Blind Artist Creates Eerie, Hypnotizing GIFs From Famous Photos And Painting
Pages
▼
Monday, October 26, 2015
The Artistry of George Redhawk
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Are You Crying? There's No Crying In Bullfighting!
The Death of a Matador
(figuratively speaking) or
Is everything you read and/or see on the internet true?
(figuratively speaking) or
Is everything you read and/or see on the internet true?
Every day, the Daily Dot finds something that people on Facebook are sharing and, in turn, shares it with you—with a little explanation. Here's today's share.
It’s such a touching image: the bullfighter who sits down, overwhelmed
at the barbarism of his craft, and the bull who approaches him, as if in
supplication. The noble animal is peaceful, even though it’s bleeding
from darts and sword jabbed in its spine.
More than 25,000 Facebook users
have liked and shared the photo, which comes with this moving caption:
“the end of Matador Torero Álvaro Múnera's career. He collapsed in
remorse mid-fight when he realized he was having to prompt this
otherwise gentle beast to fight. He went on to become an avid opponent
of bullfights.”
Facebook, can’t you get anything right? Múnera is, indeed, a former matador turned animal rights advocate. But his conversion was far more violent. An aspiring lower-level Colombian bullfighter, he was savagely gored by a bull in 1984. It left him permanently paralyzed.
But what about that pose of regret? Turns out that photo is of a much
younger bullfighter, Francisco Javier Sánchez Vara, who’s standing in
“desplante”—an act of defiance. Because the bull is so near death, Vara
is able to rest in its path with impunity.
Though users’ reactions are mixed on whether it’s an accurate caption, they seem to agree on one thing.
“Poor animal.....intelligent, gentle,innocent soul....as if to say 'Why? Why are you hurting me ?” wrote Robert Artese.
“I am completely against bull fighting, but that is not Alvaro Munera
in the picture. This is just an A-hole mocking a dying bull,” wrote Gustavo Carcamo.
Bullfighting is barbaric, in my opinion, I attended one and vowed to never go to another. The odds are so stacked against the bulls that it seem little more than torturing a caged animal until it is to weak to take anymore and then it is killed as if the matador had done something brave and triumphant...that said, the bulls do sometimes get a few licks in before their demise, as evidenced by the following video.
Venganza de Los Toros (Revenge of the bulls)
CONTENT ALERT: Bloody and graphic.
Venganza de Los Toros (Revenge of the bulls)
CONTENT ALERT: Bloody and graphic.
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Kitty Knows Best: Pussycat Patton
That filthy, flippin' mouse will rue the day it set foot in my kitchen...thinks he can steal out of my bowl, well he's got another 'think' coming. He's going to see I'm not one of those pussies that sits back and watches some vermin eat his food.
Meow meow, I'm boilling, meow meow!
CanopyStair, Oh So Clever!
CanopyStair is a spiral staircase that straps around any tree trunk.
(via DeZeenMagazine)
Graduate shows 2015: a pair of Royal College of Art graduates have created a new way to climb trees – strapping steps around the trunk to form a spiral staircase up to out-of-reach branches.
(via DeZeenMagazine)
Graduate shows 2015: a pair of Royal College of Art graduates have created a new way to climb trees – strapping steps around the trunk to form a spiral staircase up to out-of-reach branches.
Thor ter Kulve and Robert McIntyre's CanopyStair comprises modular wooden platforms made from curved birch plywood, typically used to build small aircraft.
When bound to a tree trunk with adjustable woven ratchet straps at
staggered heights and orientations, the modules can be used as steps.
"Since tree trunks are all unique we had to design a system that
would adapt to their uneven surfaces, whilst not harming the tree in any
way," Ter Kulve told Dezeen.
One end of the step has a triangular profile, where thick neoprene
pads mounted on sand-cast aluminium joints at each corner create three
soft contact points with the tree.
"We have worked
with the arboriculturalists at Hampstead Heath to ensure we are not
damaging the tree," said McIntyre. The curved shapes of the steps were
designed to help the elements to
appear straight even if they are slightly uneven when installed as a
spiral set.
Ash poles attached to the end of each step can be strung together
with lengths of flexible plastic to create a balustrade. Each tread also
has a coarse top surface for better grip. "As one climbs the steps, the slight curve on the top surface of the
tread acts to 'cradle' your foot, adding to the sense of security," Ter
Kulve said.
Kulve and McIntyre, who both studied on the RCA's Design Products
course, came up with the idea for the CanopyStair while spending time on
an island in the Portuguese Azores archipelago last year. The house they stayed at was surrounded by a high wall, blocking the
property's sea views, so the pair shimmied up a tree to get a better
vantage point.
"Only by climbing a tree in the garden could we watch the sun setting
across the ocean," McIntyre told Dezeen. "We began to discuss ways of
transforming a garden tree into a staircase, allowing us to walk up and
down easily and enjoy the view." To alleviate safety issues with installing the higher treads, the
designers suggest using simple rock-climbing equipment to secure whoever
might be at risk of falling.
Installation times vary depending on the desired height on the
staircase. "To set up a seven-metre-high staircase would take about
three hours with two people," Ter Kulve said. "Taking that down would
take about 30 minutes."
The duo hopes
that providing an easy route up trees will encourage the exploration of
their upper reaches."The canopies of trees are the least explored
ecosystem on the planet
– we know less about them than we do the deep ocean," said McIntyre.
"On climbing the CanopyStair, one enters this secret world, and it is
somehow mesmerizing."
A prototype CanopyStair, created with the support of London architecture studio Haworth Tompkins,
was successfully erected and used in Sussex. It has now been installed
outside the RCA's Kensington campus as part of this year's graduate
exhibition.
Photography is by Tony McIntyre.