Saturday, August 29, 2009

Spray-On Solar Cells


Solar cells soon could be painted onto the sides of buildings or rooftops with nanoparticle inks, according to one chemical engineer. The new nano-ink process could replace the standard method of manufacturing solar cells, which requires high temperatures and is relatively expensive, said Brian Korgel of the University of Texas at Austin. "We make a solution of these nanocrystals, and we spray paint them onto a substrate," said Matthew Panthani, a doctoral student and graduate research assistant in Korgel's lab. -Live Science

Tarantino really does think violence is "like, cool."

Violence in the movies can be cool," he says. "It's just another color to work with. When Fred Astaire dances, it doesn't mean anything. Violence is the same. It doesn't mean anything. It's a color." He scorns anyone who tries to see simulated violence as having meaning. Sadists take human suffering seriously; that's why they enjoy it. No: Tarantino is morally empty, seeing a shoot-out as akin to dancing cheek-to-cheek. He sees violence as nothing. Compare his oeuvre to the work of a genuine cinematic sadist -- Alfred Hitchcock -- and you see the difference. Precisely because Hitchcock enjoyed inflicting pain, the pain is always authentic, and it is never emptied of its own inner horror. We don't leave our moral senses at the door when we go to the movies, or pick up a novel, or go to a gallery. We feel such tension in Tarantino's movies because the good and sane part of us doesn't want the violence to come -- while the debased part of us is cheering it on. The artists who have claimed their work was purely aesthetic were either frivolous, psychopathic, or lying. The novelist Vladimir Nabokov -- who I love -- claimed in the introduction to Bend Sinister that, "Politics and economics, atomic bombs, primitive and abstract art forms, the entire Orient, symptoms of 'thaw' in Soviet Russia, the Future of Mankind, and so on, leave me supremely indifferent." He was writing in the year of the Cuban Missile Crisis, when he and everybody he knew came within a few hours of dying in a nuclear war. How could he be "supremely indifferent" to that prospect? How can you revere aesthetics and not mind if every aesthetic object you love is incinerated? The answer is, of course, he wasn't indifferent. If you read his letters, you find he worried about these issues at great length. Similarly, I suspect Tarantino has deeper instincts beneath his life-is-a-grindhouse-flick pose. The tragedy of Tarantino is that he could have been so much more than the Schlock and Awe merchant that he has devolved into. -Johann Hari: The Terrible Moral Emptiness of Quentin Tarantino Is Wrecking His Films, The Huffington Post

Friday, August 28, 2009

Glen Orbik



http://www.orbikart.com/

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Bicycle Film Festival


http://bicyclefilmfestival.com/

Monday, August 24, 2009

Stefan Kanchev


http://stefankanchev.com/other.html

Friday, August 21, 2009

zero film festival

http://www.zerofilmfest.com/

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Kirk Demarais


http://www.secretfunspot.com/

Shepard Fairey interviews Bansky

Shepard Fairey: How long are you going to remain anonymous, working through the medium itself and through your agent as a voice for you?

Bansky: I have no interest in ever coming out. I figure there are enough self-opinionated assholes trying to get their ugly little faces in front of you as it is. You ask a lot of kids today what they want to be when they grow up, and they say, “I want to be famous.” You ask them for what reason and they don’t know or care.

http://swindlemagazine.com/issue08/banksy/

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Screw Magazine Cover Art


http://screwmagazinecoverart.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Cristiana Couceiro

http://setediasete.blogspot.com/

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Thursday, August 13, 2009

S. Britt

http://www.sbritt.com/

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Grant Hamilton



http://fullfra.me/FULLFRAME/trailer.html

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Fashion Film Festival


http://www.fashioninfilm.com/

David Klein





http://www.davidkleinart.com/Home.html