We all have different things that touch us. For some, it's stories on the printed page. For others, songs or spoken narratives. For yet others, photographs.
You may not know that the US government hired Dorothea Lange to photograph the "relocation effort."
She clearly saw the injustice and human tragedy that was unfolding, and documented it unflinchingly.
Her work was censored, and only in 2006 made broadly available.
Take a moment and see what she saw.
https://anchoreditions.com/blog/dorothea-lange-censored-photographs
For another insightful example of flat ontologies in popular culture, may I refer you to the works of [1] [2] of Takahashi et al. exploring the implications of dividing the material world into just two categories:
1. small enough to be rolled into katamari,
2. will soon be small enough to be rolled into katamari.
[1] Katamari Damacy, Namco, 2004
[2] We❤️Katamari, Namco, 2005
So I've been building a 100% analog polyphonic synthesizer with an unique twist. To use only vacuum tube era technology from the 1930s.
Over 300 neon gas diodes create the sound you hear. Pretty awesome for technology from 100 years ago.
Still a work-in-progress, but I wanted to post a video of it with the innards spread out across the workbench. : }
I call it the "Neon String Machine"
Hey I made a little zine for Valentine's Day of various dedication pages from books and you can buy it here: https://buy.stripe.com/eVacP2bUj7l25dS5ky
"in the future, women with soundchips in their earrings will listen to Beethoven's symphonies"
Someone made an endless simulation of Seinfeld, using AI generated dialogue in a lo-fi 3D world. It's kinda fascinating https://www.twitch.tv/watchmeforever
a humble render farmer