Archive for category Art

Where to find good free clipart!

http://all-silhouettes.com

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Art, Religion, Wellbeing and Experience

Art = a guided experience – to empathically relive or experience something intended by the artist : whether to relive a chilly morning landscape, or the freedom/joy the artist felt covering themselves in paint and rolling around on a large sheet of paper.

Religion = the art of guiding people to particular moral, emotional and spiritual experiences. Hardly a surprise that the main motor for this is artistic, in the form of storytelling/myth, religious painting, and of course, music.

In Religion we witness the power of art when combined with repetition, i.e. the power of behavioural training. Repeat something often enough and the experience/memory becomes persistent enough that it can be easily recalled and used to compare and contrast against other experiences.

Defining experiences, and making them repeatable, brings structure to life. It directs your energy (by limiting what you do and how you do it) and enables larger, cohesive social groups (who implicitly agree on the basics of what is acceptable in their shared experience). It is not the case that any experience has an impenetrable boundary, that it floats freely distant from any other experience or interpretation – all experiences are by necessity (neurologically) linked to the same structures that enable us to experience life itself. Therefore it is hardly surprising that people do feel a very strong need to define “what belongs” and “what doesn’t” based on small differences, because ultimately all experiences are linked.

How might this be used in a modern context? Socially, the thought leaders are in a place where they are more aware of relativism in values, and the arbitrary nature of our indoctrination, than ever before. As this dissolves our social norms (by making it acceptable for individuals to define their own life experiences, and recruit others to come with them) it generates enormous uncertainty, and destroys many of the basic social assumptions which people either do need, or believe they need.

This is where Active Politics is called for, to find new social structures which can work and which are sustainable. To reassess whether any shared beliefs/assumptions must be held sacred and immutable (by means of force and imprisonment) and if so, what they are.

The current system evolves piecemeal (as individual occurances within an abstract anti-repressive liberal framework falsify existing social or legal constraints as repressive), but one of the largest catastrophic collisions which this will not defuse can be seen between the followers of religion (as preservers of the local society group identity) and the followers of science (as the pioneers of the individual identity).

Biologically, it seems that (as Maslow pointed out) we need a bit of both. The group is our foundation, but without individual fulfillment, the human suffers under tyranny and in misery.

It is possible, given our knowledge of psychology, sociology, and the anthropology of religious and artistic practice, to assemble structures on a scientific basis which rapidly train/indoctrinate people into particular experiences. In an open society they would be free to choose, and to leave, to experiment with the alternative experiences – as they increasingly are now.

In that sense, this is nothing new, but I am interested in whether it would be possible to establish a bridge between the sciences and religion, which removes the inaccuracy of myth and dogma, but recreates the essential positive elements of *religious experience* which serve to make life both tolerable and enjoyable, within a scientific context.

In this sense, the scientific context simply means moving people on towards a current understanding of the world. However, it also means a context where *nothing* is regarded as absolute truth, where dogma should be actively resisted as one of its central tenants. It is also a context in which we should *not* loose the spiritual, and social experiences which make life wonderful. Partly these have been lost in the enlightenment, made subservient to the three pillars of economic, scientific and bureaucratic power – perhaps because (being embedded in the religious paradigm) it was not possible to extract the dogma from the underlying experience and recognise how important it is.

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A great place to find some unusal movies!!!

http://www.alternativereel.com/includes/top-ten/display_review.php%253Fid%253D00044

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Information Visualisation – some interesting sites

http://news.designlanguage.com/post/1473307539

http://www.good.is/departments/transparency/

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Places to find good music!

www.makeuseof.com/tag/top-10-free-ways-discover-music-online

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Gravity Driven Tai Chi

The idea of “gravity” is only a few centuries old, and still not fully understood… although it forms the principle force which exerts an influence on our physical body.  As a fighting art, Tai Chi would of course have had to account for this force, and it does so albeit using different more esoteric words and concepts.

During Qi Kung (not Qi Gong) today, while discussing the idea of feeling energy flowing into the ground (which seems like lying to myself) and energy flowing up into the universe, with a split being made at belly height, everything suddenly made sense with respect to gravity.

