Two Nice Things.

Image
1. Canadian artist Erin Mcsavaney paints beautiful pictures of buildings in nature. Quoting Walter Benjamin, she calls architecture “the most binding part of communal rhythm,” a thing based on rules and parameters and angles and lines. Her paintings, which all seem hazy and water-logged, play with the sharp edges of buildings, the soft lines of trees. Pretty, pretty. (via)

2. “It might interest you to know,
speaking of the plentiful imagery of the world,
that I am the sound of rain on the roof.”

In an amazing feat of pure adorableness, a three-year-old child recites Billy Collins’ “Litany.”

Cover Up.

Here’s something funny for a Monday morning: Cover art from Low Commitment Projects. Losing an hour of sleep has left me a zombie, so I have little more to say, except that this is fantastically witty (oh, Roger Barker!) and very cute. Also, I might just need that one book…

Sew What?

Nerdy crafters really are the best. The best what? The best at living, obviously. This craft, which is nothing short of beautiful, is a full-sized quilt made by Kate Findlay and was inspired by the Large Hadron Collider. She’s created a series of quilts that all use the massive physics experiment as the aesthetic guide for the patterns and prints. They’re pretty and strange and so very geeky.

“I’ve been living and dreaming and sleeping and eating hadron colliders,” she told Symmetry Magazine.  Bet she’s read this book (I hope she’s read it. It’s so good! And so weird).

Anyway, I like it. Even if the LHC can’t actually make particles travel faster than the speed of light. Oh well, maybe it’s for the best…

I Love Public Art, Part II.

Coin art from Amsterdam by artist Stephan Sagmeister. In case you can’t read it, it says: “Obsessions Make My Life Worse and My Work Better.” It was commissioned back in 2008 by Urban Play for the project Things I Have Learned In My Life So Far.

Not only is it really, really pretty (the font!) but also scarily true. You know how sometimes things knock you over with their sudden and surprising applicability? Like someone wrote or created something that was clearly (yes, I know this is self-aggrandizing and self-centered and all sorts of solipsistic junk, but that’s how it feels) intended just for you? That just happened.

Watch a video about Stephan’s piece here.

I Love Public Art.

Architect John Locke not only has an awesome name (okay, I wasn’t that into the philosopher, but I did just start re-watching Lost and I’m totally team Locke), he’s also a very cool dude. He must be, since he designed this amazing project: a communal lending library, tucked into obsolete phone booths. The plywood shelves can be installed in any phone booth, and are filled with books, which passersby can borrow, exchange, or take for keepsies. Operating on the honor principle, they not only look cool, but also help disseminate knowledge in a weird, slightly haphazard way.

I would love to see something like this in Boston or Cambridge. I feel like it would really thrive here! Can someone make that happen, please?

See more pictures at Design Bloom.

Sea of Lights.

Italian-born artist Giancarlo Neri recently installed these gorgeous lights in downtown Rio de Jeneiro. Titled Maximum Silence, the public art work is composed of 9,000 25cm lights that change color and intensity according to a pre-programmed cycle. Though most of the time they shine in unison, every few minutes the lights break into a chaotic “color free-for-all” before reverting to their ordered ways.

Pictures of the installation make it look really, really beautiful and sort of otherworldly and futuristic at once. Alien-art. That should be a genre, if it isn’t already.

See more here.

Follow Me?

Mini-announcement: I joined Pinterest! Be a dear and follow me? I mostly just post pictures of treehouses, food I will never make in my tiny kitchen, and interesting art projects. Kind of like my blog, only I update it a lot more often.

And since I feel like that’s not enough for a blog post, here’s something wonderful: The Pothole Gardener. I realize he’s not exactly new news, but this guy has been making some of the most adorable street art I’ve ever seen. He takes potholes and cracks and other urban chasms and turns them into sweet little gardens, complete with miniature lounge chairs and umbrellas. Sadly, the guerrilla gardener just works in London, but maybe we can bring his movement to Somerville? The city streets here are pretty grey and could use a few flowers.

Knock ‘Em Out.

This is awesome. Made by Debra Baxter, this amazing sculpture even has a super badass title: Crystal Brass Knuckles (I am going to realign your chakras motherf*****). In an interview with the blog My Love For You (one of my daily reads, by the way), Baxter said:

It is sort of a superhero tool/weapon. Most of my work is about engaging the body in some way. Calling the body to do something. My work embraces failure and fragility…though you won’t know that seeing this piece… They are made to fit a woman’s hand. There is a feminist/grrl power piece to this…and to all my work. Women engaging in their power and sexuality.

Brilliant. Oh, and her other work is pretty lovely, too.

A Hair’s Breadthe.

A lot of people find human hair disgusting when not attached to a head (I know I had some previous roommates who did) but I never really understood that reaction. Sure, I don’t like eating hair, but if I find one my food I generally just remove it quietly and keep eating. We leave little pieces of ourselves everywhere—skin cells and hairs and tiny bits of gnawed-off nails—that it seems inevitable that we’ll be in constant contact with human debris.

Anyway, I’m thinking about this partially because I came across the work of Jenine Shereos on Notcot. She crafts these incredibly delicate, impossibly intricate leaves out of human hair. She stitches and weaves and knots the hair until it creates this perfect little skeleton. I can’t even imagine the patience that it takes. Continue reading