Completely ripped from another site:
Ken Murphy’s A History of the Sky is a fantastic art project recording, collecting, and displaying time-lapse movies of the San Francisco sky.
Completely ripped from another site:
Ken Murphy’s A History of the Sky is a fantastic art project recording, collecting, and displaying time-lapse movies of the San Francisco sky.
This guy is falling off stuff. An acquaintance described them as brutal. I thought they were sort of funny. But in reality, this philosopher artist is a genius.
I am lost on this… but we have until 31st Dec. 2010 to round this out.
Here are a couple random movies I think are way up there. Any missing?
What moments in film history are branded onto your brain that makes you love horror… that impacted you and taught you the thrill or love…
If you want to share your own, or think I missed something… let me know!
NO ORDER IN PARTICULAR
I should upload a spreadsheet.
First questions:
Well this is complex, is it not? Or maybe it is just more about sharing scary film with the masses.
I was thrilled to see the Horror clip during the Oscars.
Are you capable of removing the individual from the body of work, or is the body of work so intimately influenced by the artist that it would be impossible not to contemplate the two together?
COINCIDENCES? FATE.. or something else?
Fact: Mathematically, it’s a mystery they don’t occur more often.
Schick Vaugn 1995 “Why People Believe Weird Things” is where the data is from, my words
This is the start of a much larger professional piece… I just want to get this stuff down.
—————–
I am buried in thought about what social media equity is, how much the micro level activities
Quantified, measured data is knowing. Deeply understanding math is a verifiable infrastructure to reason. But the last comment [ed note: a comment that you don’t get to see, and it may be for the best