Thursday, November 19, 2009

WHY ISN'T DAMON SOULE MY ART TEACHER???

http://www.damonsoule.com/pb/images/img3150849ca62cfe80cc.jpghttp://www.damonsoule.com/pb/images/img2870748e93259ddf46.jpg
http://www.damonsoule.com/pb/wp_b21077d9/wp_b21077d9.html

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Hell, a Motivator of Economic Growth

What makes economies grow? It’s a question that has occupied thinkers for centuries. Most of us would tick off things like education levels, openness to trade, natural resources, and political systems.

Discuss
COMMENTS (39)

Here’s one you might not have considered: hell.

A pair of Harvard researchers recently examined 40 years of data from dozens of countries, trying to sort out the economic impact of religious beliefs or practices. They found that religion has a measurable effect on developing economies - and the most powerful influence relates to how strongly people believe in hell.

That hell could matter to economic growth might seem surprising, since you can’t prove it exists, let alone quantify it. It stands as one of the more intriguing findings in a growing body of recent research exploring how religion might influence the wealth and prosperity of societies. In recent years, Italian economists have presented findings that religion can boost GDP by increasing trust within a society; researchers in the United States showed that religion reduces corruption and increases respect for law in ways that boost overall economic growth. A number of researchers have documented how merchants used religious backgrounds to establish one another’s reliability.

The notion that religion influences economies has a long history, but the specifics have been vexingly difficult to pin down. Today, as researchers start to answer the question more definitively with the tools of modern economics, what’s emerging is a clearer picture of how nations’ prosperity can depend, in part, on seemingly abstract concerns like theology - and sometimes on quite nuanced points of belief or religious fervor.

The work is preliminary, but offers the hope of useful findings. Knowing exactly how and when God influences mammon could lead to smarter forms of economic development in emerging nations, and could add to our understanding of how culture shapes wealth and poverty. And it stands as part of a larger movement in economics, in which the field is looking beyond purely material explanations to a broader engagement with human culture, psychology, and even our angels and demons.

In a sense, religion and economics long have been intertwined. There are more verses on money and finance in the Bible than there are verses on prayer. The New Testament stakes out clear if seemingly contradictory positions: on the one hand is the admonition that a rich person has little chance of getting into heaven; on the other is the parable of the talents, which praises the servant who got the biggest return on his money. Islam, to this day, outlaws the charging of interest; Buddhism instructs its followers to abjure desire for material goods.

On a larger scale, religious denominations affect economics by creating bonds of trust and shared commitment among small groups, both necessary qualities for lending and trade. In the Middle Ages, studies show, monk-run estates outperformed those that used serfs, thanks to religiously inspired cooperation and frugality. The Quakers of 18th-century Britain, renowned for their scrupulous honesty, came to dominate British finance. Ultra-orthodox Jews similarly dominate New York’s diamond trade because of levels of trust based on religion. Modern religious kibbutzim on average outperform their secular rivals, in part because of trust built through engaging in communal religious rituals.

But the ways that religions can influence entire economies - and the extent to which they do - are less clear. In 1905, Max Weber, a German sociologist who studied religions, identified what he called “the Protestant work ethic” as the driving force behind modern capitalism in the West. But by the middle of the 20th century, most sociologists had dismissed Weber’s thesis as based on bad theology and bad statistics. Modern economists haven’t looked much at the question, in part because it’s difficult to quantify something like religious belief, or to compare statistics on religious beliefs across countries. Scientists also find it hard to prove that religion, or any aspect of culture, causes economic behaviors.

But over the last several decades, better sets of statistics on religion have become available, and improvements in computing power and mathematical techniques have made it easier for economists to run very large statistical analyses, with hundreds of variables.

Among the most provocative findings have come from Robert Barro, a renowned economist at Harvard, and his wife, Rachel McCleary, a researcher at Harvard’s Taubman Center. McCleary, the daughter of a Methodist missionary, felt that she had seen religion change people’s economic behavior, and wondered why economists didn’t look at it as a potential factor in economic development. Barro found the idea intriguing.

The two collected data from 59 countries where a majority of the population followed one of the four major religions, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, or Buddhism. They ran this data - which covered slices of years from 1981 to 2000, measuring things like levels of belief in God, afterlife beliefs, and worship attendance - through statistical models. Their results show a strong correlation between economic growth and certain shifts in beliefs, though only in developing countries. Most strikingly, if belief in hell jumps up sharply while actual church attendance stays flat, it correlates with economic growth. Belief in heaven also has a similar effect, though less pronounced. Mere belief in God has no effect one way or the other. Meanwhile, if church attendance actually rises, it slows growth in developing economies.

