Tuesday 13 March 2018

elemental

First shown as part of a comprehensive exhibition on the artist in the Victoria & Albert Museum in 2013, Open Culture pays a tribute to Paul Robertson’s Periodic Table of David Bowie as its twelve city gallery tour is coming to a close in Brooklyn. Each period and series feature figures that Bowie has either inspired or credits as influencers. Be sure to visit the link above to learn more and to watch a video summary of the arrangement.

time-lapse

We know it’s an advertisement for a major food manufacturer but this spot from Japanese conglomerate Ezaki Glico (probably best known globally for their pocky snacks) that illustrates the stages and milestones of life with seven-two actresses (aged the year of life that they each portray) is really rather a poignant one. Even though Japan enjoys a much longer life-span, the company choose the number to highlight the fact that the world-wide average life-span for women is 71.8 years—though an astronomical improvement over what it was a century ago at a mere thirty-one years.

don’t confuse me with the facts. i’ve got a closed mind.

Serving as a reminder that even in these dark days, the arc of history bends towards justice, we would do good to recall the infamous gaffe of Indiana congressman and noted Nixonian sycophant Earl Fredrick Landgrebe.
Staunchly defending the seemingly indefensible actions of Richard Nixon throughout the Watergate Hearings even as documents surfaced demonstrating that Nixon himself directed aids to hinder the investigation of the break-in, Landgrebe pledged, “I am going to stick with my president even if he and I have to be taken out of this building and shot.” In lieu of impeachment, the very next day (8 August 1974) Nixon tendered his resignation and stepped down from high office. For his pledge of loyalty, Landgrebe was voted out of the House of Representatives a few months later. While such historical anecdotes are heartening, we’d also do well to remember that Americans—as well as dozens of other nations past and present—have systematically surrendered their political will and power by consenting to allow governments to work towards the advantage of business and personal enrichment rather than for the betterment of society.

Monday 12 March 2018

7x7

media diet: what a journalist gleaned by restricting himself to print sources for a period of two months, via Swiss Miss

firmitas, utilitas, venustas: Doctor Balkrishna Vithaldas Doshi, noted for forwarding architectural dialogue and vision in South Asia, is the first Indian awarded the prestigious Pritzker prize—whose motto is founding father Vitruvius’ own

miss congeniality: a look at vintage prom royalty, via Everlasting Blรถrt

the living daylights: an overview of some of the world’s stranger time zones

ombudsman: Wikipedia’s carefully considered editorial decision on how to best illustrate its entry on “human,” via Slashdot

student thesis: thematic parallels between Jurassic Park (1993) and The Towering Inferno (1974)

night on bald mountain: long exposure shots of circling drones create halos in the sky 

ๅ›ฃๅœฐ

Literally meaning “group land,” we are given a visually striking introductory tour of Japan’s danchi—large clusters of apartment towers executed in concrete (previously here, here and here) meant to offset the housing pressures experienced in the 1950s through the 1970s from the country’s then growing population—from Tokyo-based photographer Cody Ellingham.
Though many of the structures are aging, maintained either by the local authorities to provide public housing or by large corporations to provide places to live for their staff and promote workforce cohesion, rent for danchi units is either nominal or non-existent and interested parties apply for residency through a lottery programme. Check out the link above from Spoon & Tamago to learn more and peruse a whole gallery of apartment blocks.

medical model, social model

In order to raise awareness for individuals with physical handicaps and promote how advanced three-dimensional printing technology are making prosthetic limbs accessible to more people, an advocacy organisation in based in Paris have outfitted several statues from Antiquity and more recent times—including a life-sized replica of the famously disarming Venus de Milo—who’ve sustained some damage over the centuries with artificial arms and legs.
The campaign is operating under the principle that no body in the world should have to wait so long before being made whole—not that the fractured, whom because of their flaws like Venus epitomise perfection, but rather to urge reflection on how we frame being able-bodied and how assistive devices (as spectacles and hearing-aides have done) might shed their associated stigmas.

Sunday 11 March 2018

midge at the mic

Earlier this week marked the anniversary of the identification and arrest of broadcast personality “Axis Sally” employed by Nazi Germany in order to spread propaganda and engineer public opinion and reception of the Allied war effort in 1949. Mildred Elizabeth Gillars, originally from Portland, Maine, was one of those Lost Generation types that came of age between the wars and was quite disaffected by the failure of her aspirations to become an actress. Not able to sustain a career in New York City, Gillars moved to Paris and then to Algiers before finding stable employment in Dresden in 1934 first as an English teacher and then with the Reichs-Rundfunk state media outlet.

The pursuit of fame often is expressed as infamy and Gillars’ case is perfect example. Though protesting that she signed an oath of allegiance under great duress after the attack on Pearl Harbor which pulled the US into the war and that she had no truck with Nazi ideology, under the influence of various Svengalis, Gillars’ prolific programmes turned pointedly vile, broadcasting under several pseudonyms and conflated with other parallel campaigns of disinformation and demotivation, with arcs of narrative aimed to engender homesickness for troops stationed overseas and suggest that prolonged absence did not make the heart grow fonder with sensational stories of infidelity while husbands were away at the front. For Midge at the Mic, Gillars would DJ a music hour with American songs with interstitials attacking the US government. Here is a link to an audio recording hosted on YouTube. Gillars was apprehended in Berlin running a second-hand furniture operation and was tried and convicted on a single count of treason (despite a litany of charges brought against her) for a broadcast that preceded the storming of the beach at Normandy by just a few days designed to make families question the worth of their sacrifice. Once discharged after serving a sentence of eleven years, Gillars confined herself to a convent and taught German, French and drama classes in an attached academy.

Saturday 10 March 2018

alpha predator

Via the always brilliant Nag on the Lake, we learn of the successful trial run of a robotic monster to mitigate human and wildlife competition for resources that’s a sort of next generation of scarecrow. Orchard-keepers and rice farmers in Japan can now summon the juggernaut Super Monster Wolf as a means of keeping wild boars out of their chestnut groves and rice paddies without resorting to more lethal countermeasures.
Its prowling and howls are adaptive so its quarry does not grow inured to its presence and the terrifying turns into the laughable. Having had a close-call with one of these hulking beasts (not pictured—this one was relatively tame and confined to a wild park), we wonder if Super Monster Wolf could be persuaded to patrol different beats besides safeguarding crops in order to keep animals away from busy roads and out of harm’s way. Be sure to visit the links up top to learn more and see a video demonstration of Super Wolf in action.