At any moment in time, ala school physics, there is not just a force acting downwards (gravity) there is also a force acting upwards (the resistance of the ground through which gravity is trying to pull you).  Internally, these two forces are acting simultaniously, as gravity tries to pull you down and through the earth, and your musculature, and skeleton, and will, try to keep you upright.

When, in Tai Chi they refer to energy flowing into the ground, I realised it seems possible to perceive this precisely at the moment where you relinquish as much resistance to gravity as possible, allowing the “down” force to exert its maximum influence (which results in as much down force as is basically possible without hooking yourself to something on the ground and pulling!).  Equally, energy flowing up into the heaven, can be perceived as precisely the motion of you acting against gravity to raise yourself.  These two concepts only work during motion – a change in position, releasing yourself to gravity, or acting against it.

The reasoning for the belly high split seems likely to be that Tai Chi attempts to establish a very solid foundation from which to launch strikes with the upper body (as opposed, for example, to Capoiera).  This means that it is desirable to maintain a downward force below the belly (i.e. from the top of the hips, while you release your body weight through the minimal possible structure preventing and hindering you from falling over whilst retaining flexibility to move) whilst above the belly one maintains an almost free-floating body able to strike, pull down, push up etc. i.e. using the spine and the roundness of the back primarily, to act with or against gravity.

To me, this seems to be a much simpler description of what is going on, using words which have modern meaning.

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The most interesting photos on Flickr from the last seven days!

http://www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days/show/

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Designing a dream home

I have long wanted to find a home that fills several needs:

  • Minimal energy consumption in construction and use
  • “Anthroposophic” in form (we apes are not “at home” in boxes. we have emerged amidst non-rectangular organic forms)
  • Utilises “phased” construction over multiple years (for more economically responsible self-building, in tune with a growing family and income)
  • Uses traditional lo-tech materials and construction techniques (to simplify self-building with local craftsmen)
  • Simple to maintain/repair/replace (repeating sub-structures)
  • Low cost (repeating sub-structures)
  • Spacious
  • Possible to pack up and transplant to another location

I think I have found the basic template in Bill Coperthwaite’s self-made “yurts” :


photo-2

It doesn’t take much imagination to see how effectively this beautiful form can be constructed from repeatable natural elements using traditional techniques and skills, has excellent properties in heat (shade) and cold (circular forms minimise surface area and present little obstruction to cold winds blowing from the north!), is eminently suitable for solar collectors, and can be built in stages according to available budget and time.

If it is designed according to the core principle of a Yurt, wherein the walls support a free standing roof by means of tensioning ropes around the perimeter this design can allow for incredible interior flexibility and re-purposing.

I’m in love with this form.

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Making timelapse movies for free in OSX from JPG images

It was a bit of a stress to find it, but check out avidemux , an incredible little tool that works on OSX (yey!).

Just select the first JPG in the directory of images you want to turn into a timelapse and it does the rest… super fast and efficient.

Just save as the output type you want!

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About to take timelapse photos for a week at a festival wedding

It’s been months in the planning, and a few prototypes (thanks to the help of my engineering brother) in the making… but now a simple, transportable, hopefully robust setup is in place :

One large car battery with cable attached permanently to contacts, leading to a water proof socket, attached to several meters of cable, going to a cigarette lighter salvaged from scrap with a transformer all held within a watertight container (an old lemonade bottle suitably waterproofed), going to a water-tight lunchbox with a rectangle removed and 2cm thick perspex hot-glued into position. The box contains the camera and power-in from the battery, and will be strapped to a tree out of harms way with a ratchet strap going through a hook made with bindatwine at the bottom of a tripod which pulls tightly into the tree.

Given that I have a 4Gb card, and I’m going to take 640×480 images of about 100k disk size, I’m gambling that the card can hold around 40,000 images. If I take two pictures a minute for 7 days it’ll need (7 * 24 * 60 * 2) just over 20,000 images, so I have a good safety margin.

Now I just have to hope the car battery holds out so long, that animals don’t rip the box off the tree, that none of the cables become detatched, and that water doesn’t seep into the camera box!!!

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