View allAll Photos Tagged dotmatrix

May 10, 1991 - Safeway, Los Altos, CA. Another shopping list from the collector's days as a paid grocery shopper. This family had their shopping list computerized.

Alex and I stopped by some crazy video camera to dot matrix display in a shop window.

Print: 20" x 16"

White matt, no frame

Price: $40

Photographer: Elizabeth Lemon

 

All proceeds go to the American Red Cross.

 

If you'd like to purchase this print, please contact Sean Coon

on this Epson LX810 9-pin printer I'm taking apart

I'm a smoker...he's a smoker, but plays an instrument which is pretty bad-ass when you do it at the same time. Luckily I had IS on option 2 so I could move with him as he continued his bad-assery.

 

Eric Velarde

Brennan O'Brien of the Bronzed Chorus. Photo byElizabeth Lemon

The Programmer - Bruce Jackson #bookart #dotmatrix

this was the official kick-off show for the dotmatrix project, and both the radials and sorry about dresden kicked ass! the photos and videos don't lie.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Stephen Charles

Made in 1996, based on 68EC040 processor.

 

Start-up error message.

the fifth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts, each with little time playing together, yet both with big, unique sounds. project tritium kicked off the evening with james marshall owen dropping his bowie-esque delivery and jagger-esque stage presence over highly composed music and sounds that at times seemed improvised. the raving knaves then took the stage (and our sound engineer) and rocked their set with a variety of kinetic, powerpop tunes. david mclean's hips might still be gyrating. a fine time had by all.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Elizabeth Lemon

Actually, this is Michael Sileno . From the May 18th 2010 benefit show at the Greene Street Club.

 

For more details visit www.oftenawesome.org/ and www.oftenawesome.com

 

Photo by Mark Smith

we've moved to a new format for posters living in bar, restaurant & retail windows.

 

3 months worth of shows = less $$$

 

please feel free to print and post wherever.

 

design by Justin Reich

A Dotmatrix Project joint

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Tanya Peterson

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Elizabeth Lemon

the second dotmatrix project event was a blast. both carolina clearwater and old stone revue flexed their talents.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Andy Henley

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Kevin Belton

the fifth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts, each with little time playing together, yet both with big, unique sounds. project tritium kicked off the evening with james marshall owen dropping his bowie-esque delivery and jagger-esque stage presence over highly composed music and sounds that at times seemed improvised. the raving knaves then took the stage (and our sound engineer) and rocked their set with a variety of kinetic, powerpop tunes. david mclean's hips might still be gyrating. a fine time had by all.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Elizabeth Lemon

Edwin Andrews, unknown date, Green Street Garage, Central Square, Cambridgeport, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, stained glass

 

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Michael Dunn

Laura Leslie interviews Don Ravon and Sean Coon about the Dotmatrix Project on "The State of Things" for WUNC radio.

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Stephen Charles

Brennan O'Brien of Bronzed Chorus. Photo byElizabeth Lemon

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by John Leonard

by bpNichol.

 

2nd edition. [Toronto, Ganglia Press], october 1984. 35 copies issued as grOnk Random Number Series 4.

 

5-1/2 x 8-1/2, 4 sheets white xerographic bond folded & stapled twice to 16 pp in selfwrappers, front cover only & all but p.13 printed black photocopy.

 

contents:

i) "so long ago" (cover; concrete poem; part 8/8 of Interrupted Nap)

ii) Popular Song (b&w dotmatrix version; concrete poem)

iii) Blues (typeset by Vivien Halas; concrete poem)

iv) Cycle No. 22 (IBM version; concrete poem)

v) Allegory # 7 (concrete poem)

vi) Frame 6 (concrete poem)

vii) A Small Song That Is His (poem)

viii) The Martyrology From Book 3 (poetry in 2 parts:

–1. "in vocation"

–2. "within the difference")

ix) DRAFT OF AN EPILOGUE TO "INCHOATE WORLD" (from The Martyrology Book VI Books (poem, "35,000 feet above Saskatchewan")

__________________________

 

• issued in connection with a repeat lecture, The ''Pata of Letter Feet

• all works include marginal annotations

1st edition, also october 1984

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Tanya Peterson

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