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15 votes
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A handful of highly skilled artists in Ghana are behind some of the most imaginative, beautiful and exaggerated film posters. These posters are hilarious, captivating, colorful and highly impressive.
9 votes -
The dirty secrets of Pompeii: Brothels, art, and more
15 votes -
Art house movies are having their TikTok moment
6 votes -
JINZO Paint — vintage mobile drawing app
8 votes -
The homemade limits of everyday weirdness
12 votes -
2023 art supplies highlights
As the year draws to a close, I've been thinking back on the things I've been using in my craft. I figured folks might like to join me, and it could spark some interesting discussions about...
As the year draws to a close, I've been thinking back on the things I've been using in my craft. I figured folks might like to join me, and it could spark some interesting discussions about different kinds of artistic tools.
- What have been your go-to art/craft supplies this year?
- What have you tried for the very first time?
- Have you returned to using something you haven't touched in a long while?
- Have you been pleasantly surprised by something?
- Has something disappointed you?
- Was there something you dreamed about making art with, but couldn't get for some reason?
25 votes -
Each year from 2014 to 2114, a manuscript is sealed in The Silent Room of Norway's Future Library – the goal: greater hope for humankind
13 votes -
The personal, political art of board-game design
6 votes -
Largest dataset powering AI images removed after discovery of Child Sexual Abuse Materials
27 votes -
Stephen Fry reads Nick Cave's stirring letter about ChatGPT and human creativity
33 votes -
In Indonesia, humanity’s oldest art is flaking away. Can scientists save it?
12 votes -
AI was asked to create images of Black African docs treating white kids. How'd it go?
31 votes -
The strange world of Japan’s PC-98 computer art scene
56 votes -
Can you recreate Spirited Away in Blender? Should you? I gave it a try with three scenes.
22 votes -
Why restoring a Banksy mural in Venice is so controversial
15 votes -
I made a 12,000 page bookbinding abomination
19 votes -
Early computer art by Barbara Nessim (1984)
18 votes -
This is how AI image generators see the world
16 votes -
Artists lose first copyright battle in the fight against AI-generated images
23 votes -
Return of the AI Megathread (#13) - news of chatbots, image generators, etc
I haven't done one of these since early July, but it seems like there's an uptick in news. Here's the previous one.
28 votes -
Meet Nightshade, the new tool allowing artists to ‘poison’ AI models with corrupted training data
56 votes -
In the depths of Hobart's Museum of Old and New Art, a volcano is stirring – Hrafntinna (Obsidian) is an immersive installation by Icelandic artist and musician Jónsi
9 votes -
Is cinema dying? And if so, who is responsible? – A murder mystery
23 votes -
How AI art reduces the world to stereotypes
33 votes -
Tomoya Ikeda — Macintosh artist
12 votes -
Kenichi Shinohara's pixel art Ukiyo-e (1987)
6 votes -
A24 expands strategy from arthouse gems to more commercial films
9 votes -
I got a pokemon tattoo
45 votes -
Getty Images CEO Craig Peters has a plan to defend photography from AI | Discussion of Getty's AI image generator and related topics
13 votes -
Pokemon x Van Gogh Museum exhibit opens today
14 votes -
Love thy neighbor - A stolen flag, a painted fence, and a message to the community
10 votes -
Rubens & Women review – ‘Naked breasts moved him religiously’
4 votes -
Getty Images to debut its own AI image generator which will be trained on Getty’s own data
16 votes -
How do you feel about arthouse movies?
So the discussion at https://tildes.net/~movies/1ar2/martin_scorsese_says_fight_back_against_comic_book_movie_culture_by_supporting_directors_like made me think about mainstream Hollywood way of...
So the discussion at https://tildes.net/~movies/1ar2/martin_scorsese_says_fight_back_against_comic_book_movie_culture_by_supporting_directors_like made me think about mainstream Hollywood way of movies versus - well everyone else? I am not even sure I like the term "arthouse" movies, because movies are movies regardless of the boxes we put them in, but for the sake of the argument movies that don't fall in the category of traditional mainstream storytelling. Is it just French artsy fartsy pretentious weirdness or is (quote) real cinema (unquote)?
I think my movie habits have been pretty average. I am not American, but most of what I have watched during my lifetime have been Hollywood productions. By a huge margin. In recent years I found myself going more and more bored with both movies and tv series from whatever the algorithms at the streaming services were pushing to me. Not that it was bad, just felt more and more like a product designed after a specific set of criteria aimed at my taste demographic. So I forced myself to break out of the bubble and watched movies totally outside my comfort zone with something I am sure the algorithms would never have recommended me. Started with movies by Kieslowski and Wong Kar-wai. And since then I feel like a whole new world of movies has opened up for me. Not that everything is magically great. There are still pretentious French movies that make me roll my eyes, but most of all it is something different. Story telling rules I thought couldn't be broken are thrown in the air and something completely unexpected appears on screen instead.
It takes some getting used to. I really struggled with a good deal of self-doubt whether I could actually understand these movies, because I have studied film theory or went to art school. At the end of the day it is really just about watching things intuitively and trying not to analyze everything or thinking about what things are supposed to mean, and be curious to why the movie does things that maybe the complete opposite of the film techniques I was used to from more mainstream movies.
This is not to bash at the Hollywood blockbuster way of filmmaking, because when that formula works - it really damn well works. But so can something completely different like Hlynur Pálmason's Godland, Haneke's Funny Games or Bujalski's Computer Chess - just to name a few of my recent very compelling movie experiences.
11 votes -
Your NFTs are actually — finally — totally worthless
46 votes -
Danish artist who submitted empty frames as artwork told to repay funding
23 votes -
Danish artist Jens Haaning ordered to return €67,000 to a museum after he supplied it with two blank canvasses for a project he named "Take the Money and Run"
27 votes -
How public pianos decorated by artists came to dot Portland’s streets and parks
7 votes -
This "perpetual motion" device is really clever
18 votes -
Art restoration fail
15 votes -
Archaeologists reveal largest palaeolithic cave art site in Eastern Iberia
16 votes -
Supporting an artistic child
I've never really been much of an artist myself, but one of my kids (11m) really likes drawing, painting and making small animations on his ipad. I'd like to give him some gentle encouragement, if...
I've never really been much of an artist myself, but one of my kids (11m) really likes drawing, painting and making small animations on his ipad. I'd like to give him some gentle encouragement, if that's likely to help him enjoy creating artwork more, but I'm not sure what would be a good approach. Does anyone have some suggestions? He told me that he likes drawing objects and landscapes, but I think that's only because he's not confident in drawing live subjects.
Some ideas I had, but I'm not certain of:
- Sketchpad?
- Guide or drawing techniques book?
- Finding and recommending a good youtube channel?
If there's something that helped you at this time of life please let me know, thank you!
29 votes -
Google wants an invisible digital watermark to bring transparency to AI art
30 votes -
Businessman involved in fraudulent Alaska Native artwork scheme given longest sentence ever handed down to someone violating the Indian Arts and Crafts Act
12 votes -
Where can I see Hokusai's Great Wave today?
22 votes -
Sparrow Solitaire for Playdate
16 votes -
A data breach at Christie’s revealed exact GPS coordinates of collectors’ artworks
25 votes -
On this day nineteen years ago, Edvard Munch's 'The Scream' was stolen in broad daylight from an Oslo museum
14 votes -
Finding Kloos - a game created by the UK Secret Intelligence Service (MI6)
20 votes