Let’s see. The internet is in a meme deficit and along comes the spore creature creator and what do we get? COCK MONSTERS FUCKING COCK MOSTERS!!! They’re everywhere and we loves them, hard. Youtube is swimming with COCK MONSTERS. [via Google News]

Related, Jason Kottke sends us a link to a Goatse Spore creature, below, and adds that the creature’s dong flops around just like the rubber dildo in the video we just posted. So it does, Mr. Kottke, so it does.

A few more after the jump
Continue Reading »

Via Make:

The “Third Eye” by Takehito Etani, is a head-mounted video device that enables the wearer to experience perception from “outside of their body”. The device consists of a mono-eyed goggle with a 2-inch LCD monitor and a small surveillance camera mounted above the user’s head.

Awesome: An open-source directory of good-looking (and very Dutch) patterns. Check them all out. Via Many Stuff.

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

A classic, via The Moment, which attempted a kind of high-brow survey, asking people to send in their fave videos about “dancing about architecture. This was Andreas Angelidakis’s submission. (He’s the guy that did these interesting buildings in second life.) After the jump, a nice but somewhat static video Angelidakis made, inspired by Nomi:

Continue Reading »

Coffins

That pic looks like a bunch of superfun bumper cars right? They’re actually coffins from Ghana—love that PT Cruiser. Original story:

The coffins are designed to represent an aspect of the dead person’s life — such as a car if they were a driver, a fish if their livelihood was the sea — or a sewing machine for a seamstress. They might also symbolize a vice — such as a bottle of beer or a cigarette.

Ablade Glover, an artist who works with the carpenters, says the coffin acts as a home in the afterlife, so it must be beautiful. But he laments that after putting so much time into creating the coffin, it gets hidden underground.

More images:

Continue Reading »

Numen

Tip on the lights via Today and Tomorrow. The effect you see is pretty simple: It’s a mirrored cube, with its interior edges lined by fluorescent lights. Each side of the cube is a two way mirror, with the opaque side facing outward, so that you can see “inside” the cube, and its infinite reflections. Ergo, the sense of limitless depth. (More about the lights, at this crap website. They were designed by For Use, a very good furniture design outfit.) Josiah McElheney’s lightbox sculptures work the same way.  More McElheney stuff:

Continue Reading »

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

Via Brooklyn Vegan, which linked the video in honor of the death of Albert Hofmann, the first human being to trip on acid.

Also check out this video, which has some amazing interstitial interpretations of Hoffman’s first trip. (They don’t get going for a bit.) Via Laughing Squid.

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

Via Everyone Forever (though I think they’re way off in saying this video is good because of “how crap it is.” C’mon guys. This is just good because it’s good, not good because it’s bad. There’s life beyond design foppery)

Koons 2

I’ve wondered forever. The Times has a story up about his fabrication company:

Is it possible to make a full-scale 70-foot model of the locomotive so that it is hyper-realistic and semifunctional — with wheels spinning as fast as 100 miles per hour and steam belching three times a day — and also make it lightweight enough to be safe? How much would the whole thing — which could easily top $25 million — actually cost to build? How long would it take? And what would happen in the event of an earthquake?

For answers they turned straight to one source: Carlson & Company in San Fernando, Calif. One of the art world’s leading fabricators, it specializes in making artworks that are too large, industrial, labor-intensive, time-consuming or otherwise complex for the artists to make in their own studios. Its clients over the years have included artists as diverse as Isamu Noguchi, Ellsworth Kelly, the duo Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen and, perhaps most prominent, Mr. Koons.

I’ve always been a little lukewarm about Koons, though his standards are impeccable. I do hope that locomotive gets built—it should be wonderful and frightening, and a shot right across the bow of Charles Ray’s Firetruck, which was parked out in front of various museums.

Image: Librado Romero/The New York Times.

Space Car

An excellent set of vintage images. A few more:

Continue Reading »