Marfa from The Brothers McLeod on Vimeo.
Author Archives: Lex Gill
FOUR HUNDRED AND EIGHTY
By Laura Bifano.
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY NINE
Pat Perry mural in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq (via graffitistreet and booooooom).
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY EIGHT
From If They Should Come for Us, by Fatimah Asghar. my people I follow you like constellations we hear the glass smashing the street & the nights opening their dark our names this country’s wood for the fire my people my people the long years we’ve survived the long years yet to come I seeContinue reading “FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY EIGHT”
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY SEVEN
Suzanne Moxhay, from Interiors.
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY SIX
From Toni Morrison’s Beloved via Maria Popova. “Listening to the doves in Alfred, Georgia, and having neither the right nor the permission to enjoy it because in that place mist, doves, sunlight, copper dirt, moon — everything belonged to the men who had the guns. Little men, some of them, big men too, each oneContinue reading “FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY SIX”
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY FIVE
Extrapolate from Johan Rijpma.
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY FOUR
Mark Sarmel via booooooom.
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY THREE
Two different snakes, from Lauren Napolitano.
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY TWO
From Alexander Reben’s all prior art (see also: all the claims).
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY ONE
Annie Baillargeon, from the (unsettling) collection, Les natures mortes.
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY
Excerpt from Dear Friend by Dean Young: What happens when your head splits open and the bird flies out, its two notes deranged? You got better, I got better, wildflowers rimmed the crater, glitter glitter glitter. We knew someone whose father died then we knew ourselves. Astronomer, gladiator, thief, a tombstone salesman. All our vacationsContinue reading “FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVENTY”
FOUR HUNDRED AND SIXTY NINE
From The Irradiated International by Lou Cornum, via Data & Society. In 1998, a group of Dene elders from Northwest Canada traveled to Hiroshima to meet with survivors and descendants of survivors of the atomic bomb dropped some fifty years earlier. Some of the uranium used to kill more than 200,000 people in Japan had been minedContinue reading “FOUR HUNDRED AND SIXTY NINE”
FOUR HUNDRED AND SIXTY EIGHT
By Ilya Milstein — I love his detail and his titles. In order: “A Library by the Tyrrhenian Sea,” “The Minimalist,” and “On Exactitude in Science.”
FOUR HUNDRED AND SIXTY SEVEN
Instructions from Nicole He‘s The Best Art computer (human outputs available here).