daniel askill: we have decided not to die.

This is one of my favourite shorts of all time. It’s from a few years ago – 2004 – but I noticed on NOTCOT that the full thing has been put up on Vimeo. And what a beautiful thing that is…

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Directed by Australian Daniel Askill, “We Have Decided Not To Die” is wordless and visually stunning. It’s austere and stark and one of my favourite things ever. I’m so pumped that I found it online, and that you can all check it out too now:

If patience isn’t your thing, or, like me, you just like to watch trailers for things you’ve just watched to see how they match up with the complete product, then check out the film’s equally awesome trailer.

christian faur: crayon series 1 + true color.

I have an overwhelming sentimental attachment to crayons. (For some proof, check out the design of my Twitter page.) Not just the sense-memory of using crayons when I was a kid, but as an adult realizing the fundamental artistic ideas that those little sticks of wax represented to me; colour, creation, exploration, and (a particular sub-set of the general societal crayon fascination) the connection between word and colour. This, for a five year-old, is where written description and visual incarnation collided: the language of colour.

I remember the exact moment I figured out what “Burnt Sienna” meant, and immediately, there was this incredible shade, so much more than an “orange”, right there in my grubby little hand. Don’t even get me started on the others: Goldenrod, Raw Umber, Orchid, Periwinkle. The connection between what I read and what I saw was beautifully obvious, and obvious in its beauty.

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Artist Christian Faur understands not only the adult attraction to the ideals of crayons, but has amped them up to create incredible, hand-crafted, crayon-pixellated, eye-defying images that are unlike anything I’ve seen before. Straddling a crossing between sculpture and photography, wax and print, he assembles more than 100,000 hand-cast crayons of his own shades and hues into staggeringly beautiful works of art. Impressionistic, with a hint of trompe l’oeil, the tiny crayon columns of separate colour simultaneously appease the eye and defy it. This is crayon-Pointillism, taking the agonizingly detailed pin pricks of colour pain-stakingly arranged on the canvas, á la Georges Seurat, and leaving the brain to do the other half of the work. Its beauty is partially already realized by the patterns of colour, but then our eye struggles to put the rest together.

A master of balance, not just between bright shades, but between greys and primaries, he shows that he can not only deftly mix colours to imitate the physical nuance of an actual photograph, but also has the control to create the shapes in greys and white and augment the images artistically with colour, rather than creating the shapes with only colours themselves. It’s jarring and gorgeous, creating an almost physical sensation as our mind tries to adjust these point of colour into one big comprehensive picture. The experience of trying to see it is just as important as finally seeing.

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Seen from the side, not only does the work involved become more apparent, but an almost separate beauty emerges; the sculptural aspects of the pieces come into view, like miniature crayon horizons, tilted to reveal their relief, these side-ways typographies of colour give us a little insight, from this angle, of what our brains see so differently when viewed from straight on.

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Says Faur on his website: “…I have developed a mapping system that translates the English alphabet into twenty six discrete colors and I use these crayon ‘fonts’ to add words and language to each of the pieces in the show… The direct representation of language in each piece further imbues the works with meaning and brings an aspect of color into each composition reminiscent of DNA coding. The alphabetic key at the lower left of each panel allows the viewer to interpret the individual words written throughout the various panels.”

Via @MarcShil via PSFK

virgin mobile: screw you recession!

I don’t normally talk about my own work on here much, but Virgin Mobile’s new campaign (which I obviously helped worked on) is getting some big buzz. We started it off with a huge billboard installation at the corner of Yonge and Dundas in Toronto. Oddly enough, the balcony from my place looks across a park… right into the corner of Yonge and Dundas Square. So basically I fall asleep staring at my own copywriting on a gigantic billboard. There are worse things…

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Last Friday the billboards and the impending campaign got profiled by Jennifer Wells in the Globe and Mail and the billboards got some talk time on Stimulant.  We’re working right now on a very cool website, Screw You Recession!, that’s launching very soon. So stay tuned…

philip beesley: hylozoic soil.

This is insane. Hylozoism is the philisophical doctrine that matter is inseparable from life, which is a property of matter. (I had to look it up, I’m not going to even pretend that I knew that off the top of my head…). With that idea in mind, that at the core of all matter is an undeniable essence of life, Toronto digital media artist and experimental architect Philip Beesley created “Hylozoic Soil.”

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The installation is so eerily organic and minutely-detailed it’s almost hard to believe it was designed by a person and not borne of nature. It’s like it should be living in a cave somewhere. It’s exciting yet freaky, fascinating but a little dreadful. You have to watch this vid to believe it…

“Hylozoic Soil” won first price at the VIDA Awards, an international competition fostering works of art created with artificial life technologies. The text describing the project on the VIDA website is absolutely amazing. Here it is in it’s unedited glory:

“The glass-like fragility of this artificial forest, built of an intricate lattice of small transparent acrylic tiles, is visually breathtaking. Its frond extremities arch uncannily towards those who venture into its midst, reaching out to stroke and be stroked like the feather or fur or hair of some mysterious animal. In keeping with Beesley’s own description, his enchanted environment complies with the laws and cycles that determine the millenial assembly of a coral reef, with its cycles of opening, clamping, filtering and digesting. Capacitance-sensing whiskers and shape-memory alloy actuators create a diffuse peristaltic pumping motion, luring visitors in to the eery shimmering depths of a forest of light.

