(Source: photobigbang, via formicarius)
(Source: photobigbang, via formicarius)
(Source: learningtheblues, via boxforstanding)
for(){}; - projection mapped video game on canvas
Playable art by Brent Watanabe features acrylic hand-painted canvases mounted on wall, with sprites projected on surface - video embedded below:
In for( ){ };, there is no beginning or end to the game, just collecting and wandering, birthing and consuming, an arbitrary point system rising until your inevitable death and the birth of another generation. It is a game mechanism without the game. An addictive but essentially aimless experience.
The piece is a triptych of playable acrylic paintings, controlled by the viewer using a NES controller.
NASA announces the selection of the first astronauts, aka the “Mercury Seven,” on April 9, 1959
Position Description for Mercury Astronaut
(More on Project Mercury)
(Source: rachelateasalamander, via thegameofart)
(Source: insprd)
Victor Vasarely
ohne Titel (Linien-Komposition)
1970er Jahre
(Source: weissesrauschen, via thegameofart)
Gary Hill 1986
A man narrates the piece, and his voice is plugged into the speaker which is seen within the video. He slowly fills the speaker with sand describing his every movement. Furthermore his words become visible in a sense as you can see the sand vibrating as his voice reverberates through the speaker. This interesting idea brings all whole side to the concept of a voiceover as the voice takes centrestage within the video.
(Source: youtube.com, via gwynethviolet)