Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
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Image courtesy of All The little Live Things
As of today there's a giant fucking freak in my house stalking my every move.
Sandra Rechico, who I will no longer refer to as a 'ho (on-line anyway) is now a saint for driving the three hour return trip to pick up an insanely happy beast who spent most of the ride drooling all over her head.
Bat-boy.
Corinne Carlson Billboards various locations (from 2000 on)
via Jennifer McMackon in big RED & Shiny
And from Kim Fullerton writing in Xtra: "Corinne Carlson’s swanky billboard — reading "Baa?" — made of sequin-like reflective disks that sparkled and cavorted in the wind and the rain. Part of Logo City at Blackwood Gallery, Baa? teased us with an incomprehensible question and the promise of an answer like Pizza Pizza could never deliver."
Kraftwerk: Tour de France (everybody sing along, c'est fantastique)
Doggy hits stoned guy on bike (only interesting 2007 Tour de France news so far):
aaaaaaaawwwwwwwwww
Last weekend our friends (and family) at TooBadDogs treated us to a state-of-the-art rock stadium spectacle: Roger Waters' staging of The Dark Side of The Moon.
It was very loud, with tight professionally choreographed sound, lighting, lazers, pyrotechnics, and video projection, including a swell old tube radio.
Roger himself was the rock-star of the evening, barking his dark lyrics and denounciations of G.W.Bush, but the real star of the evening was the moon: The Dark Side of The Moon is one of the cultural foundations of my generation, so much so that we all now take it for granted. This particular event made me realize how perfect, in an artistic sense, this seemingly silly hippy set of metaphors is: MOON; MIND; PRISM; HEARTBEAT; Perfect in the sense of being potentuous and profound, yet completely open-ended, still to this day inviting interpretations about the interplay of these four simple symbols, loosely cobbled together by the Floyd and Hipgnosis Design. Will future generations look back upon this lunar prism as a cultural touchstone of the late 20th century? |
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