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Monthly Archives: April 2024
Waiting to Work
I was recently surprised to discover a glass enclosure about the size of a large shipping container with mummy-like figures peering out. The installation is situated in Philadelphia’s Independence Historic National Park, at Market Street between 5th and 6th, near the … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Museums, Tourism, USA
Tagged Independence Historic National Park, National Constitution Center, Philadelphia, Street Art
1 Comment
my hope is vertical
TODAY, MY HOPE IS VERTICAL Jane Hirshfield Today, my hope is vertical. Tomorrow it will be horizontal. The next day, cloudy. My hope is like a Greek myth: exchanging skin for bark, bark for scales, scales for the hollow bones … Continue reading
Conflict Cartography
I was recently bemoaning the fact that the main stream media in the United States can’t seem to focus on more than two serious conflicts at the same time, and even then, the coverage is sorely lacking. But I just … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Europe, History, Maps, Middle East, Tech, USA
Tagged Cartography, Gaza, Israel, Ukraine
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New York City is the best movie set in the world
Texas-born filmmaker Jordan Studdard grew up with dreams of living in New York City. Now that he’s been there for seven years, he created an homage to his adopted hometown with a wall-sized map of the city, dotted with tiny … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Film, Maps, movies, Tourism, USA
Tagged Cinema, Friends, New York City
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Go To A Happy Place
One Minute Park: I really, really enjoy this pure dead simple website. One Minute Park couldn’t be more basic – click the link and you get transported to a full-screen video, in landscape, which lasts for exactly 60 seconds and … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Europe, Film, Tourism, USA
Tagged Amsterdam, Brooklyn, green space, parks
3 Comments
First Impressions
On April 15, 1874, thirty artists, including Edgar Degas, Paul Cezanne, Claude Monet, Berthe Morisot, Camille Pissarro, Pierre Auguste Renoir, and Alfred Sisley, held an exhibition of their works in Paris, at the Boulevard des Capucines, the vacant studio of the photographer Nadar (Gaspard-Félix … Continue reading
Literacy for Life
The Literacy Pen by The World Literacy Foundation and the Dutch firm Media.Monks is an amazing educational device designed to enable illiterate individuals to start writing and learning to read, instantly. Open source and compatible with all standard pens on … Continue reading
Maps, Art and AI
The very clever guys behind the website Brilliant Maps have utilized artificial intelligence programming to conjure up some quite interesting maps based on the painting styles of some great artists. You can see the results on their website and on YouTube in … Continue reading
Posted in Animation, Art, Film, Maps
Tagged AI, Cartography, Gustav Klimt, MidJourney, Painting
1 Comment
Smoke Signals
Mt.Etna‘s Southeast Crater has begun emitting countless graceful vapor rings (“volcanic vortex rings”), a phenomenon never seen like this before. Someone said “maybe because we receive so much bad news lately, Etna has decided to do something simply beautiful”.
