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4 votes
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Simple Minds - Hypnotised (1995)
4 votes -
Early computer art in the '50s and '60s
8 votes -
On weird America
12 votes -
Jeff Carlisle - Another Night at the Warp Core Cafe (2018)
5 votes -
ASCII Moon: View and cycle through the Moon's phases, rendered in ASCII art
18 votes -
Can AI-generated photos be art?
24 votes -
Finding Peter Putnam
15 votes -
After nine years scurrying in the shadows, the two-person Swedish street art collective known as Anonymouse has finally stepped out of the dark and into a museum exhibition
14 votes -
Susan Herbert - Cat Paintings
9 votes -
We took the back off a Michelangelo and it took seven months | Saving Michelangelo’s Epifania cartoon
8 votes -
Where can I see Hokusai's Great Wave today?
27 votes -
A tool for burning visible pictures on a compact disc surface
16 votes -
GenAI is our polyester
17 votes -
"Weave Me Another Cocoon" - A hypertext tragedy
23 votes -
Troupe of world-class sand sculptors have descended on Hundested in Denmark, as the town prepares to open its 14th annual sand sculpture festival
8 votes -
In the last decade, extensive fungal growth has developed in Danish museums parallel to climate change, challenging occupational health and heritage preservation
22 votes -
Jenny Hval – To Be A Rose (2025)
4 votes -
The Hirox microscope has rotary head attachments that allows you to sweep around your tiny subject like a drone
7 votes -
Would you like to be a part of my music/sound art project?
hi everyone — i have been working on a new music/sound art project for a few months and wanted to include voice recordings of people. i really enjoy tildes and reading what you all choose to share...
hi everyone —
i have been working on a new music/sound art project for a few months and wanted to include voice recordings of people. i really enjoy tildes and reading what you all choose to share and think this would be the perfect place to collaborate!
if you would like to contribute, i’m looking for a few specific things and am also open to hearing anything you’d like to send (and i do mean anything).
here are things that i had in mind:
- voicemails / ideally you would record your voice to your phone or computer using the built in microphones with a message. it could be completely made up or one you would leave someone you know. the more personal/individualized the better.
- transcription of a note / similar to the previous item, i would like to hear you read out a note you took recently. no context necessary. you could of course just make one up for this project as well.
- internal dialogue / obviously this would be a bit more difficult as i would imagine the moment the dialogue becomes external it changes shape and who thinks to even record such a thing? but it’s worth a shot!
- text i provide to you with your own interpretation on how to “perform”
- almost anything you want to send me! (just probably not anything i could get flagged for copyright infringement)
- while i’m primarily seeking voice recordings, if you record some other audio (the ambience of a public park, your commute to work, a pet making noise, server room hums, etc.), i’m open to that as well
about the project
this project is a “slice of life” of sorts with sound and visual art. with that, there would be no context to the spoken audio or visual. these audio recordings are a part of a larger project that will have ambient, drone, and experimental music as the primary focus. there will eventually be a visualization of this project but i have not locked down how that will end up being.
here are two recent examples of music that would accompany the voice recordings (though these exact songs will not likely appear on the project): 1, 2
this will be publicly available as part of my music catalog and on my website. though i did have an idea for some of the spoken audio parts to only be available on physical media or an in-person only event.
your contributions are anonymous unless you request otherwise (to be credited, split royalties*). if the recordings contain personally identifiable information, i’ll work with you on removing those parts or not using the audio at all.
i will reach out to each contributor with the final version before public release so that you can decide if you still want to be apart of it. zero pressure, no hurt feelings.
notes
none of these recordings need to be in english. i would prefer that you speak in whatever language makes you feel most comfortable and authentic.
my only request is that you don’t “make a voice” — i am looking for your natural voice and not a performance.
(*) i currently make near-zero USD on my music, so the royalties split would only be for the sake of fairness and the future possibility of it being picked up by the algorithms or something.
———
thanks for taking the time to read all of that and i hope hear from you!
edit [20.04.25] - wow, i can’t believe how many of you are interested in contributing to a internet stranger’s art project! i’m very grateful.
41 votes -
How To Do Nothing: Resisting the attention economy | Jenny Odell
26 votes -
The $5M art festival that ends in flames
6 votes -
Looking for a (potentially multiplatform) app for pixel art
I wanted to practice my stagnant drawing skills and something I always liked is pixel art, but I don't know any program for that (beside Paint and Photoshop) so I would like for recommendations...
I wanted to practice my stagnant drawing skills and something I always liked is pixel art, but I don't know any program for that (beside Paint and Photoshop) so I would like for recommendations here, the only big feature I need is multi layers management and that preferably runs in multiple platforms (You know, like Gimp and Inkscape).
Anything that runs on Linux/Windows/Android is welcomed. I guess there should be open source apps for that, and since it's only for practice I would to waste money on paid apps.
