The Poetry of Photographer Milton Rogovin

Before the week comes to an offi­cial close, we want­ed to remem­ber and cel­e­brate the life of Mil­ton Rogovin, a social doc­u­men­tary pho­tog­ra­ph­er who, in the tra­di­tion of Walk­er Evans, used his cam­era to cham­pi­on the under­priv­i­leged — the work­ing poor and the under­class­es liv­ing in the Unit­ed States and beyond. He died this past week at the old age of 101. The New York Times revis­its his work in this obit­u­ary, and the short video above gives you a glimpse of the man and his body of work.

Sundance Film Festival 2011 on YouTube’s Screening Room

A quick note for film afi­ciona­dos: The 2011 edi­tion of the Sun­dance Film Fes­ti­val is now under­way. And over the next two weeks, The YouTube Screen­ing Room will bring you short films from fes­ti­vals past and present. Right now, you can watch four new films by up-and-com­ing direc­tors – 8 Bits, Andy and Zach, The High Lev­el Bridge, and Skateis­tan: To Live and Skate in Kab­ul (above). More new films will be added on Jan­u­ary 27th and Feb­ru­ary 3rd. In the mean­time, you can catch sev­er­al oth­er short films that orig­i­nal­ly played at Sun­dance, or were made by Sun­dance Insti­tute alum­ni.

via Switched.com

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Alcohol in its Microscopic Splendor

Who knew that alco­hol could take on such beau­ty? What looks like abstract art above is actu­al­ly your every­day Cos­mopoli­tan. And, with­in this larg­er col­lec­tion, you will dis­cov­er the micro­scop­ic beau­ty of The Bloody Mary, Dry Mar­ti­ni, Pina Cola­da, Sake, Tequi­la, Vod­ka Ton­ic, Whiskey, and White Russ­ian. For more micro pho­tog­ra­phy, check out the win­ner of the 2010 Nikon Inter­na­tion­al Small World Pho­tomi­crog­ra­phy Com­pe­ti­tion, and our post ear­li­er this week, The First Snowflake Pho­tos (1885).

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Stop Motion Fun in Venice

Shel­ley Jones and Marko Anstice “space hop” through Venice with the help of some stop motion pho­tog­ra­phy. It’s a win­tery Venice, very dif­fer­ent from the city (watch video) mil­lions come to know dur­ing the sum­mer months.

Appre­ci­ate the tip Ellen. If you have a great piece of intel­li­gent media to share with your fel­low read­ers, please send it our way. They’re always wel­come…

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Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey: Free AudioBooks & eBooks

The Ili­ad and Odyssey — they form the bedrock of west­ern lit­er­a­ture and cul­ture. And now, thanks to Ian John­ston of Van­cou­ver Island Uni­ver­si­ty, you can find online numer­ous Eng­lish trans­la­tions of Home­r’s great epic poems, includ­ing some by major lit­er­ary heavy­weights. John­ston’s list fea­tures trans­la­tions of the Ili­ad by Thomas Hobbes (1675), George Chap­man (1614)Alexan­der Pope (1720), William Cullen Bryant (1870), Samuel But­ler (1888), and Rich­mond Lat­ti­more (1951), along with accom­pa­ny­ing ver­sions of the Odyssey. Sep­a­rate­ly, but cer­tain­ly worth not­ing, Lib­rivox offers free audio­book ver­sions of the Ili­ad and Odyssey, both based on the But­ler trans­la­tion. They’re now added to our list of Free Audio Books, and we have e‑texts with­in our Free eBooks col­lec­tion.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Pla­to’s Repub­lic … In Clay

Learn­ing Ancient His­to­ry for Free

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JFK’s Inauguration: 50 Years Ago Today

We have been going a lit­tle vin­tage late­ly, and we’ll have to do it one more day. For today marks the 50th anniver­sary of John F. Kennedy’s inau­gu­ra­tion, the begin­ing of a pres­i­den­cy that inspired many, even though it last­ed scarce­ly more than 1000 days. Kennedy’s inau­gur­al speech ran 1364 words and took 14 min­utes to deliv­er. That makes it sig­nif­i­cant­ly short­er than the longest inau­gur­al address (William Hen­ry Har­ri­son took 8,445 words in 1841) but longer than the ters­est one – George Wash­ing­ton spoke mere­ly 135 words dur­ing his sec­ond address. With 50 years of hind­sight, we still con­sid­er Kennedy’s speech one of the finest inau­gur­al address­es because, as E.J. Dionne writes this week, it chal­lenged the nation (and still does today) “to har­ness real­ism to ide­al­ism, patri­o­tism to ser­vice, nation­al inter­est to uni­ver­sal aspi­ra­tion,” espe­cial­ly with the eter­nal line: “And so, my fel­low Amer­i­cans: ask not what your coun­try can do for you — ask what you can do for your coun­try.” You can revis­it the speech in full above, and also find oth­er great archival footage with­in the new YouTube Chan­nel spon­sored by the JFK Pres­i­den­tial Library.

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The First Snowflake Photos (1885)

Back on a Ver­mont farm in 1885, Wil­son A. Bent­ley attached a micro­scope to a bel­lows cam­era and became the first per­son to pho­to­graph an indi­vid­ual snowflake. Two decades lat­er, he sent 500 prints of his snowflakes to the Smith­son­ian, where they still remain. (View some here.) And then, yet anoth­er two decades lat­er, he pub­lished a book packed with 2,400 snowflake images. NPR’s web site has more of Bent­ley’s work on dis­play. And, of course, you can find an entire trib­ute site ded­i­cat­ed to his win­tery work…

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Fractal Landscape

An evolv­ing frac­tal land­scape, all cre­at­ed with a WebGL 3D frac­tal ren­der­er. If you join/log into Vimeo, you can down­load the video right here and watch “Sur­face Detail” in full detail…

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Arthur C. Clarke Presents the Col­ors of Infin­i­ty

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