the portable cinema allows one to see everyday situations as a succession of intertwined moments.
The post bruit du frigo's kinotour wagon is a mobile cinema which captures everyday scenarios appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
the installation presents an artistic study of the decline and succession of natural materials, as the stems overhead gradually shift through the natural stages of life and decay.
The post rebecca louise law suspends 8,000 flowers from san francisco gallery to show the beauty of decay appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
HEY EVERYBODY! I'm excited to unveil a new publication I got to design called La Petite Mort. Please check out the link and hit the “Thumbs Up” button at the bottom if you like it!!!
They're available for FREE at Calliope NYC
Sistine Chapel buttocks are veiled, while Leonardo's Leda was so saucy she was destroyed. But prudish censorship only confirms the pulling power of art
You never know what will offend people. Researchers at the University of Cambridge have discovered that a skirt was crudely painted over the naked Eve in a Renaissance manuscript soon to go on view at the city's Fitzwilliam Museum. Some time between the 16th and 18th centuries a particularly prudish owner had this image bowdlerised, even though the nudity of Adam and Eve is a venerable and respectable religious theme.
Related: Unveiled: Adam and Eve naked again after centuries-old cover-up
Related: The top 10 male nudes in art
Related: The top 10 female nudes in art
Continue reading...Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester
Faced with an invisible material and no whizzy inventions to show, this exhibition pays underwhelming homage to a Nobel prize-winning discovery
It's been hailed as the wonder material that will revolutionise everything from smartphones and car tyres to aeroplanes and condoms. But the problem with graphene, for the curators of a new exhibition at the Museum of Science and Industry, is that you can't actually see it. And none of these potentially miraculous applications for the atom-thick material have actually been invented yet.
“There's never been so much expectation invested in a new material,” says Danielle Olsen, co-curator of Wonder Materials: Graphene and Beyond, which opened this week in the city where this mercurial form of super-thin carbon was first isolated in 2004. “It's under a lot of pressure to perform.”
Related: Graphene - the new wonder material
Membership Event: Private view of Wonder Materials: Graphene and Beyond
Continue reading...The largest ever 3D map of the universe strengthens astronomers' belief that three quarters of the cosmos is made of an unknown substance: ‘dark energy'
It is hard to know whether it's a success or a failure but modern astronomy tells us that almost three quarters of the universe is in the form of an unknown substance called “dark energy”.
Add to this the “dark matter” that astronomers are still searching for without success, and we think we live in a Universe where only two percent of it is the familiar atoms that make up you and I, stars and planets.
Continue reading...Had enough of tech? Sporting a big or any kind of unlikely looking beard or interestingly dyed hair? El Reg has found the perfect new job where you'll get paid handsomely to espouse the wonders of trendy beer.…
The Wallpaper* pick of astounding staircases
Nigel Blake, 13 MILLION...Yay! Many thanks! posted a photo:
The Millennium Bridge and St Paul's Cathedral at night about 40 minutes after sunset _22A9019
Nigel Blake, 13 MILLION...Yay! Many thanks! posted a photo:
Southwark Bridge and the City buildings, London UK _22A9016
Nigel Blake, 13 MILLION...Yay! Many thanks! posted a photo:
Southwark Bridge and the City buildings, London UK _22A9014
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Henry Christy Scientist of the Day
Henry Christy, an English banker and archaeologist, was born July 26, 1810.