Hylozoic Soil implements a distributed sensor network driven by dozens of microprocessors, generating waves of reflexive responses to those drawn into its vast array of acrylic fern stalagmites. Different levels of programmed activity encourage the emergence of coordinated spatial behaviour: thirty-eight controller boards produce specific responses to local action, while a bus controller uses sensor activity collated from all the boards to command an additional “global” level of behaviour. The forest thus manifests a haunting, breathing organicity, as it stirs to envelop and charm its human explorers. In keeping with the tradition of biologist artist Ernst Haeckel’s Riddle of the Universe (1899), which traced actions of organic and inorganic nature alike back to natural causes and laws, Beesley’s Hylozoic Soil stands as a magically moving contemporary symbol of our aptitude for empathy and the creative projection of living systems.”

Holy shit. Anything with “capacitance-sensing whiskers and shape-memory alloy actuators” is more than fine by me

Via Come Up To My Room

superbien: patachromo.

I’m obsessed with the emotion of colour. The connection between colour and our psychological being is intrinsic and undeniable. Based on the theories of chromatherapy, this magnificent, multi-coloured LED installation by France’s Superbien makes people feel as good as it looks.

The photography documenting the project is equally sleek, stunning, and multi-hued. So fresh.

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Via Fubiz™

mystery photo.

I found this incredible snap on Design You Trust™. Unfortunately, the post there doesn’t give any info about the pic. It’s from a site called Zamin Online, which is mostly in Arabic. Does anybody have any ideas on where the pic might be from? I would love to know if it’s some kind of colour-based cultural event, or what the purpose/history (if any…) is behind the amazing vibrancy everyone is sporting.

Click on the pic below to enlarge and see it in its original context at Zamin Online.

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circlesquare + bienvenido cruz: dancers.

Nice vid, directed by Vancouver’s  Bienvenido Cruz, for Circlesquare’s track “Dancers”, off their latest album Songs About Dancing And Drugs.

datamoshing: kanye west + nabil elderkin: welcome to heartbreak. chairlift + ray tintori: evident utensil.

Datamoshing is the new tiltshift. I guarantee. Now it’s just a matter of who’ll do it well and which big company will soullessly make a campaign out of it “because the kids think it’s ‘dope.’”

A few days ago Kanye West unofficially released this killer datamosh masterpiece for “Welcome To Heartbreak”, directed by Nabil Elderkin. What Björk is to alt music vids, Kanye West is to hip hop. Sure he’s a megalomaniac with Tourette’s, but god damn he’s got some kick ass videos. He’s not afraid to push the envelope, and for that you can’t help but respect his artistic drive. I still wish he’d take some Percs or something, but whatever.

Laying some foundation to the datamosh trend, last week  Chairlift released this Ray Tintori (Court 13) vid for their track “Evident Utensil.” This is the more home-grown, underground, makeshift and raw use of the effect. Obviously not as big-budget as the Kanye vid, and with a little less gloss, but still an interesting way to mess around with data compression.

So now there’ll be some arguments about who did this You can also check out datamosh work from director David O’Reilly

Via Culture Bully


shelter + radiohead: house of cards.

This spot just totally took my breath away. That, and it’s set to Radiohead, so that’s guaranteed win.

Radiohead donated the rights to use their track, In Rainbow’s “Videotape” to Leo Burnett London for this new spot, “House of Cards” (coincidentally or not, also the name of another track from Radiohead’s In Rainbows…) The House of Cards campaign is promoting Shelter, a UK housing charity working to bring attention to the desperate homelessness crisis in Britain. Everyone involved – Radiohead, Leo Burnett, Framestore, Outsider, Dom and Nic, and actress Samantha Morton – donated their time to create this worthwhile spot.

The final 20 seconds are absolutely stellar. So haunting I cant stop thinking about it…

(Director: Dom and Nic. Production: Outsider. Post-Production: Framestore.)

flight404: solar, with lyrics.

The calibre of incredible work people are starting to turn out with processing is getting really off the hook. Check out this unreal vid from Flight404, “Solar, With Lyrics”, set to the amazing Goldfrapp’s single “Lovely Head.” If you have some time and are in the mood to explore, then Flight404 has more than 100 videos on Vimeo. They’re experimental, geometric, and addictive. Beware.

Flight404 also has an exquisitely subtle, organic, almost embryonic vid for Radiohead’s “Weird Fishes/Arpeggi” that was submitted to the aniBoom In Rainbows Contest. You can check out the vid here.

If you like this, you should also check out the beautiful processing-created video work of Glenn Marshall.

Via Changethethought

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