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Thursday 15 December 2011

Post-Halloween Spookiness

I have made friends with a new site called Classic Horror Campaign and they're great fun. Just got a film review up, Carnival of Souls, and they've managed to source a load of beautiful posters and different covers. My favourite is probably the pen-and-ink style black and white one, which doesn't give away anything about the plot with a silly tagline (plus why colour the cover of a black and white film....).

ALSO in conjunction with the Classic Horror Campaign was Frighten Brighton, an event for which I made these beauties:

SKULL AND CROSS-BUNS


60g butter
140g caster sugar
1 egg (recipe says large but I tend to use medium as I feel sorry for the hens)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
115g plain flour
30g cocoa powder
1/4 tsp bicarb of soda / baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
5 tbsp milk
4 tbsp strong espresso

  • Cream the butter and sugar together until pale and fluffy, then add the eggs and vanilla extract. If it separates a bit dont worry, but you can always warm it very gently until fully combined.
  • Combine the flour, cocoa, salt and baking soda, and then sift them slowly into the buttery goo, alternating this with your milk.
  • Then finally stir in your espresso. If you can't make 'proper' espresso then the equivalent in instant is fine: strength-wise just go by how much you love coffee!
  • Bake at 180'C/gas 4 for about 15 minutes, until they are firm to the touch.

This was adapted from the lovely Lily Vanilli's chocolate cupcake recipe: I LOVE the addition of coffee, it gives it such a rich, dark edge.
As the cocoa means they can still be a little dry, even with the addition of milk, I mixed dark brown sugar and some more cocoa with boiling water to get a classic fudge sauce, and drizzled it on top. This can be done after cooking, as I wanted it over the top of my skulls, or about 3/4 of the way through to get an even goopier cupcake.

I was hoping to use marzipan for the skulls, and bake them til they were nice and crispy, but the world had sold out of the stuff as everyone had decided to make their Christmas fruitcakes! So I sculpted them with white icing and glued them on top with buttercream before adding my chocolate drizzle.

Success!

Next plan: get a better camera, my baking is good but the photos are horrendous.

Wednesday 14 December 2011

Well recently I have been making gingerbread... Excessive amounts...



For Xmas I'm planning to make several gift-boxes with the stuff, then fill em with other goodies, like fudge or mini chocolate brownies, so when that happens pictures will occur.

But these things also stopped me in my tracks, they're fantastic.

Thursday 8 December 2011

The Monster Within


Freud (or, that Frood Dude, as I will forever think of him) strikes again in our latent fears of being turned into poo. This reminds me of wading through all of the visceral myth and fairy-tale centred writing in my early literature years. Lots and lots of being devoured and what it means to us. What I like about this article is that it extends the complexity even more logically, in an evolutionary way. (Because, among other things, Freud is now a bit old hat.) There is a dragon-like creature in almost every culture, and while the development of RPGs made them more of the domain of creative fantasists, it was once the sole problem of great warriors and and adventurers, slaying beasts and gaining national notoriety.
I'll be honest, there's not a huge variety of more classical dragon images readily avaiblable, which says something about at least the internet-dwelling percentage of population and their continued fascination with them. And even some of the cheesier hand-drawn depictions have something fearsome to them. This is the perfect predator we are looking at, and even in the modern world, their is something incredibly fearsome about that.
As the end of the article states, it's only by this mishmash of evolutionary synthesis and mythic imaginary development that we remember our enemies, and ultimately a reminder of how to best defeat them:
"We want and need to feel there’s a monster within us so we can summon its power when necessary. Millions of years as a prey species have taught us that, at times, we must drink the dragon’s blood to survive."

Tuesday 6 December 2011

Merry New Episode of Doctor Who

Steven Moffat can do no wrong in my eyes. Unlike Russel T Davies.
It's funny, but after Father Christmas stopped existing, Christmas meant nothing until The Doctor came back. I just need a little magic to rely upon. A little quantum possibility can't hurt either (how else did he deliver all the presents?!)

