Chris Jordan’s interpretation of American mass-consumption
Chris Jordan - Skull with Cigarette Chris Jordan, a Seattle-based artist, has some amazing photography and digital artwork at his website. In his current series, "Running the Numbers: An American Self-Portrait," Jordan takes statistics from American culture (energy usage, the environment, consumerism) and digitally parlays those stats into thought-provoking (that term's often overused, but in this case it's appropriate) works of art. The image at left is composed of 200,000 packs of cigarettes, the same number of Americans who die from cigarette smoking every six months. Check it out — you probably won't believe what you see.
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What would Jesus buy? Probably nothing.
Buy Nothing Day logoNot that I don't want anything for Christmas, BUT... Morgan Spurlock ("Supersize Me") has a new film out, "What Would Jesus Buy?", about Reverend Billy, a Vancouverite who preaches against consumerism on Buy Nothing Day. The antithesis to Black Friday, Buy Nothing Day has been popularized, if you will, by Adbusters. From this CNN story: A review of "What Would Jesus Buy?" in "Christianity Today" questioned whether (Rev. Billy) Talen's act, poking fun at both religion and consumerism, went too far. "Yes, it's condescending. Yes, it cheapens Christianity," the magazine said, before concluding: "But the whole argument of the film is that our commodity culture has already cheapened Christianity." Something to think about.
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Seattle, San Juan Island, and Vancouver honeymoon pictures, at long last!
Vancouver skylineAfter six months, April and my honeymoon pictures from Seattle, San Juan Island, and Vancouver are now finally viewable at Photobucket (if you didn't get my email with the password, let me know and I'll send it.) Well, honestly, they've been online for several months, but I just haven't publicized them. I hope you think they're worth the wait :) I was planning on publishing them to my Flickr account, but I'd already named and sorted all of them on Photobucket and it'd be a time-consuming task to do the same on Flickr (unless there's an automated process that I'm not aware of.) Photobucket, in my experience, is great for uploading photos that you plan to post on websites and share with others, but Flickr's great because users can share comments about other people's photos, and it's much more user-friendly than Photobucket, in my humble opinion.
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