Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
Digital Media Tree this blog's archive OVVLvverk Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact Sally McKay: GIFS / cv and contact |
View current page
...more recent posts
Artist Diana Thater writes a rip-roaring report detailing her personal, ongoing battle with a certain group of LA art critics (David Pagel, Christopher Knight and Dave Hickey). Snippet describing a panel in 1997: "Artists in the audience came up to the microphone to speak and all took the opportunity to voice their own frustrations with the attitude of the art critics in LA toward the artists. Why was it so mean? So personal? Why was the worst of the curatorial criticism reserved for female curators? Why was any medium other than painting automatically 'conceptual'?" |
Scary: Just in time for Hallowein, the incomparable Ms. Gracie Jones:
Corporate Cannibal:
Libertango (Ástor Piazzolla)
Slave to the Rhythm! (Citroën CX Car Advert)
In honor of the death of LimeWire we have stolen a "brief history of some of the biggest events in file sharing over the past ten years" from Gearlog. (warning: annoying pop-ups) LimeWire went dark today, thanks to a court-ordered injunction. The Manhattan-based site is just the latest in a long line of file-sharing sites to rise and fall in the past decade or so. |
The Talairach Atlas
Wikipedia says: "By defining standard anatomical landmarks that could be identified on different subjects (the anterior and posterior commissures), it became easier to spatially warp an individual brain image obtained through Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Positron Emission Tomography (PET) and other imaging methods to this 'standard Talairach space'. One can then make inferences about tissue identity at a specific location by referring to the atlas." Everything2 says:" There are some problems with the Talairach atlas. First of all, the atlas is based on one brain, which happens to be the brain of a 60-year-old French woman. Only one hemisphere was mapped, assuming that the hemispheres were symmetrical (although as a rule they are not). The most notable difference between the Talairach brain and other brains is its size. The Talairach brain is considerably smaller than the average brain by up to 10 millimeters in each dimension. Because brain sections are typically taken every 2 millimeters, this leaves a total of 15 slices that would go unnaccounted for. Also, the Talairach atlas leaves out the majority of the brain stem and cerebellum." |