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Interesting photo set from of works from Tim Noble and Sue Webster, piles of trash that form amazing shadow art… Pictured here: Dirty White Trash [With Gulls], 1998 | six months’ worth of the artists’ rubbish
TRASH
SHADOW ART
Via: Make Zine
MAKES
susan coffey
Susan is one of my favorite models, hands down. She's like the girl that lives next door.
Its the end of the world
on May 21, 2011 around 6pm ;)
..............................WORD.
Test Post
Yeah, Fool. I still play with my toys. You got a got damn problem with it? I'll beat yo motherfuckin' ass.
RANDOM TIME...
Eddie Munster gets gangsta
I'm just glad it's Friday. Even the damn drawings need a little bit more coffee then usual.
T.G.I.F.
Via: Traced Reflection
Marilyn's glasses are cool.
Lars von Trier, director of the upcoming film Melancholia called himself a Nazi today causing outrage from the Anti-Defamation League and the Cannes Film Festival. Kirsten Dunst the film’s star was sitting next to him during his off color statements, much to her dismay.
Actress Kirsten Dunst, who is the star of his film, became visibly uncomfortable while the director spoke of being a Nazi sympathizer.
“Oh my God, this is terrible,” she said at one point to co-star Charlotte Gainsbourg. And after the press conference ended, the actress remarked to von Trier, “Oh, oh Lars. That was intense.”
The controversial director has since apologized for his comments, saying, “If I have hurt someone this morning by the words I said at the press conference, I sincerely apologize.”
And despite declaring, “Ok, I’m a Nazi,” he added in his statement, “I am not anti-Semitic or racially prejudiced in any way, nor am I a Nazi.”
Ridiculous! Lars von Trier likes to say shocking things to get attention, but this is just too much. This just seems like a very poor and desperate attempt to get attention for the upcoming film’s release. I was interested in this movie before, but this is pretty off-putting. I’ll probably just skip it, he doesn’t seem like a good person to support. What do you think?
Nazi Director Freaks Out Kirsten Dunst
Just another year at Cannes Film Festival...
Via: Telegraph, Backseat Cuddler
Alvaro Ilazarbe
/Freegums:
"IN-BETWEEN"
"For this show I explored space, patterns, and the energy that lies in-between. I painted black and white patterns on amorphous wooden pieces which hang on an identically patterned wallpaper. The wood paintings' swirling lines blended into the background, becoming one with the environment. Contrasting line work created a visual vibration causing tension within the space. Through this I wanted the viewer to be aware of the spatial energy that lies between oneself and the object" - Freegums
Narwhal Art Projects presents IN-BETWEEN, a solo exhibition with Miami artist Alvaro Ilazarbe/Freegums.
Opening Reception was held on:
Friday May 13 from 7-10pm
Exhibition Dates: May 13-June 12
Via: Narwhal Art Projects
Garbage Pail Kids "Flash Back" came out a few years ago as a re-release of the classic sticker cards. It's a big deal for collectors and fans to purchase. Sure, Ebay is a great place to find items and fill in gaps in collections, but there is just something about buying a fresh pack of cards off the shelf and putting together a set from scratch. It's the little things in life that give us something to look forward to and remind us of being a kid again. This totally brings me back in time and I remember collecting them and sometimes putting the stickers on the back of Atari games. LOL
There was something about the 80's and being a kid. Collecting or being into things that were "Gross" was the catch of the day. Grossing out or pissing off our parents with things they considered junk was always the thing to do.
Via: Mr. Potter
"My girlfriend Ginny gets taken to the movie theater to see "Fast Five". After a preview for the Hangover 2, a trailer for a movie comes on. A trailer I made of her father and I where I ask her father for her hand in marriage. After he gives me permission, I race off to the theater she is at to ask her to marry me.
What she doesn't know is our familiy and friends are in the theater with her watching the whole thing, along with about 100 strangers ;-)"
Great Marriage Proposal
AMAZING STORIES!
AMAZING STORIES!
I mostly remember this as a TV show in the 1980's but this actually use to be a monthly science fiction magazine on the newsstands in the 1940's. Read more about the history below.
Amazing Stories was an American science fiction magazine launched in April 1926 by Hugo Gernsback's Experimenter Publishing. It was the first magazine devoted solely to science fiction. Before Amazing, science fiction stories had made regular appearances in other magazines, including some published by Gernsback, but Amazing helped define and launch a new genre of pulp fiction.
Amazing was published, with some interruptions, for almost eighty years. The title first changed hands in 1929, when Gernsback was forced into bankruptcy and lost control of the magazine. Amazing became unprofitable during the 1930s and in 1938 was purchased by Ziff-Davis, who hired Raymond A. Palmer as editor. Palmer made the magazine successful though it was not regarded as a quality magazine within the science fiction community. In the late 1940s Amazing began to print stories about the Shaver Mystery, a lurid mythos which explained accidents and disaster as the work of robots named "deros"; the stories were presented as fact, and led to dramatically increased circulation but also widespread ridicule. Palmer was replaced by Howard Browne in 1949, who briefly entertained plans of taking Amazing upmarket. These plans came to nothing, though Amazing did switch to a digest format in 1953, shortly before the end of the pulp-magazine era. A brief period under the editorship of Paul W. Fairman was followed, at the end of 1958, by the leadership of Cele Goldsmith. Despite her lack of experience she was able to bring new life to the magazine, and her years are regarded as one of Amazing's most creative eras. She was unable to arrest the declining circulation, though, and the magazine was sold to Sol Cohen's Universal Publishing Company in 1965.
Going green takes on a whole different meaning on this February 1949 issue of Amazing Stories, featuring "The Insane Planet" by Alexander Blade.
Cover art by Robert Gibson Jones.
Ziff-Davis Publishing Company
(Chicago/Illinois) Mai 1950
Cover: Arnold Kohn
Ziff-Davis Publishing Company
(Chicago/Illinois) October 1946
Cover: Robert Gibson Jones
ex libris MTP
THE TV SHOW!
Amazing Stories is a fantasy, horror, and science fiction television anthology series created by Steven Spielberg. It ran on NBC from 1985 to 1987, and was somewhat erratically screened in Britain by BBC1 and BBC2 - billed in the Radio Times as "Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories" - with episodes airing at any time from early on Sunday morning to weekday evenings to very late at night; it later received a more coherent run on Sci-Fi.
The series was nominated for 12 Emmy Awards and won five. The first season episode "The Amazing Falsworth" earned writer Mick Garris an Edgar Award for Best Episode in a TV Series. It was not a ratings hit (ranking 40th in Season 1 and 46th in Season 2), however, and the network did not renew it after the two-year contract expired.
From the beginning intro for the TV show.
I loved this show, it had a real Steven Spielberg 1980's feel for obvious reasons.