Posts Tagged ‘The New York Times’
The Annals of Radical Juxtaposition, Vol. A3: More Than the News That’s Fit to Print…

Every day for the past 20 years, Ross Bleckner has collected page A3 of The New York Times, which always features an advertisement for Tiffany’s in the top right corner. Because of its placement in the paper’s first page of international news, the advertisement is usually placed alongside a news item about a major catastrophe, tragedy, or war. This juxtaposition creates an unusual tableau that can be equal parts humorous, tragic, ironic, and revelatory, especially for those with minds as alert as Bleckner’s, attuned to noticing the stark contrast between decadence and decline as reported by one of the greatest newspapers in the world.
A3: Our Lives in The New York Times, a book of 87 works by Bleckner that includes the one above, was published by Edgewise Press in 2011.
Bleckner’s bio, more examples of his clipping, and the opportunity to purchase prints, at Artspace.
As we wonder where they put the comics, we might recall that it was on this date in 1883 that the Himno Nacional of the Dominican Republic, “Quisqueyanos Valientes” (“Valiant Quisqueyans”), was performed for the first time (at the Masonic Lodge “Esperanza No.9”). The Dominican Congress adopted Himno Nacional as the official national anthem, after heated debates, on June 7, 1897. But President Ulises Heureaux vetoed the act because the lyricist Emilio Prud’homme was an opponent of his government. Heureaux was murdered in 1899, and the political disorders of the following years prevented the “officialization” of the anthem. Himno Nacional was finally adopted (by dictator Rafael Trujillo) on May 30, 1934.
Hear the U.S. Navy Band play the anthem here.
Emilio Prud’homme, lawyer, legislator, and lyricist (source)
CamScam…

Further to “Believing the evidence of one’s own eyes…” and “The eyes have it…,” a tool for detecting Jpeg files that have been altered: from Error Level Analysis, The Image Error Level Analyser.
Error level analysis shows differing error levels throughout this image, strongly suggesting some form of digital manipulation.
…or in more technical terms,
Error level analysis (ELA) works by intentionally resaving the image at a known error rate, such as 95%, and then computing the difference between the images. If there is virtually no change, then the cell has reached its local minima for error at that quality level. However, if there is a large amount of change, then the pixels are not at their local minima and are effectively original.
-Neal Krawetz, Ph.D. http://www.hackerfactor.com
Cool thing is: it works. One simply uploads a jpeg image, then discovers the extent to which one has been bamboozled.
… Oprah’s head has been spliced onto the body of glam actress Ann-Margaret. The manipulation was immediately detected by Ann-Margaret’s fashion designer Bob Mackie, who created the gown.
– from Time, “Top 10 Doctored Photos”
As we boot up those Photoshop tutorials, we might recall that it was on this date in 1904– the very day that the French Third Republic and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland signed the Entente Cordiale, and that British mystic Aleister Crowley transcribed the first chapter of The Book of the Law— that Longacre Square in Midtown Manhattan was renamed Times Square, in honor of The New York Times, which was (and is) based there.
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