Posted by
Jenna Delashaw
comments (0)
Posted by
Jenna Delashaw
comments (0)
Justin Maller

Dita Von Tease
Ombres Et Diamants
Freelance illustrator and art director Justin Maller creates surreal works of art, merging both realistic and fantastic aspects of images. Maller’s works trick the mind and eye into believing that such things can really exist in the physical world and that his work has merely captured a moment in real time. His usage of subtle yet profound aspects in Dita Von Tease and Skye Harbor only further accentuate the realism he begins to portray, yet his obvious manipulation in Ombres Et Diamants stands out amongst his other works but is still unified with them in their practicality.
Shawdow Chen
Sacrifice
Thunder of Fall
Summer Tune
China-born Shadow Chen incorporates surrealism and reality in a much different style than that of Maller. Chen uses much more illustration techniques and organic forms for the dreamlike environments of her pieces. Chen's innovative techniques have fueled her to create her own clothing line as well as win awards in furniture design. But her mastery of the digital medium is her most obvious talent of all.
Posted by
Jenna Delashaw
comments (0)
Foursquare seems like a really cool and fun idea, though I don't really ever see myself partaking in it, or at least actually keeping up with it if I did. It seems like it would take the spontaneity and pleasant surprise out of just running into friends, that's a part of life.
Another part of life is parenting and childhood. I personally see those two things experiencing drastic, negative changes if serious surveillance technology were to be involved. A part of life is sneaking around and doing things you're not supposed to and dealing with the guilt of lying to your parents. Sometimes they find out, sometimes they don't, but either way is a learning experience.
I think there's a difference in using it in children who are incredibly young and incapable of knowing the dangers of the outside world yet. If a four year old walks away from Mom and a stranger offers them some sort of comfort, their innocent little minds can't help but trust this person with nothing less than their life. But as a child grows older, they learn that there are those that they can't trust and that there are some parts of the world that are extremely dangerous. It's when they are aware of such things that parents should cease surveillance of their children (had they started) and begin letting the child go into the world more and more over time.
I would only agree to implanting a microchip that gave me constant biofeedback in my child if my child had some sort of chronic syndrome or disease that is hard to detect when life threatening symptoms are occurring. I no doubt see the benefits, but the benefits take out the experience of parenthood. I can picture some parents getting lazy and using the chip as an excuse not to comfort their children when they have a simple stomach ache. Ideal parents would comfort regardless, but that's now when things like that are more a convenient luxury, but as the technology becomes more normal, parents would get more lazy and dependent upon that.









