Today in Solidarity (11/30/14): Artists in Ferguson/St Louis have transformed boarded up shops into beautiful protest art, calling for peace, strength, and understanding. A movement in motion. #staywoke #farfromover
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stop adding ‘and now, the weather’ to literally every piece of surreal humour or art i’m begging you it’s not creative it’s not funny it needs to stop nOT EVERY FUCKING SURREAL THING IS FROM NIGHT VALE
and now, the whether or not I should add it to this text post and express my creativity…
Someone hasn’t seen Bill Hicks stand up.
Moses
Artist: Frida Kahlo
Completion Date: 1945
Style: Naïve Art (Primitivism), Surrealism
Genre: religious painting
Technique: oil
Material: masonite
Dimensions: 61 x 75.6 cm
Gallery: Private Collection (On loan to the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, TX)
Scientists invented fabric that makes electricity from motion and sunlight. To create the fabric, researchers at Georgia Tech wove together solar cell fibers with materials that generate power from movement. It could be used in “tents, curtains, or wearable garments,” meaning we’d virtually never be without power. Source
The Art of Mystique: How @rob_sheridan Became the Art Director of Nine Inch Nails
To see more of Rob’s haunting and surreal photography, follow @ rob_sheridan. For music stories from around the world, head to @music.
In 1999, when he was 19, Rob Sheridan (@ rob_sheridan) received an unexpected phone call, inviting him to New Orleans to interview for a job with the rock band Nine Inch Nails and its ringleader, Trent Reznor. The group was looking to extend their online footprint with a new webpage, and had scoured the Internet in search of a candidate. Rob may have lacked the typical professional expertise one might need for a job of that caliber, but he did have the experience, having created a fan site for the band, two years earlier.
“To get that call out of nowhere just as I started my freshman year of college –– ‘Hey, I work with Nine Inch Nails, we want to talk to you’ –– it was completely surreal,” he recalls, 16 years later. “That doesn’t happen to people. I had no professional experience. I was just a kid. I didn’t know anything that I was doing and all of a sudden these guys are calling me saying they want to talk to me about a job.”
Rob grew up in Seattle, at a time when grunge and Nirvana blanketed the airwaves. But he was more drawn to Trent’s bleak industrial tones. They were grittier and different –– taking the grunge sound and flipping it on its head by introducing electronic elements.
That made the website job a natural fit for Rob, and not just due to his budding fandom. He always had a knack for creating things, first through drawings and illustrations, and then on the computer, which allowed him to test the boundaries of his imagination. Today that creativity extends to shooting photos in his spare time. His pictures tend to capture different atmospheres and textures –– dark caves, barking dogs, color-coordinated outfits.
Though Rob is now fully entrenched in the NIN camp, getting noticed for his visual prowess via a fan site was practically unheard of in the late ‘90s. It’s difficult to remember now, but there was a time when a fan being able to connect with a famous artist was next to impossible. An enormous chasm existed between popular musicians and their listeners. Mystery and mystique ruled.
That’s why Rob was so shocked about the opportunity. Looking back, though, the pairing was serendipitous. He and Trent shared the same creative instincts when it came to music and technology.
“Initially I was just this enthusiastic kid who was going to help out with their new website and hang out down in the studio and take photos,” he says. But then Trent kept throwing him more challenges. “Before I knew it, I was just the full art director and responsible for all the visuals related to the band. I learned so much in the first couple years of working with Trent –– like six years of college condensed into two years of insane work.”
What does being the art director of Nine Inch Nails entail? It’s Rob’s job to help translate the band’s guitar scratches, riffs and electronic tones into haunting album artwork, concert visuals and other projects. When Trent begins a new album, he will play Rob the music and/or talk to him a bit about the concepts behind it. From there, Rob will begin to throw different ideas around. It’s all about trial and error –– rounds of back-and-forth before settling on something they’re both happy with.
“He’ll come back with lots of noes and a couple yeses,” says Rob, of Trent. “Eventually we will walk down a field based on a series of reference images and I will present some ideas on where those go and how that connects back to the music. We also, more recently, think about where it goes from there: How does this relate to concert visuals? How does this relate to merchandise?”
Overall, Rob likes to play with restraint. It’s about getting back to that aforementioned era when artists were still shrouded in mystery. At the same time, it’s also important to work under the umbrella of new technology and social media advancements. (Take, for instance, the alternate reality game they built for the band’s 2007 release, Year Zero, where fans would run around collecting clues about the record’s dystopian narrative.) The central focus is to give audiences just enough where they keep coming back for more.
“We work with other people who are used to doing other big productions, and they just don’t understand: ‘We could do this! Why wouldn’t we do that?’ And we will say, no, we won’t do that, that’s too much,” says Rob. “People are wired to think like that now: Anything we can do, let’s pull out all the tricks. We could be doing the craziest, most absurd animated fire on stage, [but] sometimes our coolest effects are done with just the simplest tools.”
––Instagram @music
We know, we know: You just blue yourself.
In our latest issue, the cast of Arrested Development reveals what it was like to work together again: “We all walked onto the set and we just sat around and stared at each other, and it was surreal,” says Portia de Rossi. “Everybody looked exactly the same and they acted exactly the same, both in character and in between takes. Body language was the same, the same old jokes, the same old eye rolls. It was really amazing.”

Just died
Belgian artist Sammy Slabbinck’s surreal collage art juxtaposes vintage photographs with contemporary composition styles to challenge traditional states of mind.
You always hurt the one you love,
The one you shouldn’t hurt at all.
You always take the sweetest rose,
And crush it till the petals fall.
You always break the kindest heart
With a hasty word you can’t recall.
So, If I broke your heart last night
It’s because I love you most of all.
what a dreamy fucking asshole




