#Ruth Jarman
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longlistshort · 2 months ago
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The contemporary artists and designers in Seeing the Unseeable: Data, Design, Art at Art Center College of Design, each use different types of data as the basis for work that is both imaginative and informative. This exhibition is part of The Getty’s PST ART: Art and Science Collide programming.
From the gallery-
Seeing the Unseeable: Data, Design, Art explores selected works by contemporary artist and designers responding to data’s impact on daily life. The exhibition premise rises from the dawn of Big Data in the early 1990s, which brought with it advancements in the field of data visualization: the practice of representing vast quantities of information to make it understandable and engaging to the public. In its early forms, data visualization was most often used in map-making and creating statistical graphics, viewed largely as a tool to convey information in the sciences and support analytic reasoning. In recent years the field has become an influential force in contemporary culture, transforming visual literacy in the global cultural landscape.
Seeing the Unseeable considers data in the recent past and present, addressing issues related to data mining and invisible data, data humanism, and data’s relationship to our varied environments. Exploring a critical cultural moment in our relationship with the magnitudes of information that routinely bombard us, works in the exhibition draw attention to issues ranging from the vastness and capabilities of data technologies to the personal, social and humanitarian consequences of data collection and data systems.
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About the video work above by Hyojung Seo–
Singapore Weather Data Drawing Series reconsiders data visualization as it develops beyond mere representation to aestheticization. As the title of the work suggests, this series of data are drawings aimed to build a visual narrative beyond the original scope of the data itself. The weather data drawings generally represent information about Singapore’s weather patterns, while also standing as abstract digital artworks. This visual loosening of data into a series of patterns and movements presents weather statistics thorough a visual sensation rather than a more conventional data visualization design. The essential link is the descriptive title. While the work may abstract Singapore’s weather patterns, the movement and shapes designed by Seo also expand the meaning of the information as a kind of living, organic form.
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About the above work by Linnéa Gabriella Spransy–
Described by Spransy as “procedural abstractions,” the paintings shown present an alternative to what may be considered data-driven art. While terms such as “data” and “generative art” are often used to describe digital-based imagery, the artist’s painting method lies at the heart of data and data visualization: number patterns. The Prime Mover paintings demonstrate the intimate working relationship between the artist and pure data. Spransy begins by constructing linear patterns using prime number sequences onto the prepared canvas. From this accumulated form, she then selects areas to pour paint over. After the paint dries, she initiates another pattern that grows around the existing intrusions. This push and pull of structure and chaos creates a field of balance and counterbalance, an ebb and flow between the artist, the numbers, and the seemingly shifting, multiple layers and dimensions of her paintings.
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About the above work by Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle and Storm Prototype: Cloud Prototype No. 2 and 4, 2006 (the hanging titanium sculptures in the first photo)-
Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle is recognized for a wide-ranging, multifaceted practice resulting in sculpture, large-scale instal-lations, photography, and video. Ranging in scale from modest to monumental, his works are the result of years of research and achieved working in collaboration with creatives, inventors, and technicians in a vast range of fields, from the physical and life sciences to earth sciences. Lu, Jack and Carrie (from The Garden of Delights) (1998) is comprised of three colorful digital prints: a series of abstractions based on images of DNA samples taken from imaging technologies utilized in genomic mapping and depicting “families” of friends selected in sequence. Storm Prototype: Cloud Prototype Nos. 2 and 4 2006) are hovering spectral forms manifested in three dimensions from the analysis and compilation of real weather data. Additionally, the works are inspired by the artist’s consideration of global migration patterns. These works represent the compulsory flow of nature, whether revealed in the sky, ocean, or over land, impervious to international boundaries.
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About the above work Incroci (Crossings) by Giorgia Lupi and Ehren Shorday–
Described by the artists as data portraits, this collaborative project emerged from Lupi’s observation that “each person’s life may be unique and different, but when seen together, these distinct paths begin to form patterns.” For Incroci, a dataset was created by asking strangers, and their social media circles, to share five dates (day/month/year) representing significant life moments, from the day of their birth up to the year 2022. The project was conducted during the Covid-19 pandemic, which gave weight to the question of what could be considered a significant life moment. Incroci exemplifies the ways in which data visualization design is evolving to a level beyond merely providing an aesthetic framework for data to realizing subtext within the datasets. As Lupi states: “The more ubiquitous data becomes, the more we need to experiment with how to make it unique, contextual, intimate. The way we visualize is crucial because it is the key to translating numbers into concepts we can relate to.”
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About the work above by Semiconductor–
Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt, aka Semiconductor, have been collaborating for over 25 years working in sound, video, installation and sculpture. Referring to their work as technological sublime, they explore ways of experiencing nature mediated through the languages of science and technology. Spectral Constellations is a series of generative animations, driven by scientific data of young stars. This data, collected by scientists using a method called Spectroscopy, creates an understanding of structures around distant young stars, where gas and dust come together to form planets. Semiconductor have employed this spectral data as a physical material, translating it into rings of light which resemble gradiated discs of planetary and stellar formations. As the data ebbs and flows it introduces a sense of form and motion. Waveforms merge and interfere revealing patterns and rhythms, engaging our human tendency towards pattern recognition. The fragmented LED mosaics provide partial windows from which the spectral data shifts and shimmers.
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About Fernanda Bertini Viégas and Martin Wattenberg‘s Wind Map-
Fernanda Viégas, a computational designer, and Martin Wattenberg, a mathematician and journalist, are known as pioneers in the field of data visualization. Their research has helped define visualization as a discipline and practice, creating interactive and open-source tools for examining a wide range of scientific, social, and artistic questions. Conceived as a personal art project, their iconic work Wind Map culls information from the National Digital Forecast Database, which is maintained by the National Weather Service and available to the public. Continually gathering these forecasts, which are time-stamped and revised each hour, the artists have created a “living portrait” of the wind landscape over the United States. To emphasize the beauty and distinction of this influential work, exhibition curators commissioned a special iteration of Wind Map without the city locations and names. The standard version of this piece remains in the public domain on their website: http://hint.fm/wind/
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About Laurie Frick’s Moodjam Intense and Moodjam Mild-
In her exploration to humanize data, Frick creatively mines information from her own functional and behavioral patterns as part of her art practice. Inspired initially by the daily activity tracking of computer programmer Ben Lipkowitz, Frick began tracking her own sleep with an electroencephalogram headband, expanding it to her husband’s sleep patterns and then others. Initially mapping her moods with color swatches through Mood-jam.com, Frick expanded to track her temperament every few seconds using a combination of heart rate (HRV), facial recognition and galvanic skin response (GSR), assessing her stress, nervousness, and general mood every few seconds. The work shown is an interpretation of this compiled data, using boxes of countertop laminate samples that she sourced during an artist residency at the Headlands Art Center near San Francisco. Moodjam Intense and Moodjam Mild are the resulting gridded works.
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About Peggy Weil’s 77 Cores–
Peggy Weil has long been engaged in exploring ways of seeing. Today she continues to inquire the realms of perception, investigating how we see, what we see, and how we can see beyond. When she heard about the Greenland Ice Sheets project which stores 2-mile-long poles of ice samples in meter long cylinders, she was compelled to document them. The ice cores-paleo thermometers holding ash from volcanic eruptions, pollen and environmental gasses-are, to Weil, “deep space holding very deep time.” As such they speak to the notion of the extended landscape: stretched out beyond what we perceive and see, hidden in the atmosphere or the earth underneath our feet. In 77 Cores, images of seventy-seven glacier ice-sheet cores are printed and laid out over twenty-four feet. allowing the viewer to mark time by walking its length.
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About Sarah Morris and the Sound Graph paintings above-
Sarah Morris creates films, paintings, and sculptures based on a wide range of sources, including graphic logos, architectural space, transportation systems and maps, GPS technology, and the movement of people in urban locations. She has said, “I want to map what is going on, these situations we find ourselves in-both physically and philosophically.” The Sound Graph paintings are derived from fragments of conversations and sounds recorded by the artist and translated into hard-edged geometric shapes in vibrant patterns that seem to visually fluctuate. Her interest in incorporating sound into her paintings began when she conceived the film Finite and Infinite Games (2017), titled after the cult philosophy and numbers theory novel by James P. Carse. Morris sees her paintings as being part of a larger self-generating system, always remaining open and allowing for interpretation, motion and change.
