Capture: Cut Collective: Public Access 5
18 Responses
-
Jackson, this is sensational.
It also makes me even happier that we're going to be working with Cut Collective on a certain social event.
-
-
Ohh wow.. very cool, Jackson!
-
Wow, those shots between the silos are amazingly eye-bending.
-
JacksonP, in reply to
working with Cut Collective on a certain social event.
PS. That will be something special, I'm sure.
-
JacksonP, in reply to
-
Lilith __, in reply to
I found myself getting a kind of reversed vertigo looking up.
Awesome! Go back at night for the reverse effect?
I was just reading this in China Miéville’s Kraken
They were on the top deck, above the most garish of central London’s neon, by low treetops and first-floor windows, the tops of street signs. The light zones were reversed from their oceanic order, rising, not pitching, into dark. The street on which lamps shone and that was glared by shopwindow fluorescence was the shallowest and lightest place: the sky was the abyss, pointed by stars like bioluminescence. In the bus’s upper deck they were at the edges of deep, the fringe of the dysphotic zone, where empty offices murked up out of sight. Billy looked up as if down into a deep-sea trench.
Wheeeee……….
-
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Foyer pleasure...
I found myself getting a kind of reversed vertigo looking up.
well they look like vestibules, so some vestibulocochlear nerve reaction is likely...
:- )Lights II.
very scifi - could be from Solaris, Dune, 2001 or somesuch...
'60s somehow, more than now - tanks for this...Love the assemblage, collage, art too...
-
-
Lilith __, in reply to
Oh, bravo, Jack!! :-)
-
The moon is no door. It is a face in its own right,
White as a knuckle and terribly upset.
It drags the sea after it like a dark crime; it is quiet
With the O-gape of complete despair. I live here.Sylvia Plath, from The Moon and the Yew Tree
-
Sacha, in reply to
Jackson, this is sensational.
applause
working with Cut Collective on a certain social event.
continued applause
-
Sacha, in reply to
Sylvia Plath
We forget her skill rather than her demise. Not sure 'personal as political' did her many favours.
-
Sacha, in reply to
reversed vertigo
crop out the bottom half and superimpose a star field and you've got the beginning of Star Wars
-
Lilith __, in reply to
We forget her skill rather than her demise.
What she did write was sensational. Such a pity she didn't have a lot more years (as Ted Hughes did) to hone her craft and write lots more.
[I've never understood the hatred a lot of Plath-fans have for Hughes. Her suicide was not his fault; it's just a rotten shame and a tragedy for all concerned.]
-
Hi guys,
I am having my first personal photographic exhibition in a couple of weeks time, and I'd like to share some images (there will be 20 portraiture works, mostly black and white) on your blog. How could I contact you to discuss that, of course if you are interested?
Kind Regards,
Alex :) -
Hi Alex.
That sounds great.
If you hit the reply button at the bottom of the post, or my email icon we can get in touch.
Actually, you have an email too. I'll send you a handshake.
Cheers
Jackson -
lovin it all. { :)
Post your response…
This topic is closed.