Me and My Visual Similar Friends
Presumably, Niko Princen began from a self-photo and then generated a set of visually similar images to produce _ Me and My Visual Similar Friends .
read more →rants, raves, and writings by Dylan Kinnett
Presumably, Niko Princen began from a self-photo and then generated a set of visually similar images to produce _ Me and My Visual Similar Friends .
read more →foodmosh:
read more →someone has visually demonstrated all of the matter that these silent but surplus letters visually make when printed in three different languages. (via Letterology: The Silence Experiment )
read more →international exchange for poetic invention International Exchange for Poetic Invention is a multilanguage weblog with links and information on poetic invention - our term for exploratory / investigative / experimental / radical / conceptual poetry.
read more →Before we had a word for copypasta , there was a poetics of copypasta. Flarf was invented to explore the possibilities of digital text, copying, pasting, collaborating, and changing, to create new writings.
read more →New Cut Paper Correspondence The handwriting and the lines support the structure of the cut paper, keeping it strong and sculptural, despite its apparent fragility. In these paper cutouts, I focus on the text, structure, and emotion of the letter
read more →The Noun Project The Noun Project is a seemingly infinite collection of black-and-white symbols put into the public domain. As the founders put it, it is an attempt to organize the world’s visual language into one online database.
read more →A collaboration between choreographer Jonah Bokaer, and video artist Michael Cole that has been animated, choreographed, and performed by the artists through the use of digital choreographic software.
read more →Graphic Text Readings This reading list offeres a survey of various different kinds of “graphic texts” in all senses of the world. The author of this reading list asks "
read more →from Veil (1976) by Charles Bernstein. Available as a .pdf—>
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