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About the works above by Mimi Ọnụọha–
The Library of Missing Datasets comprises three filing cabinets filled with folders the reveal unseen biases within the system of data collecting. According to the artist, this work is “a physical repository of those things that have been excluded in a society where so much is collected.” While data-collecting algorithms claim to provide comprehensive information, their vastness hides data-driven forms of inequity: what Ọnụọha considers “algorithmic violence.” Revealing the conditions surrounding invisible data, she “aims] to trouble assumptions baked into the beliefs and technologies that mediate our existences.” In Absentia (2019) presents six risograph prints in the style of twentieth-century African American sociologist W. E. B. Du Bois’ infographics presented at Exposition Universelle, the Paris World’s Fair, in 1900. Ọnụọha visually quotes from Du Bois to acknowledge his work’s significance and the injustice it has since suffered: the US Department of Labor and Statistics halted publishing of his sociological research on Black rural life in Alabama, claiming it to be too controversial.
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Finally, the image above is of work from Refik Anadol’s AI data painting series– California Landscapes.
Refik Anadol is an artist, designer, and leader in the aesthetics of data and machine intelligence. Utilizing advanced technologies including Al, machine algorithms, and quantum computing, he has become known for large scale, immersive installations that render massive amounts of data into highly dynamic abstractions. The artist’s California Landscape series employs images of California’s national parks. Spawned from a dataset of over 153 million images, the largest dataset of this kind ever to be used for an artwork, the Generative Study works feature images that are recognizable. Yet as these majestic landscapes constantly morph, so does the matter that we conventionally identify as earth and sky. A series of interconnected lines imbue the images with additional references, in this case the algorithm driving this perpetual visual flux. In its varying juxtapositions of nature and technology, this work reminds us of how distinctive our perceptions of each may be.
This exhibition closes 2/15/25.
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in-the-nights · 1 year ago
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Ruth Marie Jarman (formerly Ruth Shiraishi), English voice of Mega Man (Mega Man 8) and X (Mega Man X4), as a newscaster in Gamera 2: Attack of Legion.
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annespooky · 1 year ago
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Wales Online | 5 juillet 2014
Derrière la nouvelle assemblée galloise des Manic Street Preachers : les collaborateurs qui ont rendu possible Futurology Les Manic Street Preachers sortent leur dernier album Futurology lundi. C’est une sortie audacieuse et courageuse qui s’est réalisée avec de nombreux joueurs gallois centraux à sa production. Voici ce que le leader James Dean Bradfield a à dire des collaborateurs qui ont…
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melancholyflower · 1 year ago
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Wales Online | 5 juillet 2014
Derrière la nouvelle assemblée galloise des Manic Street Preachers : les collaborateurs qui ont rendu possible Futurology Les Manic Street Preachers sortent leur dernier album Futurology lundi. C’est une sortie audacieuse et courageuse qui s’est réalisée avec de nombreux joueurs gallois centraux à sa production. Voici ce que le leader James Dean Bradfield a à dire des collaborateurs qui ont…
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cocktailsfairytales · 6 months ago
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🎧 𝐍𝐎𝐖 𝐀𝐕𝐀𝐈𝐋𝐀𝐁𝐋𝐄 𝐈𝐍 𝐀𝐔𝐃𝐈𝐎 🎧
𝐁𝐨𝐚𝐫𝐝𝐞𝐝 𝐇𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐬 by Ruth Stilling is now available in AUDIO!! 
Narrated by: Helen Duff & Jarman Day
Listen Now!! https://geni.us/bhaudio
Link in bio @authorruthstilling
𝐁𝐥𝐮𝐫𝐛:
My whole life, I've come out on top.
One of the finest players ever to grace the NHL? Check. Most prolific playboy with an enviable reputation between the sheets? Check. Award for the cockiest athlete in America? Also, check, and well deserved I'd say.
So why does my life feel anything but the perfect image I project? And why won't the one woman who came crashing into my life and knocked me on my six-foot-four ass take me seriously?
She doesn't even recognize me, let alone worship the ground I walk on. I'm in uncharted territory, tearing up my rule book and unearthing buried demons in my pursuit of her affection.
I always get what I want in life, but apparently, Felicity Thompson didn't get the memo. I want her in my bed, but all she offers me is her witty British tongue and no-nonsense attitude.
It isn't supposed to be this way. She's supposed to unravel for me. Yet the harder I pursue her, the more my own layers peel away.
Felicity Thompson is fast becoming not just what I want but the very woman I need in my life, and I'm terrified to admit that when it truly matters, I might not be coming out on top after all.
#BoardedHearts #RuthStilling  #AudioRelease  #SeattleScorpionsSeries #HeFallsFirst #HockeyRomance #wordsmithpublicity
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mw2camilanavarro2023 · 2 years ago
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Ver de manera más gráfica el sonido...
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brendon-img · 6 years ago
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Semiconducter: The Technological Sublime
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sound-art-text · 4 years ago
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Earthworks is an Immersive moving image Installation by Semiconductor, who are artists Joe Gerhardt and Ruth Jarman. This animated moving image and sound installation depicts the phenomena of landscape formation, compressing hundreds of thousands of years of geological time into less than twelve minutes. Masses of colourful layers are animated by the soundscapes of earthquake, volcanic, glacial and human activity, recorded as seismic waves, which form spectacular fluctuating marbled waveforms across a 20 metre screen that zig-zags through the space taking over the entire gallery. Earthworks makes tangible the immense natural forces captured by seismic data and tackles the way in which geological and human processes are inextricably linked in the Anthropocene. 
http://www.fabrica.org.uk/earthworks
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ollyarchive · 6 years ago
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Years and Years’ Olly Alexander, Lucy Spraggan and Sir Ian McKellen among Top 100 in 2019’s Pride Power List
The list celebrates all that is good and great in the LGBT+ community
This year’s Pride Power List has been released and it includes musicians Years and Years‘ Olly Alexander and Lucy Spraggan, and also actor Sir Ian McKellen.
Today, celebrations are taking place in the nation’s capital to commemorate Pride in London – honouring the lives, achievements, history and future of the LGBT+ community.
To coincide with the occasion, the Pride Power List 2019 has been released, revealing the members of the LGBT+ community in the UK who have made a significant impact in the fight for the equality and inclusion of LGBT+ individuals.
“The list celebrates all that is good and great in the LGBT+ community and has a unique mix of celebrity, community, celebrity and business leaders,” said Linda Riley, founder of the Pride Power List.
Individuals included in this year’s list include musicians  Years and Years‘ Olly Alexander, Lucy Spraggan and Westlife’s Mark Feehily, and actor Sir Ian McKellen.
The Pride Power 2019 List Top 100 LGBT+ individuals:
Ruth Hunt – chief executive of Stonewall.
Sir Ian McKellen CH CBE – actor and LGBT+ rights advocate.
Phyll Opoku-Gyimah – co-founder of UK Black Pride.
Owen Jones – columnist, author, commentator and political activist.
Peter Tatchell – LGBT+ campaigner and activist.
Sandi Toksvig OBE – writer, actor, comedian, presenter and producer.
Michael Cashman CBE – Labour peer, actor, former MEP and LGBT+ campaigner.
Munroe Bergdorf – DJ, activist and feminist.
Edward Enninful OBE – editor-in-chief of British Vogue.
Liz Carr – actor, comedian and disability rights campaigner.
Clare Balding OBE – broadcaster, journalist and author.
Graham Norton  – television and radio presenter, comedian and actor.
Gok Wan – fashion consultant, author and television presenter.
Saara Aalto – singer and musician.
Mhairi Black MP – Scottish politician.
Heather Peace – actor, musician and LGBT+ rights activist.
Nicola Adams OBE – professional boxer.
Liv Little – founder of gal-dem magazine.
Stephen Fry – actor, presenter, writer, comedian and activist.
Anthony Watson – founder and CEO of TBOL.
Lord Waheed Alli – media entrepreneur and politician.
Dawn Airey – Getty Images board and NYT chair.
Alan Carr – comedian, television personality and author.
Cressida Dick – commissioner of the Metropolitan Police.
Paris Lees – journalist, presenter, feminist and transgender rights activist.
