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 Sunday, July 30, 2006

With his Bible Rewrite Project scattered with pictures of homemade animals sewn together, Nate Hill is becoming a God-like chimp.
The real God takes time out from His busy schedule to talk with Nate in this exclusive interview...

God: Am I supposed to be doing this interview? Usually people have questions for me.

Nate: I'd like to know when you're coming back?

God: Oh, I don't know. I was reading this Bible Rewrite Project of yours, so if I were you, I might say when men and women start sewing dead animal parts onto themselves again [Genesis 6]. But, I would say something similar... When all flesh is corrupt.

Nate: What do you mean by 'corrupt?' I hope not when I use pets killed by cars in art?

God: That's a tough one. I like how you're making something beautiful out of something ugly. Though I would sure like it if you would try to find their owner. I don't want you to hurt anyone's feelings, and they may want their pet back. I have a question for you... With your rewrite, are you trying to improve upon My Bible?

Nate: Is that possible?

God: I would say no... If you're not trying to improve it, then can you tell the people what you are trying to do?

Nate: Ultimately, what I think will happen is that in my attempt to recreate the Bible in my own image and create my own animal kingdom as you did, I will expose myself for the human that I am, and at the same time boost Your stature and remind some of Your title as the Greatest Artist of All Time.

God: Don't be so hard on yourself. Your rewrite has its own merits and isn't totally a distortion. It's like seeing Me through you. You are looking at My legacy through your singular lens and obsession; that being cutting up dead animals and sewing them together again in odd ways.

Nate: I know this is all a little narcissistic, but perhaps through trying to make animals of my own, I will get a glimpse into what it means to be the greatest creator of all time, and what it means to be God?

God: Maybe a tiny glimpse.

Nate: I'll take that.

God: What have you learned so far?

Nate: That I have a long, long way to go.

God: Don't give up... Tell the people if you actually want to "stop roadkill"?

Nate: Not really.  The website title is ironic.

http://stoproadkill.org/

posted on 7/30/2006 12:00:42 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Friday, July 28, 2006

"At the beginning of 2001, I began taking pictures of recently abandoned offices, and the things people had left behind. This project was more than photography for me. It was economic archeology. America has not suffered such a vertiginous economic collapse since the 1930's, and I wanted to document the human cost, while it was happening.

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

There is something very strange about walking into a recently abandoned office. The heavy, Pompeii-like stillness, punctuated only by the occasional sound of the air-conditioning, turning itself on. A coat-hanger waiting patiently for a coat. A limp happy-birthday balloon on the floor. A drawer stuffed with take-out menus. Everywhere, signs of life, interrupted. "

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano

Bankrupt by Philip Toledano is available to buy at Amazon and for more information on Philip Tolendanos photographs visit his website www.ptoledano.com

posted on 7/28/2006 7:50:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Thursday, July 27, 2006

1. Botulinum (ingested)
It’s hard to rank the lethality of toxins, but experts agree that botulinum – several orders of magnitude deadlier than sarin – is the gold standard. Your nervous system fails and you die in extreme pain. Works miracles on wrinkles, though.

2. Ricin (ingested or inhaled)
Made from the lowly castor bean, ricin causes respiratory and organ failure, followed by death within hours. Even chewing a few beans can kill you.

3. Anthrax (inhaled)
Cutaneous exposure can kill, but the most deadly, panic-inspiring form of anthrax is inhaled. It starts with flu that doesn’t get better – then your respiratory system collapses.

4. Sarin (inhaled)
Sarin is one of the deadliest nerve gases, hundreds of times more toxic than cyanide. Just one whiff and you’ll foam at the mouth, fall into a coma, and die. Originally synthesized for use as a pesticide, it was outlawed as a warfare agent in 1997.

5. Tetrodotoxin (ingested)
Found in the organs of puffer fish (the famous Japanese delicacy fugu), tetrodotoxin persists even after the fish is cooked. If the toxin is consumed, paralysis and death can strike within six hours. Up to five Japanese die from badly prepared fugu every year.

6. Cyanide (ingested or inhaled)
Cyanide exists in a number of lethal forms that are present in nature or easily manufactured. Exposure leads to seizures, cardiac arrest, and death within minutes.

