WE DON’T LIVE HERE NO MORE

March 18, 2009 at 3:27pm | In internet | Leave a Comment

wemoved

We’ve moved on, to our own little piece of the blogosphere at tinygems.org. Check our new location for recent updates, and please update all links and feeds accordingly. Tiny Gems – now with more unironic love of pop culture, making fun of art, semi-bullshit sociological analysis, and totally ridiculous media theory (on acid)!!!

Thanks for reading, and for feelin’ us, always, Nadine & Michael Tom

Obama nation

January 21, 2009 at 1:42pm | In internet, politics, pop culture | Leave a Comment
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obama-shark-oops-too-cool

…and just in case you didn’t know, someone has created a web site for the timeless question: “Is George W. Bush still president?”

Jumpin’ jumpin’

January 14, 2009 at 1:44pm | In design, internet, new media | 2 Comments
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wallsm1

Light Energy Studio is a company that sells “innovative decorative home furnishings, unique sculpture, lighting, furniture and art,” including all manner of LED floors, “plasma sculptures” and “infinity mirrors.”

If you have no idea what any of that means, that’s fine. Thankfully, they have a walk-through of “The Vortex Club” – a nightclub design ted entirely with Light Energy Studio furnishings – available on their web site. It is probably the greatest thing on the internet right now. Enter the Vortex!

(Thanks for the link, Cat!)

RIP TRL (or, Has Internet killed the video star?)

November 17, 2008 at 5:44pm | In culture, internet, music, new media, television, video | 1 Comment
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This Sunday, the 10-year run of “TRL” (how long has it been since the show was actually called “Total Request Live”?) on MTV came to an end with the show’s 2247th episode. A New York Times article on the final episode details the performances (Beyoncé, P. Diddy, Snoop Dogg, Justin Timberlake) and the Times Square spectacle (sign-waving, screaming teens corralled behind police barriers) that characterized the final episode, echoing the height of the show’s popularity – the late 1990s and early 2000s, when boy bands dominated the charts and drew herds of shrieking fans outside of MTV studios every afternoon.

Does the end of “TRL” – as Ben Sisario’s Times article hints – mean the end of the reign of the music video, the end of MTV’s hegemony over teen culture? Despite attempts to keep clips under control through DRM and take down notices, music videos and other proprietary content still vanish into the dark corners of the Internet, never to return safely to DMCA-controlled territory – opening up new channels and modes of viewing not available under the auspices of MTV producers. Watching “TRL” constrains the viewer’s access to content; sites like YouTube, however, offer a plethora of related videos, playlists, ads and fan-created content to be browsed at will, a wealth of media and information for the avid pop music fan. The linearity of “TRL” – a slow progression of video clips, guest appearances, performances, contests, news and commercials – pales in comparison.

In other words, in an age of web 2.0 media bombardment – with music videos posted to YouTube and imitated by fans or mashed with the pop-culture-phenomenon-of-the-week, with celebrity gaffes blogged about, discussed in Us Weekly and “The Soup” and then blogged again – the “TRL” format seems quaint, even endearing in its outdatedness. What need is there for new “TRL” appearances when fans have nearly the whole 2247-episode show catalog available at the click of a mouse, to be downloaded, remixed, parodied at will? While this increase in content access allows the target audience of “TRL” (teenage pop fans) greater agency in the production and consumption of culture, it may also decrease the ability of current music/video producers to create truly singular, original or interesting content. As the pop star is subsumed more and more into a field of public property, the music video and the pop single lose their capacity for innovation bit by bit; defining moments in these media risk being drowned out in the general babble.

Then again, with music videos like this one, who can say the age of the music video is over?

Collect Yourself

November 10, 2008 at 5:49pm | In art, culture, internet | Leave a Comment
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This month, Copy Gallery in Philadelphia presented an exhibition of personal collections of objects “gleaned from the darkest dustiest corners of artists from Philadelphia and New York.” The show, curated by Luren Jenison, featured Family Circus books belonging to Andrew Jeffrey Wright, squeaky toys from Adam Wallacavage and ski masks from Ben Peterson, among other things.