Hannah Bardell MP – SNP MP of Livingston Constituency.
Lucy Spraggan – singer and songwriter.
Adele Roberts – radio presenter and DJ.
Sara Geater – chief operating officer of All3Media.
Alison Camps – partner and deputy chairman of Quadrangle.
Claire Harvey – diversity and inclusion consultant.
Charlie Condou – actor and columnist.
Ruth Davidson – Scottish politician and leader of the Scottish Conservative Party.
Mark Feehily – musician and one of the lead singers of Westlife.
Dr Ranj Singh – TV presenter, author, columnist and doctor.
Jane Hill – BBC journalist and broadcaster.
Olly Alexander – songwriter, actor and lead singer of Years and Years.
Chardine Taylor-Stone – cultural producer, writer and activist.
Tim Jarman – assistant director for diversity and inclusiveness at EY.
Amy Lamé – writer, performer, presenter and London’s night Czar.
Evan Davis – presenter, economist and author.
Annie Wallace – actor.
Kiki Archer – author.
Bobby Cole Norris – TV personality and presenter.
Horse McDonald – singer and songwriter.
Susan Calman – comedian, television presenter and writer.
Dr Elly Barnes MBE – CEO and founder of Educate and Celebrate.
Ollie Locke – television personality, presenter and writer.
Angela Eagle MP – Labour MP for Wallasey.
Brian Ashmead-Siers – partner at PwC.
Reeta Loi – writer, musician and activist.
Sophie Anna Ward – actor and author.
Vincent Francois – regional chief auditor executive at Societe Generale.
Jack Monroe – best-selling author and activist.
Baroness Liz Barker – House of Lords, Liberal Democrats.
Benjamin Butterworth – journalist for i newspaper.
Dr Liam Hackett – founder and CEO of Ditch The Label.
Pema Radha – chief of staff to Global Head of Managed Services at EY.
Mark McLane – head of diversity and inclusion, M&G Prudential.
Bisi Alimi – gay rights activist, public speaker and blogger.
Julie Wilson – CEO of Optimus Cards.
Mary Portas – broadcaster and TV personality.
Val McDermid, FRSE, FRSL – author.
Michael Salter-Church MBE ​– co-chair of Pride in London.
Ryan Atkin – professional referee.
Kelly Simmons MBE – FA director, Women’s Professional Game.
Wes Streeting MP – Labour politician.
Ryan John Butcher – journalist.
Andy Woodfield – partner at PwC.
Charlie Craggs  – trans activist and author.
Dan Hughes – PR specialist.
Dolly-Rose Campbell – actor.
Suki Sandhu OBE – founder and CEO of Involve and Audeliss.
Charlie King – celebrity personal trainer and columnist.
David Ames – actor.
Emma Woollcott – partner at Mishcon de Reya.
Polly Shute  – partnership director of Parallel Lifestyle. ‏
Kezia Dugdale – director of John Smith Centre.
Cliff Joannou – editor-in-chief of Attitude magazine.
Jacqui Gavin – Diversity and Inclusion Centre of Excellence manager at Employers Network for Equality and Inclusion.
Jodie Taylor – professional footballer.
Mark Anderson – executive vice president of Customer Experience at Virgin Atlantic.
Professor Sue Sanders – professor and chair of Schools Out. UK.
Daniel Lismore – artist, designer and writer.
Simon Jones – PR specialist.
Ian Massa-Harris-McFeely – events producer, voice coach and makeup artist.
Justine Greening – Conservative Party politician.
Darren Styles OBE – publisher of Attitude magazine.
Rikki Beadle-Blair – actor, director, screenwriter, singer, choreographer and songwriter.
Lord Collins – Labour peer and LGBT+ rights advocate.
Jen Brister – comedian, writer and actor.
Russell T Davies – screenwriter.
Amrou Al-Kadhi – writer, performer and filmmaker.
Pav Akhtar – co-founder and director of strategy of UK Black Pride.
Tag Warner – CEO of Gay Times.
Dr Catherine Lee – deputy dean of Anglia Ruskin University.
Suzi Ruffell – comedian.
Scott McGlynn – presenter, blogger and author.
Mridul Wadhwa – transgender rights campaigner.
Dotty – rapper and radio presenter.
Read more at https://www.nme.com/news/lucy-spraggan-years-and-years-olly-alexander-and-sir-ian-mckellen-among-top-100-in-2019s-pride-power-list-2525081#w1Fgr9ZqxIuiStF7.99
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lightresist · 7 years ago
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20 Hz by Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt) 
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fictionz · 2 years ago
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New Fiction 2022
Ten years of cataloguing every piece of new-to-me fiction. That decade was my thirties. So much happened and I don’t keep a diary but I have this.
I still remember sitting at a Carls Jr. in Oakland, on a rainy January morning, reading short stories in an anthology, and thinking “I should write this down so I know what the hell I’ve read this year.” Or lying in the back of my Jeep and watching Only Lovers Left Alive on my crappy little tablet before going to sleep. Playing Hotline Miami on my too old laptop in that crusty apartment in Redwood City. Things just kind of snowballed from there.
Previously: 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013
2022: Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec
Short Stories, Chapters, Excerpts
Jan - "Genesis" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jan - "Exodus" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jan - "2 B R 0 2 B" by Kurt Vonnegut (1962)
Jan - "From the Deposition of the Vaginal Teeth" by Elizabeth H. Turner (2022)
Feb - "Leviticus" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Feb - "Numbers" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Mar - "Deuteronomy" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Mar - "Josue" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Apr - "Judges" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Apr - "Ruth" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Apr - "Change :)" by Iphgenia Baal (2021)
Apr - "Pain in the Neck" by Iphgenia Baal (2021)
Apr - "Middle English Bestiary" by Iphgenia Baal (2021)
Apr - "vodaphone.co.uk/help" by Iphgenia Baal (2021)
Apr - "Nothing Old, Nothing New, Nothing Borrowed, Nothing Blue" by Iphgenia Baal (2021)
Apr - "I Just Want to Pull Down Your Panties and Fuck You" by Iphgenia Baal (2021)
May - "The Ghost Birds" by Karen Russell (2021)
May - "1 Kings" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
May - "2 Kings" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
May - Dracula Daily - "May" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Jun - "3 Kings" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jun - "4 Kings" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jun - "What Dreams May Come" by Michael Jan Friedman (2004)
Jun - "Night of the Vulture" by Greg Cox (2004)
Jun - "The Ceremony of Innocence is Drowned" by Keith R.A. DeCandido (2004)
Jun - "Blood Sacrifice" by Josepha Sherman & Susan Schwartz (2004)
Jun - "Mirror Eyes" by Heather Jarman & Jeffrey Lang (2004)
Jun - "Twilight's Wrath" by David Mack (2004)
Jun - "Eleven Hours Out" by Dave Galanter (2004)
Jun - "Safe Harbors" by Howard Weinstein (2004)
Jun - "Field Expediency" by Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore (2004)
Jun - "A Song Well Sung" by Robert Greenberger (2004)
Jun - "Stone Cold Truths" by Peter David (2004)
Jun - "Requital" by Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels (2004)
Jun - Dracula Daily - "June" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Jul - "1 Paralipomenon" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jul - "2 Paralipomenon" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jul - Dracula Daily - "July" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Aug - "1 Esdras" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Aug - "2 Esdras" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Aug - "The House of No Return" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Teacher's Pet" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Strained Peas" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Strangers in the Woods" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Good Friends" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "How I Won My Bat" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Mr. Teddy" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Click" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "Broken Dolls" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "A Vampire in the Neighborhood" by R.L. Stine (1994)