7. Mercury (inhaled)
Low levels of mercury are not especially toxic to adults. However, inhaled mercury vapor (the metal starts turning to a gas at room temp) attacks the brain and lungs, shutting down the central nervous system.

8. Strychnine (ingested or inhaled)
A common pesticide, strychnine isn’t as toxic as other poisons on our list, but it gets style points for causing one of the most horrific deaths of all: Every muscle in your body spasms violently until you die from exhaustion.

9. Amatoxin (ingested)
Derived from the death cap family of mushrooms, amatoxin destroys your liver and kidneys over several days. You remain conscious – and in excruciating pain – until you slip into a coma and expire.

10. Compound 1080 (ingested or inhaled)
As an animal poison, compound 1080 proved a little too effective: The bodies of creatures killed with 1080 remain poisonous for up to a year. Odorless, tasteless, water soluble, and without antidote, 1080 blocks cellular metabolism, leading to a quick yet painful death.

– Christopher Null

Straight stolen from wired.com

posted on 7/27/2006 11:11:20 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Stina Persson has lived, studied and worked in Tokyo, New York, Florence and Lund, Sweden, where she was born. She says her illustration style is basically about "finding the right balance between the edgy and the elegant the raw and the beautiful." To achieve this, she uses ink, watercolor and gouache, as well as Mexican cut paper (used at ceremonies and festivals). Stina now lives and works in Stockholm.

Among Stina's clients are Absolut Vodka, Godiva Chocolatier, Atlantic Records, Macy’s Department Store, Bloomingdale’s, UNIQLO, American Eagle Outfitters, The Creative Partnership, Volvo Japan, Franco Sarto Shoes, Björn Borg Clothing, DKNY, Goldwell Styling products, and the Swedish Broadcasting Corporation.


Stina Persson - Addolorata
Sheet Size 60 x 80cm
Limited archival Giclee
print on Da Vinci paper

 


Stina Persson - Dandelions
Sheet Size 60 x 80cm
Limited archival Giclee
print on Da Vinci paper 

 


Stina Persson - Glitter
Sheet Size 60 x 80cm
Limited archival Giclee
print on Da Vinci paper


Stina Persson - Daisies
Sheet Size 60 x 80cm
Limited archival Giclee
print on Da Vinci paper



Stina Persson - Pink Tree
Sheet Size 100 x 39cm
Limited archival Giclee
print on Da Vinci paper

Cosh is proud to announce Stina Persson, as our latest showcase artist. View her work here. Come and see Stina's work and other new works at Spitz Gallery, exhibition starts.... Thursday 26th July, more details here.

Also check the cosh gallery full collection.

www.coshuk.com

posted on 7/26/2006 2:43:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Keith Haring was born on May 4, 1958 in Reading, Pennsylvania, and was raised in nearby Kutztown, Pennsylvania. He developed a love for drawing at a very early age, learning basic cartooning skills from his father and from the popular culture around him, such as Dr. Seuss and Walt Disney.

Upon graduation from high school in 1976, Haring enrolled in the Ivy School of Professional Art in Pittsburgh, a commercial arts school. He soon realized that he had little interest in becoming a commercial graphic artist and, after two semesters, dropped out. While in Pittsburgh, Haring continued to study and work on his own and in 1978 had a solo exhibition of his work at the Pittsburgh Arts and Crafts Center.

Later that same year, Haring moved to New York City and enrolled in the School of Visual Arts (SVA). In New York, Haring found a thriving alternative art community that was developing outside the gallery and museum system, in the downtown streets, the subways and spaces in clubs and former dance halls. Here he became friends with fellow artists Kenny Scharf and Jean-Michel Basquiat, as well as the musicians, performance artists and graffiti writers that comprised the burgeoning art community. Haring was swept up in the energy and spirit of this scene and began to organize and participate in exhibitions and performances at Club 57 and other alternative venues.

