We are attempting to survive our time so we may live into yours.
— Jimmy Carter, Voyager message June 16, 1977
We have loved posting up in cafes and drawing the same things !!!! Coffee cans in a cafe in Peekskill, NY
— Emily and Paul, "Newsletter Issue No. 1"
I can barely even remember what our apartment looks like.
— Isaac
Marcia and I were your age when Clara came along.
— Dr. Ketchell in a text
Mike Winkelmann, aka Beeple, has been thinking about that banana recently. You know, the one that was bought from a fruit seller outside Sotheby's, duct taped to a wall, flogged for $6.2 million, and devoured before the press in Hong Kong.
The last time the eccentricities of the art world grabbed mainstream attention, Beeple was to thank, his Everydays: the First 5000 Days (2021) prompting that tired and essential question: what is art? This hasn't happened with Maurizio Cattelan's Comedian, Winkelmann said. Yes, the work is absurd and grossly expensive, but no one's saying it's not art. Nor has it escaped his attention that Justin Sun, the banana's gleeful owner, was Everydays's under bidder.
"A hundred years ago, we decided you could turn over a toilet and call it art, but I draw pictures every day on the computer with the sole purpose of them being art and people say it's not art. How could that possibly be?"
— Richard Whiddington, @artnet
My brother Scott working on his encyclopedia. He suffers from short-term memory loss for the last 35 years. This is part of his memory now. He writes and collects images that he reads through to help him remember. Rather remarkable.
— @craigdykers
The antediluvian period is the time period chronicled in the Bible between the fall of man and the Genesis flood narrative in biblical cosmology... Colloquially, the term is used to refer to any ancient and murky period.
— Wikipedia, "Antediluvian"
Cortis and Sonderegger's process calls attention to the staging of photographs, whether made in the studio or as a historic record.
— Wall text, "Making of "Mont Blanc: La Jonction" (by Louis Auguste Bisson & Auguste Rosalie Bisson, 1861)," The Nelson Atkins Museum of Art
I'm going to watch until he wakes up.
— Cora watching the baby monitor
Two dings.
— Lily on the sound airplanes make before takeoff
As humans, we possess the unique habit of archiving; we collect symbols essentialized by their permanence. We build up the intimate interiors of our homes with found artifacts, collected ephemera, photographic records capturing our lineage. We place these images on our walls in neat geometric compositions. We move to translate the loss of time into an idealized eternity by passing these records down — each a form of proof that life has continuity, that we belong to the past and equally as much to something beyond ourselves.
— Lydia Chodosh, On the Impulse to Notate
The gift that was a cutting of my grandmother's Plumeria tree sent from Los Angeles has been refused by the Louvre Museum in Paris on the grounds that the collections do not contain works in this format.
— @davidhorvitz
MrBeast has reportedly rented the three Pyramids of Giza for 100 hours for a YouTube video.
— @starworldlab
Of course, I am happy. In each of your hearts is piece of Nelly, and you’re never gonna forgot me, and that was my aim. Cake, we can bake. Piece of Nelly, you got.
— Nelly, "E6 Autumn Week," The Great British Baking Show
Dadadadadada
— Wally
Joe says that when he looks at Bo, he feels past generations looking through him, like a stack of pringles.
— @noraphone
I was born to have him.
— Lily
Working each day for nearly a decade, Lemon has made these drawings as "a way to memorialize, honor, and celebrate the greatness of minor things."
— Wall text, Ralph Lemon's "Untitled (The greatest [Black] art history story ever told. Unfinished)"
if i'm ever terminal or anything please bring me to pet animals
giraffes bunnies
— Lily in a text
Thus, Reagan would grow up to be a model American, freed of the burden of the past and ready to make a fresh start. In other countries, the historian Bernard Lewis observed, events that had happened a thousand years ago were still sparking conflict. In the land of opportunity, by contrast, the phrase "that's history" was used to dismiss something as having "no relevance to present events, concerns or purposes."
— Max Boot, Reagan: His Life and Legend