"Nothing for Money"
visit @ https://t.co/MDxPhDiftC
An experimental digital gallery of a decade of REMIXed ZEconomy news spots transformed into endless loops of decontextualized parasitic self-consumption of meaningless glitched memories over each iteration.
Photographer📷 Matthew Brady made this portrait of #AbrahamLincoln#OTD in 1864. (also credited to his associate Anthony Berger)
It was used on the US @federalreserve $5 bill from 1914 until in 1999. #FactoidFriday
"It didn’t matter that people didn’t show it. It didn’t matter that people rejected it.… I never gave up because if you do, you become an employee of somebody else’s view of what’s appropriate.” —Lynn Hershman Leeson
📖https://t.co/PCSdoh5SS5
Henry Morton Stanley, an American reporter, was sent to Africa to find a missing English explorer.
#OTD in 1871, he found him in what is now Tanzania.🌍
Stanley supposedly greeted him with, “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”
The interesting shape on the back of this Swiss note is a self-portrait—a sculpture made by Sophie Taeuber-Arp: Swiss painter, sculptor, dancer, architect and interior designer. #FactoidFriday
Beautiful engravings were proposed, test prints made, then…nothing.
See the tests and read about the note on the blog, “Vignettes for a $1,000 Bank Note that Never Was.”
���� https://t.co/RthLmmPXJ6
#SundayReading
Le « business » de l’émergence est un des plus immoraux et cruels, où prospèrent ceux qui instrumentalisent cyniquement les aspirations légitimes des jeunes artistes.
via @lemondefr https://t.co/bxAmxnz9Zk
"Nothing for Money"
visit @ https://t.co/jfROn1hb8M
An experimental digital gallery of a decade of REMIXed ZEconomy news spots transformed into endless loops of decontextualized parasitic self-consumption of meaningless glitched memories over each iteration.
It’s the 157th birthday🎂 Geoffrey de Havilland, designer of the Moth biplane, used to train Canadian🍁 pilots in the 1920s and 30s.
A Gipsy Moth is on this coin along with Murton Seymour, promoter of Canadian flying clubs.
Faz hoje 157 anos que o navio SS Great Eastern concluiu a instalação do cabo telegráfico que ligava Inglaterra e a Terra Nova. Esta peça foi cunhada em nome de D. Luís I, rei que governava em Portugal quando se deu este facto.
#MuseuCasadaMoeda