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Contents contributed and discussions participated by dcarn261

dcarn261

Carbon 14: Climate is Culture Exhibition - 0 views

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    Climate is Culture - Four months of cultural engagement visioning the challenge and the possible future, a unique and powerful narrative engagement with what is one of the most pressing issues of our time, climate change.
dcarn261

Art attack: why getting creative about climate change makes sense - 0 views

started by dcarn261 on 09 Oct 13 no follow-up yet
  • dcarn261
     
    ach of us, sometime and somewhere in our lives, has been profoundly moved by a piece of art; a song, a poem, a book, a painting or a film. The values and desires inherent here become absorbed into our psyche, they inform our response, and are embedded to form the person we can be and the societies we construct.

    With this notion Cape Farewell has, since 2001, been collaborating with the world's leading climate scientists and our most influential artists to create a cultural response to climate change. Climate change is a by-product of our over stimulated complex societies. The solution is not complex: replace our energy supply, currently dependent on burning coal, oil and gas, with something a little more sophisticated and environmentally friendly. So far we haven't figured out how to do this.

    We believe climate change is a cultural, social and economic challenge, and we have to move beyond the scientific and rational debate to address it. By bringing together artists, scientists, communicators and cultural opinion formers, we endeavour to develop creative 'works' that act as a catalyst for change. Using creativity to innovate, we engage artists, writers, poets, musicians and filmmakers for their ability to evolve and amplify a creative language, communicating - on an emotional level and on a human scale - the urgency of the global climate challenge.
dcarn261

Gamers take aim at ancient Pictish stone puzzle - 0 views

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    ONLINE gaming fans are to be recruited by Scotland's national museum to harness their technical skills to help piece together more than 3,000 recently discovered fragments depicting the Cross on a Pictish slab. The project, the first of its kind in the archaeological world, will see participants use a unique 3D programme developed by a Scottish technology firm to try to solve the mystery of the Hilton of Cadboll Stone. Computer experts believe people who play computer games are more adept at manipulating objects on screen. Nasa has already made use of citizen astronomers who use home computers to sift through time-lapsed data from the Kepler space telescope to search for habitable exo-planets, planets outside the solar system. The stone, which stood on a chapel site in Tain in Easter Ross was carved around 800AD, after the Picts converted to Christianity, in order to celebrate their new religion.
dcarn261

The amazing work of Loyiso Mkize - 2 views

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    Loyiso Mkize is an artist based in Cape Town, South Africa. "creating visual art is a talent and gift i have enjoyed all my life. it has evolved into a tool that i use to express my views and ideas. I paint people and paint about people. our complex nature fascinates me and therefore compels me to expressively tell our story. My work is African and celebrates the beauty and wealth running in the veins of her people. its in the subjects eyes, lips, skin tone/texture, dress, hair, that i draw inspiration from. the experience and stories we carry with us are the corner stones from which we mold a new identity. it is the human spirit that i aim to share in my art."
dcarn261

The Difference Between Cultural Exchange and Cultural Appropriation - 0 views

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    Cultural appropriation is a term that isn't often heard in daily conversation, which means it's inevitably misunderstood by those who feel attacked by feminists, sociologically-informed bloggers, and others who use the term.
dcarn261

Rick Owens Replaced Runway Models With a Step Dance Team - 0 views

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    When fashion does "subversive," it tends to faux-subvert industry norms within a very unoriginal arena, while mostly upholding industry (very thin, mostly white) norms. "Subversive" fashion is ugly clothing and ugly makeup on very thin, mostly white models; "subversive" fashion is making some kind of bizarre gender commentary on very thin, mostly white models.
dcarn261

Concrete Gets Housebroken - 0 views

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    Man has been using concrete as a building material since the rise of the earliest civilizations. The Romans refined its use for construction, laying a concrete foundation for the Colosseum. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the mix of cement, sand, water and rocks fell out of use before being...
dcarn261

Here's Why Teens Don't Want to Shop at Abercrombie & Fitch - 0 views

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    In 1992, Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Michael Jeffries took a staid, century-old sporting apparel store, injected it with teenage hormones and grew the rejuvenated company into a multi-billion dollar retail chain. He has also personally discouraged unattractive, unpopular and overweight customers from shopping at Abercrombie, and during Jeffries' tenure as chief executive, the company has faced numerous discrimination lawsuits.
dcarn261

Welcome to the Designer Youth Hostel - 1 views

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    The high-design, low-cost boutique hotel is now an established phenomenon, thanks to properties like the Philippe Starck-designed Mama Shelter mini-chain in France, NYC's Jane, Singapore's Wanderlust or Berlin's Michelberger.
dcarn261

A Very Brief History of Why It's So Hard to Get From Brooklyn to Queens - 0 views

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    Ever try to get from Brooklyn to Queens, two of the most populated boroughs of New York City? Without a car, it's nearly impossible, as most subway lines require one to go through Manhattan first.
dcarn261

Honeybees are sweet for skyscrapers - 0 views

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    It's been five years now since it was reported that, for the first time ever, more than half of the world's population live in urban areas. Such a dramatic demographic shift comes with inevitable consequences - some predictable, like rising housing prices and greater economic disparity, and some less so, like the rise in urban honeybee population. With growing interest in sustainability and local food production combined with news stories and documentaries about honeybee colony collapse disorder, recent changes in laws, and the growing urban population, urban beekeeping is a full-blown trend. But it's not just about the honey. The humble honeybee is starting to play a greater role in the design of urban living.
dcarn261

Compare 1836 and modern-day New York with this interactive map - 1 views

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    Travel back in time with this interactive map of New York, which lets you take a spyglass to any part of the city and uncover what that circle of space looked like in 1836.
dcarn261

Blue and Green Roof To Serve As a Green Jobs Training Opportunity - 0 views

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    The Osborne Association's 100-year-old Osborne Green Career Center in South Bronx, N.Y., will soon be outfitted with a blue and green roof. The new roof will become part of the center's green jobs training program for the formerly incarcerated. Trainees will learn how to maintain the roof and monitor its effectiveness. The roof will be paid for in part by the Osborne Association and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection's Green Infrastructure Grant Program (see the winners). Each year, the roof should manage more than 908,000 L (240,000 gal) of stormwater with the goal of reducing combined sewer overflows to the East River.
dcarn261

Analysis: Are retail's green shoots appearing? - 0 views

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    These last few summer months brought good sales for many as the sun shone on retailers as well as holidaymakers. As today's rise in retail sales offers futher good news, Retail Week takes a look at how each sector is performing.
dcarn261

The New Generation of Healthy Food & Beverages - 0 views

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    Since nutritional information became important and popular concern about it grew dramatically, many food brands have foreseen this as an opportunity to build their identity. Nowadays, more and more packages show information on their main panel about caloric values, or other important product features, such as quantity of calcium they provide. Consequently, brands created a new way to talk to consumers. In Tridimage, we daily receive briefs requesting this kind of communication. The new generation of healthy foods and beverages has changed the visual codes of packaging design.
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