Aug - "The Werewolf's First Night" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "P.S. Don't Write Back" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "Something Fishy" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "You Gotta Believe Me!" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "Suckers!" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "Dr. Horror's House of Video" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "The Cat's Tale" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "Shell Shocker" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "Poison Ivy" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "The Spirit of the Harvest Moon" by R.L. Stine (1995)
Aug - "The Chalk Closet" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Home Sweet Home" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Don't Wake Mummy" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "I'm Telling!" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Haunted House Game" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Change for the Strange" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Perfect School" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "For the Birds" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Aliens in the Garden" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Thumbprint of Doom" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Pumpkin Juice" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Attack of the Tattoo" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Wish" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "An Old Story" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Scarecrow" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Awesome Ants" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Please Don't Feed the Bears" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Goblin's Glare" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "Bats About Bats" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - "The Space Suit Snatcher" by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Dracula Daily - "August" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Sep - "Tobias" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Sep - "Judith" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Sep - Dracula Daily - "September" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Oct - "Leonora" by Everil Worrell (1927)
Oct - "The Hollow Man" by Norman Partridge (1991)
Oct - "The Black Stone Statue" by Mary Elizabeth Counselman (1937)
Oct - "The Door" by Ann R. Loverock (2020)
Oct - "The Events at Poroth Farm" by T.E.D. Klein (1972)
Oct - "The Dead Wagon" by Greye La Spina (1927)
Oct - "Soft" by F. Paul Wilson (1984)
Oct - "Beelzebub" by Robert Bloch (1963)
Oct - "The Black Phone" by Joe Hill (2004)
Oct - "The Angle of Horror" by Cristina Fernández Cubas (1996)
Oct - "The Striding Place" by Gertrude Atherton (1896)
Oct - "The Fall of the House of Usher" by Edgar Allan Poe (1839)
Oct - "The Nurse's Story" by Elizabeth Gaskell (1852)
Oct - "The Girl With the Hungry Eyes" by Fritz Leiber (1949)
Oct - "The Summer People" by Shirley Jackson (1950)
Oct - "The Husband Stitch" by Carmen Maria Machado (2014)
Oct - "The Phantom 'Rickshaw" by Rudyard Kipling (1888)
Oct - "Scales" by Cherene Sherrard (2017)
Oct - "The Aztec" by Carmen Baca (2020)
Oct - "The Reaper's Image" by Stephen King (1969)
Oct - "The Mummy’s Foot" by Théophile Gautier (1840)
Oct - "When the Gentlemen Go By" by Margaret Ronald (2008)
Oct - "The Pear-Shaped Man" by George R.R. Martin (1987)
Oct - "Turn Out the Light" by Penelope Love (2015)
Oct - "Unseen—Unfeared" by Francis Stevens (1919)
Oct - "The White Cormorant" by Frithjof Spalder (1971)
Oct - "A Ghost Story" by Mark Twain (1870)
Oct - "The Signal-Man" by Charles Dickens (1866)
Oct - "Rearview" by Samantha Hunt (2020)
Oct - "The Green Bowl" by Sarah Orne Jewett (1901)
Oct - "A Good Student" by Nuzo Onoh (2014)
Oct - Dracula Daily - "October" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Nov - "Esther" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Nov - "Job" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Nov- Dracula Daily - "November" by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
Nov - "Clyde" by biomechanicalmash and bogleech (2020)
Audio Shorts
Feb - "Los Espiritus Regresan a Casa" edited and translated by James D. Sexton & Freddy Rodríguez Mejía, adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Feb - "Lo que los perros vieron" collected by Joseph D. Sobol & adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Feb - "El Niño Que Vio Visiones" by Victor Montejo & adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Feb - "Las Memorias de los Muertos (La Misa Encapuchada" collected by Teresa Pijoan & adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Feb - "El maestro de escuela" collected by Teresa Pijoan & adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Feb - "La Flor Llameante" edited by J. Frank Dobie & adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Feb - "Pachacamac y Wakon" based on work by Fran Gonzales & adapted by Carolina Quiroga-Stultz (2018)
Novels
Jan - Avatar: Book One by S.D. Perry (2003)
Jan - Avatar: Book Two by S.D. Perry (2003)
Feb - Death on the Nile by Agatha Christie (1937)
Mar - The Fall of Terok Nor by Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens (2000)
Mar - The War of the Prophets by Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens (2000)
Mar - Inferno by Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens (2000)
Jun - Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton (1990)
Jul - Bad Hare Day by R.L. Stine (1996)
Jul - Egg Monsters from Mars by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Cold Fusion by Keith R.A. DeCandido (2001)
Aug - The Beast from the East by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Say Cheese and Die—Again! by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Ghost Camp by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - How to Kill a Monster by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Legend of the Lost Legend by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Vampire Breath by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Calling All Creeps by R.L. Stine (1996)
Aug - Beware, the Snowman by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - Chicken, Chicken by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - Don't Go to Sleep! by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - The Blob That Ate Everyone by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - The Curse of Camp Cold Lake by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - My Best Friend is Invisible by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - Deep Trouble II by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - The Haunted School by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - Werewolf Skin by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - I Live in Your Basement! by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - Monster Blood IV by R.L. Stine (1997)
Aug - Cry of the Cat by R.L. Stine (1998)
Aug - Bride of the Living Dummy by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - A Less Perfect Union by William Leisner (2008)
