Monday, 30 November 2009

The Imaginarium of Dr Panasus

STEAM PUNK

Contemporary Victorians!
Broadly, steampunk is about re-imagining the Victorian age and creating the appliances, clothes, weapons and lifestyles that might have come about if some present-day innovations had been invented way back when.
"It's about taking modern technology and presenting it in a way that the Victorians would have accepted," said Mr Richardson-Brown.

The broader field of steampunk traces its origins to an offshoot of science fiction which detailed a fictional past in which zeppelins, trips to the moon and Mars and science that depended on the harnessing of titanic energies was commonplace.
One of the best known steampunk works is the Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling. 
Since then the ideas have cropped up in short stories, films, cartoons and on fashion catwalks. Its influence is becoming more and more pervasive.
The "punk" in the steampunk name comes from cyberpunk which was a hugely influential branch of science fiction pioneered by, among others, Gibson and Sterling. It swapped space opera for gritty streets, body mods and the "consensual hallucination" of cyberspace. The "punk" comes from the DIY ethic that powered the music of the same name.

Many adopt Victorian dress. Frock coats, waistcoats and top hats are popular among men. Women favour gowns, bustles and corsets.Most are bedecked with accessories that were never even dreamt of in the days of Victoria. Goggles are enhanced with extra lenses, metres and sights. Jewellery is fashioned to look like miniature pumps or knife switches. Brass, leather, buckles and cogs are all to the fore.
Many are dedicated makers and crafters who make their own clothes, accessories or mod their gadgets to have a more neo-Victorian feel. Steampunk balls are becoming more common as are conventions and themed outings.

The growing number of artists and amateurs who have built steampunk devices has led the Oxford Museum of the History of Science to mount an exhibition of them. The show runs until February 2010.



 





Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Silent View

Silent-View photography is an art photo project consisting of a photographer (Silent-View) and a model (Fraeulein von Rosenfelde). Since 2005 both of them implement with their pictures particularly gloomy and bizarre, sometimes unsettling themes, but extended their repertoire in 2007/2008 to fashion, glamour and band photography as well as to video art.



 

 




Footlocker Ad Campaign


Julian Beever

UK-based artist specializes in realistic pavement drawings, wall murals, and traditional paintings.




Takato Yamamoto



 

 

Kindred times and Future goodbyes

In an abandoned 19th century ruin in South Tel Aviv, four local artists with international roots invited the public to see what they’ve been up to on weekends. Know Hope, Klone, Zero Cents and Foma spend Saturdays decorating the streets and buildings of Israel’s seaside conurbation together. “We just started painting…then decided to go back the next week…and the next,” Know Hope states. They eventually decided to make an exhibition of their work, the location was kept secret until the opening day.



 

 

Monday, 2 November 2009

Woody Allen

"Life doesn’t imitate art, it imitates bad television."

MARNI HORWITZ

Marni Horwitz is a New York photographer, Horwitz first became interested in photography when she was seventeen, she started taking pictures of the world most immediately at hand --her family--a subject that continues to be of great artistic importance to her.



 

 

Tom Wood



“I think of the photograph as a receiver of sensations, sensations are intangible, I try to organize them through the act of photography.”
Wood has spent over fifteenyears and shot over 3,000 rolls of film photographing Liverpool and its people from a bus. Visually stunning and dramatically revealing it is a body of work of immense power. Tom Wood’s first book Looking for Love established his reputation as one of the most original photographers working in the UK.

Published History :

  • 1989Looking for love (Chelsea Reach Nightclub from 1982 to 1985)
  • 1999People – Wienand
  • 2002All Zones Off Peak – Dewi Lewis Publishing (1979 to 1996 bus rides atound Liverpool)
  • 2002Bus Odyssey – Hatje Cantz Publishers (more 1979 to 1996 bus rides atound Liverpool)
  • 2005Photie Man ( Retrospective book)

Ric Bower - 'The Chair'

Welsh Photographer and Artist, took part in the Group Show exhibition at G39 Gallery Cardiff.



 

 



What Would Jesus Drive?

The Sunday Times The hottest downloads; "What Would Jesus Drive?: Boomtown T***s Shouty, spittle-flecked dissing and electro-punk banditry. Sublime."


Diane Arbus

Was one of the most original and influential American photographers of the 20th century. In 2003, she and her work were the subject of a major traveling exhibition: Diane Arbus Revelations. In 2006 her life story was the subject of a motion picture starring Nicole Kiddman as Diane Arbus.