Weekend Art Culture

Weekend Art Culture is the small miracle where the city loosens its grip for an hour and lets you breathe differently. You step off the sidewalk and into a room that feels tuned—quieter, brighter, like the air has been edited.

In front of Roy Lichtenstein bedroom pop art, I watched a bedroom turn into a kind of diagram: crisp outlines, punchy color, dots that pretend to be texture but also refuse it. A lamp becomes a statement. A bed becomes a rectangle of intention. Even the shadows look like they agreed to behave.

The funny thing is how familiar it all is. You recognize the furniture the way you recognize a dream after waking—almost yours, but not quite. The tidy scene feels domestic and distant at the same time, like home remembered through a window.

Museums always return you to yourself in little ways. The soft scuff of shoes on wood floors. The pause of a stranger who stops beside you, both of you measuring the same image, both of you briefly quiet. And then you leave, back into the city’s noise, carrying a cleaner line of thought—something bright and flat that makes the real world look newly textured.

Manus X Machina at the Met and More

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The idea was simple, Mikey and I would goto the Manus x Machina exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on mother’s day morning to avoid the crowds. We also viewed Pergamon marble work and Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun paintings among our short meandering path between the lot.

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Old Dow Jones Mainframe – DOWCOM

An interesting trip to the Dow Jones building in South Brunswick, NY to meet teams for WSJ. In one of the older buildings there was a long since forgotten Dow Jones Museum. Including original stock tickets, old mainframes, News Boards and the first digital issue of The Wall Street Journal.

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FASHION NIGHT OUT NYC 2010 – Cockpit USA

FASHION NIGHT OUT NYC 2010 – Cockpit USA

All art work for this event was created by me Zachary A. Martz

Celebrating 35 years of business with 35 looks; Cockpit USA invites you Sept: 10th-24th to our POP-UP ARCHIVE MUSEUM dedicated to military and its influence in fashion.

via(Cockpit USA)

Understanding Your Digital Identity with Personas


PERSONAS – How does the internet see you? (click)

What is Persons

Personas is a component of the Metropath(ologies) exhibit, currently on display at the MIT Museum by the Sociable Media Group from the MIT Media Lab. It uses sophisticated natural language processing and the Internet to create a data portrait of one’s aggregated online identity. In short, Personas shows you how the Internet sees you.

How does it work

Enter your name, and Personas scours the web for information and attempts to characterize the person – to fit them to a predetermined set of categories that an algorithmic process created from a massive corpus of data. The computational process is visualized with each stage of the analysis, finally resulting in the presentation of a seemingly authoritative personal profile.

Philosophy

In a world where fortunes are sought through data-mining vast information repositories, the computer is our indispensable but far from infallible assistant. Personas demonstrates the computer’s uncanny insights and its inadvertent errors, such as the mischaracterizations caused by the inability to separate data from multiple owners of the same name. It is meant for the viewer to reflect on our current and future world, where digital histories are as important if not more important than oral histories, and computational methods of condensing our digital traces are opaque and socially ignorant.

credits: Personas was created by Aaron Zinman, with help from Alex Dragulescu, Yannick Assogba and Judith Donath.

via (Personas)

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