“During the Old Stone Age, between thirty-seven thousand and eleven thousand years ago, some of the most remarkable art ever conceived was etched or painted on the walls of caves in southern France and northern Spain. After a visit to Lascaux, in the Dordogne, which was discovered in 1940, Picasso reportedly said to his guide, “They’ve invented everything.” What those first artists invented was a language of signs for which there will never be a Rosetta stone; perspective, a technique that was not rediscovered until the Athenian Golden Age; and a bestiary of such vitality and finesse that, by the flicker of torchlight, the animals seem to surge from the walls, and move across them like figures in a magiclantern show (in that sense, the artists invented animation). They also thought up the grease lamp—a lump of fat, with a plant wick, placed in a hollow stone—to light their workplace; scaffolds to reach high places; the principles of stencilling and Pointillism; powdered colors, brushes, and stumping cloths; and, more to the point of Picasso’s insight, the very concept of an image. A true artist reimagines that concept with every blank canvas—but not from a void.”
Calling New Yorkers… »
There is some art on.
Too Art For TV 5, a fine art show for the animation industry.
I’m showing a film, but, alas, have no plans to make it in person, unless something spectacular happens to me between now and March (I’ll keep you posted if it does).
Sunday night brain dump (unfinished) (6/182)

(T)
“Everything” by Micachu and the Shapes with the London Sinfonietta (2011)
Wood Rhyme

Photographed at my local wood supplier.
Hire Her »
“An excellent writer, a rock star traffic-generator, and a generally awesome person.”
‘You guys all know how much I think of Susannah Breslin, right? She was the second total stranger I ever painted (after Genesis Breyer P-Orridge), and she wrote an incredibly kind post about it on her old (now gone?) blog, the Reverse Cowgirl. She contributed to the first round of Significant Objects (and I bid on and won her Story and Object), a she is, mysteriously, the connecting thread between all of the first people I started following on tumblr. She has two amazing current projects: the self-published They Shoot Porn Stars, Don’t They? and The War Project. I am aware that it is absurd to think that my sphere of influence has anything on nevver’s, but, you know, sometimes you have to say your piece all the same.’
1. I found tumblr because of Susannah.
2. I found Molly because of Susannah, and then this happened.
3. Susannah reblogged my animation.
4. I fully endorse this message.
Freedom of ‘76 by Ween (1993)
…and the tide recedes…
The 6 minute Moleskine
An assembly manual by Burningfp.

1. You will need:
2 sheets good quality A4 paper (150 gsm is good)
1 piece of recycled cardboard (Stella beer box card is thin and strong)
2 standard staples
Scissors, ruler, pencil and stapler.

2. Fold the paper in half, then fold back the other way, this then should make it easy to tear in half with a neat edge.

3. Repeat so, in the end, each sheet bears 4 strips.

4. Repeat on the other sheet so you end up with 8 strips.

5. Fold them all together in half, making booklet.

6. Make sure that crease is nice and sharp.

7. Using the booklet as a guide measure out a rectangle on the card to act as a cover. Give it an extra 5mm in width and 10mm in length to accommodate the edges and spine thickness.

8. Cut out the card.

9. Making sure the edges are equal fold the cover around the booklet.

10. Using a thick carpet or plasticine as a base push two staple through the spine. Turn the book over and carefully bend the staples over as they should be, but use a tool, like a knife or something so you don’t damage your beautiful fingers.

11. You can even cut the corners rounded just to look classy.

12. Bingo, it’s flexible so will fit nicely in a back pocket, and is the perfect receptacle for notes on your next novel, concepts of social theory, life sketching, mind maps, crudely drawn genitalia etc etc.
(If this is a bit low rent for you, may I recommend the excellent Linda Boucher’s elegantly decorated actual moleskines available here.)
Enjoy!
bfp
x
(cross posted from my tumblr)
