WeBlog
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Tickr = Photos + Flickr + Dipity
Labels: China, ethnography, mash-up, photography
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Wednesday, February 27, 2008
How I Live: A study of an ethnographic self-study
She documents almost everything she does or creates on her website and has just jumped into audio podcasting, too.
I needed to clean the apartment. Instead of cleaning the apartment, I took pictures of the mess in the apartment. It's a colorful mess. A muffin tin holding plastic bags of beads and some jewelry tools. Haven't worked on jewelry in a long time, so this has been sitting out for a long time. Da guys on the shelf next to the movie chair, owl, creature from the black lagoon, Stripus McGreenley the sock monkey, water bottle, more Mr. Sketch markers, Good magazine. |
Labels: blog, creativity, graphic facilitation, photography
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Thursday, October 18, 2007
Photographer Chris Jordan Says "Stats Ain't Cutting It"
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Labels: ecology, photography, PopTech
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Monday, May 07, 2007
'92 LA Burning: Woman + Son Cross Still-Burning Street
Twelve years ago, I was in my last year of art school. From my vantage points as young man looking at the world he was about to enter, things looked nuts: the First Gulf War broke out; a big, nasty Recession was looming; and the Rodney King beating had become one of the first subjects of the citizen-journalism debate.
Go here to see some photos from the riots that broke out in LA after the Rodney King verdict brought the hammer down on a city seething with rage.
From Dana Graves:
On April 29, 1992, twelve jurors rendered their verdicts in a controversial case involving the 1991 beating of Rodney King by four LAPD officers.
One of the officers was found guilty of excessive force; the other officers were cleared of all charges.
At various points throughout the city that afternoon, people began rioting. For the next six days the violence and mayhem continued."
These photos are what I saw in & around my LA neighborhood of Echo Park.
Riot Gears
May 04, 2007 | from On the Media :
15 years ago, riots raged across Los Angeles and TV screens worldwide. Much of the media portrayed the riots as a response to the beating of Rodney King. But historian Mike Davis says that simple narrative did L.A. another injustice: it ignored the reality on the ground.
Labels: culture, photography

