McCleary says this makes sense from a strictly economic standpoint - as economies develop and people can earn more money, their time becomes more valuable. For economic growth, she says, “What you want is to have people have their children grow up in a faith, but then they should become productive members of society. They shouldn’t be spending all their time in religious services.”

After Barro and McCleary’s initial work was published in 2003, other economists started looking more seriously at the impact of religious beliefs. Researchers based at the New University of Lisbon and the University of Illinois used a model that showed European industrial development between 1645 and 1850 took place roughly 35 years earlier in Protestant countries than Catholic ones. (The researchers posited that Protestant beliefs in economic success as a sign one might get to heaven inspired people to work harder and invest.) The German economist Sascha O. Becker looked at Prussia’s economic development and found that, at least for Germany, Weber was right about the Protestant work ethic: Protestants were more likely to be entrepreneurs than Catholics, and more likely to create bigger firms. (Becker argues the cause isn’t religious belief itself, but an accidental offshoot of Protestants needing to be literate enough to read the Bible.)

So what is it about religion that creates these economic effects? On one level, the connection seems intuitive: All the major religions extol virtues like self-discipline, sacrifice, and thrift. Some even preach that earthly success translates to good things in the afterlife, a kind of gold-plated stairway to heaven. Religion can, quite directly, affect what you earn - fundamentalists and evangelicals in the United States tend to have lower savings rates and incomes than members of other religions, in part because they have larger families and give away more of their money.

Belief’s influence on our economic behavior might even reflect biology. The special motivational power of hell, for instance, may lie deep in the human psyche. Ara Norenzayan, a psychologist at the University of British Columbia, and his graduate student Azim Shariff set up an experiment that would make it easy for people to cheat on a difficult math test. They found that people who believed in an omniscient, vengeful God typically chose short-term suffering - that is, facing the test without the crutch of cheating - over possible eternal suffering. “Those who believed in a punishing God cheated less,” Norenzayan said in an e-mail. He considers his findings to be consistent with Barro and McCleary’s research.

Of course, belief might just spark behavior that affects economic growth, rather than causing the growth itself. Charles M. North, an economist at Baylor University, argues that private property protections developed by the Church to guard against grasping secular rulers gave Catholic - and eventually Protestant - nations stronger protections for individual rights than other nations, creating incentive for individual success. Similarly, literacy seems clearly connected with economic development, and mass literacy is a Protestant invention, says Robert D. Woodberry, a sociologist at University of Texas at Austin. He has mapped how missionaries spread literacy, technology, and civic institutions, and finds that those correlate strongly with economic growth. He argues in part that this helps explain why the once-poor but largely Protestant United States surpassed rich, Catholic Mexico after 1800.

If religious belief does have important effects on prosperity, it raises a difficult question for anyone concerned with economic development: What should we do with that knowledge? Does it make sense to put up religious billboards in struggling countries, or to appoint a minister of belief? Probably not. For one thing, religion is just one among many factors that affect economies. And for another, it seems to take a long time for religious shifts to catalyze economies. The Protestant work ethic may indeed have some economic importance, but the Industrial Revolution in Germany came 300 years after Martin Luther’s 95 theses. Many countries in the developing world shifted from ethnic religions to Christianity or Islam during the 20th century, and few miracles have so far occurred in those economies.

Many think we can just pluck out the secular lessons from the new findings, and no longer need religion as a spur for, say, property laws and literacy. Norenzayan thinks that people originally developed the idea of “supernatural monitors” - a fear of being punished by an omniscient watcher - at a time when secular institutions either didn’t exist, or might as well not have. Today, he thinks, developing nations can simply adapt proven, secular approaches to governing.

Then again, cloning institutions without certain intangible aspects of culture often proves futile. When Italy imposed identical forms of government across its regions, the new institutions worked well in some parts of the country but performed poorly in others with different underlying traditions. Governments worldwide have tried to foster their own versions of Silicon Valley, and, lacking the California Bay Area’s particular culture and history, have mostly failed. While education and rule of law might seem straightforward secular policies, the cultural forces that carry them into a society, including religion, have a lot to do with whether people respect them.

