Archive for the ‘Projects’ Category

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Taking Earth’s Pulse

March 17, 2011

In the wilds of the San Jacinto Mountains, along a steep canyon, scientists are turning 30 acres of pines and hardwoods in California into a futuristic vision of environmental study.
They are linking up more than 100 tiny sensors, robots, cameras and computers, which are beginning to paint an unusually detailed portrait of this lush world, home to more than 30 rare and endangered species.
Much of the instrumentation is wireless. Devices the size of a deck of cards – known as motes, after dust motes – can measure light, wind speed, rainfall, temperature, humidity and barometric pressure, detecting the presence of a warm body or tracking the progress of a chill wind up the canyon. Keep reading HERE.

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PIGHOUSE

March 3, 2011

CAIRO, Egypt

A project by: Alexander Prusakov

Pighouse

The project PIGHOUSE was submitted for consideration for the 2010 Central Glass Architectural Design Competition in Tokyo, Japan. The brief called for new ways to envision the age-old problem of HOUSING. Our entry won the Merit Prize, placing within the top ten of more than six hundred international entries.

Architecture or Revolution

As Cairo hurtles toward revolution, it appears some of the challenges that have plagued Egypt’s minority of Coptic Christians have been side-lined in the face of larger issues of democracy. Picking the scab off Le Corbusier’s dictum of “ARCHITECTURE OR REVOLUTION”, and with Egypt, the country, in sharp focus again, we believe it’s time to dust off our project; to raise the possibility of an architecture developed in alignment with a grassroots ethos; to stave off revolution for the Zabbaleen, a community of Coptic Christian garbage collectors living on the fringes of downtown Cairo.

Housing for Pigs/Compose for Life

Nothing beats the pig’s ability to chow down garbage and process in into useful fertilizer whilst fattening into delicious pork. PIGHOUSE suggests that our ideas for HOUSING look beyond notions of mere “accomodation”. Housing pigs on the roofs of existing buildings in Manshiyet-Nasr, Cairo, imbues the existing housing with CIVIC and COMMUNAL function, invigorating a host of other activities such as rooftop planting and cultivation.

More at Architizer

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ICA Talks

February 20, 2011

Talks from the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. The public discussions cover the period 1981–1994.

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Dekochari 2020

February 19, 2011
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The Noun Project

February 19, 2011


http://www.thenounproject.com/

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TooGOoD

February 19, 2011






Absolutely in love with Studio Toogood. Under the creative direction of London-based designer, Faye Toogood, the Studio collaborates with clients who seek alternative ways of developing their brand or their interior.

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Electronic Literature Collection V.2

February 10, 2011

“Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 2″ is a just-published, Creative Commons licensed multiformat volume from The Electronic Literature Organization.

Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1

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Ape Typologies

February 4, 2011






These are quite handsome I have to say.
A project by Kenyan photographer James Mollison.

He says:

“While watching a nature program on primates I was struck by their facial similarity to our own. Humans are clearly different to animals, but the great apes inhabit that grey area between man and animal. I thought it would be interesting to try to photograph gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans using the aesthetic of the passport photograph- its ubiquitous style inferring the idea of identity.

I decided against photographing in zoos or using ‘animal actors’ but traveled to Cameroon, Republic of Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo and Indonesia to meet orphans of the bush meat trade and live pet trade.”

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Expats and Natives

February 4, 2011

Lucia, Jonathan (USA), Aaron – Mexico, 2005

Yumi, Surayoum, Carsten (Germany) – Costa Rica, 2003

James (USA), Daniella, Ivana, Alba – Mexico, 2004

Frances (England), Nick, Lek – Thailand, 2003

Kaerolik, Robin, Eric (Canada), Erika, Rosio – Nicaragua, 2003

Leticia, Leonardo, Siggi (Germany) – Mexico, 2005

“The portraits in Expats and Natives were made in small-scale tourist destinations of the developing world – islands in Thailand, surfing villages in Nicaragua, coastal towns in Mexico. We traveled to these destinations in search of natural beauty, indigenous culture and respite from the urban pace – irresistible notions inherited from centuries of storytelling, photographs and advertising.

In these areas, where there is seemingly little interaction between tourists and locals, we noticed a significant population of mixed families— travelers who stayed and became expats, living with their local wives (or less frequently, husbands) and raising a family in a new culture. We found westerners who had come for similar reasons as us, drawn by the exotic or the escape but who had chosen to remain, and locals who had found a different future outside of their culture. These families came together as a consequence of tourism, a new manifestation of the complicated mixing of cultures that began along trade routes and continues through flows of capital and travel.

