Kinetic sculpture: A metal three-pendula harmonograph designed and constructed by visual artist Anita Chowdry, http://j.mp/1ADHCiI
Video by Josh Jones, http://j.mp/1rMFb7z
Music: Gassenhauer Nach Hans Neusiedler, composed by Carl Orff.
Kinetic sculpture: A metal three-pendula harmonograph designed and constructed by visual artist Anita Chowdry, http://j.mp/1ADHCiI
Video by Josh Jones, http://j.mp/1rMFb7z
Music: Gassenhauer Nach Hans Neusiedler, composed by Carl Orff.
When Adobe Illustrator first shipped in 1987, it was the first software application for a young company that had, until then, focused solely on Adobe PostScript. The new product not only altered Adobe’s course, it changed drawing and graphic design forever.
Watch the Illustrator story unfold, from its beginning as Adobe’s first software product, to its role in the digital publishing revolution, to becoming an essential tool for designers worldwide. Interviews include cofounder John Warnock, his wife Marva, artists and designers Ron Chan, Bert Monroy, Dylan Roscover and Jessica Hische.
This Week in Art Crime: When art is a crime, some crime is art http://j.mp/1tyEmTI
— The New Inquiry (@newinquiry) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/1qjuOeb
on: July 31, 2014 at 02:02PM
Sure, now we have satellite imagery, but for my $ these historical atlases of moon are tops: http://j.mp/XksGqo http://j.mp/XksGqu
— Joe Hanson (@jtotheizzoe) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/1smvITt
on: July 31, 2014 at 02:10PM
“…and 2 seconds later all 3 counselors were y̶e̶l̶l̶i̶n̶g̶ very strongly encouraging everyone to get up…” http://j.mp/UO9ob9
— Rusty Foster (@rustyk5) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/XksG9Q
on: July 31, 2014 at 01:46PM
The Iron Genie is a Harmonograph (pendulum sketcher) http://j.mp/XksHKZ on view at MHS Oxford http://j.mp/UO9nUE
— BibliOdyssey (@BibliOdyssey) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/1mudTSE
on: July 31, 2014 at 01:46PM
The poet John Milton briefly met Galileo in 1636, and here is the result: http://j.mp/1zz8GOJ
— फेडसिंह (@fadesingh) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/1zz8EX5
on: July 31, 2014 at 10:29AM
RT @History_In_Pix: In 1910, a French illustrator named Villemard predicted what the year 2000 would be like http://j.mp/1rLj8y1
— Thony Christie (@rmathematicus) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/1j2rkDx
on: July 31, 2014 at 09:27AM
@ThePoke The local news this morning beggars belief http://j.mp/1m0DXSf
— Nick Campbell (@nick_campbell) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/1m0E0xy
on: July 31, 2014 at 06:07AM
These aren't abstract paintings — they're huge images of iPhone smudges http://j.mp/1xCaMdU http://j.mp/1xCaMuc
— WIRED (@WIRED) July 31, 2014
from http://j.mp/RoTsKU
on: July 30, 2014 at 11:03PM