In addition to being impressed by the innovation and energy of his contemporaries, Haring was also inspired by the work of Jean Dubuffet, Pierre Alechinsky, William Burroughs, Brion Gysin and Robert Henri’s manifesto The Art Spirit, which asserted the fundamental independence of the artist. With these influences Haring was able to push his own youthful impulses toward a singular kind of graphic expression based on the primacy of the line. Also drawn to the public and participatory nature of Christo’s work, in particular Running Fence, and by Andy Warhol’s unique fusion of art and life, Haring was determined to devote his career to creating a truly public art.

As a student at SVA, Haring experimented with performance, video, installation and collage, while always maintaining a strong commitment to drawing. In 1980, Haring found a highly effective medium that allowed him to communicate with the wider audience he desired, when he noticed the unused advertising panels covered with matte black paper in a subway station. He began to create drawings in white chalk upon these blank paper panels throughout the subway system. Between 1980 and 1985, Haring produced hundreds of these public drawings in rapid rhythmic lines, sometimes creating as many as forty “subway drawings” in one day. This seamless flow of images became familiar to New York commuters, who often would stop to engage the artist when they encountered him at work. The subway became, as Haring said, a “laboratory” for working out his ideas and experimenting with his simple lines.


Keith Haring in Pisa - one of the few murals still remaining bold and beautiful


Between 1980 and 1986, Haring achieved international recognition and participated in numerous group and solo exhibitions. His first solo exhibition in New York, held at the Tony Shafrazi Gallery in 1982, was immensely popular and received critical acclaim. During this period, he participated in highly renowned international survey exhibitions such as Documenta 7 in Kassel Germany, the São Paulo Biennial and the Whitney Biennial. Haring completed numerous public projects in the first half of the 80’s as well, ranging from an animation for the Spectracolor billboard in Times Square, designing sets and backdrops for theaters and clubs, to developing watch designs for Swatch and creating murals worldwide.

In April 1986, Haring opened the Pop Shop, a retail store in Soho selling T-shirts, toys, posters, buttons and magnets bearing his images. Haring considered the shop to be an extension of his work and painted the entire interior of the store in an abstract black on white mural, creating a striking and unique retail environment. The shop was intended to allow people greater access to his work, which was now readily available on products at a low cost. The shop received criticism from many in the art world, however Haring remained committed to his desire to make his artwork available to as wide an audience as possible, and received strong support for his project from friends, fans and mentors including Andy Warhol.



Throughout his career, Haring devoted much of his time to public works, which often carried social messages. He produced more than 50 public artworks between 1982 and 1989, in dozens of cities around the world, many of which were created for charities, hospitals, children’s day care centers and orphanages. The now famous Crack is Wack mural of 1986 has become a landmark along New York’s FDR Drive. Other projects include; a mural created for the 100th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty in 1986, on which Haring worked with 900 children; a mural on the exterior of Necker Children’s Hospital in Paris, France in 1987; and a mural painted on the western side of the Berlin Wall three years before its fall. Haring also held drawing workshops for children in schools and museums in New York, Amsterdam, London, Tokyo and Bordeaux, and produced imagery for many literacy programs and other public service campaigns.

Haring was diagnosed with AIDS in 1988. In 1989, he established the Keith Haring Foundation, its mandate being to provide funding and imagery to AIDS organizations and children’s programs, and to expand the audience for Haring’s work through exhibitions, publications and the licensing of his images. Haring enlisted his imagery during the last years of his life to speak about his own illness and generate activism and awareness about AIDS.


Keith Haring© & Jeremy Scott Limited adition Adicolour

During a brief but intense career that spanned the 1980s, Haring’s work was featured in over 100 solo and group exhibitions. In 1986 alone, he was the subject of more than 40 newspaper and magazine articles. He was highly sought after to participate in special projects and collaborated with artists and performers such as Madonna, Grace Jones, Bill T. Jones, William Burroughs, Timothy Leary, Jenny Holzer and Andy Warhol. By expressing universal concepts of birth, death, love, sex and war, using a primacy of line and directness of message, Haring was able to attract a wide audience and assure the accessibility and staying power of his imagery, which has become a universally recognized visual language of the 20th century.

Keith Haring died of AIDS related complications at the age of 31 on February 16, 1990. A memorial service was held on May 4, 1990 at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City, with over 1,000 people in attendance.

