cover photo



blog archive

main site

artwork

bio






Schwarz



View current page
...more recent posts

"SURVIVAL THROUGH DESIGN, to ameliorate by the fast-advancing insights of all sciences, the human setting in which to live, to work, to rest"

- Richard J. Neutra (1892-1970)





[link] [add a comment]

King Kong meets the Gem of Egypt





[link] [add a comment]

cabin in the dark

cabin on the prairie





[link] [4 comments]

Casa Malaparte Capri





[link] [3 comments]

Lisa Law photographer

New Buffalo (new)





[link] [add a comment]

Obsolete 100 years of Electronic Music





[link] [add a comment]

SF Tape Music Center

"Donald Buchla started building and designing electronic instruments in 1960 when he was commisioned by the Avant Garde composer Morton Subotnik to build an instrument for live electronic music and composing. With a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation Buchla started building his first modular synthesisers in 1963 under the name "San Fransisco Tape Music Center", the name of Subotnik's music studio. Buchla's early synthesisers were experimental in design to accomadate the experimental music they were intended to produce, utilising unusual control features such as touch sensitive and resistance sensitive plates. Buchla's early pioneering work included the first analogue sequencers."





[link] [add a comment]

One-Log House





[link] [add a comment]

SF rocks

Diggers SF

Bleed this

Stroboscopic Trampoline





[link] [17 comments]

bottle diggers

FOHBC





[link] [1 comment]

"Big Daddy" Don Garlits





[link] [add a comment]

ZATAOMCM





[link] [add a comment]

Electronic Music Foundation

Vint Synth





[link] [add a comment]

Hitchhiker's Guide to the Moon





[link] [1 comment]

Off Grid





[link] [add a comment]

Felix Wankel father of the rotary engine





[link] [1 comment]

remember The Alamo





[link] [add a comment]

Moshe Safdie and associates




[link] [add a comment]

Le Corbusier cabin





[link] [add a comment]

In Every Dream Home a Heartache





[link] [add a comment]

Exquisite Corpse

"Among Surrealist techniques exploiting the mystique of accident was a kind of collective collage of words or images called the cadavre exquis (exquisite corpse). Based on an old parlor game, it was played by several people, each of whom would write a phrase on a sheet of paper, fold the paper to conceal part of it, and pass it on to the next player for his contribution.

The technique got its name from results obtained in initial playing, "Le cadavre exquis boira le vin nouveau" (The exquisite corpse will drink the young wine). Other examples are: "The dormitory of friable little girls puts the odious box right" and "The Senegal oyster will eat the tricolor bread." These poetic fragments were felt to reveal what Nicolas Calas characterized as the "unconscious reality in the personality of the group" resulting from a process of what Ernst called "mental contagion."

At the same time, they represented the transposition of Lautréamont's classic verbal collage to a collective level, in effect fulfilling his injunction-- frequently cited in Surrealist texts--that "poetry must be made by all and not by one." It was natural that such oracular truths should be similarly sought through images, and the game was immediately adapted to drawing, producing a series of hybrids the first reproductions of which are to be found in No. 9-10 of La Révolution surrealiste (October, 1927) without identification of their creators. The game was adapted to the possibilities of drawing, and even collage, by assigning a section of a body to each player, though the Surrealist principle of metaphoric displacement led to images that only vaguely resembled the human form. One, by three hands, begins with a spider, which gives way to a man's torso the feet of which are formed by two jugs. Other, more interesting cadavres exquis were reproduced in a special issue of Variétés titled "Le Suréalisme en 1929" (fig. 288). One of these begins with a woman's head by Tanguy, which dissolves in to a jungle scene by Max Morise, returning to a female anatomy schematically indicated by Miró, and terminating in "legs" in the form of a fishtail and an engineer's triangle by Man Ray."


[link] [add a comment]

Hillbilly Music

Moonshine


[link] [add a comment]

Outhouse


[link] [add a comment]

Koolhaas


[link] [add a comment]