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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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Op 01 05 02021 lanceren ik, samen met Christiaan Fruneaux, een wekelijkse nieuwsbrief en online community voor langetermijndenken. Vol historische denkkaders, toekomstscenario’s en speculatieve verbeelding. Eerst open en gratis, uiteindelijk met een betaald lidmaatschap. Elke week zullen we met jullie delen wat we lezen, welke trends en ontwikkelingen ons bezig houden en welke toekomsten we voor ons zien. Van provocerende blurbs en doorwrochte artikelen tot inspirerende beeldessays. Kortom; we willen jullie meenemen in het duiden van Het Lange Nu. Schrij je hier 👇 in https://www.monnik.org/de-chrononauten
The Earliest Globe to Show the Americas May Have Been Made by Leonardo da Vinci in 1504
The Ostrich Egg Globe, made in/around 1504, is the earliest-known European globe to depict the Americas. And there’s evidence that it was made by Leonardo da Vinci. Open Culture has the story:
Missinne, a real estate developer, collector, and globe expert originally from Belgium, discovered the globe in 2012 at the London Map Fair. It was purchased “from a dealer who said it had been part of an important European collection for decades,” and its buyer and owner remain anonymous. After the globe appeared, Missinne “consulted more than 100 scholars and experts in his year-long analysis,” putting “about five years of research into one year,” says Sander, calling the research “an incredible detective story.”
Missinne’s investigation seems to substantiate his claims that the globe was made by Leonardo or his workshop. The evidence, some of which you can find on the Cambridge Scholars Publishing site, includes a 1503 preparatory map in da Vinci’s papers; the presence of arsenic, which only Leonardo was known to use at the time in copper to keep it from losing its lustre; “The use of chiaroscuro, pentienti, triangular shapes, the mathematics of the scale reflecting Leonardo’s written dimension of planet earth”; and a 1504 letter from Leonardo himself stating, “my world globe I want returned back from my friend Giovanni Benci.”
As with all things newly attributed to Leonardo in recent decades, there’s disagreement about this claim. You can read about the evidence collected by Stefaan Missinne, the discoverer of the globe and primary champion of its Leonardo connection, and decide for yourself. My brief, amateur take: if the first point in your analysis of a connection between this globe and Leonardo da Vinci is based on Salvator Mundi, which itself has disputed authorship and all but disappeared after its 2017 purchase, you’ve chosen a tough path towards persuasion.
James H. Johnson, Modern residential innovation: Robert H. Antell house, Pittsford, 1971.
Photograph by Hans Padelt.
From “A guide to neighborhoods and villages”, 1974. https://www.instagram.com/p/CJjlWltA8x2/?igshid=1v1znk422x67t
Planetarium Table Clock from 1775.
Art of Maliness and Ted Slampyak
Levi Walter Yaggy. Celestial Phenomena, Zodiacal Signs, Planetary Systems, Geographical Studies & Geological Charts, 1887-1893.
A cornucopia. Under the Roof. 1940.
Internet Archive
Zélie Dethorey - http://zeliedethorey.com - http://zelibrius.tumblr.com - https://twitter.com/Zelibrius - https://www.linkedin.com/in/z%C3%A9lie-dethorey-8ab09669
I am half Scottish and half Japanese- I hand-sewed this kimono from men’s dress shirts and boxer shorts.
Who'll want to listen to the radio when you could play Gran Turismo in the car?
If Ford have their way, these won’t just be on a small seat-back screen. The American car manufacturer has gone as far as patenting an “autonomous vehicle entertainment system’ which could effectively cover the windscreen with a projector screen, placing more emphasis than ever on being able to ignore the road.
Pawel Lipiński and Mateusz Frankowski, ‘Mashambas Skyscraper’, Winners of eVolo 2017 Skyscraper Competition
As automation reduces the need for human labor, some Silicon Valley executives think a universal income will be the answer — and the beta test is happening in Kenya.
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Neo Classical, Alexey Kondakov