Sep - Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (2020)
Nov - Places of Exile by Christopher L. Bennett (2008)
Nov - The New Girl by R.L. Stine (1989)
Nov - The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson (1959)
Nov - Seeds of Dissent by James Swallow (2008)
Dec - The Chimes at Midnight by Geoff Trowbridge (2008)
Dec - A Gutted World by Keith R.A. DeCandido (2008)
Dec - Brave New World by Chris Roberson (2008)
Dec - The Embrace of Cold Architects by David R. George III (2010)
Dec - The Tears of Eridanus by Steve Mollmann & Michael Schuster (2010)
Plays
Aug - The Nexus (aka The Dream Box) by Andrew J. Robinson & Alexander Siddig (199x)
Poems
Jan - "Lot's Wife" by Anna Akhmatova (1973)
Comic Shorts & Single Issues
Jan - "The Door in the Kitchen" by Abby Howard (2019)
Feb - "The most beautiful woman in town has issued an ultimatum" by Reggie (2022)
Feb - "Curiosity Killed My Beia" by Hana Chatani (2021)
Mar - "Giraffes Explained" by Tim Andraka (2022)
Mar - "I have been hired to clean the wizard tower" by tart (2022)
Apr - "The Night-Mother" by Melanie Gillman (2021)
Apr - "Sometimes even the villains have standards" by britainbray (2022)
May - "Gorn Trek" by dux (2022)
Jun - "Aquarium" by NoneToon (2022)
Jul - "Bathtub Mermaid" by Edith Zimmerman (2022)
Jul - "its time for… the dark cabinet" by itstimeforcomics-blog (2015)
Aug - "Venus En Route" by Edith Zimmerman (2022)
Sep - "Robot Woman" by Basil Wolverton (1952)
Oct - "Swamp Monster" by Basil Wolverton (1953)
Oct - "The Story of Sal Pullman" by Lonnie Nadler & Abby Howard (2019)
Oct - "O Whistle, and I'll Come to You, My Lad" by M.R. James & Abby Howard (2019)
Oct - "Rainbow Sprinkles" by W. Maxwell Prince, Chris O’Halloran, Martín Morazzo, Nimit Malavia (2018)
Oct - "Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall!" by Jack Davis, et al. (1953)
Oct - "The Harvest" by Shannon Campbell & Pam Wishbow (2016)
Oct - "In Each and Every Package" by Reed Crandall, et al. (1954)
Oct - "Roots in Hell" by Richard Corben (2016)
Oct - "Mars Is Heaven!" by Ray Bradbury, Wally Wood, et al. (1953)
Oct - "Save the Last Dance for Me!" by Dennis O'Neil & Pat Boyette (1969)
Oct - "Infected" by Bruce Jones, Richard Corben, Steve Oliff (1982)
Oct - "Unpleasant Side Effects" by Kerry Gammill, Sam F. Park, Mar Omega (2010)
Oct - "The Boar's Head Beast" by George Wildman, Nicola Cuti, Wayne Howard (1975)
Oct - "Ill Bred" by Charles Burns (1985)
Oct - "Don't Go to the Island" by Sfé R. Monster & Kalyna Riis-Phillips (2016)
Oct - "Some Other Animal's Meat" by Emily Carroll (2016)
Oct - "Greed" by Becky Cloonan, Jordie Bellaire, Travis Lanham (2013)
Oct - "Goin' South" by Nancy Collins, David Imhoff, Jeff Butler, Steve Montano, Renée Witterstaetter, Electric Crayon, Simon Bisley (1995)
Oct - "Winnebago Graveyard #1" by Steve Niles, Stephanie Paitreau, Jordie Bellaire, Jen Bartel, Alison Sampson, Aditya Bidikar, Mingjue Helen Chen, Sarah Horrocks (2017)
Oct - "Seed" by Fiona Staples, Jose Villarrubia, Michael Dougherty, Todd Casey, Zach Shields, Marc Andreyko (2015)
Oct - "Kill Screen" by Lauren Beukes, Dale Halvorsen, Ryan Kelly, Eva de la Cruz, Clem Robins, Bill Sienkiewicz, Rowena Yow, Shelly Bond (2015)
Oct - "The Fool of the Web" by Patricia Breen, Roel, Brenda Feikema (1997)
Oct - "Fortune Broken" by Sandy King, Leonardo Manco, Marianna Sanzone (2015)
Oct - "The Cemetery" by Franco, Abigail Larson, Wes Abbott, Sara Richard (2022)
Oct - "The Speed of Pain" by Jeff Lemire, Andrea Sorrentino, Dave Stewart, Steve Wands, Will Dennis (2018)
Oct - "Gestation" by Marguerite Bennett, Jonathan Brandon Sawyer, Doug Garbark, Nic. J. Shaw (2014)
Oct - "Chemical 13!" by Michael Woods & Saskia Gutekunst (2009)
Oct - "Hello, My Name Is..." by Nadia Shammas, Rowan MacColl, Licha Myers, Chris Sanchez (2021)
Oct - "Sea of Souls" by Jenna Lynn Wright, Alvaro Feliu, Juan Francisco Mota, Ricardo Osnaya, Erik Lopera Tamayo, Jorge Cortes, Robby Bevaro, Maxflan Araujo, Walter Pereyra, Taylor Esposito (2022)
Oct - "Crush" by Janet Hetherington, Ronn Sutton, Becka Kinzie, Zakk Saam (2018)
Oct - "The End of All Things" by Natalie Leif & Elaine Well (2014)
Nov - "Lenny" by David Cooper (2021)
Graphic Novels & Trades
Jan - Displacement by Kiku Hughes (2020)
Dec - The Last Generation by Andrew Steven Harris, Gordon Purcell, Bob Almond, Terry Pallot, Mario Boon, John Hunt, Robbie Robbins, Chris Mowry, Neil Uyetake, Andy Schmidt, Scott Dunbier, Justin Eisinger, Mariah Huehner, Bill Tortolini (2009)
Betas & Demos
Mar - "Platformer Practice" dev. Itizso (2020)
Video & Electronic Games
Jan - Florence dev. Mountains (2018)
Jan - Slide in the Woods dev. Jonny's Games (2021)
Mar - Fox's Peter Pan & the Pirates dev. Tiger Electronics (1990)
Mar - The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles dev. Chris Gray Enterprises (1992)
Mar - Instruments of Chaos Starring Young Indiana Jones dev. Brian A. Rice & Waterman Design (1994)
Mar - The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Revolution dev. Riverdeep & Asylum Entertainment (2007)
Mar - The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Special Delivery dev. Riverdeep & Asylum Entertainment (2007)
Mar - The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Hunting for Treasure dev. Riverdeep & Asylum Entertainment (2008)
May - Outer Wilds - "Echoes of the Eye" dev. Mobius Digital (2021)
May - Aperture Desk Job dev. Valve (2022)
Aug - Goosebumps Night of Scares dev. Cosmic Forces (2015)
Aug - Goosebumps: Escape from HorrorLand dev. Dreamworks Interactive (1996)
Aug - Stray dev. BlueTwelve Studio (2022)
Aug - Goosebumps: HorrorLand dev. Gusto Games (2008)
Aug - Goosebumps: Attack of the Mutant dev. BlueSky Software (1997)
Sep - Goosebumps: The Game dev. WayForward (2015)
Sep - Goosebumps Dead of Night dev. Cosmic Forces (2020)
Oct - Silent Hill dev. Team Silent (1999)
Oct - The Excavation of Hob's Barrow dev. Cloak and Dagger Games (2022)
Oct - Halloween Forever dev. Imaginary Monsters (2016)
Oct - Bride of Frankenstein dev. Paul Smith, Steve Howard, Timedata Ltd. (1987)
Oct - Zombies Ate My Neighbors dev. LucasArts (1993)
Oct - Darkstalkers 3 (aka Vampire Savior) dev. Capcom (1997)
Nov - Scorn dev. Ebb Software (2022)
Nov - Star Trek: Voyager – Elite Force dev. Raven Software (2000)
Short Films
Jan - "The Snowman" dir. Dianne Jackson (1982)
Jan - "Baker Bobb" dir. Billy Burger (2018)
Jan - "Magnetic Rose" dir. Kōji Morimoto (1995)
Feb - "Robin Robin" dir. Dan Ojari & Mikey Please (2021)
Feb - "Boxballet" dir. Anton Dyakov (2021)
Feb - "Affairs of the Art" dir. Joanna Quinn & Les Mills (2021)
Feb - "Bestia" dir. Hugo Covarrubias (2021)
Feb - "The Windshield Wiper" dir. Alberto Mielgo (2021)
Feb - "On my Mind" dir. Martin Strange-Hansen (2021)
Feb - "Please Hold" dir. KD Dávila (2021)
Feb - "The Long Goodbye" dir. Aneil Karia (2021)
Feb - "The Dress" dir. Tadeusz Lysiak (2021)
Feb - "Ala Kachuu—Take and Run" dir. Maria Brendle (2021)
Mar - Robot Carnival - "Opening" dir. Katsuhiro Otomo & Atsuko Fukushima (1987)
Mar - Robot Carnival - "Franken's Gears" dir. Koji Morimoto (1987)
Mar - Robot Carnival - "Star Light Angel" dir. Hiroyuki Kitazume (1987)
Mar - Robot Carnival - "Deprive" dir. Hidetoshi Ōmori (1987)
Mar - Robot Carnival - "Cloud" dir. Manabu Ōhashi (1987)
May - "Sitting" dir. Emily Yoshida (2017)
Jun - "Making art in America. 👁👄👁" dir. Angie Wang (2022)
Sep - "The Dancing Pig" dir. Mr. Odeo (1907)
Nov - The Legend of Mor'du dir. Brian Larsen (2012)
Movies
Jan - Cowboy Bebop: The Movie dir. Shinichirō Watanabe (2001)
Jan - The Tragedy of Macbeth dir. Joel Coen (2021)
Jan - The 355 dir. Simon Kinberg (2022)
Jan - The King's Man dir. Matthew Vaughn (2021)
Jan - Scream dir. Matt Bettinelli-Olphin & Tyler Gillett (2022)
Jan - Scream 4 dir. Wes Craven (2011)
Jan - Belle dir. Mamoru Hosoda (2021)
Jan - Licorice Pizza dir. Paul Thomas Anderson (2021)
