Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Just a spoonful.




If you have never heard of Kina Grannis; You're Welcome.
Her sweet sweet voice melts like a spoonful of honey on your tongue.
This is just one of her may covers on youtube, so be sure to check the rest out!
Something about her simplicity, tone, mood... basically everything... just reels me into her work.
She is not only talented, but incredibly sweet -- she deserves all the recognition in the world.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Drip back down the thread of time.



Chino Otsuka is a talented photographer who was born and raised in Tokyo, Japan (Holler!) before moving (and now residing) in London.  In this photo series "Imagine Finding Me", she cleverly manipulates old photographs from her pasts by adding her present imagine within them.  By doing so, she is able to create new images in which her old self and new self live together; just like time-travelling.  

"The digital process becomes a tool, almost like a time machine, as I'm embarking on the journey to where I once belonged and at the same time becoming a tourist in my own history."

The project reminds me of having a sort of guardian angel.  But in this case, you go back and guide yourself to grow into the person you are now. Her amazing attention to detail: noise, shadow, exposure etc. really helps the photographs look completely authentic.






Sunday, December 29, 2013

Melting the World


Sunga Park, South Korean designer and illustrator creates these lovely watercolor landscapes of various cities across the world including London, Paris, Busan, Istanbul, venice and Oxford.  These paintings are stunning in numerous manners; obviously aesthetically brilliant but also in a more resounding way.  One looks at each of these pieces and feels a lost memory, something everyone can relate to.  Something you wish you could remember perfectly, but is hazy with a few lines of details that you cannot shake.  The creation of a memory is a beautiful thing in and of it self, but I feel that Park truly captures these moments on paper.  I wish she could do a time-lapse of making these pieces, and truly save the movement and flow of a memory.







Saturday, December 21, 2013

The Power of Empathy



This powerful short helps us understand the difference between "empathy" and "sympathy".  These words often get misused and miscommunicated in our daily lives.  The animation encompasses the two words in a simple, clear manner and allows the audience to truly understand (and enjoy) the power of empathy as opposed to sympathy. 

"Dr Brené Brown reminds us that we can only create a genuine empathic connection if we are brave enough to really get in touch with our own fragilities." 


Voice: Dr Brené Brown
Animation: Katy Davis (AKA Gobblynne) www.gobblynne.com

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Floating Underwater



We all remember the glorious Japanese artist who painted photorealistic goldfish -- not on a canvas, but literally within the folds of their natural habitat.  

Well the impressive technique continues to thrive under Boston-based artist Jessica Dunegan's very talented hand.  "Working with epoxy resin, poured in layers with acrylic paint, the artist's creations are almost sculptural works of art as the pigments are encased within different levels of the translucent material." via MyModernMet










Tuesday, December 10, 2013


to the moon

Art thou pale for weariness

Of climbing heaven and gazing on the earth,


Wandering companionless


Among the stars that have a different birth,


And ever changing, like a Joyless eye

     That finds no object worth its constancy?

Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822) 








Photography: Klaus Kampert

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Obscure


Fabio Selvatici says the work features "the inner impulses of the human soul, the psyche, and the travails of inadequacy in relation to the same claustrophobic environment that oppresses [his subjects]."