Wishing you a happy holidays from the RobotSpaceBrain team! Here’s a mini-video we put together, hope you enjoy!
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-RSB
Wishing you a happy holidays from the RobotSpaceBrain team! Here’s a mini-video we put together, hope you enjoy!
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-RSB
“Traffic Lights” is a mysterious new photography series from Lucas Zimmermann. The images are simple in composition, yet the foggy scenes deliver a special sense of otherworldly enchantment.
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Lucas snapped the 5-20 second exposures at an intersection near Weimar, Germany. The red and yellow lights are natural, but the blue light was created during post-production editing of the green light.
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Very cool…
You can find more from Lucas on his Behance page.
-RSB
Yang Yong Liang is the Chinese contemporary artist responsible for this breathtaking installation titled, “The Moonlight”. The piece was oil painted onto an acrylic light film with LEDs attached to the back.
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Then, the moonlight was beamed onto a reflective water pool to get this amazing final scene.
Here’s a picture of the piece with the room lights on, to give you an idea of how it was made:
China has been showing a strong interest in the Moon lately. Reportedly, up to 1,000,000 citizens are now working in their space program.
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They recently launched the Chang’e-3 lunar lander, with the Jade Rabbit Moon rover on board, hoping to achieve a “soft landing,” which would be a critical step on the way to putting a person safely on the Moon.
Here’s an interesting podcast from Science Friday discussing China’s lunar plans. Maybe we will see a race to Mars between the US and China in the near future?
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For more artwork from Yang Yong Liang, head over to his site.
-RSB
Yayoi Kusama is a prolific artist hailing from Matsumoto, Nagano, Japan, and the Infinity Rooms pictured above are part of her new solo show titled, I Who Have Arrived In Heaven, which is showing at the David Zwirner Gallery in New York.
Using an array of lights and mirrors, Kusama was able to portray the vastness and wonder of the Universe inside a space no larger than a room in your house.
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It really is a sight to behold!
The work is on view until December 21st, so if you’re in New York City, be sure to experience this for yourself.
-RSB
[via Colossal]
The hot air balloon has been carrying humans high into the sky since the first manned flight back in 1783. It’s a whimsical means of transportation that captures the imagination of pilots every year at the Festival Internacional del Globo in León, Guanajuato, Mexico.
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The images above come from the 2012 event, which featured a collection of over 200 balloons.
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The Darth Vader hot air balloon certainly takes the cake in my opinion.
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I’d really love to see a semi-transparent version lit up a night… It would be quite the sight!
For information on finding a festival near you, check out this Wikipedia list.
-RSB
One of the best methods to view the magnificence of Earth is to step outside the confines of gravity and get a “bird’s eye view.” These high-resolution satellite images chosen by Yann Arthus-Bertrand and printed in his new book, “Earth from Space“, display amazing patterns and textures of the ever-changing world below.
However, I am more drawn to the beauty of the selected images. It’s amazing to see how the rivers cut through the Earth and how farm land creates extensive geometric patterns.
If you enjoyed these, check out Earth’s Brain from Hector Garrido, and you can pick up “Earth from Space” here
-RSB