News, discography, video, and all projects related to Matt Dean.
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Halber Mensch (1986) Directed by Sogo Ishii Performed by Einstürzende Neubauten and butoh collective DaiRakudokan.
If you haven’t seen this from the mid 80’s, you’ll find the angst of the age in some of us wasn’t just Joy Division and pseudo-rebellion, but real terror and angst. Unfortunately, too much of that has become true, and or uncovered from dark secrets.
Glad to hear the clang and bang, and the sounds and images of my childhood soul burning loud and free……and watching the ghost who follow the ash.
Gives me a stomach ache just seeing the picture. Felt the same way first time I got trashed on screwdriver. I am 45 and I was 17 when that happened, and still remember Screwdriver on Saturday, and trying to kill the hangover with MD the next day. Only ended up in the loss of body fluids and an even worse headache than the first time…
(Source: vangr)
Perceiving the ones that are important enough to document, then doing so in some medium, is not finger painting.
Special thanks to Bird Paradigma http://soundcloud.com/sarasantos for use of the track The Arkheion http://soundcloud.com/sarasantos/the-arkheion
a remarkable piece in itself before I imposed my twisted ideas upon it…
Electronic Experimental
Scanning electron micrographs of diatoms, microscopic algae that form the base of the food chain and produce 20% of Earth’s oxygen.
X2710
A close up of a Nictitating Membrane, it is a trait found on birds as well as reptiles that allow the animal to retain vision while moistening the eye. It is in effect, a second eyelid.
Cinder block throwing robots playing catch with cinder block in very successful effort to scare any humans who might be watching
From Co.Design on Adam Ferriss’ art made by re-sorting pixels of existing images using open source code:
“For this particular collection of greyscale patterns, Ferriss used code written in the popular programming language Processing that employed two techniques: pixel sorting and cellular automata. Starting with a photograph of a wave crashing against a craggy shore, Ferriss first used code to sort the pixels from brightest to darkest (his program was a tweaked version of one written by fellow artist Jeff Thompson). Then Ferriss made a greyscale version of that image and sorted its pixels again. At this point in the process, the original ocean scene is totally unrecognizable, having been rearranged pixel by pixel into a bouquet of monochrome diamonds.”
Cool! Thanks Everlane!
Listen to Jaguars & Shamen by Jack Hertz and Cousin Slias.
Look what I just found on SoundCloud: http://soundcloud.com/aos-crowley/unsilent-city-rain