Barro and McCleary, for their part, think religion and policy are difficult to mix. McCleary says the lesson of their results isn’t that governments should boost religion, but simply that they should recognize it has some value, and avoid regulating it too heavily. The bigger application of research into religion, she thinks, isn’t to foster religious imperialism but to build a better-informed economics, and in the long run, better policy. There won’t be manna from heaven. But there might, over time, be less poverty here on earth.

Michael Fitzgerald is a freelance writer in Millis. He researched this while a Templeton-Cambridge Journalism Fellow.

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Hell, A Motivator of Economic Growth

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/11/15/the_curious_economic_effects_of_religion/?page=full

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Wadi rum on the Behance Network

I'm so happy to see that not everyone's been discouraged from light painting since all those commercial ads. It's not style biting if you can make it look good or even better. i present Wadi Rum, from (my most favorite online artists' community sites) Behance.net

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Thursday, October 29, 2009

LOL: Marker Pen 'Burglars' Draw Cops' Attention (Skye News Online)

Marker Pen 'Burglars' Draw Cops' Attention

11:06pm UK, Wednesday October 28, 2009

Huw Borland, Sky News Online

Two burglary suspects who covered their faces by drawing on 'masks' with a permanent marker pen have been arrested.

Suspects Matthew Allan McNelly and Joey Lee Miller

Mug shots of McNelly and Miller after their arrest

A witness told police that two men with painted disguises were trying to break into an apartment in Carroll, Iowa, US.

The caller added that the pair, both wearing black hooded sweatshirts, drove off in a large white car.

Police soon spotted a 1994 Buick Roadmaster that matched the vehicle description and stopped it.

They found two occupants with mask-like scribbling on faces, Iowa's Daily Times Herald reported.

Matthew Allan McNelly, 23, and Joey Lee Miller, 20, were arrested at gunpoint because of reports they might be armed, but neither man had a weapon.

Both suspects were charged with attempted second-degree burglary and have been released on bail.

McNelly was also charged with driving while intoxicated.

The pair was due in court on November 10 for a preliminary hearing.

Second-degree burglary is Class D felony punishable by up to five years in prison and a $7,500 (£4,575) fine.


Source:

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Marker-Pen-Burglars-Suspects-Miller-And-McNelly-Caught-In-Carroll-Iowa-With-Disguises/Article/200910415421313?lpos=World_News_News_Your_Way_Region_6&lid=NewsYourWay_ARTICLE_15421313_Marker_Pen_Burglars%3A_Suspects_Miller_And_McNelly_Caught_In_Carroll%2C_Iowa%2C_With_Disguises

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Chimpanzees Seen 'Mourning' Late Friend (Skye News Online)

Chimpanzees Seen 'Mourning' Late Friend

1:01pm UK, Wednesday October 28, 2009

Emma Rowley, Sky News Online

A group of chimpanzees have been captured on camera apparently lost in grief for the death of a friend.

Chimps appear to mourn one of their own in Cameroon

The huddled chimps pay their respects to Dorothy. Photo: Monica Szczupider/Solent

More than a dozen apes watched in silence from their enclosure in Cameroon as the body of Dorothy, a chimp in her 40s, was wheeled past for burial.

Dorothy, who died of heart failure, was described as a "prominent figure" within the group of about 25 chimps at the Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Centre.

The photo was taken by 30-year-old Monica Szczupider.

She was working at the centre, which cares for orphaned animals whose mothers were killed for the illegal bushmeat trade.

"We were burying Dorothy," she said. "We brought her in the wheelbarrow to let the others see.

"I cannot emphasise enough how silent and still they were. Chimpanzees are typically not like that.

"They are loud, with short attention spans. It was unbelievably emotional. We were all struck."


source:

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Chimpanzees-Mourn-Death-Of-A-Friend-Photograph-Captures-Silent-Tribute-In-Cameroon/Article/200910415421032

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Friday, October 23, 2009

The Ultimate DubStep Party

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not much else to say other than randomize and jack that shit up to 11!

