Great Picture
I think this is a strangely captivating photo simply due to composition and cropping (as the photoblog's name implies).
I think this is a strangely captivating photo simply due to composition and cropping (as the photoblog's name implies).
Posted by Gregory Turner-Rahman at 10:41 PM 0 comments
There is something in underground Toyko. Could it be a secret city or just giant storm drains?
Posted by Gregory Turner-Rahman at 6:44 PM 0 comments
This video is essentially raw footage that betrays its quiet presentation. There is nothing graphic about this video but it is subtly disturbing nonetheless. The story unfolds quickly and while most of the video is a police spokesperson explaining the situation, she does little to bring closure or even fully explicate why the police did what they did.
Posted by Gregory Turner-Rahman at 6:39 PM 0 comments
Ran across this recently and thought it to be an effective visual display of presidential doublespeak. With all the useless dribble cut away we see the real meat of the speech. The simple revision makes apparent a certain desperation that I find pitiful. I guess the speech was meant to stir us up and scare us even, perhaps. It utterly fails to elicit those feelings. I think what I feel is tantamount to frustration even a little pity.
Posted by Gregory Turner-Rahman at 6:36 PM 0 comments
This is a crap picture of the Bodleian library at Oxford University in England. It is one of the oldest in Europe (the library not my picture - hah!) and is the main research library at the university. The architecture has made it a favorite of the film industry (parts of the first two Harry Potter movies were shot inside). It would've been fun to visit the library but my visit to Oxford was filled with other academicky (<-- my new word) things to do.
Jayme and I presented a paper at a visual literacy conference at Mansfield College early in July. I think we both enjoyed ourselves although Jayme was probably just being very polite as she usually is. We met lots of interesting, talented, and gentle people and gorged ourselves on pub food (not in front of them thankfully). I stayed on in England for the past month to visit family and experience British-style rain .
It rained - I am not joking - almost every single day! Needless to say, I am thrilled to be back stateside in our near 100 degree temperatures. I had plenty of time to read and think. Stay tuned.
Posted by Gregory Turner-Rahman at 6:35 PM 0 comments