"I'd like people to consider what it means to let the government control our daily lives. When we are controlled we hand over our individual responsibilities to the state. I wanted to make a suit for the non-criminal citizen whose house is being watched 24 hours by street surveillance cameras. I'm also responding to a wish to disappear."Desiree Palmen
Friday, 21 August 2009
Get Lost in the Library With Desiree Palmen
Labels:
art,
books,
camouflage,
control,
Desiree Palmen,
disappearance,
libraries,
Photographer,
society,
surveillance
Tuesday, 18 August 2009
Carnegie Library, Lambeth
The Bookseller magazine this month reported Lambeth Council's Property Performance Report stated that Lambeth has a £35m backlog of building repairs. Comments on individual libraries included that the Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, donated by Andrew Carnegie, "would be ideal for sale for a private residential flat conversion", and that Minet Library, North Brixton, "could be closed." A Council spokesman said that, “Anyone who visits our libraries will know some of the buildings are old and need replacement.”
If you look at the Lambeth Council website now you will read, 'As part of the London Open House weekend, Carnegie Library will be hosting tours on the hour on Saturday 19 and Sunday 20 September 2009. Tours will be on first come basis and will include public areas, despatch room and the garden. Carnegie Library is a picturesque Grade II listed building, combining framework with Tudor style mullioned and leaded windows.'
If you look at the Lambeth Council website now you will read, 'As part of the London Open House weekend, Carnegie Library will be hosting tours on the hour on Saturday 19 and Sunday 20 September 2009. Tours will be on first come basis and will include public areas, despatch room and the garden. Carnegie Library is a picturesque Grade II listed building, combining framework with Tudor style mullioned and leaded windows.'
Monday, 17 August 2009
Mobile libraries
Living in countries glutted with books and swarming with virtual realities, it's easy to take reading for granted. I've been checking out these wonderful mobile libraries. If anyone knows of others, please let me know.
The Probigua library bus in Guatemala
The RAM VAN (Buffalo, USA)
A camel library in Kenya
A donkey library in Ethiopia
A donkey library in Colombia.
The Probigua library bus in Guatemala
The RAM VAN (Buffalo, USA)
A camel library in Kenya
A donkey library in Ethiopia
A donkey library in Colombia.
Labels:
Antigua,
biblioburro,
books,
Buffalo,
Camel,
Colombia,
donkey,
Ethiopia,
Guatemala,
Kenya,
learning,
libraries,
Luis Soriano,
Mobile libraries,
reading,
USA,
Yohannes Gebregiorgis
Sunday, 16 August 2009
sniff it and see
"The source of inspiration for many great literary figures may have been nothing more than a quick sniff of the bouquet of mouldy books," wrote Dr. R.J. Hay, one of England's leading mycologists and Dean of Dermatology at Guy's Hospital in London.
In The Lancet, (1996), Dr. R.J. Hay, one of England’s leading mycologists, wrote that "fungal hallucinogens" in old books could lead to "enhancement of enlightenment."
http://www.erowid.org/psychoactives/media/psychoactives_media2.shtml
Saturday, 15 August 2009
The ghost library
Finding Librophiliac Love Letter: A Compendium of Beautiful Libraries has stirred up a vivid memories of the day I passed my interview at the British Library and entered the circular Reading Room. The rustle of pages being turned was punctuated by the dull thud of heavy, leather-bound catalogue books being placed on counters echoing round the pale blue dome...
Inspired by the domed Pantheon in Rome, the Reading Room was closed in 1997 and the Library moved to King's Cross. In 1996, while the new library was being built, workmen heard clanking sounds and a civil servant saw a “weeping man in 18th-century dress,” according to the Sunday Times, May 19, 1996.
The old Reading Room was reopened in 2000 and anyone can walk in now, but it's a like a mausoleum. In the sanitised Great Court where the library stacks used to be there's a carved quote , 'and let thy feet milleniums hence be set in the midst of knowledge" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
Labels:
Alfred Lord Tennyson,
ghost,
libraries,
reading,
Temples,
The British Library
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