Thursday 8 November 2018

durchfรคhrt

Being very well acquainted with the city (check the label for Saxony for more), we enjoyed indulging in this film artefact, courtesy of TYWKIWDBI, that delivers a whistle-stop tour of Leipzig by street car (StraรŸenbahn) from 1931 and did recognise several streets and landmarks in passing. As the source recommends, use your imagination to create an immersive experience as you transverse the city at speed.

2 u.s.c. § 192

On the heels of an extraordinarily antagonistic, rambling press conference that saw one news organisation stripped of their White House credentials, bullied ascendant Democrats and Republicans who lost elections, antithetical Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III tendered his resignation at the request of Trump, his announcement upstaged by presidential tweet.
Though his tenure was highly contentious, Sessions’ continued presence lent an air of legitimacy to an investigation into the Trump campaign’s connections to the Russian oligarchy—which Trump never forgave his earliest supporter for recusing himself from (reportedly, the two were not on speaking-terms)—and protests are mobilising to ensure that whomever replaces Sessions at the department’s helm will not obstruct the investigation and allow it to continue unimpeded. To put this chaos in context, with little to no power in government, Democrats and patriotic Republicans were still able to curb Trump’s worse inclinations and impulse, and now that they’ve managed to gain a toehold—one-half of one-third of the branches of the federal government is certainly more than that though it sounds small—the Trump syndicate is terrified by what the “power of inquiry” in Democrats’ hands (to their chagrin, congressional Republicans changed the rules on House led investigations back in 2015, making it easier to subpoena individuals unilaterally, and failure to respond to a summons means one is in contempt of Congress) could reveal about the US Grifter-in-Chief.

Wednesday 7 November 2018

brand loyalty

As Deezen informs, though we’re coming to the party a little late with the campaigning ostensibly over and only the ballots left to be tallied, a freshly organised Centre for American Politics and Design has distilled and grouped the logos of over a thousand recently concluded political races in order to forward the dialogue on the role that graphic design plays in democracy.

Tools at the archive all for users to filter and
adjust how they compare and contrast the posters and perhaps identify common elements and and better understand how messages are limned. The aggregator, which is also a good means of uncovering how a platform and race might invoke name recognition through convergent branding—we think—will be a good resource and application going forward as well.

sore-loser

Our faithful chronicler, Doctor Caligari, informs that among many other premieres and momentous occasions that occurred on this day, in 1962 Richard Nixon, a sixteen year political veteran, delivered a rather acrimonious concession speech to a gathering of supporters and reporters after learning of the electoral win of incumbent Pat Brown, who would remain the governor of California, a traditionally Republican stronghold at the time, for another term. The contender lashed out at the media, snarling, “you don’t have Nixon to kick around any more, because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference.” Be careful what you wish for.  Brown was defeated and replaced by Ronald Regan in the 1966 race but his son, Jerry Brown Jr. went on to become the thirty-fourth and thirty-ninth and current governor of the state.

6x6

spitzmaus mummy in a coffin and other treasures: Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum’s guest curators, Wes Anderson and Juman Malouf

siss-boom-bah: antique Japanese fireworks catalogues

invaderz: a twist on the classic arcade game whose advancing armada evolves (relatedly) during play

a declaration of future independence: antiquarian JF Ptak shares the scarce text of Czechoslovakian president Edvard Beneลก’ nullification of the Munich Agreement, which was promised to usher in “peace in our time”

not the stockholm syndrome: Swedish capital takes a stand on the privatisation of public spaces (previously), via Super Punch

ๆšฆ:dioramist and art director Tatsuya Tanaka (previously) is sharing a daily calendar of his miniatures assembled from the everyday, via Nag on the Lake   

Tuesday 6 November 2018

all roads lead to rome

Covering a familiar subject, the Map Room directs our attention to an interactive and animated study of a thirteenth century reproduction of a Roman illustrated itinerarium—that is, a road map that shows the network of the cursus publicus (previously) of the Empire around the time of the reign of Augustus, called the Tabula Peutingeriana after the sixteenth century Augsburger antiquarians, Konrad Peutinger and his wife Margaretha Welser, who conserved this artefact.  The seven metre long scroll is made a bit more wieldly and accessible by depicting it as a side-scrolling animation with additional features that, for instance, allow one to toggle between the ancient and modern toponyms for places along the routes. Inscribed into the UNESCO registry in 2007, learn more about the unique strip map and the ongoing scholarship surrounding it at the pair of links up top.

old dutch master

Plain Magazine directs our attention to the impressive portfolio of Dutch artist Suzanne Jongmans whose project Mind over Matter materialised over a fortunate shortage in costuming and a bit of improvisation.

Crafting elaborate cauls, collars and headwear out of packing supplies and protective sheaves, Jongmanns poses her subjects in the style of seventeenth century Dutch and Flemish portraiture, perfectly framing the tradition of taking tronies (Dutch for face)—as articulated by painters like Frans Hals, Johannes Vermeer and Pieter Brueghel the Elder who strove to capture human visage at its most expressive. The pictured model with a recycled wimple is a faithful homage to Rogier van der Weyden’s 1460 Portret van enn dame.