MOONMILK FOR THE CAVE BEAR.
Posted in: Awesomeology, Caves, Gallery, photography, Ryan McGinleyRyan McGinley’s new Moonmilk series is a kaleidoscopic melding of Moonage Daydream and Clan of the Cave Bear. Check out the full series HERE.
Ryan McGinley’s new Moonmilk series is a kaleidoscopic melding of Moonage Daydream and Clan of the Cave Bear. Check out the full series HERE.
Artist Mike and Doug Starn takes double trouble to a new level. The twin brothers have created an architectural performance art piece that looks like a behemoth-size game of pick-up sticks with 2,000 poles of bamboo and 16 miles of nylon rope slowly crawling across the floor. Taking over a 50-foot space at the Tallix foundry in Beacon, New York the Big Bambú will showcase it’s evolving structure on the 2nd and 4th Saturday of every month this summer.
Click here to view the embedded video.
Ashraf Aiad on his blog has several video tutorials on some highlights features of Mudbox 2010.
Last Chance is a timeless piece about the importance of hope in our current environment.
Check out the first episode of fxguidetv en español, hosted by María Castelló.
Mucca Design has been cranking out great projects lately. One of their most recent is a fresh identity system for full-service gourmet destination Brooklyn Fare.
Plaza Films’ Helen Clemens directs a curious odyssey for Eskimo Joe’s “Losing Friends Over Love” music video. The project’s gentle ambiance is shot through with streaks of tension, creating a compelling narrative arc within a claustrophobic world.
Animated by Pete Commins (Partizan), the video’s faux stop-motion feel, electro-mechanical props and use of room-based vignettes remind me a little of the classic Super Furry Animals “It’s Not the End of the World” video (created by David and Laurent Nicolas), but “Losing Friends” has a look-and-feel all its own, driven as it is by the innocent exploration of the lead character.
Credits
Music Video Directed By Helen Clemens
3D Animation By Pete Commins
Produced By Jamie Hilton
June 2009 © Helen Clemens / Warner Music
Notoriously banned documentary, Cocksucker Blues, is available to be streamed in 9 parts on the web for what we’re sure will be a very limited time. We have no idea if it’s good, bad, whatever (hardly anyone has ever seen it fully) but we DO know it’s really hard to find. According to legend: Really massive epoch defining rock band- the Rolling Stones- thinks it’s a good idea to have a camera follow them around while touring for their most challenging, drug-addled record to-date until they see what’s on the film and then they ban it. Time heals all wounds so maybe everyone will be stoked for Cocksucker Blues to see the light of day but you never know, so run over HERE and watch that shit before it evaporates into thin air.
div xmlns=http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtmla href=http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118007412.html?categoryid=13cs=1nid=2570Vfx shops cooking up shared recipes/a, at Variety./div
MPC’s latest podcast showcases the studio’s work for the Evian ‘Skating Babies’ spot.