The music video I did for Lisa Markley.

pixel skylines
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Three Goblin Art
DEAR READER

ellievsbear
d e v o n

Kaledo Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Peter Solarz
$LAYYYTER
YOU ARE THE REASON
Game of Thrones Daily

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
will byers stan first human second
we're not kids anymore.

blake kathryn
Sade Olutola
styofa doing anything
Show & Tell
Jules of Nature
seen from Türkiye
seen from Australia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Japan
seen from Portugal
seen from Maldives
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia
seen from India
seen from Japan

seen from Netherlands

seen from Japan

seen from India
seen from Nepal
seen from Nepal

seen from Greece

seen from Serbia

seen from Singapore
seen from Australia
seen from United States
@shariefilms
The music video I did for Lisa Markley.
2nd Year Graduate film.
Lauren Groff’s Fates and Furies
This isn’t a typical review. I will not do a plot summary or an in depth analysis. I’m still absorbing this book. Soaking it in. Processing. As with any profound experience, it will take awhile to know the extent this story has affected me.
I love how Groff writes. So brutally honest. Poetic. Picturesque. It’s as visual to me as any film.
Like the title implies, the story has the feel of a Greek comedy/tragedy. The asides are cryptic and intriguing. Glimpses into the future that only make you want to gobble up the words in a race to know what happens next. The characters - vibrant and complex; human and alive. The staggering evidence that perception is everything and relationships are complicated.
The book is delicious and complex - like an amazing red paired with dark chocolate. I will have to read it again. Maybe even twice more. Just so I know that I didn’t miss a single morsel.
Sharie Vance © 2015
I bought a lot of stuff from this guy in his little shop hidden down an alley in #Kolkata #india #cityofcalcutta #cityofjoy #peopleinkolkata #peopleinasia #travelphotography by @sharievance
Late night shopping at #Newmarket #Kolkata #india #travelphotography by @sharievance (at Kolkata, India)
While filming in a community in #Kolkata #India these energetic young people insisted on having their photo taken. :) #peopleinkolkata #peopleinasia #cityofjoy #cityofcalcutta #travelphotography by @sharievance
#travelphotography on the roof of #grandoberoi in #Kolkata #india
October is just around the corner and my favorite part of the season is coming soon! #texas #texasstatefair #texasstars #home #dallas by @Sharievance
#abstract #abstractart #art #painting #abstractpainting by @sharievance
#Painting by @sharievance #artist #abstractart
#abstract #abstractart #abstractphotography on the roof of #grandoberoi in #cityofcalcutta #Kolkata #india #travelphotography by @sharievance
Take the stairs when you can. #abstract #abstractart ##abstractphotography #somewhereinmexico #travelphotography by @sharievance
"Contain" #Painting #art #abstractpainting #abstractart by @sharievance
From a roof near #Newmarket in #cityofcalcutta #cityofjoy #Kolkata #india I love the contrasting colors and sharp angles. #travelphotography #abstract by @sharievance
I'm a graduate film student at NYU, and I wanted to let you know that within a day and a half your blog has probably been seen by just about every student and faculty member here. It's made some people in our not-perfect-but-relatively-egalitarian program realize how big a problem this still is in the industry and I've already overheard conversations from both men and women determined to change this. So you should know that this is having a deep impact, even if the results aren't immediate.
Female boredom - is it really the worst thing?
As I was walking though my bedroom the other day, I accidentally caught a scene from Ridley Scott's recent flick, The Counselor. I say accidentally because I never watch those sort of movies on purpose - and by those sorts, I mean where there is a lot of people on people violence involved. I only have a limited amount of time on this planet. I want to be educated and entertained when I watch films - not reminded of just how degenerate we humans can be to each other. Those movies are more scary to me than any horror flick I’ve ever seen.
Anyway, I caught this line - "The truth about women is that you can do anything to them except bore them." - said one male character to the other.
I'm always analyzing films in terms of social gender construction, whether or not I watch them on purpose or accidentally catch a scene, and so this particular line struck a chord with me. First, I disagree. I can list a whole lot of things you can't do to me that are far worse than my inability to handle boredom. (Which, I’ll admit, is pretty bad.) Second, I don’t think I like it when men define what is true about women. Maybe I don't like it when anyone defines a whole set of people period.
Zeros + Ones: A Feminine Equation
Zeros + Ones: A Feminine Equation
Ada King, Countess of Lovelace, brilliant, articulate, and forever curious, became interested in Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine, a proposed general purpose computer that he had designed in 1837. The daughter of the affectionately dubbed Princess of Parallelograms, Annabelle Byron, and the prolific writer, Lord Bryon, Ada is an argument for hereditary genius. She considered herself an analyst and a prophetess. Asked to expand upon the Italian mathematician, Luigi Menabrae’s explanation of Babbage’s machine, Ada’s extensive notations, which were longer and more detailed than the original explanation, included what is considered to be the first computer program ever written, earning her the post humorous distinction of being the first computer programmer. While being the first at anything is notable, the fact that she did this as a 28 year old female during the nineteenth century, long before computers (Babbage’s invention notwithstanding) were invented, is astounding or so it would seem.
However, upon reading Zeros and Ones and Sadie Plant’s examples of traditional “women’s work” such as weaving and typing, longstanding misogyny and the methods of communicating that women have employed over the centuries, it actually makes sense that a woman would be the first to understand and develop a computer language. Additionally, because women were historically regulated to mundane tasks, aka ‘micro processes’, they have been instrumental in the development of computers themselves - not through victimization, though, but through agency. Using Ada’s story as a launching point and structure, Sadie Plant gives women their place in computational history.
From the beginning of her book, Plant makes it clear that current methods of computing, networking and even technological hardware are outgrowths of natural systems and that everything is connected to everything else. With detailed descriptions of sexual selection, bacterial and viral replication, human biology, the advent of computer technology and cultural ideals of patriarchy, Plant weaves the history of women, computers, and machines, into an intricate and complicated tapestry to rival any ever created on a Jacquard loom. Tantalizing excerpts from science fiction literature, movies, Freud, Lacan, Baudrillard, and Ada’s own letters flesh out her arguments. Speaking of women in society, she writes;
“There was always so much, too much, and too many different things to do, so many tasks to juggle and perform: making lists and notes, taking stock, keeping track; parallel processing, flipping between functions and the cry of a child, the ring of the doorbell, a sudden flash of dream sequence; distributed systems, adaptive networks, scattered brains” (106).
Computers articulate using packets of information sent through a network. The information is ‘scattered’ and then reassembled. Artificial intelligence programs are designed to be intuitive. Computers run multiple platforms at the same time. Databases keep lists, keep track, and juggle. The parallels are clear.
Articulate, exploratory, and insightful, Plant’s writing is incredibly dense, layered, and non-linear. It folds in on itself. There are times when one is not certain if she is describing technology, or women in general, and that’s the point.
© Sharie Vance 2014