View allAll Photos Tagged Activity

The alleyways in Saigon are a maze. They are very narrow lead and connect everywhere.

View from Holiday Inn Notre Dame roof photographed at Rue Danton Paris France by Joel Morin.

Annual showcase of student activities and clubs 2013. Photos by Stephen Mease

Photo credits: Zipeng Zhou

Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths workshops held at GC

HearBudz are a simple and effective solution dedicated to making your earbuds safer and more enjoyable. They are compatible with the white Apple earbuds that come standard with every ipod, ipad, iphone, and nano. They re-position your earbud so you can hear your music and the world around you at the same time. They securely and comfortably stay in place, and won't fall out, even while performing activities such as walking, jogging, running, bicycling, skating, exercising, working out, yoga, skiing, and any other activity you may enjoy. www.hearbudz.com

  

-One size fits all

-Comfortable

-Flexible

-Adjustable

-Made in USA

Cardboard City 2022 | Santa Monica Place

Annual showcase of student activities and clubs 2013. Photos by Stephen Mease

The Wistarion, Pg. 79, 1945, Archives & Special Collections, Hunter College Libraries, Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York City.

 

For more information:

library.hunter.cuny.edu/about/archives

 

Melbourrne Academy B-side v Ashbourne - 11 Dec 2021

Photo credit: Rebecca Zeiber, N.H. Sea Grant

A father laces up his daughers skates on a snowing day.

“The material basis of media technologies – and books are only one example – is changing, for which historical perspectives might give not only comforting back-up (‘nothing is as permanent as change’) but also ideas to push the change forward.” (Jussi Parikka, 2012)

 

We can certainly talk about change; our present landscape is a space where the digital and physical have become synonymous, which many believe to be signaling the coming of an ontology-less future, through the accelerated disruption of cultural value. In this light old standards show their age and obsolescence in the face of the new, and with each new wave of informational overload we are further alienated by the system, that revolves around an economy of monetary circulation. All these factors come together to push a re-evaluation of identity and the human value. This brings to mind the genealogy of currency, articulated by Joseph Beuys during the discussion entitled What is money? : “Of course ‘Geld’ [‘money’] comes from ‘Gold’, same etymology. But it comes equally from ‘Geltung’ [‘validity’], meaning the value people fix based on their perception of a natural right. The word ‘Geltung’ is rooted in representations of a natural right, while the word ‘Gold’ is rooted in the economy of barter!” (Joseph Beuys, 2012).

 

In this light, Geltung [validity]: perception of a natural right brings together four artistic investigations that re-evaluate established methods of financial exchange bestowing new material values and identities to their subjects. In a landscape where monetary currency is pinnacle, the artists interrogate notions of personal and individual history, locality and its impact in identity and the framework that contains our cultural objects.

 

Diogo da Cruz’s work, WORDCOIN (2016 – Current), proposes the implementation of a new currency, that will give a literal value to each one’s speech. By creating The Bank for Argumentation, the costumer-museum-goer will have the opportunity to trust his or hers arguments to an institution that can save and trade them, giving the deserved and objective exposure to their ideas. Max Dovey presents Breath (BRH) (2017), a digital currency that is mined through human respiration. The installation combines breathing and micro-computers to mine, store and trade human breath as a virtual currency on the crypto-market(s). The market value of BRH is determined by the inflation created by respiratory miners who participate in the physical installation. Felicity Hammond’s artworks draws upon images from her own archive, using documents of the landscape and found images online; those of both existing and imagined future spaces. Hammond utilises particular motifs and structures that respond specifically to the digital representations found online of Dundee’s vast regeneration programme. For I keep forgetting I’ve been to Tokyo: GAIDEN (2017), Petra Szemán follows the virtual self through parallel and intersecting realities, along the departure-initiation-return structure of a hero’s journey. Drawing upon personal and/or constructed experiences, the work explores the idea of a non-localised identity that’s an archive of accumulated personal mythologies acquired from a multitude of realities.

 

agorama.org.uk

 

An offline/online exhibition curated by Alejandro Ball and Inês Costa

 

Opening night: 27 October 2017, 7pm – 9pm

 

Performance part of NEoN Festival: 9 November 2017, 7pm – 8pm

 

Supported by Creative Scotland, University of Dundee and Leisure and Culture Dundee

A great view of Kalalau Valley and the Pacific Ocean, taken from 4000' above in Kokee State Park. Kalalau is part of the world famous Na Pali Coast

Copyright © 2021 by Camphill Community Mourne Grange (CCMG)

 

All rights reserved. No part of this photo may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, downloading or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of CCMG.

Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths workshops held at GC

Foto: Lucas Laverge, Foto NHHS

available in my etsy store

Clubs post upcoming events on this board in the Bartlett Dining Commons at the University of Chicago.

1 2 ••• 38 39 41 43 44 ••• 79 80