Writing on the show in Roberta Fallon and Libby Rosof’s artblog, Brandon Joyce (of the Philadelphia Institute for Advanced Study) characterizes it as “gathered from the private caches of various New York and Philadelphia obsessives.” He goes on to say that “the nice thing about the Collections Show is that it allows us to see the social utility of our imbalanced fascinations. It welcomes obsession; rather than the proportional, reasonable, and loveless way in which we usually hoard our everyday artifacts.”

In this context, “New York and Philadelphia obsessives” clearly comes to stand for “various well-known personalities of the Philadelphia contemporary art scene.” Rather than really “welcoming obsession” and demonstrating “social utility,” the show illustrates the cult of personality that rules the art world in Philadelphia (or, I’d presume, any art scene, anywhere). These collections are not the points of interest in and of themselves – it is the collectors that are (as always) on display. How, for example, can the viewer account for K-fai Steele’s collection of office stationary “gathered from her temp jobs in New York from 2004-2007″ (below) without seeing it as, not a demonstration of personal obsession, but a work of art meant to illustrate the artist’s past employment struggles?

If, as Joyce writes, the desire to collect on display this month at Copy Gallery is really “contingent, weird, and so specific that it seems to land the collector somewhere on the Aspberger’s spectrum,” for the show to really represent the mind of the obsessive collector, it wouldn’t need to justify a sense of artistic value with collections from the hands of established or up-and-coming local artists.

Let Me Blow Yr Mind

October 3, 2008 at 4:28pm | In internet, obsession, photography | Leave a Comment
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From the Dept. of Recent Obsessions: Nothing and Everything at the Same Time

Confession: I opened this “new post” window without a single idea of what I am a recently obsessed with. In case the lack of updates to this blog for the past over-a-month didn’t tip you off, Michael Tom and I pretty much obsessed with nothing, which is possibly the same as being obsessed with everything. Instead, here are the results of a google image search for “nothing and everything at the same time” :

David Byrne: Genius, Blogger, Drunk Bicyclist

May 22, 2008 at 8:58pm | In internet, music | Leave a Comment
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… my tire slipped on the cobblestones of West 14th St., and I remember lying in the street, looking at oncoming headlights and rolling towards the curb so they wouldn’t run me over. Two cops approached and looked down at me. “Have you been drinking?” they asked. Probably a typical question in that neighborhood at that time of night. “Yes, I’ve had a few drinks,” I replied. “But I’m hurt.” I managed to get up by myself and retrieve my bike (no help from the NYPD, though one of them asked if I was David Byrne) and it wasn’t until later, when I was in bed, that the pain made itself truly known. I wondered how I would ever even get out of bed. The next day I went to the hospital and x-rays revealed two broken ribs — numbers 3 and 5, way up high. They’re healing now, little by little, and I was told that in 3 weeks I should be OK.

- David Byrne Journal: 05.16.2008: You drank too much and fell off your bike

See, it’s true. Stars: they’re just like us!

Keep it weird

April 8, 2008 at 4:15pm | In art, design, illustration, internet | Leave a Comment
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Let’s all be weird together this spring and summer!


(Images from Jesse Branford’s image archive)

Tiny Little Mixtapes

March 30, 2008 at 2:42pm | In internet, music | Leave a Comment

tinymixtape.jpg

Muxtape is a really awesome website/idea. Click the image above to access the official Tiny Gems early-spring 08 mixtape — my tribute to the power of the pop song. Enjoy, kids!

Adventures in Intertextuality 3: “Simplify”

December 5, 2007 at 9:51pm | In art, internet, new media | 1 Comment
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From JPEGmess.org, the 3rd piece in a series called AiTube:

aistill.png

i start my days with some youtube. when illustrator opens, it always obscures my screen.

As a series, I’m not sure how well it works; some of the screenshots are certainly a lot more inventive and eye-catching than others. I can get down with the concept: capturing the ephemeral for posterity (here, the “Simplify.aip” plug-in initializing), turning the mundane into the semi-interesting, and the annoying “waiting and procrastinating about making art while watching sketchy videos on youtube” time into art itself… Not all of the pieces in this series work quite as well as this one, but I’m really feeling this particular color scheme and the look of this girl’s face.

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