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Sunday, October 11, 2009

Z-DAY, Norfolk, VA (11OCT09) slideshow enclosed

http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn4ke/sets/72157622440591621/show/

       So, Norfolk raised our hopes and ALMOST SMASHED them entirely. It was nice enough for the MacArthur Mall (Norfolk, VA) to allow what some may call an inalienable right to walk among the living and look AWESOME doing it! However, coma, the City of Norfolk Police (and apparently, mall task force) played off of a skewed perspective of Virginia Code § 18.2-422 - Prohibition of wearing of masks in certain places. Unfortunately, the wi-fi was either overwhelmed by the zombie geeks that probably broke every Virginia fire code in that store, or it was just too unreliable to allow me to browse up the actual law, as posted in the Virginia Codes (which supersedes, in this case, a City's protestant preferences). As stated in that very same code, the exceptions are as follows: the provisions of this section shall not apply to persons (i) wearing traditional holiday costumes; (ii) engaged in professions, trades, employment or other activities and wearing protective masks which are deemed necessary for the physical safety of the wearer or other persons; (iii) engaged in any bona fide theatrical production or masquerade ball; or (iv) wearing a mask, hood or other device for bona fide medical reasons upon the advice of a licensed physician or osteopath and carrying on his person an affidavit from the physician or osteopath specifying the medical necessity for wearing the device and the date on which the wearing of the device will no longer be necessary and providing a brief description of the device.
      
Long story short, folks: What was supposed to be a full blown, zombie mall-crawl, became a rushed cue of bloodied-up, all eyes on us, surreal and grotesque power walk to the HOT TOPIC down and across the stairs, from the Barnes & Nobel starting point. It was a disappointment  to some- and you know I complained- but really one must ask oneself... "HOW MANY TIMES CAN ONE SEE HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE GEEKING OUT ON A ZOMBIE PAGEANT OUT IN PUBLIC???"
       I can still plan for Richmond, VA's Zombie-walk!


http://law.justia.com/virginia/codes/toc1802000/18.2-422.html

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Saturday, October 10, 2009

When Will the 21 Century LOOK like the 21st Century?

Thanks to the Genius of James Patten, we have Microsoft developing "Surface", "The Day the Earth Stood Still" (remake) and "Minority Report's" touch-interactive technology and what looks like quite a few eager advert companies ready to jump on that train and ride it into a place the 21st century should actually look like. The following link is to a showreel of some of those firms shpwcasing  both promise and technovisual satisfaction. n joy.

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i've also included the link to a most outdated website of Mr. Patten's- and oh-so under-exploited revelation 'slash' brainchild of his intellectual prowess.

http://www.jamespatten.com/audiopad/

http://www.jamespatten.com/audiopad/vid1.php (.mov)
http://www.jamespatten.com/audiopad/vid2.php (.mov)
http://www.jamespatten.com/audiopad/vid3.php (.wma)

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Monday, October 5, 2009

Becoming Divergent

there's a littl bit of a hidden message that's trying to be spoken here, considering that the two painting projects i have lined up next- should i ever get to them- are of only half a face. the easiest facade for a half a face, while almost appearing whole, would be the profile. these are faces that are coming out of (or submerging into) a line drawn down the center of each page/ canvas. on one side of the line, there will be a separate color than what lies just on the other side. the face, however will be anything but flesh tones. these are to describe the mania, passion, psychosis. there will be plenty of color. and considering how bad i am at color, i'm quite excited to see how much i'm either going to mess this up or perfect it- either way, it'll just so accurately describe the moment, i'm sure.

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Friday, October 2, 2009

Super Macro Your Cellphone Camera With A DVD Lens

Cameraphone, check! old DVD players, check! lots of tiny random objects, just DYING for a macro snapshot, check! I know what micro-project I'll be tied up with all of Sunday!

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street art on the Behance Network

May I present to you, Stamatis Laskos! I've seen this guy's work up on the interent before. Pieces here and there, in the Mediterranean, for commercial work- promoting local art. I recommend everyone at least spy a few of these amazing pics. (click on the blue link that says "STAMATIS LASKO'S PORTFOLIO," to see more)

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Quadri d'esposizione on the Behance Network

I have become a BIG FAN of BEHANCE.NET. Here is one of the new projects that was just posted a few hours ago. The subject material is a bit overdone, but really, really enjoyable to watch, regardless.

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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

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Forever's Not So Long

An endearing perspective of how people might cope with death and solitude. A meteor set to strike over the eastern seaboard and two strangers decide that they would rather not die alone. Very, cute and deserving of its award!

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Monday, September 28, 2009

Fenga Papit!!! LOL

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Some people have all the luck... Some get FENGA PAPITS!

