Sunday, October 6, 2013

Palace of Fine Arts, at dusk

Check out these fine arts images:


Palace of Fine Arts, at dusk
fine arts
Image by jrodmanjr
The Palace of Fine Arts is in San Francisco, CA, right in the middle of a residential neighborhood (the Marina). It is the last remaining structure of a much larger group of buildings that were constructed for the Panama-Pacific exposition & World's Fair in 1915.

This is a 30 second exposure, and I only had a few attempts to get this right since this type of daylight only lasts for a few minutes. The time of year is ideal, since the sun sets direcly behind the rotunda allowing for the bright blue sky to evenly frame the dome.


Palace of fine arts, San Francisco
fine arts
Image by $ PHPhoto
Palace of fine arts, San Francisco


THE FINE ART OF GOOFING OFF AND OTHER WIDE WEIRDNESS FROM HENRY JACOBS
fine arts
Image by dublabrat
flyer by: Alia Penner

TUESDAY, December 14th

dublab and Cinefamily present...

THE FINE ART OF GOOFING OFF AND OTHER WIDE WEIRDNESS FROM HENRY JACOBS

All Ages / 8pm / buy tickets

the Cinefamily
611 N Fairfax Avenue
Los Angeles, 90036

cinefamily.org
dublab.com

MORE ABOUT HENRY JACOBS AND THIS MIND SPARKING PROGRAM...

What happens late at night when the television fuzz melts together with your subconscious mind? They become one entity and blossom into bright bursts. The TV channels the waves of your id and every unknown notion your cerebrum has hidden away in dusty recesses becomes a glowing explosion of sight and sound. Does this ultimate, brain-tickling television program sound too good to be true? In this day and age of narrow focused broadcast beams it is, but open your eyes wide because in 1972 a few episodes of this magic was made real. Sound artist Henry Jacobs got together with producer Chris Koch and visual artist Bob McClay to create a series of half-hour television programs for San Francisco public television station KQED. This show titled "the Fine Art of Goofing Off" is an ultimate revelation. It is like Sesame Street’s psychedelic, philosophical cousin who lives on the top floor of a tenement on the weird side of the road. It’s a wild, tangential ride through richly layered imagery and hypnotic, non-matching sources. One familiar voice heard on the program is that of Zen philosopher Alan Watts. This is no strange coincidence as Henry Jacobs was as tight with Watts as tight can be. Jacobs is somewhat the voice behind the voice behind the voice behind the voice of Zen. As the co-founder and manager of the Alan Watts archive he has continued spreading his pal’s Eastern Philosophy to the world.

Jacobs is the living, breathing, acting, thinking, laughing, swimming expression of life lived with a mind wide open. This vibe made him fast friends with Alan Ginsberg, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Ken Nordine, Lenny Bruce, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and many other luminous minds in motion. In the company of stellar collaborators Henry’s creative output has influenced modern music with its inventive twists. He is often considered the originator of modern surround sound due to his Vortex: Experiments in Sound and Light which came to life at the San Francisco’s Morrison Planetarium and at the 1958 World Expo in Brussels. He also hosted the very first ethnographic radio show on American radio and released an album "Radio Programme No 1 Audio Collage: Henry Jacobs’ Music and Folklore," on the legendary Folkways Records in 1955. He even provided improvised soundtrack material and background dialogue for George Lucas’ film "THX 1138" and was nominated for an Academy Award in 1964 for his work on the short film "Breaking the Habit."

Wow, we could go on and on and on but the point is, you should not miss this screening. We’ll be showing Henry’s favorite moments from "the Fine Art of Goofing Off", some amazing short films and excerpts from "THX 1138." We’ll also share audio snippets from Vortex and other moments from "the Wide Weird World of Henry Jacobs." We’ll even have Henry on the line for a live remote Q&A from his wild outpost on the Northern California Coast. Oh yeah, there will be a live tape loop performance and probably some left-handed ping pong action happening as well.



Dig deeper...

Henry Jacobs’ website
Jacobs’ NPR interview
“The Wide Weird World Of Henry Jacobs” on Important Records
Arthur Magazine’s visit with legendary Zen humorist Henry Jacobs

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