Susanna Hesselberg’s Underground Library

Every two years on the coast of Denmark the Sculpture by the Sea exhibition takes place. It is the nations largest outdoor exhibition and for this years incarnation 56 site-specific sculptures graced the Danish coast. Among them was Susanna Hesselberg's homage to her father and books:  “When My Father Died It Was Like a Whole Library Had Burned Down” (a reference to Laurie Anderson’s song World Without End). Reminiscent of the rabbit hole in Alice in Wonderland the library descends deep underground. With the top sealed and only the page ends visible the library is completely inaccessible. The work powerfully portrays the depth of...

Continue Reading →

Allen Ginsberg on censorship, language and police brutality

[youtube]https://youtu.be/rj17WbJ1k7k[/youtube] In 1968 Allen Ginsberg appeared on Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr. The topic was the Avant-Garde but it wasn't long before Ginsberg, who Buckley refers to as "the hippie's hippie, the bohemian prototype," turns the discussion to the power of the media, censorship and language. He points out how the language of the media is a far cry from the language of the everyday and how the language the police use "toward hippies and Negroes" never enters the public discourse so one can never get a true picture of what happened.  This was almost 50 years ago!

Continue Reading →

“From Aaaaa! to ZZZap!” – Printing Wikipedia for art’s sake

The latest exhibition at the Denny Gallery features a sampling of Michael Mandiberg's wild project called “Print Wikipedia.” Here's the skinny: Print Wikipedia is a both a utilitarian visualization of the largest accumulation of human knowledge and a poetic gesture towards the futility of the scale of big data. Mandiberg has written software that parses the entirety of the English-language Wikipedia database and programmatically lays out thousands of volumes, complete with covers, and then uploads them for print-on-demand.   Built on what is likely the largest appropriation ever made, it is also a work of found poetry that draws attention...

Continue Reading →

The reading life of scientists explored in new series from the University of Cambridge

[youtube]https://youtu.be/i_Zq2FXTB5A?list=PLoEBu2Q8ia_OJey8wqE7pyczqsQ8BFrx3[/youtube] Taking its inspiration from the ‘What Scientists Read’ project which queried  30 scientists about their reading lives 'Novel Thoughts' is new film series focusing on eight scientists and the books  that helped shape their lives. For some, a book came along at just the right time. Professor Clare Bryant, of the Department of Zoology, read A S Byatt’s Possession at a crucial point in her early career. Its page-turning portrayal of two historians racing to uncover hidden truths reminded her of the excitement of scientific discovery, and persuaded her not to turn her back on her own research career...

Continue Reading →