Françoise Nielly

Striking portraits. Found her site through The Cool Hunter, who recommended her video particularly. I concur – watching her work large scale with knives is inspiring. I once made an instructional video about palette knives. That step by step lessony thing seems pointless to me now, looking at this – I reckon anyone’d get a heap more out of just watching talented artists actually work with their knives.

The work featured dates back to 2002. You can see a subtle increase over this period in the use of the dayglo palette, which suits me just fine thanks.

Françoise Nielly – Artist :: home.

Laid Eyes On

kimber modern austin

(photo by Alison Zavos)

As I laid eyes on these seatbelt hammocks on Lost At E Minor, I acquired another tiny morsel of self knowledge: I love the material and fabrication of seatbelts. I can just feel this hammock, and I am nowhere near Austin.

Kimber Modern, Austin, selt belt hammocks – Cool Travel | Lost At E Minor: For creative people.

Will It Be A Webcrush?

Now, admittedly, I only paid strict attention to this for the first six and the final three or so minutes, and I hardly ever was watching, just listening. But this is inspired. The is-it-robot-voice-or-is-it-human intrigue increases my enjoyment. And the point, if I understood it as intended, lights up my “money is the root of all evil” button nicely.

I saw this on my very first ever visit to 3 Quarks Daily, which may well become a bona fide webcrush for me.

More Beloved Even Than Bacon

Slow Food International’s Sloweb posts today on my favorite food, cheese. I love cheese so much, I can even enjoy simply reading about it. Although I wouldn’t describe my experience of this article as enjoyment. Shame-flavoured self-awareness was more the case. The European author travels to America to explore the raw milk cheese industry, and discovers along the way the thoughtless ubiquity of cheese this side of the pond.

The fact is that, in the US, cheese is not treated as a hedonistic, gourmet product as it is in Europe: a little piece as an appetizer with your aperitif, a selection of cheeses instead of meat for an alternative main course, a little piece at the end of a meal, as is customary in Greece or southern Italy. In the States, cheese is mostly transformed into a huge, unending flow that floods the whole market, and especially the fast food sector.”

This is one of those things you know, but you don’t dwell on, n’est-ce pas? I cannot even take refuge in the maple leaf on this one, as abominable eating practices appear to me to be shared across the border. I am left to contemplate the true nature of my relationship to cheese.

Slow Food International – Sloweb.

Bookwant

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I may be ambivalent about history, or I may just misunderstand my appreciation of history. One thing I am decidedly appreciative of, however, is discovering that something significant to me has a longer history than I realized. Learning in Times Online that Alex Steinweiss pioneered graphic album covers in the 1940s gave me one of those moments. It gave me another very familiar moment, too – the moment of MATERIALIST DESIRE. For you see, Taschen is releasing a book on the guy and his work on October 6. The 2009 Christmas wish list is begun.

How Alex Steinweiss invented the album cover – Times Online.

The Therapy Is Not Working

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I want to take some sort of exception to Soundwalk‘s seemingly pure commercial aspirations, yet cannot experience anything but pure love for them. I want to dismiss Phillippe Starck‘s work for them as generic dubstep and cousins, but instead I cannot turn it off. Must be some hocus pocus involved. On the upside, I have learned that the pokeyness of the App Store has its place from time to time, as I hope to salvage some pride and break this spell before the iphone release of the mix is approved.

24 Hours: The Starck Mix – Design – Wallpaper.com – International Design Interiors Fashion Travel.