Since his death, he has been the subject of several international retrospectives. The work of Keith Haring can be seen today in the exhibitions and collections of major museums around the world.

www.haring.com

posted on 7/25/2006 10:55:46 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, July 24, 2006

Geoff McFetridge's large drawings and water colour paintings as well as an installation of monochromatic wall paper, and graphic design images.  His paintings and drawings provide the inspiration for his famed design work and graphics. The work is cerebral, based on poetry, an appreciation for nature and inspired by children’s book illustrations.

As the former Art Director for the Beastie Boys’ Grand Royal magazine, his past work includes title graphics for the films Adaptation and The Virgin Suicides. He has also designed logotypes and graphics for companies such as Burton Snowboards, Girl Skateboards, and Stussy. McFetridge has previously shown exhibitions of his work in New York, Berlin, London, Paris and Tokyo and was included in the 2003 Cooper-Hewitt National Design Triennial in New York.


DRAWING 1


TAKING CARE OF BABY ELEPHANTS


THE BRIDGE BETWEEN MATTER


THE MIND TRIP

posted on 7/24/2006 6:12:12 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]

Longside Gallery 29 July - 5 November 2006

Scottish artist Kenny Hunter presents a stunning exhibition of sculpture,film and text in Yorkshire Sculpture Park’s 500sqm Longside Gallery. The exhibition includes new work that has been enabled by YSP, and is his largest solo show to date. Hunter’s people, animals and recognisably contemporary objects have a stilled and seamless clarity. Ranging from intimate to monumental in scale, these sculptures establish a complicated and direct dialogue with the viewer. They are often placed in historical sculptural poses: they stand, recline or are seated and are placed on the top of columns or pedestals. Features and attributes are immediate, recognisable and precisely defined. The ultra-smooth form does not simply recreate a classical mode, but alludes to children’s toys and cartoons.

Recent work features seemingly ordinary, young people. They are deeply engaging and loaded with potential, dressed in contemporary, or sometimes overtly fashionable, clothes. The exhibition includes Feedback Loop 2003, (Aberdeen Art Gallery Collection) and the reclining figure, Youth With Split Apple 2004.

In a recent group of works, Animal Virtues 2004-06, Hunter looks at r-selected species: those that are opportunist, and particularly those that have adapted to survival in an urban environment. They sit on constructed arrangements of everyday objects, which are carefully cast and coloured, or are found objects. Hunter investigates the idea of made and found sculpture and the formal presentation of work on plinths or pedestals. He constantly questions and responds to the world around him, and his extraordinary talent enables him to make startling and thought-provoking works.

Born in 1962, Kenny Hunter studied at Glasgow School of Art. He is based in Glasgow and has had recent solo shows at Talbot Rice, Edinburgh (2003); CCA, Glasgow (2003/4); Aberdeen Art Gallery; Conner Contemporary Art; Washington and artconnexion, Lille (all 2004). In 2005, he was resident in New York (at Location One).

Other shows have included Modern Art and Houldsworth, London; Arnolfini, Bristol and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery. He has made commissions for Glasgow Museums; the Tron Theatre, Glasgow; and Aberdeen Art Gallery. Hunter is currently working on a major new public sculpture for Barnsley MBC, to commemorate the town’s mining heritage. A book with text by Alex Hodby will be available.

http://www.ysp.co.uk/view.aspx?id=429

posted on 7/24/2006 2:14:28 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Friday, July 21, 2006

The shoe is stitched together with multiple pieces of latex rubber cast out of moulds made from my own skin. The shoe's toe and heel raise and lower as it occasionally vibrates/pulsates, and twitches on the floor as if it were still alive. The movement is not constant, and usually causes people to jump back while they are in the middle of leaning in for a closer look. It is constructed of Latex, Steel, Gear motors, Printed circuit, Rio MP3 Player, Batteries, Staples, Roommates Hair. Scale: Size 10 shoe.

Artist statement

It's a Nike shoe stapled together with human flesh, twitching...

Other than simply being twisted, this piece comments on issues of sweatshop labour and content ownership. Each piece of skin is therefore different in colour, size, and texture and the Nike Logo is done in white, slapped overtop of all the other colours.