Feb - Moonfall dir. Roland Emmerich (2022)
Feb - Death on the Nile dir. Kenneth Branagh (2022)
Feb - Blacklight dir. Mark Williams (2022)
Feb - Uncharted dir. Ruben Fleischer (2022)
Feb - Cyrano dir. Joe Wright (2022)
Mar - The Batman dir. Matt Reeves (2022)
Mar - Gangubai Kathiawadi dir. Sanjay Leela Bhansali (2022)
Mar - Compartment No. 6 dir. Juho Kuosmanen (2021)
Mar - Umma dir. Iris K. Shim (2022)
Mar - The Outfit dir. Graham Moore (2022)
Mar - X dir. Ti West (2022)
Mar - Sweet Smell of Success dir. Alexander Mackendrick (1957)
Mar - The Changeling dir. Peter Medak (1980)
Mar - Re-Animator dir. Brian Yuzna & Stuart Gordon (1985)
Mar - Everything Everywhere All At Once dir. Daniels (2022)
Mar - La Mujer Murcielago dir. René Cardona (1968)
Mar - The Lost City dir. Aaron Nee & Adam Nee (2022)
Mar - Infinite Storm dir. Malgorzata Szumowska (2022)
Apr - You Won't Be Alone dir. Goran Stolevski (2022)
Apr - Morbius dir. Daniel Espinosa (2022)
Apr - Ambulance dir. Michael Bay (2022)
Apr - Sonic the Hedgehog 2 dir. Jeff Fowler (2022)
Apr - Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore dir. David Yates (2022)
Apr - Dual dir. Riley Stearns (2022)
Apr - The Northman dir. Robert Eggers (2022)
Apr - The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent dir. Tom Gormican (2022)
Apr - The Bad Guys dir. Pierre Perifel (2022)
Apr - Moon of the Wolf dir. Daniel Petrie (1972)
Apr - Charlotte dir. Eric Warin & Tahir Rana (2022)
Apr - The Monster Squad dir. Fred Dekker (1987)
Apr - Memory dir. Martin Campbell (2022)
May - Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness dir. Sam Raimi (2022)
May - The Ancestral dir. Le-Van Kiet (2022)
May - Petite Maman dir. Céline Sciamma (2022)
May - Firestarter dir. Keith Thomas (2022)
May - Eraserhead dir. David Lynch (1977)
May - Videodrome dir. David Cronenberg (1983)
May - Men dir. Alex Garland (2022)
May - Crash dir. David Cronenberg (1996)
May - The Bob's Burgers Movie dir. Loren Bouchard & Bernard Derriman (2022)
Jun - Montana Story dir. Scott McGehee (2022)
Jun - Crimes of the Future dir. David Cronenberg (2022)
Jun - Watcher dir. Chloe Okuno (2022)
Jun - Jurassic World Dominion dir. Colin Trevorrow (2022)
Jun - Top Gun: Maverick dir. Joseph Kosinski (2022)
Jun - G.I. Joe: The Movie dir. Don Jurwich (1987)
Jun - Elvis dir. Baz Luhrmann (2022)
Jun - The Black Phone dir. Scott Derrickson (2022)
Jun - Lightyear dir. Angus MacLane (2022)
Jun - The Cat Returns dir. Hiroyuki Morita (2004)
Jun - Marcel The Shell With Shoes On dir. Dean Fleischer-Camp (2022)
Jul - Lost Highway dir. David Lynch (1997)
Jul - Mad God dir. Phil Tippett (2022)
Jul - Mr. Malcolm's List dir. Emma Holly Jones (2022)
Jul - Thor: Love and Thunder dir. Taika Waititi (2022)
Jul - Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers dir. Akiva Schaffer (2022)
Jul - Where the Crawdads Sing dir. Olivia Newman (2022)
Jul - Nope dir. Jordan Peele (2022)
Jul - Black Snake Moan dir. Craig Brewer (2007)
Jul - Vengeance dir. B. J. Novak (2022)
Jul - Fear Street Part One: 1994 dir. Leigh Janiak (2021)
Jul - Fear Street Part Two: 1978 dir. Leigh Janiak (2021)
Jul - Fear Street Part Three: 1666 dir. Leigh Janiak (2021)
Aug - Bullet Train dir. David Leitch (2022)
Aug - 3 Ninjas Kick Back dir. Charles T. Kanganis (1994)
Aug - 28 Days dir. Betty Thomas (2000)
Aug - The Gray Man dir. Anthony Russo & Joe Russo (2022)
Aug - Fall dir. Scott Mann (2022)
Aug - Bodies Bodies Bodies dir. Halina Reijn (2022)
Aug - Three Thousand Years of Longing dir. George Miller (2022)
Aug - Beast dir. Baltasar Kormákur (2022)
Aug - Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween dir. Ari Sandel (2018)
Sep - Orphan dir. Jaume Collet-Serra (2009)
Sep - Orphan: First Kill dir. William Brent Bell (2022)
Sep - The Invitation dir. Jessica M. Thompson (2022)
Sep - Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. dir. Adamma Ebo (2022)
Sep - Medieval dir. Petr Jákl (2022)
Sep - Barbarian dir. Zach Cregger (2022)
Sep - Pearl dir. Ti West (2022)
Sep - See How They Run dir. Tom George (2022)
Sep - God's Country dir. Julian Higgins (2022)
Sep - Confess, Fletch dir. Greg Mottola (2022)
Sep - The Woman King dir. Gina Prince-Bythewood (2022)
Sep - Don't Worry Darling dir. Olivia Wilde (2022)
Sep - The Silent Twins dir. Agnieszka Smoczyńska (2022)
Sep - Luckiest Girl Alive dir. Mike Barker (2022)
Oct - Smile dir. Parker Finn (2022)
Oct - The Mummy dir. Karl Freund (1932)
Oct - Invasion of the Body Snatchers dir. Don Siegel (1956)
Oct - The Skin I Live In dir. Pedro Almodóvar (2011)
Oct - The Picture of Dorian Gray dir. Albert Lewin (1945)
Oct - The Uninvited dir. Lewis Allen (1944)
Oct - The Other Side of the Underneath dir. Jane Arden (1972)
Oct - Jeepers Creepers: Reborn dir. Timo Vuorensola (2022)
Oct - Terrifier 2 dir. Damien Leone (2022)
Oct - Ravenous dir. Antonia Bird (1999)
Oct - The Experiment dir. Oliver Hirschbiegel (2001)
Oct - Ganja & Hess dir. Bill Gunn (1973)
Oct - Def by Temptation dir. James Bond III (1990)
Oct - Eyes Without a Face dir. Georges Franju (1960)
Oct - Under the Shadow dir. Babak Anvari (2016)
Oct - Amsterdam dir. David O. Russell (2022)
Oct - Deadstream dir. Joseph Winter & Vanessa Winter (2022)
Oct - In My Skin by Marina de Van (2002)
Oct - Evolution dir. Lucile Hadžihalilović (2015)
Oct - Eko Eko Azarak: Wizard of Darkness dir. Shimako Satō (1995)
Oct - Celia dir. Ann Turner (1989)
Oct - Censor dir. Prano Bailey-Bond (2021)
Oct - Halloween Ends dir. David Gordon Green (2022)
Oct - The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari dir. Robert Wiene (1920)
Oct - Black Adam dir. Jaume Collet-Serra (2022)
Oct - Trouble Every Day dir. Claire Denis (2001)
Oct - Eve's Bayou dir. Kasi Lemmons (1997)
Oct - Monster (aka Humanoids from the Deep) dir. Barbara Peeters & Jimmy T. Murakami (1980)
Oct - The Mafu Cage dir. Karen Arthur (1978)
Oct - Medusa: Queen of the Serpents dir. Matthew B.C. (2020)
Oct - Medusa dir. Anita Rocha da Silveira (2021)
Oct - Prey for the Devil dir. Daniel Stamm (2022)
Oct - It Follows dir. David Robert Mitchell (2014)
Oct - Amer dir. Hélène Cattet & Bruno Forzani (2009)
Nov - Decision to Leave dir. Park Chan-wook (2022)
Nov - Tár dir. Todd Field (2022)
Nov - The Banshees of Inisherin dir. Martin McDonagh (2022)
Nov - Black Panther: Wakanda Forever dir. Ryan Coogler (2022)
Nov - Holy Spider dir. Ali Abbasi (2022)
Nov - The Menu dir. Mark Mylod (2022)
Nov - She Said dir. Maria Schrader (2022)
Nov - Ticket to Paradise dir. Ol Parker (2022)
Nov - Wendell & Wild dir. Henry Selick (2022)
Nov - The Devil's Own dir. Alan J. Pakula (1997)
Nov - Brave dir. Mark Andrews & Brenda Chapman (2012)
Nov - Devotion dir. J. D. Dillard (2022)
Nov - Bones and All dir. Luca Guadagnino (2022)
Nov - Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery dir. Rian Johnson (2022)
Nov - Suspiria dir. Dario Argento (1977)
Dec - Strange World dir. Don Hall (2022)
Dec - Violent Night dir. Tommy Wirkola (2022)
Dec - Empire of Light dir. Sam Mendes (2022)
Dec - Demon Wind dir. Charles Philip Moore (1990)
Dec - Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio dir. Guillermo del Toro (2022)
Dec - Babylon dir. Damien Chazelle (2022)
Dec - Jack and Jill dir. Dennis Dugan (2011)
Dec - The Whale dir. Darren Aronofsky (2022)
TV Episodes
Jan - What If...? - "What If... Captain Carter Were the First Avenger?" (2021)
May - Goosebumps - "Let's Get Invisible" (1996)
May - Goosebumps - "The Ghost Next Door" (1998)
May - Goosebumps - "The Werewolf of Fever Swamp" (1996)
May - Goosebumps - "You Can't Scare Me" (1996)
May - Goosebumps - "More Monster Blood" (1996)
May - Goosebumps - "Go Eat Worms" (1996)
May - Goosebumps - "Ghost Beach" (1996)
May - Goosebumps - "Return of the Mummy" (1995)
May - Goosebumps - "Phantom of the Auditorium" (1995)
May - Como Dice el Dicho - "Muerto el perro se acabó la rabia" (2019)
Jun - Goosebumps - "My Hairiest Adventure" (1996)
