a whole life
— @nobodylikesbeing caption on a photo of an over stuffed composition notebook held closed with rubber bands
Now that would fix my incontinence.
— Lily on a motorcycle parked on Roosevelt Island
The most popular consumer cameras (phones) already make it nearly impossible to find blur... or MAKE blur.
— @emily_elsie
For Rudolph, “the age-old human needs” for “monumentality, symbolism, decoration and so on,” he wrote, “are among the architectural challenges that modern theory has brushed aside.”
— Michael Kimmelman, "Paul Rudolph Was an Architectural Star. Now He’s a Cautionary Tale.," The New York Times
did you just spend a ton of time making that thing? did you just spend $200 on that frame? well spend another 20 minutes and a couple bucks in materials to keep it from getting beat up.
— @markwagnerinc
has always looked like and there simply was no footage
— @sashafrerejones via @everyverything
they were a whole universe. to themselves and everybody they knew.
— @MargBarAmerica via @amandahuynh
He likes to stay busy.
— Emily on Wally
Please don't embarrass the town.
— Lily stopping me from sending a photo of a lot of wasps on a pastry at a farmers market to her family.
And once the collection was gone, there were remarkably few traces of Quinn left.
— Hugh Eakin, Picasso's War: How Modern Art Came to America
The system reproduces its own ideology. Professors hire people and give tenure and give PhDs to people who agree with them. That's how they feel like their legacy will continue. They don't normally promote people, younger generation, if they have radical disagreements with them.
— Michael Shellenberger, "#2211 - Michael Shellenberger, The Joe Rogan Experience"
The more the photographer is deified, Mr. Moser said, the more it ushers “a kind of forgetting that involves turning into this icon, turning into something to put on Instagram. It’s very conflictual for anyone.”
— "Peter Hujar’s Only Book Is Back in Print. His Friends Say It’s About Time.," The New York Times via @benjaminfmoser
The book is a simple one - each page features a single handwritten number. Starting with the number 1 on the cover and continuing henceforth, it takes exactly 192 pages to complete the sequence 1 to 100. For the record, the number 192 is significant in the art of bookmaking as books are bound in signatures of 16 or 32 pages, and the number 192 is divisible by both.
— @backbonebooks, description of new Micah Lexier book
Most of us live waiting for something. For artists, it’s often will they get a grant or other sources of funding? Will the gallery show their work? What does the agent or publisher think? And how do they compare themselves to other artists? “I’m not that kind of artist,” Hsieh says. “I already do what I do. I’m not asking you [to] give me something.”
— Jennie Livingston, "This Artist Once Spent a Year in a Cage. Now He’s Trying to Enjoy Himself," The New York Times Style Magazine
I never read anything. It surprises people that I still do not read. The only books I read are the books which I write. I do not have time to read.
— Keith Smith, "Book Number 95," 200 Books: An Annotated Bibliography
Timmy was rescued from a medical research institute in Philadelphia when it closed in 1982, and is one of the oldest capuchins anywhere .... at least 55 years old!
— "Timmy" sign at Pocono Snake & Animal Farm
Creation and destruction are two sides of the same coin, no matter how small that coin becomes.
— "Inge Oosterhoff on the human history of the microchip," @pioneerworks
Due to Hurricane Helene, North and South Carolina have experienced widespread internet outages. As a result, people are buying out most of the physical media at Walmart.
— @starworldlab
In The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers (1987), David Wells commented that 39 "appears to be the first uninteresting number", a fact that made it "especially interesting", and thus 39 must be simultaneously interesting and dull.
— Wikipedia, "Interesting number paradox," via @depthsofwikipedia
And the numbers are now saying in the first 50 years that 90% of everybody was dead, and that the number of people has increased as well as far as our estimates. We’re thinking it’s somewhere around 150 million people and 90% of them died. And with them, all their knowledge. Just, I mean, imagine the moment where who dies when things get bad? It’s the young and the old. So all the knowledge keepers die suddenly. The children die. This next generation that’s half taught and now completely demoralized thinking that this is a spiritual attack, that their gods hate them, that the only way out of it is to accept this new Christianity. But they don’t want to have to bring kids into this world where everybody’s dying. And even if they do, they can’t teach them what the old people were going to teach them because the old people are gone and didn’t finish the transmission. So in a single terrible moment in human history, the generation loses all their knowledge. So a lot of the things these people knew just blipped out.
— Ed Barnhart, "Ed Barnhart: Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Lost Civilizations of South America | Lex Fridman Podcast #446"