I'd like to share these image captures with you. (From an HD channel)
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210702.jpg
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210705.jpg
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210707.jpg
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210712.jpg
Hammerhead Sharks
- BingoTheClowno
- Posts: 1722
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2003 4:00 pm
- Location: Chicago
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- BingoTheClowno
- Posts: 1722
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2003 4:00 pm
- Location: Chicago
- Contact:
- BingoTheClowno
- Posts: 1722
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2003 4:00 pm
- Location: Chicago
- Contact:
On 2005-01-19 14:53, BingoTheClowno wrote:
I'd like to share these image captures with you. (From an HD channel)
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210702.jpg
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210705.jpg
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210707.jpg
http://bingotheclowno.hostrocket.com/Im ... 210712.jpg
Yeah, just cut your finger, if you want a little bit of attention.
Escher is one of my all time favorites. What a mind, and still so expressive. Imagine being able to do the same with music!!
Yes, I thought of that, and sure there exists a lot of nice transitions in music. Still it often feels like something else to me. Maybe because sound moves a timeline, and no 2 times exists at the same time without being something different. Whereas a painting exists (IMO) both as a whole and as a timeline if you let your attention shift between different areas/objects. But then, you can make attention shifts with music too. I don't know. Escher seemed to be able to bend physical laws in some of his works, while musicians for good reasons can not play backwards in real time.