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The installation of Brian H Hargrove as Northfield Mount Hermon Head of School at Memorial Chapel on September 15, 2019. Photography by Glenn Minshall.
Mojo openiBoot installation NOR overflow error.
-OS used: Ubuntu Lucid 10.04
iPhone 3G iOS 4.0.1 (don't worry, I changed some codes to get 4.0.1 to dump zephyr files and wifi files that work).
redsn0w (Windows) used in jailbreak:
-Cydia
-Custom boot logo enabled
-Custom recovery logo enabled
-Multitask disabled
-User background enabled
-Battery percentage disabled
Going to check if custom boot & recovery logos are the issue. Otherwise, it may be that iOS 4.0.1's NOR is used up more. I don't feel like rolling back to OS 3.1.2 to install openiBoot.
This was an awesome installation at the Centro de Arte Moderna in Lisbon. It is a 10 foot tall hexagonal room with walls of stacked books borrowed from the neighboring Gulbenkian Museum library. If that's not cool enough, the interior floors and ceiling of the structure are made of mirrors that reflect each other infinately so that when you're standing inside the room, the walls appear to extend up and down forever.
See more on this peice and the artist here:
www.camjap.gulbenkian.pt/l2/ar{69B9E9F5-8F5C-4e21-839A-8CB47E581010}/c{8fc15f72-06c0-49cd-ad43-3abd33a9cae1}/m1/T6.aspx
This was a site specific installation I did a couple of years ago as part of a Uni art course, based on the idea of a Wunderkammer. The bookcase was borrowed, the books (all mine) represent knowledge. The top 2 shelves are classical references: the old wooden Acanthus column tops (from Ebay) made from teak which is now a protected species, the bust (£1 from the market) the antique clock (inherited) and my collection of Penguin classic books.Traditional art training was based on drawing classical sculptures, and a thorough grasp of techniques.
The left half of the second row has a ball and a glove referencing a de Chirico painting (he also made classical references).
On the third row, the empty shelf represents the lack of knowledge, the absence of skill training, and the lack of tools and equipment on the art course at Uni. The chicken wire across the front places a barrier across the knowledge making it impossible to access.
The piece was borne out of frustration at the state of art training at the institution. They had even forgotten to renew the sculpture tutor's contract so there was no leader of that strand to the course.
I installed it at the Uni and used stones to hold down the wire netting (as in old vernacular buildings in Japan), signifying the primitive techniques, and replaced the red glove with a pink rubber glove - much scrubbing of floors etc had been involved in the show as they had no budget to pay the cleaners.
The irony is that the installation is all done by stacking - no screws were even involved in the assembly of the bookcase. Stacking was the form of sculpture promoted by the Uni in the absence of skills and equipment.
The baby on the bottom right is Anderson Cooper. Diane Arbus took the portrait for Harper's Bazaar.
cityrag.blogs.com/main/2007/09/the-dianne-arbu.html
trotz.com/2005/03/16/anderson-cooper-by-diane-arbus/
archive.southcoasttoday.com/daily/05-05/05-16-05/b03li696...
At www.fraenkelgallery.com perhaps through Feb 9th
This animation illustrating the installation of Douglas Coupland's "Group Portrait 1957" at the Robert McLaughlin Gallery was created by the Heavy Industries' design team using SolidWorks 3D design software.
Ernesto Neto installation at Yvon Lambert Gallery May 05. Tensile and foam structures house edible grains and spices to interact with. The name of the show was "Ernesto Neto: There is Nothing Else To Be Seen, But the World." Mark and another art lover have taken off their shoes to enter. The middle of this one had cinnamon that perfumed the interior. Rice held down the structure outside.
Josh Monufret stands aboard the barge Harbour Clearwater as it approaches dock in Bamfield, BC, 29 August 2012. This barge, with its black crane, were used to transport and deploy Folger Pinnacle platform.
Credit: Ocean Networks Canada
The Lodge 299 installation group in November, 1992 comprised, from left - back - Norman Bothwell, SD; George Coley, PG; Ian Proctor, IG; Andrew Muir, BB; John McLaughlin, SW; John Duncan, PG; David Jefferies, JW and Ian McCallan, JD: front - Donald Scott, PDM; Arthur McGough, IPM; Peter Cramb, PGM; William Bisset, RWM; Angus Murray, PM 299, installing master; Desmond Nicol, DM; and James Brown, PG.
Art Installation by Phillip Beesley (Canada)
This is just one of many wonderful art installations on display at Cockatoo Island as part of the Sydney Biennale.
Michael Stumpf : This Song Belongs to Those who Sing It, The Mackintosh Museum, Glasgow School of Art, 4th April- 4th May 2014. Part of Glasgow International Festival of Visual Art.
Photograph by Janet Wilson
I only took the photo !! I have no claim to the artwork !!
... ey , was soll das - is' für ALLE ;o) !