Jun - Goosebumps - "It Came from Beneath the Sink" (1996)
Jun - Goosebumps - "The Barking Ghost" (1997)
Jun - Goosebumps - "Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes" (1996)
Jun - Goosebumps - "Shocker on Shock Street" (1997)
Jun - Goosebumps - "Haunted Mask II" (1996)
Jun - Goosebumps - "The Headless Ghost" (1996)
Jun - Goosebumps - "How I Got My Shrunken Head" (1998)
Jul - Goosebumps - "Bad Hare Day" (1996)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Say Cheese and Die... Again" (1998)
Aug - Goosebumps - "How to Kill a Monster" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Attack of the Jack O Lanterns" (1996)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Vampire Breath" (1996)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Calling All Creeps" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Don't Go to Sleep" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "The Blob That Ate Everyone" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "My Best Friend Is Invisible" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Deep Trouble" (1998)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Werewolf Skin" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "The House of No Return" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Strained Peas" (1998)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Teacher's Pet" (1998)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Click" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Don't Wake Mummy" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "The Haunted House Game" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Perfect School" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "An Old Story" (1997)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Awesome Ants" (1998)
Aug - Goosebumps - "Cry of the Cat" (1998)
Oct - The Simpsons - "Treehouse of Horror XXXIII" (2022)
Oct - Bob's Burgers - "Apple Gore-chard! (But Not Gory)" (2022)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "The Sandkings" (1995)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "Vanishing Act" (1996)
Dec - Tales from the Crypt - "And All Through the House" (1989)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "Valerie 23" (1995)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "Blood Brothers" (1995)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "The Second Soul" (1995)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "White Light Fever" (1995)
TV Series
Jan - Cowboy Bebop (1998)
Jan - Cowboy Bebop (2021)
Mar - Mighty Max (1993-1994)
Jul - Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (1988-1990)
Jul - Better Call Saul - Season 5 (2020)
Jul - The Book of Boba Fett (2021-2022)
Jul - Obi-Wan Kenobi (2022)
Aug - Better Call Saul - Season 6 (2022)
Aug - Keep Breathing (2022)
Aug - Goosebumps: Chillogy (1998)
Oct - Costume Quest (2019)
Oct - Castlevania - Seasons 3 & 4 (2020-2021)
Nov - Cabinet of Curiosities (2022)
Nov - What If...? (2021)
Nov - The Sandman (2022)
Nov - Ms. Marvel (2022)
Nov - The Twilight Zone - Season 1 (2019)
Dec - Don't Hug Me I'm Scared - Series 2 (2022)
1 note · View note
ideaimateria · 6 years ago
Quote
«Tot filòsof pot ser un bon mecànic.» Ramon Llull
http://www.cccb.org/ca/exposicions/fitxa/la-maquina-de-pensar/223672
L'exposició explora l’impacte del filòsof Ramon Llull (1232-1316) en les arts, la literatura, la ciència i la tecnologia. L’actualitat d’aquesta figura controvertida, admirada i rebutjada, pren nova significació en l’actual debat sobre els models de transmissió del saber.
«Tot filòsof pot ser un bon mecànic.» Ramon Llull
El mètode de coneixement inventat per Llull, conegut com Ars combinatoria, representa un complex mecanisme de figures geomètriques i símbols que combinen lletres i conceptes, i s’anuncia com un nou saber amb pretensions universals. L’ús d’aquest mecanisme, que proposava la unitat dels diferents sabers de l’època, havia de dur, mitjançant la raó, la demostració i el diàleg, a la pau entre les religions. Llull va cercar un model complex de realitat en el qual, com en una gran xarxa, estiguessin implicats el món, l’home i Déu.
Combinant la documentació històrica i les mirades més recents d’artistes que s’han inspirat en l’obra de Llull, com David Link, Ralf Baecker i Perejaume, l’exposició dóna a conèixer aspectes sorprenents i desconeguts del seu pensament, i proposa entendre l’ars combinatoria com un precedent de les noves tecnologies de la informació.
Filòsof, místic i visionari
Els mons de Ramon Llull són molt rics i variats: el seu era un món alhora català, europeu i mediterrani; va escriure més de 250 llibres, en català, llatí i àrab; va viatjar per Orient i Occident; va cercar un model de coneixement que integrés Déu, home i món; va fomentar el diàleg entre jueus, cristians i musulmans, però també entre cristians llatins i grecs. El seu pensament és hereu de la filosofia grega, jueva i àrab i del neoplatonisme cristià. La seva concepció de la realitat està formada per la intersecció de filosofia, teologia, ciència i política; el sistema de pensament que va crear, conegut com Ars magna, interrelaciona totes les disciplines del coneixement del seu temps (astronomia, filosofia, teologia, lògica, medicina, dret…), i el llenguatge que va utilitzar per expressar tot això, l’ars combinatoria, és el millor exemple de com posar en relació coses diferents. Segons la llegenda, va morir per les seves idees.
Una exposició amb obra d'Antoni Tàpies, Arnold Schönberg, Athanasius Kircher, Bernat de Lavinheta, David Link, Francesc Pujols, Giordano Bruno, Gottfried Wilhem Leibniz, Agrippa von Nettesheim, Italo Calvino, Jacint Verdaguer, Jean-Jacques Grandville, Jeongmoon Choi, Joan Desí, Johann Heinrich Alsted, John Cage, Jorge Oteiza, José Luis Alexanco, José María Yturralde, Josep M. Subirachs, Josep Maria Mestres Quadreny, Josep Palau i Fabre, Josep Soler, Juan de Herrera, Juan Eduardo Cirlot, Manfred Mohr, Manuel Barbadillo, Marius Schneider, Miquel Bestard, Moses ben Jacob Cordovero, Nikolaus Joachim Lehmann, Perejaume, Philipp Goldbach, Pietro Mainardi, Rafael Isasi, Ralf Baecker, Ramon Llull, Raymond Queneau, Razen, Rosa Leveroni, Salvador Dalí, Sebastián Izquierdo, Semiconductor: Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt, Valère Novarina, William Morris, Yehudá ha-Leví i Daniel V. Villamediana.
«Avui, Ramon Llull seria com una estrella de rock. Aquesta exposició no pretén mirar enrere, sinó endavant, és com tenir un peu al passat, fa 700 anys, i un altre en el futur» Siegfried Zielisnki, teòric dels mitjans
«Després de veure l'exposició, un surt amb la sensació que Ramon Llull s'assemblava més a un hacker d'Anonymous, amb un punt de bogeria insensata, disposat a morir per demostrar les seves idees, que a un savi inaccessible tancat a la seva torre de marfil» El Mundo
«L’exposició sobrepassa l’interès filològic o literari. Va més enllà i deixa bocabadat per l’espectacularitat d’una capacitat intel·lectual extraordinària» Nació Digital
http://www.cccb.org/ca/exposicions/fitxa/la-maquina-de-pensar/223672
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The Dissertatio de arte combinatoria ("Dissertation on the Art of Combinations" or "On the Combinatorial Art") is an early work by Gottfried Leibniz published in 1666 in Leipzig.[1] It is an extended version of his first doctoral dissertation,[2] written before the author had seriously undertaken the study of mathematics.[3] The booklet was reissued without Leibniz' consent in 1690, which prompted him to publish a brief explanatory notice in the Acta Eruditorum.[4] During the following years he repeatedly expressed regrets about its being circulated as he considered it immature.[5] Nevertheless it was a very original work and it provided the author the first glimpse of fame among the scholars of his time.
