Teens Ponder Meaning of Contemporary Art

In 2009, Tate Liv­er­pool dis­played four works of con­tem­po­rary art in dif­fer­ent loca­tions around the city. Acclaimed film direc­tor Mike Fig­gis was asked to turn the reac­tions of Liv­er­poodlians to these sculp­tures into short films. The video above shows teenagers dis­cussing Jeff Koon­s’s “Three Ball Total Equi­lib­ri­um Tank.” Anoth­er short film cap­tures the views of stu­dents when one of Dan Flav­in’s instal­la­tions called “Unti­tled” was dis­played at their school for one day.

By pro­fes­sion, Matthias Rasch­er teach­es Eng­lish and His­to­ry at a High School in north­ern Bavaria, Ger­many. In his free time he scours the web for good links and posts the best finds on Twit­ter.

Harvard Thinks Big

10 Har­vard pro­fes­sors. 10 fas­ci­nat­ing ideas. 10 min­utes each. That was the gist of Har­vard Thinks Big, a TED-esque event held on Feb­ru­ary 11th. Now fast for­ward sev­er­al weeks, and the talks all appear online for free. Find them on YouTubeiTunes, or Har­vard’s ded­i­cat­ed web site.

Of all the 10 talks, we decid­ed to fea­ture one: Daniel Gilbert, a psych pro­fes­sor known for his book Stum­bling On Hap­pi­ness, presents a talk called “It’s the End of the World as We Know it, and I Feel Fine.” (Yes, a nod to R.E.M.) And it tries to make sense of a baf­fling ques­tion. Our plan­et is on the brink of an eco­log­i­cal cat­a­stro­phe and we’re calm­ly sit­ting here watch­ing videos. Humans have thrived because we take threats seri­ous­ly. But why not this one?

Oth­er speak­ers at the event include Steven Pinker, Lawrence LessigRichard Wrang­ham, and Elaine Scar­ry – some well known Har­vard names. One fig­ure not present was Michael Sandel. But here we have his TED Talk from 2010: The Lost Art of Demo­c­ra­t­ic Debate.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Har­vard Presents Free Cours­es

What’s the Right Thing to Do?: Pop­u­lar Har­vard Course Now Online

Floor of Kilauea Volcano Crater Collapses Before Your Eyes

Nature shows its force once again, this time in Hawaii. Last week­end, the U.S. Geo­log­i­cal Sur­vey detect­ed unusu­al activ­i­ty at the Kilauea vol­cano. And, with­in min­utes, the floor of the Pu’u O’o crater began to col­lapse. It’s all cap­tured in the short video above. The Wash­ing­ton Post has a lit­tle more on the sto­ry…

via @pourmecoffee

Inception Redone in 60 Seconds

As Car­toon Brew explains it: “Wolf­gang Mat­zl remade Incep­tion with vin­tage paper cut-outs, shot frame-by-frame on his dig­i­tal cam­era, for the Done In 60 Sec­onds com­pe­ti­tion (where entrants recre­ate a movie in no more than a minute). His film was one of the 10 final­ists in Berlin, Ger­many.” You can watch oth­er short­list­ed films here…

via Boing Boing

Bobby McFerrin Shows the Power of the Pentatonic Scale

The jazz vocal­ist and ten-time Gram­my win­ner Bob­by McFer­rin turns 61 today. To cel­e­brate, we’re post­ing this clip from the 2009 World Sci­ence Fes­ti­val, in which McFer­rin leads an impromp­tu audi­ence sing-a-long in order to demon­strate the pow­er of the pen­ta­ton­ic scale. We bet you’ve nev­er seen music the­o­ry taught quite like this.

McFer­rin, by the way, is shar­ing the stage with sev­er­al sci­en­tists, includ­ing Daniel Lev­itin, McGill pro­fes­sor and author of the book This is Your Brain on Music. If this clip hap­pens to awak­en your inner croon­er instead of your inner neu­ro­sci­en­tist, you can also check out a short singing les­son with McFer­rin on Qtv.

Sheer­ly Avni is a San Fran­cis­co-based arts and cul­ture writer. Her work has appeared in Salon, LA Week­ly, Vari­ety, Moth­er Jones, and many oth­er pub­li­ca­tions. You can fol­low her on twit­ter at @sheerly.

