Ravens and Writing Desks?


F. Scott Fitzgerald in drag for the Princeton Triangle Club, 1915-1916. And because he was such a free bitch, he was voted most beautiful Show Girl for the play “The Evil Eye” which he wrote the lyrics for and starred in.

F. Scott Fitzgerald in drag for the Princeton Triangle Club, 1915-1916. And because he was such a free bitch, he was voted most beautiful Show Girl for the play “The Evil Eye” which he wrote the lyrics for and starred in.

F. Scott Fitzgerald in drag for the Princeton Triangle Club, 1915-1916. And because he was such a free bitch, he was voted most beautiful Show Girl for the play “The Evil Eye” which he wrote the lyrics for and starred in.


unknownskywalker:

Caten: levitating sound sculpture by David Letellier
A site-specific kinetic sound sculpture made from 300 fine wires held together by two ropes and moved by gravity and the slow shifting of rotating arms connected to the four corners of the stringed tapestry from the building’s mezzanine.
The piece produces an audible interpretation of the first verse and four notes notes (do re, mi, fa) for the prayer ‘ut queant laxis’ or ‘hymn to St. John the Baptist’ as the collection of curved wires are rocked slowly.
Watch the video: https://vimeo.com/42582062
unknownskywalker:

Caten: levitating sound sculpture by David Letellier
A site-specific kinetic sound sculpture made from 300 fine wires held together by two ropes and moved by gravity and the slow shifting of rotating arms connected to the four corners of the stringed tapestry from the building’s mezzanine.
The piece produces an audible interpretation of the first verse and four notes notes (do re, mi, fa) for the prayer ‘ut queant laxis’ or ‘hymn to St. John the Baptist’ as the collection of curved wires are rocked slowly.
Watch the video: https://vimeo.com/42582062

unknownskywalker:

Caten: levitating sound sculpture by David Letellier

A site-specific kinetic sound sculpture made from 300 fine wires held together by two ropes and moved by gravity and the slow shifting of rotating arms connected to the four corners of the stringed tapestry from the building’s mezzanine.

The piece produces an audible interpretation of the first verse and four notes notes (do re, mi, fa) for the prayer ‘ut queant laxis’ or ‘hymn to St. John the Baptist’ as the collection of curved wires are rocked slowly.

Watch the video: https://vimeo.com/42582062