352
Before Sunrise (1995)
Hopping off a train in Vienna, American Ethan Hawke and Parisian Julie Delpy spend a night-time wondering whether they were made for each other. Along with Before Sunset and Before Midnight, this is part of that rarest of things the perfect movie trilogy.
Related: Sign up to our Bookmarks newsletter
Continue reading...Jan Willem van Welzenis, 2016
Oil on linen 15” x 12” / 40 x 30 cm
made out of holographic mylar and monofilament, the large-scale public sculpture spans 15,000 square feet overhead.
The post patrick shearn's liquid shard glistens above LA's pershing square appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
I've not said that I will make George Orwell look ragged or scruffy in the statue I am making of him to go outside the BBC (Letters, 11 August). I suggested he wore potting-shed clothes. In the mid 20th century, an employed gardener might habitually have worked in a tweed jacket, a tie, baggy trousers and a comfortable pullover. So he'd have dressed much like his master except with a little less crease in his trousers and a blunter edge to his lapel. This is just how Orwell looks in all the photos and it's how I aim to represent him.
Martin Jennings
Witney, Oxfordshire
• Join the debate email guardian.letters@theguardian.com
Continue reading...the assemblage of scenery combines familiar sites of interest to form fictional places of exploration.
The post caterina rossato forms fictional landscapes from cut paper postcards appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
For the edgy 21st-century arts curator, mad for site-specific installations, Liverpool is inordinately blessed with remarkable locations. A 19th-century oratory designed to resemble a Greek-Doric temple; a disused Victorian brewery beneath which there lies a lake some 40ft deep; a long abandoned art deco cinema, its ruby interior frozen in time as if its patrons, dressed in their Saturday best, might return at any moment: these are just a few of the city's more extraordinary buildings, beautiful and mournful in almost equal measure. And also, more to the point, empty and available. But therein lies the catch, of course. If art is not to be upstaged by architecture, the work must either be truly extraordinary, or so powerfully bound to its site that the two can hardly be separated.
At my feet swirled little piles of litter: plastic bottles and cigarette butts, receipts and ringpulls
It's grotesquery for grotesquery's sale, The League of Gentlemen minus the wit
Continue reading...Can Singapore's labour crunch spark a robot revolution? Daily Mail To address the constraints, Singapore is pushing businesses to look to non-human solutions for their human resource challenges, including greater use of automation and robotics. At Chilli Padi Nonya Cafe near a leafy university enclave, a tray-wielding ... and more » |
After peaking in 2012 and 2014 the current sunspot cycle has gone into decline, and should reach a minimum around 2020
It is time for Starwatch to check once again on the star we know best, our Sun, and its current level of sunspot activity. I have warned repeatedly, though, about the dangers of solar observation. To look directly at the Sun through an unprotected telescope or binoculars is to guarantee serious eye damage.
Related: Spacewatch: Solar maximum
Continue reading...Stuff.co.nz | Evicted? Got a parking ticket? Who you gonna call? Chatbot lawyer DoNotPay can help Stuff.co.nz He's the creator of DoNotPay, an online robot that has successfully challenged more than 160,000 parking tickets for drivers in London and New York City. Following the ... "Automation can be helpful, but it can also be incredibly flawed. A lot of our ... and more » |
oldskidmark posted a photo:
What a sunset effect!
venesha83 posted a photo:
rodwey2004 posted a photo:
Keepsaix posted a photo:
A birds eye view of the wonderful City of London.
This pictures is taken during my recent photography trip to London. I just brought with me one lens and a camera. It worked really well. No distractions. It just me the camera and the beautiful place to explore and photograph.
John Steedman posted a photo:
A futurologist has made a series of startling predictions about life in 34 years' time. But how far can we trust his forecast?
Name: The year 2050.
Age: -34.
Continue reading...With carriages full of unhappy travellers who have paid to be incarcerated, it's no wonder talk of nationalisation has spread beyond duffel coat-wearing socialists
Last week Southern Rail staff went on strike, leaving thousands of commuters facing a slightly improved service. Southern's non-stop calamities this summer have added support to the idea of renationalisation. This debate is something I watched with great interest. I'm a standup comedian who can't drive. I have never learned. I don't trust my hand-eye coordination. You're looking at someone who once dropped a cricket ball on to his own head during a routine catching practice; I don't think it's a great idea to have me in control of a high-speed metal death robot.
So I rely on the train system in this country. And I can tell you from firsthand experience that our train system is a mess. Carriages are full of unhappy travellers packed together like sardines, who have inexplicably paid for the privilege of being incarcerated. Periodically, everyone has to flee for cover, either by lying across the laps of the passengers lucky enough to have a seat, or by climbing into the luggage racks on the ceiling to allow the optimistically named “buffet” cart to pass through just in case anyone wants to spend £50 on a packet of crisps or a single fruit pastille.
Continue reading...