In some situations, these families seemed to echo the historical power dynamics between genders as well as between citizens of the developed and developing worlds – age differences, obvious gaps in background and economic levels, tensions and disillusionments. In other cases, the equity and tenderness of the family seemed to undermine easy judgments about status and power. Most frequently, the children in these pictures grounded the families in their shared futures.

As the largest industry in the world, it is often through tourism that the cultures of the developed and the developing worlds meet. These families suggest the layered history and unknown futures of these relationships formed in the intersection of two worlds. ” – Sasha Bezzubov and Jessica Sucher

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Luminous Earth Grid

February 2, 2011





Luminous Earth Grid is the massive-scale personal project created in 1993 by the American designer Stuart Williams.
Luminous Earth Grid, an array of 1,680 energy-efficient fluorescent lamps, swept over 10 acres of undulating landscape, 50 miles north of San Francisco. Said the artist, “I see the project as a poetic statement on the potential harmony between technology and nature.” Over a five year period, Williams launched a rigorous fund raising campaign throughout Northern California, and raised nearly half a million dollars to realize the massive project. It was widely acclaimed by critics around the globe and drew tens of thousands of visitors.

“The glowing green grid can be seen as an icon of computer imaging technology, which in this ‘real life,’ incarnation, gently melds with the flowing shape of a lovely landscape… a dream-like vision of symbiotic unity.” -
Stuart Williams

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Stephen Mallon

February 2, 2011







I am really liking these series. In his statement, Mallon writes:

NEXT STOP ATLANTIC: Can you imagine if you were on the last drop? You get on the train expecting to get out at Atlantic Station and end up hitting the Atlantic Ocean instead. Seeing these massive mechanisms being tossed into the ocean like a toy in the bathtub is a ping in my heart. I have always been attached to these machines, their surreal beauty integrated into their functional engineering. At first I was stunned, the moments of violent recycling, watching the water quickly adapt to its new underwater houses. After being pushed and stacked like a sardine in these subways cars over the past decade, it is nice to see the sardine actually getting one of these as its new steel condo. These unbelievable photographs were captured over the past three years from Delaware to South Carolina. Since the 1600′s man has artificially created reefs. The Metropolitan Transit Authority’s recycling program has been involved for the past decade, retiring over 2500 subways cars to the ocean to help rebuild underwater reefs along the eastern seabed. These are my images, seconds before these mass transit vessels join history in building homes for life under the sea.

http://www.stephenmallon.com/

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Chemotherapy update

February 2, 2011



A project by Filippo Minelli. He writes:
In the best catholic tradition on December 25th 2010 i was pregnant, but it wasn’t jesus in my belly. I discovered that i have a tumor at the liver.

I put up this blog called Chemotherapy update to make friends and relatives receive news about the events I’m living directly from my iPhone in a funny way.
Viva la vita

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Grow Your Own

January 27, 2011


Policing Genes

“Pharmaceutical companies are experimenting with pharming – genetically engineering plants to produce useful and valuable drugs. Currently undergoing field trials are tomato plants that produce a vaccine for Alzheimer’s disease and potatoes that immunise against hepatitis B. Many more plant-made-pharmaceuticals are being developed in laboratories around the world.

However, the techniques employed to insert genes into plants are within reach of the amateur…and the criminal. Policing Genes speculates that, like other technologies, genetic engineering will also find a use outside the law, with innocent-looking garden plants being modified to produce narcotics and unlicensed pharmaceuticals.”

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Social Housing For Crabs

January 18, 2011


“The space of the aquarium is projected outwards onto the gallery walls with multiple fluid shadows of the crabs in movement. more than just a playful game of calculated steps and patience, ’Crab Island’ alludes to various conditional tensions and paradoxes that we face in our daily progress along the lines of fixed, existing environment and cultural relations.”

For their solo show ‘Moving Sideways’ at the Tang Contemporary Art gallery, the Hong Kong-based architects of MAP Office built a residential building for a community of 100 sea crabs. Their installation consists of 24 identical aquariums and represents a standardized social housing unit which you can find plenty of in Hong Kong. However, the building reverses the traditional logic of luxury as density decreases from top to bottom. According to its creators, ‘Crab Island’ aims to explore notions of displacement, territory, economy, social movement and/or play. Text by Designboom.


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Are You Musical?

January 13, 2011


BBC is now running an experiment – How Musical Are You? – that assesses your overall relationship with music. It takes just 25 minutes (just?) The experiment was designed by researchers at the Music, Mind and Brain Research Group, University of London, and your participation will contribute to their research into the musical brain. You will have to sign in or register. Take it HERE.

