BLOG.
HomeBook Infrastructure

Artist Brian Dettner's take on a medium that to many begins to feel obsolete.
We recently had a look at a postmodern adaptation of Jane Austen’s classic Regency romance Pride and Prejudice, which brings to mind another closely related, and similarly bizarre personage - Brian Dettner.
?Artist Brian Dettner’s medium of choice is once again literary, but his approach and reinterpretations take a different form. He intervenes in a rather more physical way, and the result is fittingly striking.
Read More (0 Comments)
Posted by Asen on 24/4/09
High Art

"I feel fear, of course I do. We are humans and we have a natural sense of self-preservation. But I must control that before I undertake any new project because that would lead to lethal mistakes. If I ever find myself totally fearless then that is when I will stop what I am doing."
And for his next performance?
"I dream of balancing on the top of the Burj in Dubai, the tallest building in the world," he said. The World Trade Centre for Petit, the Burj for Ronningsbakken: the comparisons surely won’t stop there.
Read More (0 Comments)
Categories: Art
Posted by ODBP on 17/4/09
Pride, Prejudice, Zombies

Jane Austen's Regency romance is getting the gore treatment.
Jane Austen's legendary Pride and Prejudice gets quite spectacularly resuscitated by the Los Angeles-based film and television writer Seth Grahame-Smith in what he proclaims would become the advent of 'murder-lit.'
Claiming the mash-up nature of pop music as inspiration, the author suggested that the novel was already an easy target. The 1813 classic is conveniently out of copyright, and if you look at it with the critical eye of a film connoisseur you begin to see all the buiding blocks of classic horror bonanza - a country estate, heroines in distress and the misleadingly idyllic landscapes of Longbourn and Meryton, with a gaping lack of gore.
??Going into more detail will probably not be doing any justice to this suspenseful stylistic marriage. At the moment, however, it is subject to a ferocious Hollywood bid, in which we are sure it will make a killing.
Pun absolutely intended.
The book is currently out in the United States, with a UK edition in the works.
Read More (0 Comments)
Posted by Asen on 9/4/09
Fennesz For The Spring

Christian Fennesz's nautical music soundscapes.
With spring ripe in the northern hemisphere, time comes to align our music library to something more representative of the impending long days.
Austrian ambient artist Fennesz is quite possibly the most fittingly appropriate example of spring music. And even though his work ticks all the right boxes for a pop musician, its delivery does not fit many popular music conventions.
Fennesz's music is minimal, but the result is quite the opposite. He amplifies the minutae of feedback and seemingly arbitrary noise occurrences into a loud, organic aesthetic. ??His legendary 2001 album Endless Summer is one of few examples, where the work's title has a direct relationship with its content. It is an album that is a veritable modern classic - an enduring example of an artist picking up vernacular sounds and converting them into something that is as far away from the ordinary as it gets. A masterful ebb and flow of textures, incrementally layered patterns that supercede some of the most colossal rock riffs ever written.??
Fennesz’s nautical aesthetic is further accentuated in his most recent outing - Black Sea which it is out now on Touch, and is equally remarkable. You can also catch Fennesz at the Southbank Centre’s Ether Talk on April 20, or live the following day.?
Read More (0 Comments)
Posted by Asen on 3/4/09
RSS
CATEGORIES
ARCHIVE
- August 2010 (2)
- July 2010 (5)
- June 2010 (4)
- May 2010 (1)
- April 2010 (3)
- March 2010 (3)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (3)
- December 2009 (3)
- November 2009 (4)
- October 2009 (4)
- September 2009 (5)
- August 2009 (4)
- July 2009 (5)
- June 2009 (4)
- May 2009 (2)
- April 2009 (4)
- March 2009 (6)
- February 2009 (7)
- January 2009 (7)
- December 2008 (2)
- November 2008 (4)
- October 2008 (8)
- September 2008 (7)
- August 2008 (2)
- July 2008 (1)
- June 2008 (1)
- April 2008 (3)
- March 2008 (1)
- February 2008 (3)
- November 2007 (2)
- October 2007 (1)
- September 2007 (1)
- August 2007 (2)
- July 2007 (2)
- May 2007 (2)
- April 2007 (2)
- March 2007 (3)
- February 2007 (1)
- January 2007 (2)
- December 2006 (1)
- November 2006 (1)
- October 2006 (2)
- September 2006 (2)
- August 2006 (2)
- July 2006 (3)
- June 2006 (5)
- May 2006 (1)
- April 2006 (1)
- March 2006 (2)
- February 2006 (1)









