Lithub contributor Emily Temple has collected the hundred most quoted, remixed and generally famed passages from Western, mostly anglophile literary traditions and arranged them in incrementally tougher order and challenges the readership to see how many one can identify—for the laurels of honour and glory. How many can you recognise? Given the Mount Parnassus of books that we are heir to, it is surprising to see the bias of recency prevalent in what are considered the classics, with only a few venturing beyond the past couple of centuries. Partial credit is of course awarded and many cite the answer in the quotation.
Saturday, 27 February 2021
gezicht in delft
The 1652 painting A View of Delft with A Musical Instrument Seller’s Stall by Carel Fabritius (*27 February 1622 - †1654, student of Rembrandt and had his own studio in Amsterdam) typifies the painter’s style, a departure from that of the master in experimentation with foreshortening and spatial effects. The exaggerated angle of the cityscape suggests it might have been intended to be displayed on the curved surface of a perspective box (perspectiefdoos), using light, camera obscura and architectural elements (see previously) to create an illusion of depth.
the question project
Friday, 26 February 2021
bitmap bull finch
Via Present /&/ Correct, we really enjoyed these graphics of pixelated renderings of common birds of Japan (ๆฅๆฌใฎ้้ณฅไธ่ฆง) and especially, vis-ร -vis a pair of our recent posts, could firstly relate to the slander and naming conventions of obvious avian defamers and secondly to more personalised labels for new electronic file folders and its source catalogue. Much more to explore at the links above.
6x6
affiche: early Art Deco posters of Renรฉ Magritte
dogs of war: a public service announcement issuing guidance on how to disable Boston Dynamics weaponised Spot units
whitewash: thankfully, President Biden is able to overturn “beautiful” architecture executive order that would mandate neo-classicism in federal buildings
clothes peg: the clothesline animals of Helga Stentzel
second life: exploring and conserving the abandoned spaces of the internet
mask media: brilliant Soviet Kazakh health promotion campaigns from the 1970s—see also
pandemonium
In a pioneering paper outlining the principals of neural networks and parallel processing, Oliver Selfridge (*1926 – †2008), a founding proponent of artificial intelligence and called the Father of Machine Perception, proposed in 1959 an architecture of distributed demons that underpins our ideas about machine learning and adversarial behaviour. The model was realised in a 1977 psychology textbook illustrated by Leanne Hinton as a flow chart for both biological and computerised analogues. Learn more at Mind Hacks at the link above.
Thursday, 25 February 2021
hรผgel und tal
Taking a rather long, meandering afternoon walk now that Spring has arrived, I headed towards the former border and thought to follow the patrol road, the Kolonnenweg to its terminus understanding that there was a large tri-colour marker to be found there. I think I took a wrong turn or failed to go on long enough but came to a rise below the Hohe Schule and hill top clearing that provided a good view of Hermannsfeld and the border tower now a monument beyond. Believing I knew a way to return home without backtracking, I followed a logging trail around the mountain and down into a valley of pastures, which I though was familiar at first but then realised I had gone considerably further out of the way than I had intended and ended up in the fields north of Euรenhausen where the former control point and crossing to Meiningen is conserved as a monument.
Trying to get my bearings and finding a cycle path to follow, I discovered the ruins of a church belfry belonging to a settlement called Elmbach or Ellenbach—vacated along with surrounding property during the era of divided Germany as it was too close to the border (see previously), the ruin a reminder of a sixteenth century desertion but yet a poignant symbol, lonely in the fields whatever the circumstance. The tower houses a chapel and since 1989 has been re-consecrated as a symbol of reunion.
catagories: ๐ฉ๐ช, Bavaria, Rhรถn, Thรผringen
Wednesday, 24 February 2021
axonometric projection
Via Things Magazine, we discover the portfolio of Margarethe Frรถhlich (*1901 - †2001), architectural illustrator and modeller, who created straightforward yet expressive interiors to allow clients to preview their rooms with furnishings.
Working in Munich, Prague, London and then New York, Frรถhlich collaborated with Raymond Loewy (previously) and went on to teach at Columbia University. The title refers to the specific foreshortening techniques that allows a viewer to perceive more than one side of an object on a flat surface without overt distortion by skewing the axes and angles. In contrast to the auxiliary view of an ensemble depicted from one of the primary presentations—that is, front, back, left, right bottom or top, an axonometric picture does not privilege any principle axis and instead creates the illusion—the lines of sight—of two in parallel. More to explore at the links above.









