Category Archives: Uncategorized

Should Paul Walker’s Death Serve as a Warning?

Paul Walker died in a fiery car crash.  The driver, Roger Rodas, was a car designer and former race car driver.  Both left behind children, Paul Walker a 15 year old, and the driver a 5 year old.  Rumors are that they died while drag racing on a curvy road, but traffic cameras indicate they might have been alone.  In any case, high speeds were involved.

As many of you know, Paul Walker starred in many of the Fast and Furious movies that show outrageous car chases, racing, and high speed driving.  Do these movies encourage people, including Paul Walker himself, to take to dangerous driving themselves?

It’s the old question, do movies, TV shows and video games encourage others to try the same type of stunt, or at the very least, make high speed driving look safer than it is?  I always hated the movies where a cop car would flip through the air several times and the people remove themselves dazed but unharmed.  In real life, such situations are tragic.  Most people do not realize that the only thing holding their car to the ground is four spots around six inches square.  That’s right, the bottom of your tires.  At high speeds, you get lift, which reduces the gravitational grip your car has on the road.  If you add to that centripetal and centrifugal force and very little keeps your car under control.

They plan to continue the fast and furious series of films, along with all the other high speed movies.

I pray for the families and friends of Paul Walker and Roger Rodas that their grief may be borne and that it will not impact their lives more drastically than it must.

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Art made from Cutting Wire Mesh

Ephemeral Portraits Cut from Layers of Wire Mesh by Seung Mo Park

source:  http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1ikp5m/:1KMMlKwsV:blC0PgpH/www.thisiscolossal.com/2012/04/ephemeral-portraits-cut-from-layers-of-wire-mesh-by-seung-mo-park/

Using a process that could be the new definition of meticulous, Korean sculptor Seung Mo Park creates giant ephemeral portraits by cutting layer after layer of wire mesh. Each work begins with a photograph which is superimposed over layers of wire with a projector, then using a subtractive technique Park slowly snips away areas of mesh. Each piece is several inches thick as each plane that forms the final image is spaced a few finger widths apart, giving the portraits a certain depth and dimensionality that’s hard to convey in a photograph, but this video on YouTube shows it pretty well. Park just exhibited this month at Blank Space Gallery in New York as part of his latest series Maya (meaning “illusion” in Sanskrit). You can see much more at West Collects. (art newswest collectslavinia tribiani)

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Insanely difficult – Man Does Artwork with Rubik’s Cubes

Dream Big by Peter Fecteau

by DANILO on Nov 3, 2011

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Dream Big by Peter Fecteau“Dream Big” was a year-long project in which Pete created a mosaic of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. using 4,242 Rubik’s Cubes.

petefecteau.com

Dream Big by Peter Fecteau

Dream Big by Peter Fecteau

Dream Big by Peter Fecteau

Dream Big by Peter Fecteau

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Strange, Twisted Artwork

Strange Artwork for your enjoyment.

reposted from:  http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/6AKCpQ/:1YK8Fx7Fy:SGoAX8rL/www.etoday.ru/2010/03/ozhivshie-predmeti-terri-borde.php/

www.bentobjects.blogspot.com

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Thank You Fellow Veterans Past and Present

Veterans Day is an opportunity for all of us to thank those who have risked it all to uphold the Constitution and the nation.  Here is the oath I took when I entered the United States Air Force:

The Oath of Enlistment 

“I, Michael Bradley, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.”

honorvet1

There is no expiration date on the oath.  It does not say as long as I am active duty or in uniform.  As a disabled veteran, I can tell you that helping veterans is very important.  Battlefield medicine has become so good that I saw a recent statistic that 98% of wounded now survive.  Unfortunately, stateside VA care is abysmal.  There are wait lines for disability approval that can last years.  Mental health, financial help and family help are often lacking.

Veterans Day_1

So at least for this day, join me in supporting those who have served, past and present.  See if you can reach out to at least one veteran in your life and say thank you.  It really does mean a lot.  Try writing or emailing your Congressman and Senators as well.  Our veterans deserve a whole lot better treatment when they return home.  These are young men and women, mostly 18 to 22 who join our military VOLUNTARILY to serve.  They serve so that you don’t face a draft or danger from other nations.  That alone should be reason to say thanks.

Veterans-Day-_1024-768_Ranotosh

 

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One man, 100,000 toothpicks, and 35 years

 

One man, 100,000 toothpicks, and 35 years: An incredible kinetic sculpture of San Francisco

original link:  http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2txGz9/:mhpIS4Er:aKmcH1ng/thisiscolossal.com/2011/04/one-man-100000-toothpicks-and-35-years-scott-weavers-rolling-through-the-bay/

 

Thirty five years ago I had yet to be born, but artist Scott Weaver had already begun work on this insanely complex kinetic sculpture, Rolling through the Bay, that he continues to modify and expand even today. The elaborate sculpture is comprised of multiple “tours” that move pingpong balls through neighborhoods, historical locations, and iconic symbols of San Francisco, all recreated with a little glue, some toothpicks, and an incredible amount of ingenuity. He admits in the video that there are several toothpick sculptures even larger than his, but none has the unique kinetic components he’s constructed. Via his website Weaver estimates he’s spent over 3,000 hours on the project, and the toothpicks have been sourced from around the world:

I have used different brands of toothpicks depending on what I am building. I also have many friends and family members that collect toothpicks in their travels for me. For example, some of the trees in Golden Gate Park are made from toothpicks from Kenya, Morocco, Spain, West Germany and Italy. The heart inside the Palace of Fine Arts is made out of toothpicks people threw at our wedding.