We live in a culture disconnected from what it is doing to itself and others, we choose to ignore rather than deal with the reality we have created for ourselves. This piece ultimately comments on this simple idea.

Work in Progress Video Clip

How it works

The shoe uses a circuit to interpret signals sent out from an MP3 Player (Rio PMP 300), and converts them into on/off commands which it sends to the motors. The circuit works the same way the VU analyser on a stereo works (the lights that bounce up and down when a song plays).

It uses a LM3915n chip but instead of outputting to lights, the signal is converted from a negative pulse, to a positive one, (with a 4049) boosted (with Tip 122's) and then sent to the motors. This gives the appearance of random movement with no need for programming as highs and lows in the song will determine when and how the shoe moves.

http://www.brandejs.ca/portfolio5/shoe.php

posted on 7/21/2006 3:19:12 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Oakley Thump Glasses

Combining existing products, genius, but unlike the unimaginative clock-pen or of course the crisp-covered peanut, Oakley have come up with a winner, cordless MP3 playing sunglasses. Listen to Bob Rotellas mind management speeches or Busteds latest single whilst walking the fairways, fantastic. www.oakley.com (Found via www.golfpunkonline.com)

posted on 7/19/2006 9:45:56 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Click and hold the red square and move it to avoid the blue shapes. Be careful not to move the red square off the page.

See how many seconds you can last.

Leave your score as a comment

Click here to play

posted on 7/18/2006 3:20:30 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [6]

Found via wooster collective for more information goto www.copyrightdesign.co.uk

posted on 7/18/2006 9:48:52 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]

C.R. Stecyk III (born in the early 1950s) A southern California native and one of its most ardent pop culture historians.

Craig Stecyk (also known as John Smythe or Carlos Izan), started to gain notoriety for his art work on surfboards in the early 1970s, particularly when he became involved in the founding of the infamous Zephyr surf shop in Santa Monica, California.

In the 1970s Stecyk was also a contributing photographer and writer for "Surfer" magazine. As surfing gave birth to Skateboarding Stecyk became one of it's earliest practitioners and proponents. When Surfer magazine revitalized the 1964 SkateBoarder magazine Stecyk became one its most important photo journalists. The stories he wrote about the notorious Z-Boys from DogTown were for the most part his creation. His stories inspired an entire generation and he is often credited as the Godfather of the sport/art of skateboarding as it is known today.

Stecyk is also internationally known as a respected and collected fine artist working in sculpture, painting, surfboards, and hot-rod cars. He is one of the founders of Juxtapoz art magazine, and has written for many different books. His Life was portrayed in the 2001 award winning documentary Dogtown and Z-Boys as well as the Hollywood style feature film Lords of Dogtown in 2005.

His work features in this months Arkitip Magazine

posted on 7/18/2006 9:37:16 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, July 17, 2006

We welcome you to head over to the Nyc showroom to view the chairs from last years show in Los Angeles.

 

Modernica
57 Greene St.
New York, Ny 10012
212-219-1303 Telephone

http://www.arkitip.com/intelligence/?p=1187

posted on 7/17/2006 12:08:30 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Thursday, July 13, 2006

The fall of 1989 was remembered for the first release of the Stussy World Tour t-shirt. Shawn Stussy created what would become an enduring concept in graphic t-shirt designs. The idea and execution were simple: juxtapose two cultures from traditionally different worlds – a style device that had been used in art and music.

On the front of the tee, names of cities associated with giants of high-end fashion and glamour are written in a stoic and formal Helvetica type. London, Paris, Los Angeles, New York, Tokyo – these were the cities considered to be the style capitals of the contemporary world. The back of the shirt was printed with names of boroughs where our kind of street culture was actually thriving. Considered dark and underground, these untapped urban areas were about to shake up the world.  Scrawled in a hand drawn manuscript, the back of the t-shirt clashed with the front in style, look and meaning. The graffiti was a shout-out to this band of outsiders - Brooklyn, Bronx, Compton, Santa Ana and Venice - that is reppin' a new vibe, direction and attitude.

