_ Noemie Goudal builds and navigates immaginary cascades and rivers
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_there’s a different kind of vie en rose according to Richard Mosse‘s infrared photographs
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_Andrew Miksys got us all nostalgic with his Buses’ windows. Damn.
Merrill Garbus: playing Tune Yards with musical rompers
Merrill Garbus is a lovely example of the power of one + friends. She decided to pursue her solo musical project without a record studio. Without specialized equipment and without a formal band. Armed with a versatile voice and a ukulele she created tUnE yArDs, a sonorous experiment that make us question the need for intermediaries in the long and expensive chain of musical production -don’t you worry music whales, were not planning any riots against “the system here” – don’t send [...]
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_from Brooklyn Youngna Park shows us an intimate view of La Paz, Cochabamba and Salar de Uyuni
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_enjoy Gaku Nakagawa
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_Sarah Sudhoff is not afraid of making you uncomfortable
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_good thing Emmanuel Gutiérrez finds time between his work and his music to bring us some Costa Rican color
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_photographer Amanda James sure makes us want to meet her grandma
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_Julie Morstad’s marvelous drawings and illustrations deserve your inmediate attention. Go. Now.
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_we knew Glyn Brewerton as a great illustrator, but we admit we are new to his charcoal drawings
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_our second Russian photographer this week. Frank Herfort brings us refreshing images on these sunny summer days
Natural altruism: how night-noises induce rumination
Gopher Staffer and licenced biologist Angie Nicolás has some sleep issues. From her wonderful, sleep deprived but still scientific mind, we were able to convince her to write about a topic that had been personally bothering her: birds that go chirp in the night. While Ms. Nicolás might annihilate us for writing an intro to her piece (we’re sneaky like that!) we feel proper introduction is warranted, because we too are plagued with that admirable bug, curiosity. [...]
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_meat media were used on Rutger de Vries’s Part of me series (vegetarians abstain)
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_ok, ok, we got a little distracted from usual monday’s rush by looking at Olya Ivanova‘s photographs. Now, back to work!
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_ armed with ink and paper, Hannah Stouffer faces “”the inevitable oppositions between love, lust and gore, decadence, wrath and fate”
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_Katharina Grosse knows of course no roofs, no walls, no surfaces limiting her mountains of powder and spreaded colors
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_we can’t help but smiling while looking at Santiago Uceda‘s fabulous drawings
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_Justin Gray Morgan brings us buddhist skateboards (we’d volunteer to try one!) and wondering digital gorillas
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_Caracha! Luke Gilford’s projects aim to answer really trascendental questions
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_ we always knew common objects were up to something, so thank you David Trautrimas for proving us right
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_yes, yes. Admittedly, it was hard picking only one of Anne Faye Gillespie’s drawings for this note. Why don’t you give it a try and find your own?
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_what a good day to check out Jimmy Baker’s hyperrealistic work.
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_Venezuelan photographer Antonio Briceño found the missing pieces of a green and complicated puzzle in Rwanda
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_ it won’t be long before we are literally swimming in plastic. Luckily for us, David Edgar gives a fascinating twist to that expression with his Plastiquarium.
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_ we know Mark Jenkins’s installations shout loud and clear by themselves, but good things are always worth a second visit.
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_ Grab that pencil! Eric Ellis and Chad Kouri’s website illustrates what the world would miss if notebooks had no margins
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_ever wondered how life looks like from a dragonfly wing? Architect Vincent Callabout’s insane designs answer the question.
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_we all smile watching how Dameon Lester weighs clouds and feelings as easily as he chokes pigs.
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_rain, color and ink. Or Rafael Karcz’s painted photos