See the sculpture for yourself at the Tinkering Studio through the end of June. Photos courtesy of their Flickr gallery.

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1883 Illustrated Guide to Insane People

This is a pretty chilling look into the ‘state of the art’ definition of insanity in 1883.  This is an illustrated guide published to help other ‘mental health’ professionals at the time with diagnosis and treatment, a precursor to The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, published by the American Psychiatric Association, known as the DSM-IV-TR, or the fourth version, text revision.  Chances are in the Age of Steam you would be locked up in a cell for the rest of our life if you were considered a risk to self or others.

1883:  Illustrated Guide to Insane People

 

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Art Made Out of Colored Pencils – Not With Them

As you know, I look for unusual and/or bizarre things that I like in the world of art.  My favorites are using different materials – such as street art, the finger art, dots, nails, etc.  In this case I came across the work of Jennifer Maestre who used colored pencils not too color, but as the materials for some sculpting.  See if you like them as well. – MB

Art Made Out of Colored Pencils – Not With Them

From a very first look at these wonderfully detailed colored pencil sculptures by Jennifer Maestre, it should come as no surprise that her artwork was initially inspired by spiny sea urchins – beautiful be dangerous to the touch.  For each sculpture, Jennifer hacks apart hundreds of colored pencils, cores them perpendicular to their length and turns them into beads, essentially, which she then meticulously stitches back together and slowly shapes into solid sculptures.  Though her beginnings were with creatures of the water, Jennifer quickly expanded her subject matter to cover other organic objects – from plants and flowers to house pets and more abstract animals.

While some of her work has a planned form from the very beginning, other pieces morph and shift as they take shape into something completely unplanned but nonetheless compelling.  While her work continues to evolve, this incredible artist has had dozens of exhibitions over the past decade and has also won numerous awards, pushing herself in new directions while exploring the limits of her unique approach.

 

 

Source:  http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/54z5ll/:ZD_qMAK9:SGoAX8rL/dornob.com/beyond-drawing-creative-colored-pencil-art-sculpture/

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RASHAD ALAKBAROV PAINTS WITH SHADOWS AND LIGHT

RASHAD ALAKBAROV PAINTS WITH SHADOWS AND LIGHT

Artist Rashad Alakbarov from Azerbaijan uses suspended translucent objects and other found materials to create light and shadow paintings on walls. The best part is that you can easily create something similar at home – all you need is one or two lamps and some items from your desk.

The stunning light painting below, made with an array of colored airplanes has found its way to exhibitions like the Fly to Baku at De Pury Gallery in London.

Above the cloud with its shadow is the star with its light. Above all things reverence thyself. 

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Model Dying of Organ Failure from Anorexia Got More Bookings

Former model: Her organs were failing, but designers still tried to book her

Former teen model Georgina Wilkin was scouted in 2006 and started modeling at age 15. Throughout her career, she became so thin from lack of eating that her organs began to fail, but designers were still lining up to book her. So for the next 7 years, she would battle with anorexia. She is stepping forward now to tell her story.

When she was sixteen, she was booked for a 2-month long job in Japan, on the condition that she lose 3 inches from her hips and 1 inch from her waist. On an already thin frame, this is a serious feat. She did it, and though she was basically emaciated, she realized when she got to Japan that she was one of the “bigger” girls there. “I wasn’t looked after, or told what to do. Nobody told me where the supermarket was so I just didn’t really eat,” she writes in The Telegraph. Completely miserable and barely eating, she couldn’t even go home to her parents because part of the contract indicated that she had to repay the agency for her flight and apartment from the money she earned.

After just a year of working, she became too ill to continue, and was immediately admitted into the hospital for anorexia. “In hospital the doctors made no secret of the fact that my life was in danger. My vital organs were under such strain that there was a risk my heart could stop or my kidneys pack up,” she said. What upsets her most now is that she still sees women in huge campaigns that show the same signs of anorexia that she did: blue lips and fingers that needed to be covered with concealer because her heart was barely pumping to send blood around her body. At 5’10”, she was only 118 pounds in the beginning of her career, and won’t reveal her weight from her thinnest moments out of fear that it might become a goal for women suffering from anorexia today. Still fighting the battle, she spoke at this year’s “Shape of Fashion” debate during London Fashion Week, shaming the industry for its effects on young women. (Daily Mail)

Now an advocate for young women, she wrote in the Telegraph “I was encouraged to lose weight unhealthily by my modelling agent, but teenage girls need to be proud about what they have as a human being. I want to encourage modelling agents and casting directors to talk to girls about healthy eating, and where they do put pressure on young girls to lose their weight, to do so healthily and sensibly.”

We’ve seen this story before and we will continue to see it until there are serious changes made in the fashion industry. Click here for more experiences of the modeling world.

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