Monday 5 December 2011

ReacTIVision


I saw an amazing performance on Saturday, using reacTIVision. The performer had set up his lightbox with a small series of strings on one side as the source of sound. He placed a series of small tiles, which had images known as fiducials on the undersides, on top of the box. The tiles are then 'read' by a camera within the lightbox. The camera picks up the images and the computer distorts the noise accordingly. The performer in question had only fully 'programmed' a couple of the tiles, a few loops essentially, so that the rest of the sounds were less controlled, more unexpected, creating an improvised set, as it were.
It was fascinating to watch the mixture of control and arbitrary noise created by the fiducials being moved on the surface of the box. Even more incredible is the process of programming behind it. It all gets a bit technical for me, relying on the identifying systems set up within the computer to match and calculate the unique ID of the fiducial and then "encode the fiducial's presence, location, orientation and identity and transmit this data to the client applications". It's a great example of realtime at work: such as Wil Wheaton's current experiments in webcam feeds, and similarly it's bound by the technology it relies upon, but with fantastic implications. It could be expanded endlessly, created as a projection, and can employ finger-tracking as well (don't even ask, I've not looked). This has expanded live mixing in my mind: I was always better with grasping a system of symbols. This could be the next step, not only for literal noise experiment, but for dance, for all music performance.
A wonderful meeting of art and technology, which I lurve. If only I could understand either.

Thursday 1 December 2011

Advent Horizon

So, I last wrote a blog post on the first of June. Shocking.

Here are some notes, digested later on, from this talk:

Constitutive Self-Negation

"Abstract: Phenomenology has insistently contributed to the understanding of the irreducibility of two bodily dimensions: the body-as-subject anchoring one’s first-person perspective, carrying out one’s projects and the body-as-object constrained by its immersion in the material world, scrutinized by others. This presentation will unfold the idea that both these bodily dimensions participate equi-primordially to the constitution of one’s being. This may be shown by considering atypical experiences and practices of bodily self-transformation which may first appear as attempted self-eradication, but which may rather involve a form of constitutive self-negation. Following Reza Negarestani who characterizes decay as a “building process toward exteriority”, a radical subtraction from one’s body of the inert elements common to one’s body-as-object (life) and one’s corpse (death) will here be conceptualized as involving two contemporaneous processes: shedding one’s thing-hood and exposing one’s no-thingness. The former attests to the irreducibility of one’s body-as-subject and one’s body-as-object; the latter attests to their ineradicable intermeshing."

I often stare at myself in the mirror because I am trying to see my subjecthood from the outside, my self as other people see me. The person people seem to like and respect, or what it is that makes things otherwise. What it is about my behaviour that means I don’t find work easily. How I project myself. I am trying to become my outer self, to actualise whatever is it that will allow me to function socially. It is not working very well. I cannot relate to the me that everyone else sees, and I cannot transport myself far enough away to see it. As equally as I dismiss the idea that I am amazing, I am confounded that I have not been hired on the countless job interviews I have attended. What do I do at one time that I do not do at another? All I can see is me. I am occluded by myself. I am self-confident to the point that I don’t show it in the slightest. I am not satisfied with my inner being and yet I seem to show an outer attractiveness. I do not feel like my outside self. It is scary.

Perhaps when I am old I will love myself more. Society will not look at me as thin and young and blonde. I will be more of a person and less of a stereotype. I do not like being thin and young and blonde. I am certainly not the thinnest, youngest or blondest. I do not feel like I am that person. But I am often treated that way, or so it would appear to me, when I am spoken to as if struggling.

What am I? Where do I begin? How can I be the good others see in me, and how can I drown the preconceptions I am mired in?

My diabetes has made me forgive my body many things. My shape is mine, and I do not want to harm it anymore, and I do not crash into things with the dismorphia I once had. To be aware of the body seems to help the mind. But why? I used to long for an entirely spiritual existence, a removal from my desires. I felt the purity it might bring me. But I cannot escape my diseased flesh, so I decide to embrace the rest of it too. It is not so bad. My mind is not unnurtured. I am just lagging behind my desires.




This is also lovely
although I have never used Posterous. Learn a new thing eh?