Nothing magnifies life — in the proper sense of the word, rooted in the Latin for “to make greater, to glorify” — more than the act of noticing its details, and nothing sanctifies it more: Kneeling to look at a lichen is a devotional act.
Read on: https://t.co/UvPGpc2nP1
✨ Fellowship Presents: Empire by @sheldrick_ai ✨
We’re excited to share Empire, a new collection by British-Korean artist Sheldrick that explores how photographs preserve and reshape our view of the past by transforming over 35,000 color film slides from 1940 to 1990 into layered compositions through restoration and AI. These slides, capturing personal milestones and historic moments, are reimagined through 450 still images and 50 videos that connect the past with the present, inviting reflection on how images shape our collective memory and link us to history.
📅 Key dates:
→ Physical Exhibition Opening: January 20th, London
→ Collection Launch: January 21st 1:00 PM EST, Daily xyz
→ 500 artworks: Stills + Videos
🫳 Release Details ↓
Empire is now on the fellowship website now.
Presented by @FellowshipAi and curated by absolutely incredible @halecar2
If I wasn’t doing dry January I would be having a glass of whiskey right now. 1 year of immense work has come to an end.
It now goes out into the public forever.
#ai #aiart #postphotography
To understand the history of art is to be a responsible collector and artist. For this reason, we believe it’s important to write and share about the broader artistic community.
↓ Today, we present the work of a contemporary, Trevor Paglen.
Trevor Paglen is an artist and researcher who explores hidden aspects of our world, often focusing on technology and surveillance. He uses photography, video, and other mediums to reveal things we usually can't see, like the infrastructure behind internet and communication systems or how artificial intelligence (AI) learns to recognize images. Paglen's work is a blend of art and investigative journalism, showing us how power and information, though often invisible, still shape our lives.
For example, he has examined how AI is trained using vast collections of images, highlighting the biases that can exist in these systems. He also creates art that challenges us to think about how we perceive and understand the world. Paglen has been recognized with awards and has exhibited his work in many renowned museums. He's interested in helping us see the current world more clearly and consider different possible futures.
↓ Here's a presentation of some of his work.
El cálculo estructural de la torre Seguros la Previsora estuvo a cargo de los ingenieros Agustín Mazzeo y Armin De Fríes, profesionales con amplia trayectoria en el cálculo estructural.
Conoce más detalles en: https://t.co/O501bdpF58
There are 50+ hidden sugars put in food products
You consume many of them, yet don’t even know it
They lead to:
•Inflammation
•Gut dysfunction
•Clogged arteries
•Increased pain
•Brain dysfunction
•Diabetes
I’ll explain why.
THREAD
While the Bechers utilized a uniform documentary style to emphasize the similarity inherent in variance, Gursky's studies inspired him to broaden the concept of the photographic document by using digital alteration and montage to capture individual settings and moments.
The history of photography is a history of technology.
This 1975 digital camera prototype used a 100-by-100-pixel CCD to capture images. Digital photography didn’t enter the mainstream for another 20 years.
In 2011, Japanese telecom company Docomo created one of the most beautiful adverts we've ever seen. A giant xylophone in Kyushu playing Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring" with a wooden ball rolling down its keys [full video, HD: https://t.co/dicECkSF45]