Je crois profondément que la civilisation a été inventée pour rendre possible la solitude.
✖ Via Du Sens by Renaud Camus, P.O.L., 2002, p. 327
“Renaud Camus is a French writer, born in 1946 in Chamalières, Puy-de-Dôme, in the Auvergne region of France. He spent some time studying in England and traveling in the US, particularly New York and California (he taught for a semester in a college in Arkansas). He quickly began to circulate among writers (Louis Aragon, Roland Barthes, Marguerite Duras, etc.) and visual artists (the Warhol circle, the New York School, Gilbert and George, etc.).” (wikipedia)


• May 12, 2010 link notes tagged: art  novel  book  author  loneliness  civilization  lost 

I looked at kinescopes of the early years, every distant minute, it was another civilization, midcentury America, the footage resembling some deviant technological life-form struggling out of the irradiated dust of the atomic age.
✖ Via Point Omega by Don DeLillo, New York: Scribner, 2010, p. 26

Previously on Skandalon: Point Omega



• Apr 05, 2010 link notes tagged: art  novel  book  author  DeLillo  technology  civilization  past  life-form  life  artifact  movie  film  archive 
art communication monster civilization destruction love society loser lost alone loneliness  reblog
✖ Via

Godzilla Haiku : no 7

“Loving Godzilla 17 syllables at a time.” By SamuraiFrog



• Mar 06, 2010 link notes reblogged from godzillahaiku  [via] tagged: art  communication  monster  civilization  destruction  love  society  loser  lost  alone  loneliness 
art communication artist comic drawing history evolution time civilization chart visualization humor critic girls
✖ Via 9gag / Milo Manara.

Evolution or history of mankind. It most certainly is a drawing by Italian artist Milo Manara though I couldn’t find the original source. You’ll find another good version of it HERE.



• Sep 16, 2009 link notes  [via] tagged: art  communication  artist  comic  drawing  history  evolution  time  civilization  chart  visualization  humor  critic  girls 
art painting illustration technology civilization machine animal lost junk
✖ Via Steve Seeley: In Space series (2004-current). “I Promise To Forget You”

Read his resume.



• May 14, 2009 link notes tagged: art  painting  illustration  technology  civilization  machine  animal  lost  junk 

skandalon


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