Tuesday 12 February 2019

digital first

In a move similar to the investor malfeasance behind the ultimate demise of Sears and many high street anchor stores—rather than the narrative we’ve been sold about the pivot to online retail, an aggressive real estate operation is behind at least some of the rampant dissolution of the press and local media outlets.
The predatory firm is picking off already distressed newsrooms and redeveloping their property footprint—scaling back staff and encouraging tele-work (wrecking cohesion) in order to free up office space, either converted and sold on or retrofitted as a co-working venue. The title (not the same as the management group) refers to the idea in communication theory that breaking news should be channelled through new media (social platforms that direct to a web presence) rather than traditional formats—for the sake of expediency, though polish and rigour are often sacrificed in the process to have a scoop.

Monday 11 February 2019

vanitas vanitatum, et omnia vanitas

Lush and indulgent, via Things Magazine, we are introduced to the portfolio and gallery showings of artist Andy Dixon, whose paintings are not only homages to classical conceits on the subject of impermanence but are also quite regularly commissions of the houses and tastes of patrons, teasing out the inflection point between wealth and art, as a store of the former and as a ostentatious and conspicuous display of the former.

achievement unlocked

In a move that makes the Olympics seem a little more relevant and meaningful—rather than an expensive showcase whose benefits are very, very fleeting for the venue—the always brilliant Nag on the Lake informs that for the 2020 Tokyo Games, in order to make a bold statement about sustainability and what we toss away with our mounting trash heaps of electronic waste, athlete’s medals will be sourced essentially fully from recovered precious metal. The symbolic recycling reflects Japan’s growing more conscience of the impact that such rampant consumption has for the planet and will hopeful influence more not just to prospect but to reduce buying what’s disposable and apt to be superannuated in the first place.

olfaction

Reading this account of how one person’s loss of her sense of smell, partial recovery and dealing with dysosmia—though far from suffering in complete solitude (27แต—สฐ February is Anosmia Awareness Day sponsored by the UK charity The Fifth Sense, which advocates for people with smell and taste disorders), left her a sort of shut-in (now rehabilitated) and made us appreciate our noses and taste buds and the even the crudest, simplest bouquet for all its worth.
Not only does a deficit in smell affect diet, routine and hygiene—as well as potentially posing a safety risk bereft of certain warning signals—it also steals away associative, sentimental memories. The author’s determination wrestle back that blessing through training and exercise, despite the rather bleak prognosis, is admirable and we’ll by searching later for our old vials of essential oils—lemon, eucalyptus, rosewater and clove, we knew they would be useful again one of these days—and starting on a vigorous regiment.

howdy arabia!

The tendency of leadership of the oligarchical petrostate to accrue all attention unto itself does result in the inability to divert one’s focus and to entertain elsewhere the idea of support tempered with criticism. The tribalism and polarisation that has become America’s chief export has blinded the diplomatic corps to the norms of sovereignty and international cooperation and advances the old spectre of nation building, rejecting the idea of policing the world as the US abdicates its position of taking the moral high ground while at the same time embracing the imperialism—both petty and expansive that is a natural consequence of a rising class of oligarchs. As public coffers globally run dry with the consolidation of wealth to a few dynasties that pride themselves in tax-avoidance and garner the clout necessary to ensure that laws are favourable to preserving their status, governments turn towards hard-won public institutions as a way to make up for that revenue and auction them off wholesale—as the rich and powerful brokered for control of formerly state-owned means of production after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
While the phenomenon is certainly not original nor exclusive to America (neither limited to Republicans but to all illiberal and reformed elements as well), it is leading the way in dismantling foundations created and sustained for the benefit of all, in the public lands, the education sector, research, national defence, etc. and this clutching cannibalism has globally transmuted to acceptance and even willingness to rally against publically-held institutions and state run businesses. Oil is the last refuge of scoundrels and a dying industry that only the uncreative want to have truck with, but as Venezuela’s only valuable commodity—and we’ve created strictures within banking and lending system to make sure that such places cannot diversify when faced with challenges—halved in value as global demand flagged and the world pivots towards more sensible and sustainable, corruption and mismanagement were bound to ensue, only exacerbated by sanctions against the country. Pushing unrest to the breaking point, as America has done in Nicaragua, Colombia and Panama, the US is persuading the international community to recognise a usurper whose signalled intent is friendlier to US business interests in the region. What do you think? If America is willing to disregard the concept of self-determination and stoke rebellion and anarchy, it would follow that one has no expectation of trust and stability in other dealings or institutions.

Sunday 10 February 2019

7x7

squala mater: a definitive Latin translation of Baby Shark—via Super Punch

sonovox: watch Lucille Ball demonstrate the “voice-box” technique that Peter Frampton popularised


amplifying random noise: regional terms for carbonated beverages in the United States

the wandering earth: big budget scifi movie from author Liu Cixin (previously) has excellent New Year’s debut

from snowman to gingerbread man: the surprisingly flat dimensions of Ultima Thule (previously) baffles researchers

gregg-ruled: edition of Alice in Wonderland transcribed in shorthand—with illustrations to help the reader keep his or her place

embroidered stories: an exhibition of samplers (previously) from Scotland

Saturday 9 February 2019

ๆš–็ฐพ

Thanks to the always brilliant Present /&/ Correct, we learn that the traditional curtains that hang in the threshold of Japanese restaurants and shops are called noren.
These bold dividers that also separate rooms as well as covering doorways and windows usually have vertical slits cut in them for easier passage. Hanging them in the morning and taking them down at the close of the business day and signal opening and closing hours and are often decorated with corporate logos—associated by extension with brand-recognition. More to explore at the link above.

point par pouce

From Kottke’s Quick Links, we are directed to a little routine that will convert any image into a mosaic consisting of emojis, matched for shape and colour. There is not quite the level of granularity present to make for a pointillist image and probably works better where it does not have to compensate too much for changes in contrast.
Up close, the results look like a chaotic jumble but at a distance, it does rather capture quite well Georges Seurat’s iconic A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, the Bathing Women of Hippolyte Petitjean and the self-portrait of Vincent Van Gogh when viewed from a distance, just as the original technique prescribed.
Click on the pictures to see more details and resolve what glyphs are representing each brush stroke. Though the term carries no negative connotations now, pointillism was originally coined by critics to ridicule the style and the artists who experimented with it. Try it yourself with what you think might take well to the mosaic treatment—and take a step back before judging the creation—at the link above.