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Cognitive Cities

January 8, 2011

The Cognitive Cities Conference (#CoCities) aims to bring the vibrant global conversation about the future of cities to Germany. We believe that collaboration and diversity lead to the best results. By inviting bright minds with different perspectives, it is our ambition to enable not only an in-depth exchange about the current state of affairs, but also to foster new projects and contribute to the ongoing global discussion. We see CoCities as a platform for exchange and mutual inspiration. We invite urban planners, designers, technology geeks, environmental experts, public officials, urban gardening enthusiasts and cultural influencers to be part of the conversation. We can only make our cities more livable if we work together to improve them.

Cognitive Cities Conference

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Test you time

January 8, 2011

Reac­tion time is the time it takes to react to some­thing. It can be con­sid­ered as an index of your speed of pro­cess­ing: It shows how fast you can exe­cute the men­tal oper­a­tions needed by the task at hand.

Reac­tion Time is a basic mea­sure used in many psy­chol­ogy stud­ies. Par­tic­i­pant are most often asked to push a but­ton when done with the task, which can be as var­ied as detect­ing an object, mem­o­riz­ing a word, or iden­ti­fy­ing an emo­tion. As brain pro­cess­ing is quite fast, reac­tion times are usu­ally mea­sured in mil­lisec­onds (a thou­sandth (1/1000) of a second). Click HERE to st.art
Via Sharp Brains

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MILK

January 6, 2011



MILK
Esther Polak

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Google Maps Envelopes?

December 23, 2010

Via Mashable

Other: http://www.mapenvelope.com/

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Serko

December 22, 2010


Images of the Siberian Lake Baikal by photographer Matthieu Paley. Paley’s work was featured in Serko, a book and film telling the true story of Cossack officer Dmitri Peshkov and staggering 9000 kilometer ride across Russia in the winter 1889-1890 on his horse, Serko.

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DIY 3D printing

December 22, 2010


A Grass Roots Engineer that shares the developments and continual improvements of his 3D printing machines, as well as his perspectives on the rapidly growing commercial and DIY 3D printing communities. HERE.

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Science 2010

December 21, 2010

Science’s list of the nine other groundbreaking achievements from 2010 follows.

Synthetic Biology: In a defining moment for biology and biotechnology, researchers built a synthetic genome and used it to transform the identity of a bacterium. The genome replaced the bacterium’s DNA so that it produced a new set of proteins—an achievement that prompted a Congressional hearing on synthetic biology. In the future, researchers envision synthetic genomes that are custom-built to generate biofuels, pharmaceuticals or other useful chemicals.

Neandertal Genome: Researchers sequenced the Neandertal genome from the bones of three female Neandertals who lived in Croatia sometime between 38,000 and 44,000 years ago. New methods of sequencing degraded fragments of DNA allowed scientists to make the first direct comparisons between the modern human genome and that of our Neandertal ancestors.

HIV Prophylaxis:
Two HIV prevention trials of different, novel strategies reported unequivocal success: A vaginal gel that contains the anti-HIV drug tenofovir reduced HIV infections in women by 39 percent and an oral pre-exposure prophylaxis led to 43.8 fewer HIV infections in a group of men and transgender women who have sex with men.

Exome Sequencing/Rare Disease Genes: By sequencing just the exons of a genome, or the tiny portion that actually codes for proteins, researchers who study rare inherited diseases caused by a single, flawed gene were able to identify specific mutations underlying at least a dozen diseases.

Molecular Dynamics Simulations: Simulating the gyrations that proteins make as they fold has been a combinatorial nightmare. Now, researchers have harnessed the power of one of the world’s most powerful computers to track the motions of atoms in a small, folding protein for a length of time 100 times longer than any previous efforts.

Quantum Simulator:
To describe what they see in the lab, physicists cook up theories based on equations. Those equations can be fiendishly hard to solve. This year, though, researchers found a short-cut by making quantum simulators—artificial crystals in which spots of laser light play the role of ions and atoms trapped in the light stand in for electrons. The devices provide quick answers to theoretical problems in condensed matter physics and they might eventually help solve mysteries such as superconductivity.

Next-Generation Genomics:
Faster and cheaper sequencing technologies are enabling very large-scale studies of both ancient and modern DNA. The 1,000 Genomes Project, for example, has already identified much of the genome variation that makes us uniquely human—and other projects in the works are set to reveal much more of the genome’s function.

