Street Art

Recent street art which has been appearing in Göteborg are cut out birds set in the urban environment. Here is a jackdaw on a lamppost on Vasagatan. Or how about this bird on a station measuring environmental pollution caused by cars.

Election poster

Sweden is moving steadily towards a general election. The Social Democrat Minister of Justice has during this last term been busy diminishing human rights by increasing the rights of the state to eavsdrop. This is a nice spoof poster. The Social Democrats have election posters showing people with the tagline “I build Sweden” The text under the minister is “I bug Sweden”

Banksy’s latest is a comment on the deregulation of state industries. In this graphic case it is an image of the change from the old to the modern British Telecom (BT). This is portrayed by a bleeding old style phone box in Soho (London)

A BT spokesman said: “This is a stunning visual comment on BT’s transformation from an old-fashioned telecommunications company into a modern communications services provider.” (BBC)

What the BT spokesman failed to mention is the reduction of universal service when follows in the wake of any deregulation. The transformation of a public service company into a modern industry player is not always something to be proud of. The mutilatd phone box has unfortunately already been removed.

Larger image on Banksy’s site.

3 days left

Now its only Friday, Saturday & Sunday left to work on the thesis. I have spent most of the day (and night) editing the thesis. To be able to find many of the small errors I have missed despite several readings of the text I am now using the text to speech tool on my mac and following on a printed version on the text. Editing by listening is a very, very effective method of catching out the small typos. I have done half the text in this way and will do the other half tommorrow. The editing has resulted in the removal of some text but I still have increased it by 88 words (total 94969).

I will also meet my supervisor tommorrow afternoon to get his final thoughts on the text so that I can spend the weekend editing. On Monday morning I can finally let go of the text for almost two whole weeks. So tired…

“Lunch Hour” by Joseph Hirsch 1942.

Writing days

Some days are better than others. Today the letters would not form words, the words refused to be sentanced and the brain just didnt want to work. The approaching deadline is one day closer with nothing gained. This amazing macro-image comes from the photo-blog of Martin Kenny called Seen Objects its even more impressive in close-up.

macro-match

Art of War

The UK National Archives has an exhibition on wartime propaganda called The Art of War.
The Ministry of Information (MOI) was formed on September 4th 1939, the day after Britain’s declaration of war. The MOI was the central government department responsible for publicity and propaganda in the Second World War. The initial functions of the MOI were threefold: news and press censorship; home publicity; and overseas publicity in Allied and neutral countries.


warprop
 
This one is called “Grotesque Italian, German and Japanese characters” Artist unknown, dated at possibly September 1940.

Grotesque Italian, German and Japanese characters, shouting into a microphone. Mussolini definitely represents the Italians, for the Nazis â?? possibly Goering, and for the Japanese, possibly Yosuke Matsuoka, who signed the Tripartite Pact which established the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis on September 26 1940.

Online exihibion

A great online exihibion “Life of the People: Realist Prints and Drawings from the Ben and Beatrice Goldstein Collection, 1912-1948“. All of the exhibition’s fifty-nine works on paper are reproduced in the catalog with captions and essays.

This picture is unusual among the images in the Goldstein Collection in that it extolls the benefits of capitalism, The artist Michael Lenson (1903-1971) took the title Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s campaign speech at a union dinner in Washington, D.C., on September 23, 1944.


Full Employment
“Full Production and Full Employment
under Our Democratic System of
Private Enterprise”, ca. 1944.

Grafitti as Social commentary

Grafitti is a difficult topic. I dislike it when trams and buses are vandalised and filled with repetitive tags and I am not impressed by any sloppy, messy and defacing uses of a can of spraypaint. However this doesnt mean that I dislike everything I see. Some of the work out there falls into a category of its own. I am particulary fond of social commentary. Where there is a large communicative process. The difference? Well tags are simply the marking of turf in the same way as a dog would pee on a lamppost. Important to the dogs in the area perhaps, but not really a communication to anyone else. Social grafitti partakes, and asks others to partake, in a social discourse. One of the best examples of this I have found is the work of Banksy, who makes grafitti a form of social commentary.

“Imagine a city where grafitti wasn’t illegal, a city where everybody could draw whatever they liked. Where every street was awash with a million colours and little phrases. Where standing at a bus stop was never boring. A city that felt like a living breathing thing which belonged to everybody, not just the estate agents and the barons of big business. Image a city like that and stop leaning against the wall – its wet.” Take a look at examples of his outdoor collection here. I particularly like his work on the Israeli/Palistine wall which can be seen here. His work can also be seen in Retort Magazine – Where you can see a picture of Mujahidin Mona Lisa. More of Banksy’s work can be found in his books Existencilism (2002) and Wall and Piece (2005)


existencilism Wall and Piece
Books by Banksy

Another interesting example of interesting grafitti is done by a lesser, but more local anonymous hand holding the spray-can. I came across this wall while working in a nearby town. I would not really have bothered with it much since it is simply the words “Civil Disobedience” (in Swedish) sprayed on the wall of a concrete underpass. The thing that makes this interesting is that the writer asking for (demanding?) disobedience corrects his own sign to conform to spelling.

civil olydnad
On a wall in Uddevalla (Now repainted)

If its disobedience you want – then why bother correcting the direction of the N? Is this actually more than simple tagging? Has the hand that sprayed thought about what it was doing? Is the changing of the N actually a subtle communication by the artist on the ways in which even disobedience is ruled by conventions? This work was trivial but with the changing of the N it becomes a subtle form of communication on the nature of laws, rules and social conventions. All this in two words on a concrete wall that never previously inspired me to think. Dont tell me that grafitti isnt important.

Swedish Computer Museum

Yesterday I gave a presentation on Creative Commons at the Swedish Computer Museum, ITceum, in Linköping. I have visited the museum once before but this time I got the chance to walk around before my presentation and look at all the cool stuff. It is really a nerdy nostalgia trip with old computers some of which make you cry out “I had one of those” others pre-date me.

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Ready for a hard day at the office?

Collecting IT stuff into a museum is definately an interesting challenge. Much of what was created was used (abused?) and then thrown away, but it is important to remember that this is technical history at its best. The cool thing about the museum is that it is not virtual, you can actually touch an old Sinclair or IBM card sorter.