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Neon skaters on the Behance Network

awwwwwwwww. people are ALWAYS trying to do live tetris. what gives?

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WISH ME LUCK!

I just put myself out there with some very big fish. I just hope a couple of those guys like what they see and say something constructive- in EVERY sense of the word.
http://www.behance.net/Gallery/MndFck-No-1/315067

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Last Night's Liesurly ((NOGALLERY))

Now, about some color......

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I Am T-Pain

Check out this application:

http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=314652382


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Drawn by the glowing light of the hookah

Making two hours go past by tugging on a strawberry-banana flavored hookah is great, made moreso when I realized how carried away I got on this little gem. Lucky for me, it actually came out as nice as it did. I guess I can thank the shisha for smoothing out what is normally a skaky hand, by default! Unfortunately it's dark out, and the scanners tucked away, so my cameraphone will have to do.

The Trext at the bottom of the picture reads: "still".

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Sunday, September 27, 2009

quote of the day

that just knocked me down a peg or two!

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SOME1 deleted this. Posterous will be my "higher shelf", away from meddling hands!

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NASA's Spitzer Spots Clump of Swirling Planetary Material

"mommy, where do planet come from?"
Could you imagine what a high budget (let's say ILM) animation group could do with a sequence like this!?!?! plus i think that space is sexy.

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Somebody Colored My Roses ORANGE???

look at this! i made a picture for erice ages ago. i posted it up on deviantart.com and just this weekend, two people who both liked it got together and did a color example for me! they say they want to see it orange. i said creamsicle. maybe if i had a whole mess of these guys? like a baby blue, too. (sorta like a weird monster-ized version of carebears!)

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Somebody Colored My Roses ORANGE???

look at this! i made a picture for erice ages ago. i posted it up on deviantart.com and just this weekend, two people who both liked it got together and did a color example for me! they say they want to see it orange. i said creamsicle. maybe if i had a whole mess of these guys? like a baby blue, too. (sorta like a weird monster-ized version of carebears!)

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Saturday, September 26, 2009

Friday, September 25, 2009

HALFWAY THERE!

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Progress

an hour of swift, half not-so-serious coloring and i'm still barely making a dent on this thing! as i was describing to a friend of mine, the idea is to get the final form of the painting to look like its drafts, sketches and notes and not the other way around- which is the standard practice for most painters.

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Making a Dent, Using "Trext" for Miller Lite

The Progress that I'm making so far- not that far at all. This is jest a composite of different styles and colors that I am interested in using on the final piece- which is most likely going to be a painting, personal reasons. Thos reasons being that graphic design means that the final piece is just as easy to steal and reproduce as hitting "COPY". I like the idea of putting final forms of graphic design onto the canvas because the idea and the form make their way into the ad, or what have you, but the part that someone can call their own, is something that can be touched, owned, hung, and/or horded! So, as one would assume, the painting aslo will come with High Quality prints of all stages of progress and the digital final form, as well.

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Thursday, September 24, 2009

Halloween '09!!!

So, yeah, I'magonna be Berry Eagan from Punch-Drunk Love, this Halloween. I just need the following: a blonde Lena; a phone + phone chord; blue, thrift store suit; bad haircut and shave beard ={. If I can't find a phone, I'll settle for a money/ dice plunger, kept at eyelevel for children!

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Saturday, September 19, 2009

Sketch 06

A little something I drew on some cardboard and put up on eric's (Clise Clithing's) wall. LOL. Cute little guys still there. Just missing the makeshift frame.
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Friday, September 18, 2009

Self port

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Chalk and HURR ((NOGALLERY))

Click here to download:
IMG_0360[1] (342 KB)

Click here to download:
IMG_0362[1] (414 KB)

Click here to download:
IMG_0363[1] (378 KB)

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K@t marsh's face. Sorta.

Drawing mugs from facebook friends list. This is the only one that came out decent. I still need some more practice!
 
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my OTHER favorite ART WEBSITE (this place is on, fucking, point!)

http://ffffound.com/
check it check it check it!



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Thursday, September 17, 2009

Artificial Paradise

<p><a href=" ">ARTIFICIAL PARADISE,INC.</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/frenayjp">Jp Frenay</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
i went over to The Laughing Squid's POSTEROUS today and found this incredible little gem!

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Paint by numbers drafts

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