The Flickr Disinformationartproject Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

International Lawns + The Rural College of Art + Disinformation – “Places of the Mind” by disinformation

© disinformation, all rights reserved.

International Lawns + The Rural College of Art + Disinformation – “Places of the Mind”

5 July to 28 July 2019

White Box Gallery
5 Hare & Billet Road
Blackheath
London SE3 0RB

In his essay “Meanings of Landscape” (“Places of the Mind”, RKP 1949) the critic and curator Geoffrey Grigson described how “some people have ignored the personal factor” in writing on landscape art, and have attempted “to deduce from landscape rules of its own aesthetic”, describing the influence on art (and on art writing) of “a romantic pastime of English travellers in the eighteenth century” who sought to postulate “a kind of psychology divorced from the individual soul”. Particularly in response to the work of the painter John Constable, “Places of the Mind” proposed the alternate hypotheses that “landscape is you and me”, discussing how “we project ourselves” into an actual or painted landscape, “which then reflects our own being back to our eyes”...

Exhibition Guide (PDF) – tinyurl.com/y4f3z3xe

rorschachaudio.com/2019/04/22/international-lawns-rca-dis...

Special thanks to Domo Baal.

International Lawns + The Rural College of Art + Disinformation – “Places of the Mind” by disinformation

© disinformation, all rights reserved.

International Lawns + The Rural College of Art + Disinformation – “Places of the Mind”

5 July to 28 July 2019

White Box Gallery
5 Hare & Billet Road
Blackheath
London SE3 0RB

In his essay “Meanings of Landscape” (“Places of the Mind”, RKP 1949) the critic and curator Geoffrey Grigson described how “some people have ignored the personal factor” in writing on landscape art, and have attempted “to deduce from landscape rules of its own aesthetic”, describing the influence on art (and on art writing) of “a romantic pastime of English travellers in the eighteenth century” who sought to postulate “a kind of psychology divorced from the individual soul”. Particularly in response to the work of the painter John Constable, “Places of the Mind” proposed the alternate hypotheses that “landscape is you and me”, discussing how “we project ourselves” into an actual or painted landscape, “which then reflects our own being back to our eyes”...

Exhibition Guide (PDF) – tinyurl.com/y4f3z3xe

rorschachaudio.com/2019/04/22/international-lawns-rca-dis...

Special thanks to Domo Baal.

International Lawns + The Rural College of Art + Disinformation – “Places of the Mind” by disinformation

© disinformation, all rights reserved.

International Lawns + The Rural College of Art + Disinformation – “Places of the Mind”

5 July to 28 July 2019

White Box Gallery
5 Hare & Billet Road
Blackheath
London SE3 0RB

In his essay “Meanings of Landscape” (“Places of the Mind”, RKP 1949) the critic and curator Geoffrey Grigson described how “some people have ignored the personal factor” in writing on landscape art, and have attempted “to deduce from landscape rules of its own aesthetic”, describing the influence on art (and on art writing) of “a romantic pastime of English travellers in the eighteenth century” who sought to postulate “a kind of psychology divorced from the individual soul”. Particularly in response to the work of the painter John Constable, “Places of the Mind” proposed the alternate hypotheses that “landscape is you and me”, discussing how “we project ourselves” into an actual or painted landscape, “which then reflects our own being back to our eyes”.

rorschachaudio.com/2019/04/22/international-lawns-rca-dis...

Special thanks to Domo Baal.

“The ultimate form of communications technology is language itself” by disinformation

© disinformation, all rights reserved.

“The ultimate form of communications technology is language itself”

International Lawns, Disinformation and the Rural College of Art
Field Trip No.15 - Sat 4 Nov 2017
Domo Baal gallery, London

Disinformation is an art project whose work focusses on electricity, communications and language - exploring the creative potential of electronic messaging and laboratory technologies, investigating the psychology of perception of recorded and transmitted speech, and examining relationships between auditory signs and their visual representations. These interests converge in the fields of commercial telecommunications and corporate branding. The philosopher Marshall McLuhan characterised “advertising (as) the folk art of the 20th century”, while the design critic Stephen Bayley argues that “branding should be regarded as the contemporary equivalent of folk art”. The Disinformation project's own (somewhat tongue-in-cheek) branding is inspired by the philosopher’s notion of the “liar paradox”, while specific Disinformation artworks engage with brand entities such as the National Grid and London Underground. For Field Trip 15, Disinformation presents a carefully curated selection of branded telecommunications artefacts from the collection of the typographic designer Colin Banks. The book “Rorschach Audio - Art & Illusion for Sound” states that “the earliest form of sound recording technology was not a machine, but was written language”. Similarly, despite the emphasis that this exhibition places on branded telecommunications hardware, the display, alongside that hardware, of meticulously-crafted typographical and ideographic 'tools', helps emphasise the view that the ultimate form of communications technology is not so much these various forms of communications electronics, so much as language itself.

