For this version I left the overlapping lines to give it that 'can't quite draw between the lines' feeling. I had a little trouble fitting it onto the scanner, so an odd scanline remains towards the bottom.
Think about how being an artist has changed. Back in the 20th century works needed a big release to have a chance. If this push wasn't big enough to blast something immediately into the mainstream, then it often faded quickly into obscurity. Now, everything lives on the web to be shared and experienced at any time, by anyone, in any instant. Of course, we still see the phenomenon of brand new things trending and dominating the media space. But overall, works are less likely to feel like wasted efforts simply because they've failed to immediately find a large (paying) audience. Most 20th century artists never cared about the big media outlets, but these were necessary evils. It isn't advisable to bite the hand that feeds when you're right in the middle of trying to accomplish something. It was more useful than it was demeaning to be complacent. But today, thanks to the good ole internet, an artist can share their voice with everyone forev...
Remember where you were when the internet was born? I'll always remember a middle school camping trip my class took back in '92. We were traversing a scary railway bridge when our teacher pointed out thick wires bolted to the support beams below us and said: "Ça c'est le 'Information Superhighway!'" We were part of a "brain class". A group of students who were singled out, grouped together in a special class, and commonly referred to as "Les Nerds". I had one friend in that class who was an uber-nerd named Jeffrey B., and I was pretty sure he knew everything about computers. No offense to Jeffrey B., but he was one of these kinds of guys
Remembering Three Years of Zouch Magazine Three members of The Rolling Stones have been playing together for over 50 yrs There's an old adage in rock and roll that goes something like: "A band that plays together stays together". This adage has certainly held true for me in my life, in more ways than one. Some of the bands I was in in my teens and early 20s seemed as though they might be successful. Yet in the end, all save one of these music projects crumbled without achieving anything at all. One group quit because a band member went away to college, another time we lost a jamspace, etc. The reason these projects failed was simply that we did not follow the adage. There were no dramatic breakups for me, only a series of gentle decampments mostly owing to logistical difficulties. I've been running an online magazine called Zouch Magazine for three years, and I just now realized that the old adage has a parallel to my publishing experience. It relates to pub...
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