Tuesday, 30 September 2008

The Digital Art of Kevin Mack





I found today on boingboing a post about the digital art of Kevin Mack. Mack is a pioneering Digital Artist and Academy Award winning Visual Effects Supervisor. He received an Academy Award for his work on the film "What Dreams May Come". Other credits include "Speed Racer", "Ghost Rider", "Big Fish", "Fight Club", "A Beautiful Mind", "Vanilla Sky", "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" and many more.



Kevin’s art explores the sublime beauty of infinity, complexity, perception and consciousness. By creating imagery that exists at the threshold of recognition, he seeks to invoke the unconscious imagination of the viewer and inspire a personal experience of awe and mystery.

Monday, 29 September 2008

Paul Newman R.I.P.

I'm a little late but couldn't help but remember the great Paul Newman, one of the best actors ever, the last of Hollywood old lions, a sensitive, generous man and civil rights activist. We'll miss him.


Sunday, 28 September 2008

Faces in Sport

Great selection of sport photos on flabbergastedly



Saturday, 27 September 2008

Rock On!

See these and other photos of rock musicians (and about 9/11, New York in the '70s, etc.) on the interesting site of Allan Tannenbaum
(thanks Maurizio)


Friday, 26 September 2008

The Psycho GIF

Another great GIF to enrich the collection of all you GIF lovers out there...

PsychoGif

Thursday, 25 September 2008

Pix of the day / Sept 25

Another gallery of great photos randomly taken on the web...
(click to see in larger format)






Wednesday, 24 September 2008

70 Amazing Futuristic & Crazy Computer Cases

If the computer cases below made you laugh, give a look to the other 68 computer cases here

(thanks to the presurfer blog...Happy birthday Gerard!)

Tuesday, 23 September 2008

Born of a Panda

After 20 years a Panda is born at Kobe's Oji zoo in Japan. See the incredible and moving video of the event...(Didn't know that just born pandas were so small!!)


(via haha)







A Real Amazing Woman

The human being has incredible hidden resources and possibilities of adaptation: see this woman without arms easily doing her daily duties...



(thanks again Raghu)

The Paper Art of Peter Callesen

Peter Callesen is a 41 years old Danish artist who works with papercuts, ice, snow and make interesting performances and installations. If you like the few 'samples' below please visit his exhaustive site here
(thanks Raghu)


Monday, 22 September 2008

Elephant Appreciation Day

Today Sept 22 is Elephant Appreciation Day, a day dedicated to this beautiful, wise and regal animal. Being an elephant lover myself, I gladly join the celebrations...

Visit the official celebration site here

Ele hoppin

The Chronophage (Time-Eater)

Renowned scientist Stephen Hawking is going to unveil a remarkable clock that has no hands and shows time with the help of light. Known as the Corpus Clock, the machine has been invented by and designed by Dr John Taylor for Corpus Christi College Cambridge for the exterior of the college's new library building. Dr Taylor calls his invention a Chronophage (time-eater), a fearsome beast which drives the clock, literally eating away time.




Saturday, 20 September 2008

The Great Louie Travis

Louie Travis is one my preferred artist. He paints with an absolutely astounding technique and has an irresistible sense of humor. Here you can see two recent examples of his acrylic masterpieces and read one of the funny comments that he often adds to his paintings...Please visit his site here and don't miss his fantastic blog too...

(click as usual on images to see in larger format)


The Great Gugga Mugga









Discovered in South America at the turn of the last century, this rare Krampus had been in hiding since the great nostril incident at Stockholm in 1895.
During the holiday season, he would punish the wicked by inserting his thumb and index finger into the nostrils and lifting his victims off the ground several times.
The after effects are a harsh facial disfigurement with super-sized nostrils.

Have Guru Darshan

In India darshan means having a meeting (or just the simple, fleeting vision)with one's own spiritual teacher or a spiritually elevated person in general. Often that happens in complete silence: the mere presence of a saint or a soul at high levels of self-realization it's enough to awaken the state of consciousness of disciples and devotees, beyond words, questions and intellectual speculations.


Here is a short photo gallery, depicting some of the most celebrated Hindu spiritual teachers. I hope it can represent the equivalent of a silent darshan for all my dear friends, readers and brothers/sisters along the spiritual path who meet meet on this humble blog...


In order (click to enlarge): a rare photo of Shirdi Sai Baba, Neem Karoli Baba, Ramana Maharshi, Ammaji, Meher Baba, Amritanandamayi, Shri Herakhan Babaji













Rainbow People

Despite a world gone mad, full of violence, unjustice and suffering, some people keep alive the dream of an alternative, colorful, ecological and positive style of life. It's the Rainbow Family, with their peacefully gatherings held yearly around the planet. Life it's but a dance...you're the dancer, you're the dance...Om namah Shivaya


Thursday, 18 September 2008

The Thursday GIF

This GIF perfectly expresses my present mood and attitude...Nothing particularly interesting and/or funny found on the Web today, nothing "new" or particularly notewhorthy...Don't get me wrong: there's always something to communicate and share with others, but words, talks and chats (and blog posts...) are too often abused in our post-modern society; chatting becomes an obligation and silence an embarassing moment...On the contrary, a little (mental) silence is sometimes what we need to find our inner balance again (if possible).
So see you tomorrow with (I hope) nice new things and...well, for the moment see my face of today once again and ...keep silent for a while!!
giraph mumblin'

Wednesday, 17 September 2008

Letal Poisonous Plants

(from http://www.webecoist.com/)


Most plants contain some level of toxins (like alkaloids) for defense. After all, they’re plants. They can’t go anywhere. Through millennia of trial and error, both animals and human beings have figured out which plants are safe, which are lethal, and which are somewhere in between.(For example) cherries, potatoes, peaches and apple seeds are all toxic - eat enough of the latter, in fact, and it will prove fatal. Fortunately, artificial selection and cooking methods have all but eliminated the threat of toxins in everyday foods. But you may be surprised to find out the incredibly lethal plants often hanging around the neighborhood park - or gracing your tabletop in the form of a centerpiece.


