via mimikry
Author: Paul Greer
Animated Journal No.5 011009
Not sure what happened here, ended up all buzzy and blurry and that..
An Evolution of Musical Notation

Japanese drum notation for “Dienst Mars” (Service March) by Inukai Kiyonobu, 1865. Western Military Drums in Japan. via

The evolution of notation in Western music (source unknown)
On Talking Movies
“As soon as you put things in words, no one ever sees the film the same way. And that’s what I hate, you know. Talking — it’s real dangerous.”
via Liquid Night
Notebook Pages
Animated Journal No.1 has been added to the splendid Check It! channel on Vimeo.
Lots of excellent things on there, so you go do that.
Hilma af Klint (1862 – 1944)
“Hilma af Klint was a Swedish artist and mystic whose paintings were amongst the first abstract art. She belonged to a group called ‘The Five’ and the paintings or diagrams were a visual representation of complex philosophical ideas.”

“At the Academy of Fine Arts she met Anna Cassel, the first of the four women with whom she later worked in “The Five” (de Fem), a group of artists who shared her ideas. The group of female artists The Five was engaged in the paranormal and regularly organized spiritistic séances. They recorded in a book a completely new system of mystical thoughts in the form of messages from higher spirits, called The High Masters (“Höga Mästare”). One, Gregor, spoke thus: “all the knowledge that is not of the senses, not of the intellect, not of the heart but is the property that exclusively belongs to the deepest aspect of your being…the knowledge of your spirit”.”

Booklet with drawings by Hilma af Klint.
“The pictures were painted directly through me, without any preliminary drawings, and with great force. I had no idea what the paintings were supposed to depict; nevertheless I worked swiftly and surely, without changing a single brush stroke.”

Svanen (The Swan), nr 17, Group 9, Series SUW, October 1914 – March 1915. This abstract work was never exhibited during af Klint’s lifetime.
“Transmissions From Uranus” by Man or Astro-Man (1995)
—sound clip—from It Conquered the World ( 1956 )
Lee Van Cleef: – There, do you have any idea what your listening to?
Peter Graves: – London Philharmonic?
Lee Van Cleef: – It’s Venus.
Peter Graves: – Huh?
Lee Van Cleef: – Venus.
Peter Graves: – Why not? We’ve bounced signals off the Moon surface, there’s no reason that Venus shouldn’t radiate impulses.
Lee Van Cleef: – No, I don’t mean the static. Can’t you hear it; the other thing?
Peter Graves: – What other thing?
Lee Van Cleef: – Listen to it, Paul. Listen to the voice.





