Archive for the ‘Bizarre’ Category

Public Art

Very cool public art by Christian Moeller

Nosy

Video installation, Osaki City, Tokyo 2006
A robotic video camera randomly captures the surrounding landscape and people, which are then displayed in bitmap graphics onto three towers covered with white LEDs behind frosted glass panels.
Curator: NANJO and ASSOCIATES, Tetsu Nagata

http://www.christian-moeller.com/display.php?project_id=59&play=true

Also check out Jim Cambell at http://www.jimcampbell.tv/ Who does really cool LED art.

Thanks to Tom Merritt @ CNET for the Top 5 list.

Man on Wire

About the movie from Magnolia Pictures

On August 7th 1974, a young Frenchman named Philippe Petit stepped out on a wire illegally rigged between New York’s twin towers, then the world’s tallest buildings. After nearly an hour dancing on the wire, he was arrested, taken for psychological evaluation, and brought to jail before he was finally released. Following six and a half years of dreaming of the towers, Petit spent eight months in New York City planning the execution of the coup. Aided by a team of friends and accomplices, Petit was faced with numerous extraordinary challenges: he had to find a way to bypass the WTC’s security; smuggle the heavy steel cable and rigging equipment into the towers; pass the wire between the two rooftops; anchor the wire and tension it to withstand the winds and the swaying of the buildings. The rigging was done by night in complete secrecy. At 7:15 AM, Philippe took his first step on the high wire 1,350 feet above the sidewalks of Manhattan… James Marsh’s documentary brings Petit’s extraordinary adventure to life through the testimony of Philippe himself, and some of the co-conspirators who helped him create the unique and magnificent spectacle that became known as “the artistic crime of the century.”

About the Tight Rope Walker “Philippe Petit” from Wikipedia

Philippe Petit (born August 13, 1949) is a French high wire artist who gained fame for his illegal walk between the Twin Towers in New York City on August 7, 1974. [1]

He used a 450-pound cable to do so and also a custom-made 26-foot (7.9 m) long, 55-pound balancing pole. Tight-rope walker, unicyclist, magician and pantomime artist, Philippe Petit was also one of the earliest modern day street jugglers in Paris in 1968. He juggled and worked on a slack rope with regularity in Washington Square Park in New York City in the early 1970s. Petit is one of the Artists-in-Residence at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. Other famous structures he has used for tightrope walks include that Cathedral, the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the Louisiana Superdome, the Hennepin County Government Center, and between the Palais de Chaillot and the Eiffel Tower. Petit currently lives in Woodstock, New York. A documentary film named “Man on Wire” by UK director James Marsh dealing with Petit’s WTC performance won both the World Cinema Jury and Audience awards at the Sundance Filmfestival 2008. The film also won awards at the 2008 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in Durham, N.C.

Soda for your baby

Soda for your baby

This is great, I just love how anything was possible back in the day. I found this on this blog called The City Desk, you can check them out at http://thecitydesk.net/

Frank Chu

So 2 days later and he has different numbers on his sign. I guess 10,525,000 million galaxies got destroyed cause it dropped down in galaxies.

Frank Chu

Locking up your shovel

There is not much to say about this, except OKAY…

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