Visit http://webecoist.com/2008/09/16/16-most-unassuming-yet-lethal-killer-plants/ and find 16 among the most lethal plants on earth...like


English-yew


The English Yew, or taxus baccata (”taxus” meaning toxin), is one of the deadliest trees on the planet. The evergreen has a majestic and lush appearance and is fairly common in forests of Europe. The yew is considered by scientists to be an odd and primitive conifer along with the monkey puzzle tree of Chile and Gingko biloba tree of Asia. The yew has a rather sad history. All parts - save for the flesh of the berries - are extremely poisonous. Because the toxin causes convulsions and paralysis, it was once used as an abortifacient. Apothecaries would dry and powder the leaves and stems and give desperate women minute amounts in the days before birth control was available. Unfortunately, death would often result. The yew has been quite popular throughout history for a number of medicinal purposes at extremely dilute levels, but it is deemed too dangerous in modern medical practice to be of use. The yew’s primary toxin is taxine, a cardiac depressant. The yew acts rapidly and there is no antidote.







Moonseed


A otherworldly name and a plant with often fatal effects. The seeds of this Eastern North American drupe (stone fruit) are extremely toxic to humans, although birds can eat them. Moonseeds first cause paralysis but are fatal in larger doses and/or if treatment is not sought immediately.







Strychnine tree
Queen Cleopatra famously forced servants to commit suicide by means of a strychnine tree’s fruit seeds, which contain lethal levels of strychnine and brucine, in order to determine if it would be the best means for her own suicide. Upon seeing their agony (which included painful vomiting, facial contortions and convulsions) she opted for the apparently less horrific choice of the asp. (The asp was actually an ancient term for any number of poisonous snakes, but experts think it was probably the cobra that Cleopatra chose to end her life.)






39 Masterpieces of Creative Ads

I can stand advertisements just when they're particularly creative and smart...If you wanna see 39 new examples of that click here

then see these 17 Beijing 2008 Olympic Ads
and
42 Extremely Creative Ads I Have Ever Seen!
and
28 Extremely Creative Ads I Have Ever Seen!

Stuck in the Wrong Job? (FIFA Football World Cup, South Africa)



Heineken beer



Traveller magazine

Tuesday, 16 September 2008

Faces




A lot of expressive faces are all around us, trying to say us something or just smiling...but we didn't know it...

Amazing collection of funny and bizarre faces on flabbergastedly



and




and





Chai Pilgrimage

If you ever got the good chance to taste an original, well-done Indian chai (the tipical Hindustani hot drinking made with tea, milk, sugar and spices) and liked it, don't miss chaipilgrimage, a new site entirely dedicated to chai, full of recipes, videos and fascinating Indian street-life anecdotes...



Friday, 12 September 2008

New from the Noteworthy Naoto

New paintings of the great Naoto Hattori available on Naoto's online store



Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Dean Fraser Live!

Great reggae music with the legendary Dean Fraser on sax...He was in Bob Marley's horns section during golden times...(Bob choose the best you know...)




Tuesday, 9 September 2008

The Byrds

Give a look to a little nice collection of birds with amazing colors here...


Monday, 8 September 2008

Oktapodi

A film by Julien Bocabeille, Francois-Xavier Chanioux, Olivier Delabarre, Thierry Marchand, Quentin Marmier and Emud Mokhberi from French animation school Gobelins.

Saturday, 6 September 2008

Odin, the feline swimmer

Odin is six years old white Bengal tiger living at a Zoo in Vallejo, California, near San Francisco.
Odin was hand-raised at the zoo and after he was weaned, his British trainer Lee Munro discovered his remarkable skill...
When a lump of meat was thrown into a pool of water, Odin would happily dive in after it.'He makes a funny face - and it's actually to close his nostrils to stop the water from going into his nose'





Not all big cats enjoy the water but for Tigers from the hot climate of South-East Asia it's one way to cool down.
'Plus they hunt in and around water. They're an ambush predator so they wait for prey to come down to the water'.
Tragically, within our lifetimes, zoos might be the only places left to see these magnificent animals.
A century ago there were about 100,000 tigers in the wild. Now there are just 2,500 adults, with the Bengal variety almost extinct. None has been seen in the wild since the last white tiger was shot and killed in 1958.

White tigers are the most rare. They get their white color from an unusual and extremely rare genetic combination.

(thanks Raghu)

The Victorian horror art of Dan Hiller

Thanks to boingboing I found a new fascinating artist today: Dan Hiller. If you like the examples of his Victorian horror drawings below...well, go to visit his site here