RNA Reprogramming:
Reprogramming cells—turning back their developmental clocks to make them behave like unspecialized “stem cells” in an embryo—has become a standard lab technique for studying diseases and development. This year, researchers found a way to do it using synthetic RNA. Compared with previous methods, the new technique is twice as fast, 100 times as efficient and potentially safer for therapeutic use.

The Return of the Rat:
Mice rule the world of laboratory animals, but for many purposes researchers would rather use rats. Rats are easier to work with and anatomically more similar to human beings; their big drawback is that methods used to make “knockout mice”—animals tailored for research by having specific genes precisely disabled—don’t work for rats. A flurry of research this year, however, promises to bring “knockout rats” to labs in a big way.

A list of these 10 “Insights of the Decade” follows.
Read the rest of this entry ?

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Steampunk record player

November 21, 2010



Steam-punk record player. Details available HERE.

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Realstadt

November 16, 2010


«REALSTADT.Wünsche als Wirklichkeit» [Realstadt.Wishes Knocking on Reality's Doors]. The focal point in this exhibition is not only the concept of the City but also the way we deal with the City. It is the wishes of very many different actors playing an active part in shaping the City that are central to the exhibition: mundane wishes and spectacular ones, idealistic and economic ones, local and global ones. Cities, after all, are built from wishes, animated by wishes and pulsing with wishes.

A vast array of around 300 architectural and planning models and 80 exemplary projects from all over Germany testify to the wish for change and the energy needed to make it happen. In response to a nationwide call, these models were submitted by local authorities, town planning offices, universities, planning initiatives and individuals. The prize-winning projects of the competition “National Prize for Integrated Urban Development and Baukultur”, which was organized in 2009 by the Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Development represented important points of reference. They include blueprints for extensive urban redevelopments and pinpoint interventions, realized concepts and shelved competition entries, participatory processes and bold individual statements. More HERE

images copyright by Jan Bitter

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Trevor Paglen

November 2, 2010

They Watch the Moon (2010)

Active Military and Reconnaissance Satellites of the United States of America.



The Other Night Sky.

“Social scientist, artist, writer and provocateur, Paglen has been exploring the secret activities of the U.S. military and intelligence agencies–the “black world”–for the last eight years, publishing, speaking and making astonishing photographs.

As an artist, Paglen is interested in the idea of photography as truth-telling, but his pictures often stop short of traditional ideas of documentation. In the series Limit Telephotography, for example, he employs high-end optical systems to photograph top-secret governmental sites; and in The Other Night Sky, he uses the data of amateur satellite watchers to track and photograph classified spacecraft in Earth’s orbit. In other works Paglen transforms documents such as passports, flight data and aliases of CIA operatives into art objects.”

More on Trevor Paglen

Trevor Paglen visits Google’s Mountain View, CA headquarters to discuss his book “Blank Spots on the Map: The Dark Geography of the Pentagon’s Secret World.” This event took place on February 11, 2009, as part of the Authors@Google series.

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Cosmopolitan Chicken Project

October 27, 2010

Koen Vanmechelen is a sculptor, painter and installation artist who confronts the boundaries of Art and finds Science, philosophy and ethics at the other side of the fence. His main project – but certainly not his only one – is the Cosmopolitan Chicken Project.

How far has his Superbastard Chicken run past these boundaries?
“Cross-breeding is the one thing” says Koen Vanmechelen: “We need to cross breed across the borders if we want the world not to perish. We need to think cosmopolitan. Nothing is as beautiful as joining with other cultures and take energy from this.”

Alas, we cannot bring live chickens into the zoo. But we think you can imagine them running around the stage.

Recorded at the Antwerp Zoo on September 5th 2010.
More information: www.tedxflanders.be

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Ai Wei Wei: Sunflower Seeds

October 22, 2010





Sunflower Seeds is made up of millions of small works, each apparently identical, but actually unique. However realistic they may seem, these life-sized sunflower seed husks are in fact intricately hand-crafted in porcelain.

Each seed has been individually sculpted and painted by specialists working in small-scale workshops in the Chinese city of Jingdezhen. Far from being industrially produced, they are the effort of hundreds of skilled hands. Poured into the interior of the Turbine Hall’s vast industrial space, the 100 million seeds form a seemingly infinite landscape.

Porcelain is almost synonymous with China and, to make this work, Ai Weiwei has manipulated traditional methods of crafting what has historically been one of China’s most prized exports. Sunflower Seeds invites us to look more closely at the ‘Made in China’ phenomenon and the geo-politics of cultural and economic exchange today.

