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Communist shrine

Such little shrines -- and I really do not have any other word for it as those serve no particular function -- you find everywhere in Kerala. It seems Marxism is the fourth belief system in Kerala, besides Hinduism, Christianity and Islam.

Communist shrine

Ropemaker

This lady was part of a group making rope from coir using an old technique.

Ropemaker

Kerala Means Colour

Just an image taken at the roadside ...

Kerala Means Colour

Elephants at Temple Festival in Kerala

Temple festival near Kollam, January 2012.
Some background and more beautiful images of elephants: http://www.chitra-aiyer.com/blog/2010/11/elephant-camp-aana-kota.html

Elephants at Temple Festival in Kerala

François Morellet, 3 Double Grids 0°, 30°, 60° (1960-61)

This picture was created by François Morellet by rotating grids at the angles given in the title. The artist defined a method which was then carried out strictly, without subjective interference. Morellet experimented for a lengthy period using graphite pencil on paper, before he arrived at results which were realised on bigger scale. One observer described the visual effect, when looking at the image for a while, as 'like watching the night sky' in a cloudless night.

François Morellet, 3 Double Grids 0°, 30°, 60° (1960-61)

The Chicken as Visual Researcher

Pfister's hen is wearing prism's to deviate light. The experiment set out to find if the chicken, like humans, is able to correct an upside down world. It is. However, as a friend asked, is that a good or a bad sign, or can the chicken be considered smarter if it does it more quickly than us humans? Animals were used extensively in experimental research on the physiology of perception. In the literature from the 1950s and 1960s which I have been consulting those animals are always treated as 'things', as soulless non-entities. Yet maybe some animals showed some enthusiasm for the tasks.

The Chicken as Visual Researcher

Graduated Response?

Image source: http://i40.tinypic.com/n1exw3.jpg, from http://monsterbrains.blogspot.com/2009_03_22_archive.html
It was sourced by the author of the webpage from Folger Shakespeare Library at http://www.folger.edu.
As far as I can tell it comes from The history of four-footed beasts and serpents by Edward Topsell, printed by E. Cotes for G. Sawbridge, T. Williams and T. Johnson in London in 1658.

Graduated Response?
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