Saturday, November 28, 2009

Italic
photos by yasuhiro ishimoto. japanese american post-war photographer.
i first saw his work in a book i recently got, 
a book of essays by japanese architect arata isozaki, called japan-ness in architecture

ishimoto's book of photographs of tokyo and chicago, a tale of two cities.

his black and white photographs of the katsura rikyu in kyoto are featured 
in an upcoming reissue by yale university press of the book below . 

with photographs by ishimoto and essays by walter gropius and kenzo tange.

laurence miller gallery represents ishimoto.






Thursday, November 26, 2009

the best thing i have seen for quite some time


ok, so this is something so great, i can barely contain myself.
the earth bag. how i wish i had a mind with room to dream these things up.

i would dearly, dearly love to own this piece of joy. which joins previous items such as:

the cloud umbrella here.
the balloon chandelier
here.
and the sweet onigiri purse here.

edit: they are made of leather though, and very expensive, these bags.

all of the products in this post's pictures are via online store mistubai.
a really wonderful space. it is all adding up to bringing me ever closer to my heart's desire.
one day, i will.

"At Mitsubai Tokyo we are selling items and made-to-order pieces which we consider "hot!"...
We search and introduce items which have moved us personally in the hope one of them will connect with your heart like a Cupid's arrow. We are starting at a slow pace, and ask you to kindly watch over us."

dear claire from
nine on seven led the way to this one.
via
this blog. which is really great, and makes me think the young ones do it so well!
this post in particular is really wonderful, i think.


edit #2: seven news, this is not news. rather, it is a gallery of 18-year olds having a party.
is anyone else sick of online news sources (for overseas readers, seven news is one of the mainstream commercial channels here, with a nightly news service) and their shoddy pandering to the lowest common denominator of public interest? i have had it up to here. sorry to be all grumbly, but you know, at the same time this is the 'top read story' on this news site, the Liberal party (in opposition in australia) is brewing an afternoon leadership coup, based on the fact that half of them are climate change sceptics and they can't face their leader voting for an ETS. i would call that news. sad, and a gross rabble of out-of-touch politicians, but news.




the earth bag



summer yukata




the perfect use for troll dolls. it looks mildly flammable, however.



cochae origami i have also mentioned previously here.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Monday, November 23, 2009

collective nouns



we went to williamstown on sunday to eat chips and potato cakes on the rocks by the sea.
the question of the collective noun for octopus came up. there is not much information on it (maybe because they are lone rangers in the sea? i have no idea on these questions), but:

the most likely answer to the question, "what is the collective noun for octopus?"
a tangle of octopuses.
(octopi as the plural is a bit of a red herring, from wiki: "Fowler's Modern English Usage states that 'the only acceptable plural in English is octopuses,' and that octopi is misconceived and octopodes pedantic.")

octopuses seem like really great creatures. this is a little bit on a story that circulates about a very sneaky smart octopus. it escapes from its tank nightly to go eat some fish or similar from another tank, then crawls back to its own tank before morning, with no one the wiser, until staff begin to notice the depleting fish population in other tank. search "smart octopus" and you will also find some good stuff of octopuses opening jars, escaping through 1-inch holes, etc. etc. they are now up there on my list of favourite (not usually a pet) animals .

but collective nouns, that was my original point.
i think they are a wonderful, very underrated aspect of english.
this omniglot blog entry lists some great ones, and also has a good comment by someone named mike, relating the english collective noun system to the japanese pluralisation system. in japanese "counter words" act as pluralisers, and vary for each object being counted. for example, the counter word for inanimate objects depends on the shape of the item: a different counter for long things; a different one for flat things; a different one for mechanised things etc. etc. mike's comment gives some examples to illustrate this.


the below are some great collective nouns
from
AskOxford (collective nouns for animals),
and also omniglot blog:

A plague of locusts
A troop of monkeys
A superfluity of nuns
A parliament of owls
A pandemonium of parrots
A conspiracy of ravens
An absence of waiters
A gaggle of swans
A congress of baboons
An army of caterpillars
An obstinacy of buffalo
A murder of crows
A school of dolphins
A parade of elephants
A busyness of ferrets
An embarassment of parents
A stand of flamingoes
A siege of herons


the pictures featured here are some of tim walker's collected animals.
the top one, swans, have a great range of possible collective nouns, including:
a bank of swans; a bevy of swans; a drift of swans; a lamentation of swans. see
AskOxford for more.


edit: i just saw this brilliant artwork by allison shulnik via a drawing diary.
there is a
drawing of a blue octopus there:)


edit #2: via the comments i see this site is doing wonderful work with the collective.
unfortunately, i am not very twitter-y and actually have no idea how twitter works.
but please have a look at their great collection.



a cluster (or clutter) of cats;
a glaring of cats (which i think is more appropriate here)


a colony of rabbits; a kindle of rabbits

a rabble of butterflies; a flight of butterflies (plus other creatures in there as well)

i just really love this tim walker image.
there probably is a collective noun for grasses, but i don't know it...

Saturday, November 21, 2009