Reckon | The Whole World's a Stage

I'm Chris: Poet, lover of academy and porch, sidewalk and turning row. I am looking for everyone discovering her hands and camera trying to overstand the in between.

Reckon

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"Civilization is entirely the product of phonetic literacy. As it dissolves with the electronic revolution, we rediscover a tribal integral awareness that manifests itself in a complete shift in our sensory lives....This new electronic environment itself constitutes an inner trip, collectively, without benefit of drugs. The impulse to use hallucinogens is a kind of empathy with the electronic environment." - Marshall McLuhan
August 21, 08
The Pulchritudinous Review
The Pulchritudinous Review is an arts magazine with an emphasis on avant garde poetry and graphic art. Renee Zepeda edited and compiled it using a rare & highly desirable scarlet letterpress cover printed with sea-blue ink by Ken Mikolowski in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The cover paper is handmade from Nepal; the red thread is archival. This issue is handbound with a Japanese binding and is approximately 75 pages. Poetry comprises the majority of the content, but there are also short stories, photography, and colorful paintings. Featured writers and artists include: Anne Waldman, Alice Notley, Ann Mikolowski, Elizabeth Robinson, Roberto Tejada, Christine Hume, Matthew Rohrer, Timothy Callaghan, Nicola Pinder, and Chris Weige, among others.
As a bonus one original handmade collaged postcard from a collection of only 500 will accompany the magazine. Subscription is $10/year and the magazine appears annually. For sneak-peeks and comments on some of the content visit www.reneemarie.vox.com.The Pulchritudinous Review
The Pulchritudinous Review is an arts magazine with an emphasis on avant garde poetry and graphic art. Renee Zepeda edited and compiled it using a rare & highly desirable scarlet letterpress cover printed with sea-blue ink by Ken Mikolowski in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The cover paper is handmade from Nepal; the red thread is archival. This issue is handbound with a Japanese binding and is approximately 75 pages. Poetry comprises the majority of the content, but there are also short stories, photography, and colorful paintings. Featured writers and artists include: Anne Waldman, Alice Notley, Ann Mikolowski, Elizabeth Robinson, Roberto Tejada, Christine Hume, Matthew Rohrer, Timothy Callaghan, Nicola Pinder, and Chris Weige, among others.
As a bonus one original handmade collaged postcard from a collection of only 500 will accompany the magazine. Subscription is $10/year and the magazine appears annually. For sneak-peeks and comments on some of the content visit www.reneemarie.vox.com.

The Pulchritudinous Review

The Pulchritudinous Review is an arts magazine with an emphasis on avant garde poetry and graphic art. Renee Zepeda edited and compiled it using a rare & highly desirable scarlet letterpress cover printed with sea-blue ink by Ken Mikolowski in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The cover paper is handmade from Nepal; the red thread is archival. This issue is handbound with a Japanese binding and is approximately 75 pages. Poetry comprises the majority of the content, but there are also short stories, photography, and colorful paintings. Featured writers and artists include: Anne Waldman, Alice Notley, Ann Mikolowski, Elizabeth Robinson, Roberto Tejada, Christine Hume, Matthew Rohrer, Timothy Callaghan, Nicola Pinder, and Chris Weige, among others.

As a bonus one original handmade collaged postcard from a collection of only 500 will accompany the magazine. Subscription is $10/year and the magazine appears annually. For sneak-peeks and comments on some of the content visit www.reneemarie.vox.com.

osculations:osculations:
workoutholiday.jpg (image)workoutholiday.jpg (image)
lomography: in the deep blue skythere were rainbowslomography: in the deep blue skythere were rainbows
Ian Francis - BOOOOOOOM! - CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTSIan Francis - BOOOOOOOM! - CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTS
Clip/Stamp/FoldClip/Stamp/Fold
toothpaste-green.png (PNG Image, 410x579 pixels)toothpaste-green.png (PNG Image, 410x579 pixels)
esono.com - Poetry on the Road 2008esono.com - Poetry on the Road 2008
Look UpLook Up
night1night1
Flickr Photo Download: n+m 28Flickr Photo Download: n+m 28
+KN | Kitsune Noir+KN | Kitsune Noir
New submission to The PR by artist Timothy Callaghan on TwitPicNew submission to The PR by artist Timothy Callaghan on TwitPic
power_i_mixed_media_18x24i.jpgpower_i_mixed_media_18x24i.jpg
Marta Marcé / Work / 2005Marta Marcé / Work / 2005
Paintings 2004-2005: Untitled (Sidewalk)Paintings 2004-2005: Untitled (Sidewalk)
Paintings 2006-2007: My AdidasPaintings 2006-2007: My Adidas
meditations_on_colonization_iii.jpgmeditations_on_colonization_iii.jpg
neverneverland:

hughcrawford
Jamie Livingston (October 25, 1956-October 25, 1997) was a New York-based photographer, film-maker and circus performer who from March 31, 1979 through to the day of his death took a Polaroid photograph every day.
via anti-corporation
neverneverland:

hughcrawford
Jamie Livingston (October 25, 1956-October 25, 1997) was a New York-based photographer, film-maker and circus performer who from March 31, 1979 through to the day of his death took a Polaroid photograph every day.
via anti-corporation

neverneverland:

hughcrawford

Jamie Livingston (October 25, 1956-October 25, 1997) was a New York-based photographer, film-maker and circus performer who from March 31, 1979 through to the day of his death took a Polaroid photograph every day.

via anti-corporation

“Poetry is, I think, the highest medium that mankind has ever come up with,” he asserted in a 1981 interview. “It’s language itself, which is a miraculous medium which makes everything else that man has ever done possible.”

The Rebel pictures from scenery & nature photos on webshotsThe Rebel pictures from scenery & nature photos on webshots

Creative people alternate between imagination and fantasy, and a rooted sense of reality. Great art and great science involve a leap of imagination into a world that is different from the present. The rest of society often views these new ideas. as fantasies without relevance to current reality. And they are right. But the whole point of art and science is to go beyond what we now consider real and create a new reality At the same time, this “escape” is not into a never-never land. What makes a novel idea creative is that once we see it, sooner or later we recognize that, strange as it is, it is true.

Most of us assume that artists—musicians, writers, poets, painters—are strong on the fantasy side, whereas scientists, politicians, and businesspeople are realists. This may be true in terms of day-to-day routine activities. But when a person begins to work creatively, all bets are off.

The artist Eva Zeisel, who says that the folk tradition in which she works is “her home,” nevertheless produces ceramics that were recognized by the Museum of Modern Art as masterpieces of contemporary design. This is what she says about innovation for its own sake:

“This idea to create something is not my aim. To be different is a negative motive, and no creative thought or created thing grows out of a negative impulse. A negative impulse is always frustrating. And to be different means ‘not like this’ and ‘not like that.’ And the ‘not like’—that’s why postmodernism, with the prefix of ‘post,’ couldn’t work. No negative impulse can work, can produce any happy creation. Only a positive one.”

But the willingness to take risks, to break with the safety of tradition, is also necessary. The economist George Stigler is very emphatic in this regard: “I’d say one of the most common failures of able people is a lack of nerve. They’ll play safe games. In innovation, you have to play a less safe game, if it’s going to be interesting. It’s not predictable that it’ll go well.”