100 Cats Set Loose In IKEA [VIDEO]
CATS! (The last :45 are touching.)
[spotted on Facebook, posted by the lovely Amber Naslund (@ambercadabra)]
100 Cats Set Loose In IKEA [VIDEO]
CATS! (The last :45 are touching.)
[spotted on Facebook, posted by the lovely Amber Naslund (@ambercadabra)]
Via ummhello:
Storm King Wavefield – Maya Lin
Art crush-of-the-day.
Storm King is high on the must-make-a-pilgrimage-to list.
This is a great NYT Magazine “Consumed” column by Rob Walker, and worth a read, even if you don’t find the thing-story subject as intriguing as I do.
The longer I think about it, the more I want to see such barcoding technology adopted by performing arts groups and other organizations, e.g., in the tagging (by building managers) of seats in concert halls, theaters, and other venues. Audience members could, over time, add their stories to their seats’ tags, recording their reactions to performances and/or information about other aspects of their experiences, leaving, in effect, a digital legacy that connects them to fellow patrons, the performers, the arts organization(s). The general idea is the creation of recorded stories, layers of experiential kinds of anecdotes.
Also, if, say, I were to make a financial gift that helped support the installation of a seat in the concert hall, or bench in my favorite park, I – the donor – could record digitally what inspired me to make such a gift. Many gifts of this nature are recognized with the placement of a plaque on the funded item; the use of coded tags would complement the plaque thing. If I record my “story” on my object’s tag, it’s likely that I (donor Molly) will be linked even more deeply to both the object and the non-profit entity that oversees it (think donor relationship-building opportunities here). Perhaps that part of the park is my favorite people-watching spot, or maybe my mother was a master gardener, and I made the gift in her honor or memory – anyway, you get the story-legacy-sharing picture.
So, thanks to Rob’s influence, I’ve uploaded over the past month two – count ‘em, two – items (and their stories!) to Itizen.com. (The two stories can be accessed via the Itizen Web site or by scanning the two QR-coded tags.) This post about the the second object and story contains a link to the first one, along with other QR Code-related info.
I’m now giving some thought to uploading to Itizen a third item. Stay tuned.
Via bobulate:
Located in the grounds of Hay Castle, Wales is the Honesty Bookshop, a 24-hour open air bookshop where people select books and post the money for them through a small letterbox. Hardbacks at 50p and paperbacks at 30p. The Castle is at Hay-on-Wye, the “town of books,” so much so that according to my guidebook “if you don’t like books, you should certainly avoid Hay-on-Wye.” If you’re of the sort who does, however, be sure to make it out for the Hay Festival of Literature and Arts. (thx, adam)
Bookshelf-of-the-week selection.