The start of something beautiful
| Terence Malick and Badlands.
Sword boy
Thomas Paul’s sealife
Thomas Paul’s melamine plates parallel Laura Zindel’s ceramics in their borrowing of natural history engravings. Anything which brings tentacles into home furnishing gets a vote here and the octopus design at the top right can also be found on Paul’s cushion designs. Jeff VanderMeer would probably bemoan the absence of the squid but I took care of that department last year.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• The art of Rune Olsen
• Laura Zindel’s ceramics
• Octopulps
• New things for April II
• Darwin Day
• The glass menagerie
Wood that Works by David C Roy
Falcon (2007).
David C Roy‘s wooden sculptures are fine enough when viewed like this but really need to be seen in motion since these are all kinetic pieces. Roy’s website has a choice of animations for each work, from Flash diagrams to YouTube videos, all of which are fascinating to look at. Each piece is spring-driven and runs for several hours. The movements aren’t as predictable as you’d imagine either, many of them create an evolving range of patterns depending on the speed or arrangement of the components.
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Glass engines and marble machines
• Peter Eudenbach’s Eiffel Ferris wheel
A revolution in the boardroom
A revolution in the boardroom
| Why it pays to be gay.