Update: Friday 22 October 2010

The landscape of sunflower seeds can be looked upon from the Turbine Hall bridge, or viewed at close-range in the east end of the Turbine Hall on Level 1. It is no longer possible to walk on the surface of the work, but visitors can walk close to the edges of the sunflower seed landscape on the west and north sides.

Although porcelain is very robust, we have been advised that the interaction of visitors with the sculpture can cause dust which could be damaging to health following repeated inhalation over a long period of time. In consequence, Tate, in consultation with the artist, has decided not to allow members of the public to walk across the sculpture.

Please do not remove any of the seeds.

(TEXT BY TATE MODERN)

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Homemade Spacecraft

October 12, 2010

Video from a camera attached to a weather balloon that rose into the
upper stratosphere and recorded the blackness of space.

Visit brooklynspaceprogram.org for all the info.

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Longplayer

October 6, 2010


What is Longplayer?

Longplayer is a one thousand year long musical composition. It began playing at midnight on the 31st of December 1999, and will continue to play without repetition until the last moment of 2999, at which point it will complete its cycle and begin again. Conceived and composed by Jem Finer, it was originally produced as an Artangel commission, and is now in the care of the Longplayer Trust.

Longplayer can be heard in the lighthouse at Trinity Buoy Wharf, London, where it has been playing since it began. It can also be heard at several other listening posts around the world, and globally via a live stream on the Internet.

Longplayer is composed for singing bowls – an ancient type of standing bell – which can be played by both humans and machines, and whose resonances can be very accurately reproduced in recorded form. It is designed to be adaptable to unforeseeable changes in its technological and social environments, and to endure in the long-term as a self-sustaining institution.

The Long Term

Longplayer grew out of a conceptual concern with problems of representing and understanding the fluidity and expansiveness of time. While it found form as a musical composition, it can also be understood as a living, 1000-year-long process – an artificial life form programmed to seek its own survival strategies. More than a piece of music, Longplayer is a social organism, depending on people – and the communication between people – for its continuation, and existing as a community of listeners across centuries.

An important stage in the development of the project was the establishment of the Longplayer Trust, a lineage of present and future custodians invested with the responsibility to research and implement strategies for Longplayer’s survival, to ask questions as to how it might keep playing, and to seek solutions for an unknown future.

Proposed mechanical version, 2002. [Atelier One]

Composition in Time

Longplayer is composed in such a way that the character of its music changes from day to day and – though it is beyond the reach of any one person’s experience – from century to century. It works in a way somewhat akin to a system of planets, which are aligned only once every thousand years, and whose orbits meanwhile move in and out of phase with each other in constantly shifting configurations. In a similar way, Longplayer is predetermined from beginning to end – its movements are calculable, but are occurring on a scale so vast as to be all but unknowable.

Longplayer’s composition uses a minimum amount of information and material to create the maximum amount of variety, in terms of both sound and form. While it is a system-based composition, it is made out of very expansive and resonant musical material, which in itself is not ‘systematic’ sounding. This material (the ‘source music’) is played on Tibetan singing bowls, which possess a simple but harmonically rich sound, and a quality which is at once both physical and ethereal. A simple form of synthesis arises from the interactions of these instruments’ waveforms, with the consequence that while Longplayer’s score is deterministic, its music at any given time is unpredictable.

Longplayer’s first live performance, The Roundhouse, 2009. [Atherton-Chiellino]

Technology

At present, Longplayer is being performed mostly by computers. However, it was created with a full awareness of the inevitable obsolescence of this technology, and is not in itself bound to the computer or any other technological form.

Although the computer is a cheap and accurate device on which Longplayer can play, it is important – in order to legislate for its survival – that a medium outside the digital realm be found. To this end, one objective from the earliest stages of its development has been to research alternative methods of performance, including mechanical, non-electrical and human-operated versions.

Among these is a graphical score for six players and 234 singing bowls. The first performance based on this score took place over 1,000 minutes on 12 – 13 September, 2009, at the Roundhouse, London. Longplayer Live is performed on a vast, specially-constructed instrument by an orchestra of players working in shifts. A series of further performances are in planning for various venues around the world – see the Live page for more information.

+++ info for LONGPLAYER
Listen HERE

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The Reluctant Father

September 13, 2010

“Taking pictures is instinctual for photographer Phillip Toledano. His paternal instincts, however, took time to develop. When his daughter Loulou was born, he was faced with the sobering realization that every baby enters the world as a stranger, a living riddle demanding to be solved. Through photos and narration, Toledano plots out his journey through the maze of Loulou’s first months, revealing his steps toward fatherhood.”






See +++ HERE
Phillip Toledano’s Days with my Father.

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