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https://archive.org/details/ita-bnc-mag-00000844-001/page/n10
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disertaci%C3%B3n_acerca_del_arte_combinatorio
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Arte_Combinatoria
https://therealsamizdat.com/tag/on-the-combinatorial-art/
Georges Perec
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shortandanimated · 3 years ago
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múm - Green Grass Of Tunnel
Music: múm
Music Video: Ruth Jarman / Joe Gerhardt (Semiconductor)
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sargenthouse · 7 years ago
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Jaye Jayle “No Trail“ Video Premiere // Clash Magazine
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premiere via Clash Magazine
Jaye Jayle are ready to unveil the next chapter of their ongoing tale, with new album 'No Trail And Other Unholy Paths' set to be released shortly.
Envisaged as spread across two sides of vinyl, Side A and Side B interweave, essentially becoming one document, where each path interlocks.
The album was produced by Dean Hurley, David Lynch’s music supervisor of the last twelve years, and will be followed by a full tour.
'No Trail' is a minimalist piece taken from the album, the tumbling torrent of notes effortlessly contained within the undulating structure.
Ethan (Director) takes charge of the visuals, with four different characters representing an aspect of Evan (from Jaye Jayle) - a ritual at the end converges them.
"We filmed across a beach near Dungeness, a flat, almost desert like part of England which houses a gigantic power station. I decided on the location before we fully fleshed out the idea, so there was a lot of inspiration to take from the landscapes. Derek Jarman, an incredible film-maker once lived in a cottage out by the power station, his films have an amazing magical realism that I think we reference in the film."
"There was an entirely different ending to the film originally and I'd imagine around 40% of the footage we actually used in the edit came through improvisation. There was just so many different tangents you could go on shooting in a place like that."
Tune in now.
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Jaye Jayle live dates with Emma Ruth Rundle:
November 3 Manchester - Soup Kitchen 4 Bristol - Rough Trade 6 Glasgow - Stereo 7 Newcastle - The Cluny 8 London - Oslo
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lostconversation · 7 years ago
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A Semiconductor work by Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. Audio Data courtesy of CARISMA, operated by the University of Alberta, funded by the Canadian Space Agency. Special Thanks to Andy Kale. Made for the exhibition Invisible Fields at Arts Santa Monica in Barcelona Spain. https://ift.tt/nWzS7I 20 Hz observes a geo-magnetic storm occurring in the Earth's upper atmosphere. Working with data collected from the CARISMA radio array and interpreted as audio, we hear tweeting and rumbles caused by incoming solar wind, captured at the frequency of 20 Hertz. Generated directly by the sound, tangible and sculptural forms emerge suggestive of scientific visualisations. As different frequencies interact both visually and aurally, complex patterns emerge to create interference phenomena that probe the limits of our perception. 05.00 minutes. / HD / 2011 HD single channel and HD 3D single channel. 20Hz is co-commissioned by Arts Santa Monica + Lighthouse . Supported by the British Council. https://ift.tt/pzP2b1
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livingcorner · 4 years ago
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Pleasure Garden | The Garden Edit
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Taking inspiration from the pleasure gardens of 18th century London this magazine engages its public with an array of attractions – ranging from the past to the present, the sedate to the salacious. Here we step away from the practicalities of the garden instead placing it within a wider cultural context. The pleasure garden was always a place to escape to – a fantasy in a garden, filled with art, music, fashion, society and sex. It is this mix that we transport to the printed pages of Pleasure Garden.
You're reading: Pleasure Garden | The Garden Edit
Issue 7
Issue 7 comes out of the blue, as it also dives into the beautiful blue, looking at our connection with water. Pleasure Garden on Sea plots the course of the pleasure garden as it manifests its ultimate incarnation on the coast. Jo Metson Scott documents part of this architectural legacy in her tour of British seaside piers, while Hugo MacDonald contemplates the return to favour of life beside the seaside in ‘The Constant Sea’. We consider the possibility that every man is an island, with a look at poet and gardener Ian Hamilton Finlay and his garden at Little Sparta. Alison Morris explores Venice’s marriage to the sea in the annual celebrations of the Festa della Sensa…
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Issue Six
A Japanese Dream finds us exploring our subconscious travels and interpretations of the Land of the Rising Sun. Our Icon Isamu Noguchi is a man who represents much of the dialogue between Japan and the West through the twentieth century. Within his work we find an inspired merging of cultures – Hiromi Matsugi looks deeper into this in Beyond Borders. We also look into the playful side of Noguchi’s work in The Landscape of Play with words by Vincent Romagny and Moerenuma Park in Hokkaido photographed by Sebastian Sabal-Bruce. Oliva Meehan looks at the opening up of Japan in the late nineteenth century in Some Japanese Flowers and Trees for the imagination and Anne Koval also reflects on the Japonisme influencing the artist Whistler’s work in Nocturne…
Read more: What Is Container Gardening?
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Issue Five
This issue sees us go Au Naturel – uncovering a theme that has had shifting boundaries and conflicting definitions. Our Icon William Robinson was a man who sought to imagine a new, more ‘natural’ style of gardening. Jo Metson Scott photographs his legacy at Gravetye with words by Richard Bisgrove. Jonny Bruce takes us on a journey to three subversive gardens that liberated his thinking of what a garden could be. We revisit Howards Sooley’s photographs of Derek Jarman and Dungeness and he shares memories of his friend in Mourned by the Wind. Concepts of beauty are bought under the spotlight with Against Nature by Bethan Cole, photographed by Drew Vickers, and A Vision of Beauty by Sarah Jane Downing. We also take a look at The Bush with artist Ruth van Beek and explore the idea of being naked in At One with Nature…
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Issue Four
The Romance of the Trees sees Pleasure Garden wander into the forest where we uncover the special relationship we have with trees—their deep roots that run through our unconscious. In the Beginning—The Tree of Life opens the issue with Alison Morris considering the cultural metaphors, symbolism and role the tree plays in our worldview. Ernest Henry Wilson our Icon, is a man who hunted far and wide in search of new trees to bring to the West. His road trips around New England in the 1920s, documenting the remarkable elms there, stirred us to undertake our own. Yoshiyuki Matsumara headed to Upstate New York taking in the autumn tones, whilst Linda Brownlee visited the giants of California…
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Issue Three
Issue Three celebrates the rose—a flower perhaps more fetishised and deeply entwined in the mythology of our culture than any other. From a misogynist symbol to a feminist icon, Catherine Wagley looks at the rose’s long and thorny journey in Fetish of the Rose with photographs by Benjamin Fredrikson. The Empress Joséphine has long been talked of as a rose icon. However, Jennifer Potter unpicks this assumption and others in Myth of the Rose. Maciek Pozoga and Samuel Bradley take a journey across Paris in Pilgrimage of the Rose. Charles Quest-Ritson guides us through the horticultural history of the rose…
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Read more: Using A Digging Fork – Learn When To Use Digging Forks In The Garden
Issue Two
Our path into the Pleasure Garden continues with Issue Two and escapism is provided on many levels. The posters of Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens capture the magic and fantasy of the 174-year- old Danish institution. Marton Perlaki disappears into the wintery parks of Budapest, inspiring Judit Hevesi’s words on a love story that may have been. Our icon is Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown—the well-known 18 th -century landscape designer who defined the English style. Kate Felus introduces the man and his achievements, academic Tom Williamson sets Brown’s work in the context of the time, whilst Tom Johnson and Luke Edward Hall share their experiences of a weekend away at Stowe…
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Issue One
In this, our inaugural issue, we introduce the concept and history of our inspiration – the pleasure garden. Alex Tieghi Walker traces Vauxhall’s reputation for pleasure into the modern day. Drew Vickers photographs New York florist Brittany Asch as she talks art and flowers with Catherine Wagley. Our icon for the issue is Valerie Finnis – a gardener and photographer who captured the characters of horticultural post-war Britain. Howard Sooley shares his photographs and fond memories of Finnis from her later years and inspired by our icon we take a trip across Switzerland to visit two alpine gardens at altitude. Annemarieke van Drimmelen beautifully captures Stella Tennant at Edinburgh Botanical Gardens for a story about the family gardening gene…
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Source: https://livingcorner.com.au Category: Garden
source https://livingcorner.com.au/pleasure-garden-the-garden-edit/
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