11 votes -
Matias Faldbakken unveils design for Norwegian national memorial to 2011 attacks – twelve-metre high mosaic will show the reflection of a wading bird native to Utøya island
7 votes -
Tone Glow 006: Eric Andersen, Crying Places
5 votes -
An image of an archeologist adventurer who wears a hat and uses a bullwhip
43 votes -
Sunna Margrét – Come With Me [Live on KEXP] (2024)
4 votes -
Lupo Sol - Works on paper
4 votes -
Building free-formed circuit sculptures (Mohit Bhoite, Supercon 2019)
2 votes -
The lo-fi art and human tools era
10 votes -
Klara Kristalova, Benjamin Orlow and Tori Wrånes will represent the Nordic Pavilion at the upcoming Venice Biennale
5 votes -
A Tildes post inspired me to create a collaborative art project
38 votes -
How to sound design ecosystems
5 votes -
Piglets will be left to starve in a controversial art exhibit in Denmark – Marco Evaristti aims to raise awareness of the suffering caused by modern pig production
27 votes -
Could AI lead to a revival of decorative beauty?
13 votes -
LA races to save a vital piece of history – Ernest A. Batchelder tiles found amid wildfire ash
6 votes -
Housed in a renovated Art Nouveau post office building in Trondheim, PoMo – which sees improving gender representation in art as a key mission – is now open
8 votes -
On *wu* as described in *The Man In the High Castle*, or, that quality inherent in things that have been made with love?
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
I recently visited the fire department museum in Marietta, GA (outside ATL). There were very many interesting things to look at, but one of the things that caught my eye were the gauges on the 19th century fire engine. I experienced them on an emotional level as works of art. The faces and the hands were exquisite, and were no doubt created by hand, by someone dedicated to doing their very best job.
I couldn’t see it with old eyes, but I bet an optics assisted examination would reveal that a similar analogue gaguges on the 80’s style fire engines had a much higher degree of precision, smoother lines, more accuracy and consistency in measurement. But there was something ineffable about the dial, profound and unmistakable. The old timey dial adds to life, the mass produced dial, no matter how well produced, perform a function but otherwise just take up space.
One interesting thing about this quality, which I’ve called Wu after Dick’s book, is how immeasurable and subjective it is. Does that make it less real? I can’t even really define the quality, all I can do is acknowledge my experience of it. Another interesting quality is that it is only available to me in human creations. I don’t experience anywhere in nature, as much as I cherish wilderness.
Dick’s examination is often delivered in the context of distinguishing between original and counterfeit jewelry, which is apt. Another place I experience it is in audio equipment. Even modern ultra high fidelity equipment lacks wu for me, largely because so much of it is produced by machines. There’s a reason musicians who can afford any equipment often opt for old gear.
I wonder if a deliberate effort to restore wu, especially to everyday items, could benefit society at a fundamental level. Craft markets have hardly gone away, and we see a great many side hustle type products in sectors like soap and baby onesies and other home goods and fashion. But wouldn’t it be cool if your stove had wu? Your car? Your mobile?
No idea how we could decide to do that as a global population, let alone implement it. Perhaps it will be a side benefit of the apocalypse.
14 votes -
Turning driftwood into a life-size horse on the Sonoma County coast
3 votes -
Six Nordic paintings that can help us rethink winter – sublime landscapes of the frozen North from the turn of the 20th Century offer us a way into resilience
14 votes -
Carl Bloch's lost masterpiece finds fame again in Athens – work that made its Danish creator a superstar then mysteriously disappeared is mesmerising art lovers once more
13 votes -
elbow - Empires (2019)
6 votes -
Supersport! – Gráta Smá (2024)
2 votes -
Rediscovered Edvard Munch painting will be unveiled at London's National Portrait Gallery in March, as part of a major exhibition of the Norwegian master's portraits
10 votes -
Gyotaku: fish printing
8 votes -
Erotic art (an overview of centuries of philosophical arguments)
19 votes -
Keep Driving | Release date trailer – 6th February 2025
3 votes -
2024 art supplies highlights
As the year draws to a close, let's take a moment to chat about the tools we've been using in our various crafts. What have been your go-to art/craft supplies this year? What have you tried for...
As the year draws to a close, let's take a moment to chat about the tools we've been using in our various crafts.
- 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?
Last year's thread: 2023 art supplies highlights
20 votes -
Are there any of you living off of creating original art?
The question is a bit more nuanced than the title suggests, which I kept succinct for clarity’s sake. Are there any of you living off of their original art? By this I mean works that you create...
The question is a bit more nuanced than the title suggests, which I kept succinct for clarity’s sake.
Are there any of you living off of their original art? By this I mean works that you create according to your personal vision, and without a “list of requirements“ for you to fulfil. So, if you are a visual artist - you paint/draw/design what you want, how you want, when you want. As a musician, you play the same. Etc.
Why I am interested in this topic: I struggle to call art a hobby, since I am borderline depressed whenever I don’t engage my mind & hands to create something. But from an outside view, that’s how it looks. I work a day job, and make whatever time I can for my art. I don’t earn any money from making it.
I’ve had some experience in the past with creating visual media as a commission, and it is definitely something I am not interested in pursuing.
Therefore, if there’s anyone here who makes a living off of art, without compromising their vision, I am really interested in hearing your story & advice for how someone else can get to the same point.
28 votes -
Where do you find inspiration?
I've been working on a few artistic endeavors recently, and have found myself grasping for inspiration. Tildes has such a lively group of creators, as we see many put on display every year in...
I've been working on a few artistic endeavors recently, and have found myself grasping for inspiration. Tildes has such a lively group of creators, as we see many put on display every year in November, and I'd love to know where you all draw your inspiration from! I'm leaving this purposely vague, anything is on the table: people, places, objects, ideas, music, whatever!
14 votes