Just a virtual filing cabinet of the things that amuse and interest me and by default you should appreciate too damn it.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Solar Powered Modern Stonehenge

Solar-powered "modern Stonehenge" lets audience create nightly performance over Internet

In a collaboration between the community and the sun, Solar Collector gathers human expression and solar energy during the day, then brings them together each night in a performance of flowing light.

Twelve shimmering metal shafts rise at surprising angles from a grassy hill. They hang over the landscape, creating a graceful curve that appears to unfold for passing motorists.
The shafts are part of Solar Collector, a sculpture created by artists Matt Gorbet, Rob Gorbet, and Susan LK Gorbet as a commission for the Region of Waterloo. Set in front of the Regional Operations Centre in Cambridge, Ontario, the sculpture is solar-powered and interactive, inviting the community to choreograph its nightly performance via the web.
Each shaft has three sets of lights, along with three solar panels. Their angles reflect the angles of the sun through the year. The tallest shaft is perpendicular to the sun at winter solstice, when the sun is low in the sky. The flattest shaft faces the high sun at summer solstice.
During the day, the solar panels collect the sun's energy in a battery within each shaft. At the same time, the Solar Collector website [link] collects light compositions - patterns in light that are created by the community through a simple web interface.
"Since it's public art, it was important to us that the piece be accessible to the public," says co-artist Susan LK Gorbet. "Because it's set in an industrial area, we used the internet to create a collaboration with the community. People can compose in light on the web with a set of simple sliders."
Each night at dusk, a performance begins of all the compositions collected that day. "The light patterns are based on sine waves - the mathematics behind sunlight and the seasons," explains co-artist Rob Gorbet. "As we explored the geometry of solar energy, we were struck by how beautiful it was, and we wanted to make it visible. The angles and lengths of the shafts, the light patterns - the entire sculpture is based on the sun's movement."
After the patterns collected each day are displayed, the performance moves on to a series composed collaboratively from all the patterns ever created. The length of the performance is a reflection of the weather and the seasons, as the shafts use up their energy and fade out late in the evening, one by one.
Solar Collector launches on the summer solstice - Saturday, June 21st

Full press release...[link]
See more photos of the Solar Collector ...[link]

Saturday, June 14, 2008

The Art of David Macaulay

David Macaulay [link] is an author and artist who has helped us to understand the workings and origins of everything from simple gadgets to elaborate architectural structures through his extraordinary gift for conveying complex concepts within a social and historical context for the printed page. Beloved by readers of all ages throughout the world, this Caldecott Medal artist is the subject of an in-depth exhibition exploring his artistic process and extensive body of work. Macaulay’s classic books, which bring together the worlds of art, history and science, include such outstanding volumes as The Way Things Work and The New Way Things Work: Cathedral, Castle, City, Mill, and Mosque among many others. Read more from Artdaily....[link]

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Damn Another One

I could start an obituary column with all these artists dieing damn it....
It's artist like Alton Kelly or Rick Griffin who made album covers so wonderful. The art just doesn't translate the same on five inch square CD cases.
Legendary artist Alton Kelley created a graphic style that rocked the world beginning in the psychedelic Sixties. His concert posters, logo designs, LP album covers, and fine art have forevermore defined that time. Kelley, born June 17, 1940, passed away peacefully at home June 1st of complications from a long illness.

More to read here from the New York Times.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Ilustration Friday Submission

This Weeks Theme on


is 'BABY".

Here's my submission.

View mine and other submission's HERE