www.domobaal.com/exhibitions.html

Text by Joe Banks

International Lawns, Disinformation and the Rural College of Art, at Domo Baal gallery, 4 Nov 2017 by disinformation

© disinformation, all rights reserved.

International Lawns, Disinformation and the Rural College of Art, at Domo Baal gallery, 4 Nov 2017


“The ultimate form of communications technology is language itself”

International Lawns, Field Trip No.15
Saturday 4 November 2017
Domo Baal, London

International Lawns present an exhibition installed in Domo Baal gallery, London, for one day only, 4 Nov 2017, with special guests Disinformation, presenting selections from the Colin Banks archive, and the Rural College of Art.

Disinformation is an art project whose work focusses on electricity, communications and language - exploring the creative potential of electronic messaging and laboratory technologies, investigating the psychology of perception of recorded and transmitted speech, and examining relationships between auditory signs and their visual representations. These interests converge in the fields of commercial telecommunications and corporate branding. The philosopher Marshall McLuhan characterised “advertising (as) the folk art of the 20th century”, while the design critic Stephen Bayley argues that “branding should be regarded as the contemporary equivalent of folk art”. The Disinformation project's own (somewhat tongue-in-cheek) branding is inspired by the philosopher’s notion of the “liar paradox”, while specific Disinformation artworks engage with brand entities such as the National Grid and London Underground. For Field Trip 15, Disinformation presents a carefully curated selection of branded telecommunications artefacts from the collection of the typographic designer Colin Banks. The book “Rorschach Audio - Art & Illusion for Sound” states that “the earliest form of sound recording technology was not a machine, but was written language”. Similarly, despite the emphasis that this exhibition places on branded telecommunications hardware, the display, alongside that hardware, of meticulously-crafted typographical and ideographic 'tools', helps emphasise the view that the ultimate form of communications technology is not so much these various forms of communications electronics, so much as language itself.

www.domobaal.com/exhibitions/99-17-international-lawns-fi...

International Lawns, Disinformation and the Rural College of Art, at Domo Baal gallery, 4 Nov 2017 by disinformation

© disinformation, all rights reserved.

International Lawns, Disinformation and the Rural College of Art, at Domo Baal gallery, 4 Nov 2017

“The ultimate form of communications technology is language itself”

International Lawns, Field Trip No.15
Saturday 4 November 2017
Domo Baal, London

International Lawns present an exhibition installed in Domo Baal gallery, London, for one day only, 4 Nov 2017, with special guests Disinformation, presenting selections from the Colin Banks archive, and the Rural College of Art.

Disinformation is an art project whose work focusses on electricity, communications and language - exploring the creative potential of electronic messaging and laboratory technologies, investigating the psychology of perception of recorded and transmitted speech, and examining relationships between auditory signs and their visual representations. These interests converge in the fields of commercial telecommunications and corporate branding. The philosopher Marshall McLuhan characterised “advertising (as) the folk art of the 20th century”, while the design critic Stephen Bayley argues that “branding should be regarded as the contemporary equivalent of folk art”. The Disinformation project's own (somewhat tongue-in-cheek) branding is inspired by the philosopher’s notion of the “liar paradox”, while specific Disinformation artworks engage with brand entities such as the National Grid and London Underground. For Field Trip 15, Disinformation presents a carefully curated selection of branded telecommunications artefacts from the collection of the typographic designer Colin Banks. The book “Rorschach Audio - Art & Illusion for Sound” states that “the earliest form of sound recording technology was not a machine, but was written language”. Similarly, despite the emphasis that this exhibition places on branded telecommunications hardware, the display, alongside that hardware, of meticulously-crafted typographical and ideographic 'tools', helps emphasise the view that the ultimate form of communications technology is not so much these various forms of communications electronics, so much as language itself.

www.domobaal.com/exhibitions/99-17-international-lawns-fi...