numbers looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. My hope is that images representing these quantities might have a different effect than the raw numbers alone, such as we find daily in articles and books. Statistics can feel abstract and anesthetizing, making it difficult to connect with and make meaning of 3.6 million SUV sales in one year, for example, or 2.3 million Americans in prison, or 32,000 breast augmentation surgeries in the U.S. every month.
This project visually examines these vast and bizarre measures of our society, in large intricately detailed prints assembled from thousands of smaller photographs. Employing themes such as the near versus the far, and the one versus the many, I hope to raise some questions about the roles and responsibilities we each play as individuals in a society that is increasingly enormous, incomprehensible, and overwhelming.
~chris jordan, Seattle, 2008
via dearclaire
Labels:
america,
consumerism,
Earth Day,
information,
statistics
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Michel Gondry Rocks My World
3's a charm, it seems, with my blogging antics today. I'm on a roll, I guess... I just had to share this trailer with you for a film called Tokyo! -- which brings together 3 whacky directors (Michel Gondry, Leos Carax and Bong Joon-ho) who bless us with their unique visions of an awesome city.
Not sure when this one is coming to Toronto (if ever), but it is currently making its rounds in select theatres States-side. Gondry may have flopped (as some might say, but I'll still stand firm in loyalty) with Be Kind Rewind & The Science of Sleep, but I'm sure he will make our eyes bleed pure cinemahappiness with this latest endeavour.
How Many More Sleeps Until Fall?!!
Yes, yes, yes -- there is a fancy-pants version of this trailer on Apple, and I've given you the low-brow version ripped from another site here (in meantime). But Boxcar was practically peeing himself with glee about this little snippet of what's in store for the full feature film adaptation of Where the Wild Things Are that I figured I'd promptly post this to share with y'all (if you haven't seen yet).
All we can both say in reaction to this is: HO-LEE-SHEEEE-AT!!!
OTAKU - Who Knew?

I wasn't that gripped by the 1st part of the lecture. Prof. Berndt seemed to be walking us through verbal recount of an essay she wrote. Her criticism of anime being/not being the true key to Japanese understanding identity was a little wandering. I may have been distracted by her strange accent (German affected by years of teaching in Japan... in what I am assuming would be fluent Japanese). Or maybe I wandered off with her funny quips & selections of clips from classic anime shows/films. But I felt comfortable amongst the full-house of anime fans in the room -- sharing giggles & guffaws at her 'inside' jokes about certain anime styles or characters. At once feeling part of a special club of people, but also laughing at my own dorkiness (thinking of how my love of anime/comics sets me apart from most of my friends & how most of them just wouldn't 'get it').
The 2nd part of the lecture was what perked my attention & has had a lasting impact on me. It blew my mind! Prof. Morikawa is a freaking awesome & awe inspiring lecturer. He's an expert in the culture of Otaku. And it's apparent from his breadth of knowledge & the way he divulges this information -- just how personal and intimate this subject is to him.
Otaku is a term that was coined in the mid-80s to signify a new personality which emerged as a reaction to the 'loss of future'. The term has attached itself to the stereotype of a computer nerd or social outcast who is obsessed with gaming, fantasy and anime -- even long after adolescence. Early Otakus were generally men who had given up on the promise, progress and futuristic appeal of technology. Technology lay by the wayside during times of war & economic downturn. And as technology became more accessible to consumers, the shops specializing in techno-gadgetry, located in specific city districts, became less centralized -- spreading to the burbs.
Left behind were the very people who dreamed and built and believed in the future city. In technology. With the advent of the personal computer, these refugees of the lost era of future-progress (sci-fi dreamers) became the labourers & experts in building, programming, selling & repairing the machines. Soon, the district of Tokyo called Akihabara, became a place where computer geeks congregated. And so adopted the name 'The Electric Town'. A bizarre transformation of the district occurred which was not the result of strategic planning but of the geographical concentration of a certain type of personality (the Otaku).
What struck me most was just how much the personality & concentration of the population of Otakus has affected the architecture of the place/space they congregate in. Known to be mainstream-society outcasts -- the Otakus' tastes and lifestyles seem to carry a weight of shame. So the Otakus tend to carry out their lifestyle in private or covertly. For this reason, the buildings and complexes which house markets vending anime, electronics and other fantasy wares, are usually windowless or plastered with concealing billboards & signs. Which isn't to say that it's not openly evident what you are there for, when you're in the notorious Electric Town -- 12-storey neon billboards of doe-eyed anime characters smiling down at you all coquettish... But the cityscape is different here. Especially as Prof. Morikawa juxtaposed for us photos of busy, trendy consumer Tokyo districts (more mainstream) against shots of Otakus in Akihabara. Mainstream society districts have open, airy spaces with transparent buildings (lots of windows). It's as though these people want to make a show of their social status -- flaunting their consumerism, their happiness & their outgoing personalities.
I can do no justice to the insane amount of information that was bestowed upon us in the lecture. I'm hoping that the Japan Foundation releases an audio-cast, video or transcript of the Otaku lecture sometime soon. I encourage you to read up on this phenomenon -- even if you aren't a fan of anime or know very little about any of those offshoots/subcultures. Otaku is such an interesting & perplexing facet of sociological and urban planning study.
Some things I was especially wowed by that you might want to check out include...
- Ikeburo Otome (Maiden) Road -- the female Otaku district of Tokyo (female Otakus congregating in their own gendercentric spot because interaction with male Otakus is awkward & the interests these two groups consume is very different)
- Rental Showcases -- there are whole floors of shopping centres in Akihabara that are lined with glass cubbies (display cases, stacked in rows upon eachother), that are rented out to fans/consumers for the purpose of showcasing & selling their anime wares (figurines, books & other paraphernalia)
- Garage Kits -- there are stores that specialize in these models & model kits for hobbyists who like to build and collect anime characters/figurines -- amazing obsession! Holy crap!
- The 'Otaku!' Exhibit at the Japanese Pavilion of the 2004 Venice Biennial International Architecture Exhibition (some pictures included here) -- the exhibit was insane enough to house a re-creation of 100s of Rental Showcases that contained miniature scale models of Otaku bedrooms/apartments, housed inside of a larger scale model Otaku apartment
- Yaoi -- 'Boys' Love' media which baffled me... homoerotic or homoromantic fiction that is created mainly by & for females
- Violence associated with Otaku culture -- see Akihabara Massacre, Osaka School Massacre, murderer Tsutomu Miyazaki
Photo: example of a Rental Showcase - taken from Otaku! exhibit at 2004 Venice Biennial
Photo: really small pic -- but miniature scale models of Otaku rooms from exhibit at
2004 Venice Biennial