This year, Stussy has reinvented this classic and iconic t-Shirt with the World Tour Project. A group of over 40 artists were handpicked and invited to do their rendition of the World Tour T-shirt. They may be graphic designers, graffiti artists, clothing designers or comic book artists – but their unique hand writing style and artistic vision were specifically chosen to fit with our ethos and identity.

The t-shirts will be released in small groups starting in March and new designs will be cropping up throughout the year. The second half of the year will also see some special events and collaborations for this project. All building and creating new pages in a never-ending history. Stay tuned.

" It ain't where ya from, its where ya at……”

http://www.stussyworldtour.com/

posted on 7/13/2006 11:39:01 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Bob Gibson (The London Police) 1977. Born Chelmsford, England.

Bob Gibson has always been fascinated by big cities and architecture. Growing up, he spent some formative time in America. Detroit, New York, San Fransisco and Chicago left a lasting impression. Road trips were hugely influential.

“I liked the lines of cars, street lamps and telegraph poles, long straight roads, cruise control, emptiness, truck stops, petrol stations, fast-food, bridges, and good music on the stereo. Then, after hours of monotonous driving, a glimpse of the city skyline up ahead, and the thrill of entering the towering metropolis; orderly, magical, intimidating, exciting and immense. A living machine, a feast for the senses.”

Fueled by that imagery, he has been making art about it ever since. Whether it's a drawing, a piece of writing, a sculpture or an animation, Bob is constantly inventing fictional landscapes and scenarios that play on the power and allure of the city. Bob studied sculpure at the Norwich School of Art in the east of England and went on to be a founding member of The London Police street art collective, exhibiting work worldwide between 1999 and 2004. After a brief pause and a change in direction Bob rejoined the collective in 2005 with his new concept of cityscapes.

Bob currently resides in Amsterdam.


offices on the top floors have the best view
Bob Gibson (London Police)



an arial view of a city that doesn't exist
Bob Gibson (London Police)


the walking city advances on the sun
Bob Gibson (London Police)


a car chase scene from an imaginary french film
Bob Gibson (London Police)

Prints featured above are available from www.abluechicken.com

posted on 7/12/2006 9:37:32 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Josh Taylor died in the year 2037 at the young age of 57. It is still unclear the exact cause of his death, but there have been a couple of people who were close to Josh that started noticing weird things. While Josh was a private person throughout his life, young Tim McAllister (a neighbor) was sometimes allowed into Josh's house. Josh had Tim run to the store to buy groceries or to mail out some prints. When asked if he noticed anything strange in the days prior to Josh's death, Tim replied, "Yeah, a couple days before Mr. Taylor died, I had came in the back door and found Josh at his drawing table. He had his arm shoved elbow deep into his mouth. It really freaked him out when he saw me, and he tried covering up all the weirdness. He sure was strange." This is important though, because when the autopsy was being performed, Josh was completely cut open. On the inside of his body, it was discovered that Josh had been using his innards as a canvas.


THE STARING CONTEST
11x14" Acrylic on canvas

While only seen by a handful of people, it has been reported that the art INSIDE of Josh is leaps and bounds greater than anything else done by anybody, anywhere. Unfortunately, the Government seized control of all works of art in the year 2012 (music was seized around 1985), so it will not be issued until the Government decides what to do with it. It is doubtful that it will ever be seen, because his art is dark and controversial. It challenges all authority. It inspires people to question, it inspires people to seek change. One can only wonder what was created inside Josh, perhaps someday we will all be so lucky to see.