Alain de Botton: The Glass of Life is Half Empty

Here are a few basic truths: life is essen­tial­ly mean­ing­less; your hard work won’t dic­tate where your life goes; you will be struck down by death; and your loved ones and your achieve­ments will whith­er and turn to dust. A grim way to look at things per­haps. But a long line of philoso­phers, start­ing with the Sto­ics, have seen wis­dom in tak­ing a dim view. As Alain de Bot­ton points out, a pes­simistic out­look reduces our expec­ta­tions, our envy, our dis­ap­point­ment, and it cre­ates room for emo­tion­al upside and health­i­er life deci­sions. The talk (which fea­tures a sing-along to Elton John at the 29 minute mark) runs 38 wis­dom-filled min­utes, and it’s pre­sent­ed online by The School of Life, a Lon­don-based insti­tu­tion co-found­ed by de Bot­ton in 2008. A big thanks to Miguel for send­ing this our way…

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Phi­los­o­phy: A Guide to Hap­pi­ness (also by Alain de Bot­ton)

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Tsunami Ripples Across Globe: Animated Video

NOAA (The Nation­al Ocean­ic and Atmos­pher­ic Admin­is­tra­tion) has released an ani­mat­ed video show­ing the tsuna­mi orig­i­nat­ing off the coast of Japan, and then spread­ing across the Pacif­ic. Dra­mat­ic, to say the least.

Last year, NOAA also pro­duced an ani­ma­tion that visu­al­ized the tremors from the big Chilean quake as they worked their way across the globe. Catch it here.

via Pop­u­lar Sci­ence

Live Japan Earthquake & Tsunami Coverage on Al Jazeera

A quick news bul­letin: Japan was struck by a mas­sive 8.9 earth­quake today, fol­lowed by some dev­as­tat­ing tsunamis (see clip below). Al Jazeera is pro­vid­ing live cov­er­age (in Eng­lish) on the web. Start watch­ing here. Or find anoth­er live stream from NHK in Japan. What’s more, The Wall Street Jour­nal has a live blog ded­i­cat­ed to the earth­quake, and Google has set up a peo­ple find­er for those liv­ing in the coun­try. Our best wish­es to the peo­ple of Japan…

Tsuna­mi:

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Terrific Hand-Crafted Animation Puts the Novel, Going West, Into (Stop) Motion

Could­n’t let this one pass by…

Ander­sen M, a Lon­don design stu­dio, craft­ed a rather amaz­ing stop motion video to accom­pa­ny an excerpt from Mau­rice Gee’s nov­el, Going West. The short film was pro­duced on behalf of the New Zealand Book Coun­cil, and you can only imag­ine, as one of our read­ers points out, the crafts­man­ship, patience, and effort that went into the mak­ing this.

Thanks Dalel for send­ing this our way, and please don’t miss anoth­er one of our favorites: Books Savored in Stop Motion Film…

If you would like to sup­port the mis­sion of Open Cul­ture, con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion to our site. It’s hard to rely 100% on ads, and your con­tri­bu­tions will help us con­tin­ue pro­vid­ing the best free cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als to learn­ers every­where. You can con­tribute through Pay­Pal, Patre­on, and Ven­mo (@openculture). Thanks!

Relat­ed Con­tent:

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The Smithsonian Wildlife Photo Archive

The Smith­son­ian Insti­tu­tion has launched Smith­son­ian WILD, a new web site that lets you search through its col­lec­tion of over 202,000 images culled from sev­en ongo­ing wildlife stud­ies. Researchers in remote loca­tions across the globe have set up “cam­era traps” – auto­mat­ed cam­eras trig­gered by motion sen­sors – and left them to record what­ev­er wildlife pass­es by. The result­ing images, be they of giant pan­das in Chi­na, bark­ing deer in Thai­land, or roughed grouse on the Appalachi­an Trail, aren’t near­ly as pret­ty or clear as those we’ve grown accus­tomed to see­ing in nature mag­a­zines and HD prime­time spe­cials. But their raw­ness is part of their appeal: Click­ing through these gal­leries imparts a sense of real-time excite­ment, as if we too have been crouched in the jun­gle for hours, wait­ing to catch a glimpse of some­thing wild.

via Boing­bo­ing

Sheer­ly Avni is a San Fran­cis­co-based arts and cul­ture writer. Her work has appeared in Salon, LA Week­ly, Vari­ety, Moth­er Jones, and many oth­er pub­li­ca­tions. You can fol­low her on twit­ter at @sheerly.

Mark Twain Lives (in Animation)

Tak­ing a page from the RSA play­book, the New York Pub­lic Library has uploaded to its YouTube Chan­nel a series of illus­trat­ed talks. John Waters, Jay‑Z, Wern­er Her­zog – they’re all there. And so too is Mark Twain “read­ing” from his own work – work that was first pub­lished in 2009 with­in a vol­ume called Who is Mark Twain?. Flash Rosen­berg pro­vides the art (see her work on Vimeo); John Lith­gow does the voice.…


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