2004 Venice Biennial
More Links...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/06/AR2005060601767.html
http://www.jnto.go.jp/eng/indepth/featuredarticles/kie/akihabara/kie_akihabara_06.html
http://secure.giantrobot.com/products.php?code=GR52 (if you can find this issue someplace...)
Takashi Murakami on his art & Otaku culture...
http://www.jca-online.com/murakami.html
With Murakami gaining recognition in pop culture & art circles abroad in Western civilization (Europe, UK, North America), the art of Superflat and the media of the Otaku culture may quickly become more popular or mainstream.
More Murakami...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/06/AR2005060601767.html
http://www.jnto.go.jp/eng/indepth/featuredarticles/kie/akihabara/kie_akihabara_06.html
http://secure.giantrobot.com/products.php?code=GR52 (if you can find this issue someplace...)
Takashi Murakami on his art & Otaku culture...
http://www.jca-online.com/murakami.html
With Murakami gaining recognition in pop culture & art circles abroad in Western civilization (Europe, UK, North America), the art of Superflat and the media of the Otaku culture may quickly become more popular or mainstream.
More Murakami...
And the 411 on Dojinshi or fan-created anime stealing from or parodying Manga...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C5%8Djinshi
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C5%8Djinshi
Monday, March 23, 2009
Death :: This Band Was Punk Before Punk Was Punk

A great article was written in the New York times a few Sundays ago. Check out the full article here.
Now, all I want to do now is listen to Bowie and Velvet Underground all day.
Rock-n-Roll Victim
Politicians in my Eyes
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
We're all going to die - 100 years of existence

He spent 20 days in Berlin on a railroad bridge, photographing 178 subjects capturing a various array of emotions and expressions. He then stitched together a single 100-meter-long (YES! 100 Meters!) composite picture, which you can scroll.
Amazing! I love the stark white sky and blurred air planes in the background and bike handles in the front. Worth exploring for a few minutes.
Friday, February 6, 2009
I LEGO N.Y.

Still on my theme on NYC, Christoph has some fun with Lego. These had me smiling for hours.
An artist's daydream in a roomful of his kids' toys leads to a view of New York you've never seen.
via his blog Abstract City
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Monday, January 19, 2009
Remembering Andrew Wyeth

via The New York Times
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Favorite Albums of 2008 :: Vivian Girls - Self-Titled

Alright I have to admit the reason I bought this band was because they took their name from Outside artist Henry Darger's opus In the Realms of the Unreal.
Well they exceeded expectations. This trio of girls, from Brooklyn, with their wall of sound create an even split between love and heartbreak. Clocks in at just under 22 minutes. Good stuff. If you like surf music this is something you should add to your library. Fans of the Pixies, Jesus and Mary and Chain or 60's girl groups won't be disappointed.
Such a Joke
Going Insane
No
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Favorite Albums of 2008 :: Torche - Meanderthal

Who doesn't like a catchy riff now and then. File under stoner pop/thunder rock/doom pop.
Pirana
Sandstorm
Without a Sound
Favorite Albums of 2008 :: Foals - Antidotes (UK version)

Mathletics
XXXXX (Live At Liars Club, Nottingham, Feb 10th 2007)
The French Open (Live At Liars Club, Nottingham, Feb 10th 2007)
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