JESUS BURGER
16x20" Acrylic on canvas

Before Josh Taylor died, however, he was born. That is usually how it happens in the game of life, and Josh's life was no exception. Josh was born in a canvas in the town of Ridgewood, New Jersey. The year was 1980 and he was zero years old at the time of birth. He landed on the canvas with a loud "THUD", and Jack yelled out, "Christ, Pat it's a boy, let's call him Joshua". Pat thought that was a wonderful choice of a name, and they went back to lover's land, to start working on the creation of their second piece, which would be finished a few years later, entitled "Bronwyn." Eventually Josh got tired of being stuck in a canvas all the time, so he broke free. He started making puppets, painting, drawing, and being a shithead, as soon as he was liberated. By the second grade the Government was alerted of this talented Josh Taylor. Spies were sent to Chardavoyne Road in Warwick, NY (where the Taylor family had moved) and his house was bugged. Jack and Pat were followed every where they turned. However the spies were not noticed. Government spies are good. Regardless, Josh grew up to be a normal artist. Starving sometimes, catching a break other times. Eventually, the Taylor family started to get paranoid about being followed all the time,so they went to North Carolina and Jack and Pat split up. Pat , Josh and Bronwyn stayed in North Carolina and Jack went to Honduras or Saturn or Spain or something. He acquired a lot of expensive cars in the process. Josh continued with the arting and eventually ended up at the fictional art institute called Pratt in Brooklyn, New York, where he studied Illustration and minored in something art related. He graduated at the top of his class in 2002 and was asked to speak at the graduation ceremony. Josh accepted the invitation and went on for about 25 minutes how he felt the Government was starting to get too closely involved in the art community. Josh had been drinking heavily though, so nothing was really understood. Everyone thought he was insane, and they applauded when he was finally finished.


FIFTY-SEVEN
16x20" Acrylic on canvas

After Josh graduated from Pratt, he moved into a tiny hermit town in Alaska and painted everyday, sending his work via DHL to his friend Todd Kurpel who was supposedly selling it to art collectors/dealers. However Todd was really selling all of Josh's art to the Government. Todd was making a fortune and only sending Josh enough cash to stay broke. More time passed and then eventually the Government passed the law claiming that They own all art work. Whether it be your child's kindergarten finger painting or Josh Taylor's "The Egyptians".

 


LIVE SMALL BIRD
Shirt design for LIVE Clothing

In the year 2012, when the government took over the art world, Josh lost whatever little their was left of his mind. There have been a few people to have claimed to have seen Josh swallowing his hand as far back as 2012. It's a shame really. Another tragedy. Another talented artist to never be seen. With his greatest creation trapped inside of him.

Words by Todd Kurpel
www.joshtaylorart.net

posted on 7/11/2006 10:22:37 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Monday, July 10, 2006

An electro-graf is a graffiti piece or throw-up that uses conductive and magnetic paint to embed LED display electronics. The video below documents the making of the first prototype electro-graf in the lab at Eyebeam - giving you full instructions for using conductive and magnetic paint to embed electronics in stencil pieces.

 

There is a great article on instructables that guides you through a step by step help file on how to do one yourself - for more info go here
http://www.instructables.com/id/EHGVC6AAPXEP286K97/

and if you're still not bored go chechk out the flickr group here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/q-branch/

Found on http://graffitiresearchlab.com/?page_id=13#video

posted on 7/10/2006 9:42:21 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Friday, July 07, 2006

This California based private members society helps the rich geeks of California get a social life.

For $4,500 per month you have priority access to music, sport and fashion events around  the world plus invitations to Xenii's own  legendary secret parties. And its an easy place to meet a billionare - Google's Larry Page is a member.

http://xenii.com

posted on 7/7/2006 3:35:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Thursday, July 06, 2006

Back in 1998, three college friends, Adam Balon, Richard Reed and Jon Wright, decided, at the grand old age of 26, that they needed either to get serious about their "grown-up jobs", or give them up and go into business for themselves. What kind of business, they weren't quite sure yet. Electrical bathtubs were mooted, until the small issue of electrocution was raised. They decided that easy, healthy food was the way forward and so, in Balon and Reed's shared kitchen, they pulped some fruit and made smoothies. "Understanding fruit was much easier than electrical bathtubs," Balon says cheerfully. "Easier to deliver, too," Wright adds
But what to do about their normal jobs? To help them decide, the puppyish trio set up a stall at a festival and put up a large sign asking, "Should we quit our jobs to make these smoothies?" with one bin below saying "Yes", and another saying "No". The Yes bin filled up immediately with empty bottles. So they staked their future on a bin? "Well, we did toss a coin, too," Wright says. The next day, careers were discarded; three months later, Innocent was launched.
Eight years on, the Innocent office has more than a touch of Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory about it. They refer to their workplace as "Fruit Towers". The floor is covered in fake grass, and there's a high glass ceiling, giving a bucolic feel to what should