Author: Trent

  • Shepard Fairey Preview

    Shepard Fairey Preview

    From Juxtapoz:

    A preview of the work from Shepard Fairey’s upcoming show at White Walls in San Francisco.

    We got these examples of the work that will be on display next month. The show opens April 1st, 2006 at White Walls in SF. He’ll have a total of 50 pieces in the show plus a huge wall mural installation. See you there?
    Here.

  • Life at the gamers farm

    Life at the gamers farm

    From we make money not art:

    Ge Jin, a PhD student from UCSD, is working on a video documentary about the gold farming phenomenon. His observations from his meetings with Chinese workers in various gold farming workshops:

    When I entered a gold farm for the first time (tietou’s gaming workshop in the preview), I was shocked by the positive spirit there, the farmers are passionate about what they do, and there is indeed a comraderie between them … I do see suffering and exploitation too, but in that place suffering is mixed with play and exploitation is embodied in a gang-like brotherhood and hierarchy. When I talked with the farmers, they rarely complained about their working condition, they only complained about their life in the game world.

    Here.

  • No photo ban, but photogs still hassled

    From PDN:

    The New York Civil Liberties Union says transit police have been trying to stop photographers from legally taking pictures of the Long Island Railroad.

    In response, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which oversees the railroad, says it will remind its officers that there is no photography ban on the LIRR.

    Here.

  • Missile Command documentary

    Missile Command documentary

    Documentary by Jeremy Mack on one man’s attempt to break the high score on the classic arcade game Missile Command:

    One quarter. Two Days. No Pause Button.

    Here.

  • Aquabats! News

    Aquabats! News

    From Punknews.org:

    As far as a new record, the band had this to say: “the new record is coming along great! All we need to finish it is …songs. As soon as we write some, we are SO going to record that bad boy!”

    The band is also working on a new project called Yo Gabba Gabba which is aimed at pre-schoolers. They will be writing music, acting and directing the show.
    Here.

  • Magnum – Nairobi

    Magnum – Nairobi

    From Magnum Photos, David Alan Harvey’s Nairobi portraits:

    Nairobi has grown from a sleepy, pretty British outpost twenty years ago to a bustling metropolis of four million people today. Kenya’s leaders are often accused of corruption, but nevertheless, the country shed it’s military dictatorship five years ago.
    This is a portrait portfolio of a cross section of the powerful and the not so powerful. The eclectic mix makes up the colorful population of one of Africa’s most vibrant but problematic cities.
    Here.

  • Liberia seeks end to Taylor exile

    From the BBC:

    Mr Taylor is accused of selling diamonds and buying weapons for Sierra Leone’s Revolutionary United Front rebels, who were notorious for hacking off the hands and legs of civilians during a 10-year war.

    Here.

  • Canon updates DPP, other digital SLR software

    From Rob Galbraith:

    Canon has posted updaters or installers for several of its digital SLR software applications. Available for download are Digital Photo Professional (DPP) 2.1, EOS Utility 1.0, CameraWindow DSLR 5.3R2 (Windows), ZoomBrowser EX 5.6.0 (Windows) and ImageBrowser 5.6.1a (Mac).

    Here.

  • Street Cans

    Street Cans

    From Wooster Collective:

    Here.

  • D for Vendetta

    D for Vendetta

    From Wired:

    The plot doesn’t make much sense, either. V blows up a building, liquidates a bunch of high-powered enemies and threatens to overthrow the powers that be. The government’s response? To send two cops to track him down. Two cops! Some police state.

    Here.

  • Traveling with Bush

    Traveling with Bush

    From Christopher Morris of the photo agency VII:

    This is my personal look into the visit of U.S. President George W. Bush to India, Pakistan and Afghanistan in March 2006.

    Here.

  • Iraq war correspondents discuss…

    From UC Berkeley News:

    Jackie Spinner, Washington Post staff writer and author of “Tell Them I Didn’t Cry,” an account of a year spent in Baghdad starting in May 2004, disagreed that reporters in Iraq are prevented from telling both sides. “I think we’re getting 90 percent of the story,” she said. When disbelieving guffaws rang out from the audience, she retorted, “Excuse me, have you been there?”

    Here.

  • Epson R-D1s Digital Rangefinder

    Epson R-D1s Digital Rangefinder

    From DPReview:

    Epson Japan has today announced a subtly improved version of its unique R-D1 Digital Rangefinder Camera. Just like the R-D1 the R-D1s features the a six megapixel APS-C size sensor and supports Leica M and L mount lenses. New features include a ‘Quick View’ record review function, RAW+ JPEG support, Adobe RGB color space, image parameter control, long exposure noise reduction and higher playback magnification.

    Here.

  • Photographer Alfred Yaghobzadeh kidnapped in Gaza

    From PDN:

    The two journalists were among at least eight foreigners abducted by Palestinian gunmen in response to an Israeli raid on a Palestinian prison in the West Bank city of Jericho, according to various news reports.

    Here.

  • Holocaust installation by Santiago Sierra

    From we make money not art:

    The artist has parked six cars outside the synagogue and attached their exhaust pipes to the building using plastic tubes. It is then filled with deadly gas. Visitors are invited to go inside one by one wearing a gas mask, escorted by a firefighter. Before being allowed in, they have to sign a disclaimer stating they realise the room is full of carbon monoxide.

    Here.

  • Basketball Prank

    Basketball Prank


    From some blog:

    On Saturday, at the game, when Pruitt was introduced in the starting lineup, the chants began: “Victoria, Victoria.” One of the fans held up a sign with her phone number.

    Here.

  • Shepard Fairey "New Works"

    Shepard Fairey "New Works"

    From hustler of culture:

    Reception, Saturday, April 1st, 2006
    7pm to 11pm
    Runs through, Saturday, April 29th, 2006

    White Walls
    835 Larkin Street
    San Francisco, CA 94109

    Here.

  • Who's who: Milosevic family

    Who's who: Milosevic family

    From the BBC, meet Mirjana, Marija, and Marko:

    He brought the town two major attractions – an amusement park called Bambiland and the glittering Madonna disco.

    In November 2001 he was charged with threatening a pro-democracy demonstrator in Pozarevac with a chainsaw. But he had long since fled to Moscow.

    He described himself as “gentle and “sensitive” but “prone to depression”.

    Here.

  • Congo: Nachtwey photo essay

    Congo: Nachtwey photo essay

    From the photo agency VII:

    The war in the Democratic Republic of Congo may have ended in 2004, but every week, hundreds of people continue to die, most from illnesses easily treatable in times of peace. In a country where cholera, ebola, malaria, and even the plague are endemic, war turned disease into a slow-burning weapon of mass destruction. James Nachtwey visited the DRC in the summer of 2005 and witnessed the pain and suffering of the Congolese, the horrors of war, the ravages of disease, the dead and the dying.

    Here.