From: QueeneMUSE@aol.com
Date: Fri Sep 24 1999 - 11:44:16 MDT
In a message dated 9/24/1999 3:13:18 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
eugene.leitl@lrz.uni-muenchen.de writes:
<< The coward's way out of Nadia's challenge: assuming nano arrives about
a decade before 2050, all predictions we can currently come up with
are ridiculously (what an understatement) off.
>>
no no no, not coward's way... the non-artists way!!! We dont care care if we
are right, we don't need to be, we are havin' BIG FUN -- just cause we get it
right once in awhile like Jules Verne, measn we'll try anything!!
Hey... you know... we want to shine flashlights on fairies... have you heard
of a chimera? thats the muse you see....
>>I'd be thankful for any pointers to other artistic visions other than
H.R. Giger's, though. There should be lots of them.
Thanks, Gene, you and I are on the same page, if I was more succinct I would
have said exactly THAT! ... and the reason why i won't go Giger (and some day
when you have had enough beer that you won't remember a thing, I will let
you look at my cybergirl series which inadvertantly got *very* Gigerish) --
his art is in a color scheme that implies rot, death and decay. It's horroe
genre. It impies pain. And metal. And low temperatures. Of course, he mixes
bio with machine which is a theme I adore, and he's a friggin' genius. But i
want lively, yummie, soft, inviting futurecities.
That AIN"T giger.
; - )
Also exoterra work has been done to death. I mean how many 2001's and Aliens
images can we find? a lot. But the only guy who uses bright colors is Syd
Mead. But he's so god-damn industrial age.
Possibly Roger Dean, though his stuff is 70's and very *very* retro..."
Rocks, fish-spaceships, mushrooms, waterfalls, floating islands, soft
oranges, blues, yellows, greens...
[On a final note: Maybe someday I will understand the science parts of
Eugene's posts: please adjust your universal translater to the IQ level of
199.1
thank you]
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:05:16 MST