Take a photo of a barcode or cover
still a great experiment and I still support Moore in his right to be verbose and syncretic
A fairly short book that took me longer than Gravity's Rainbow. Harman has virtually no ideas that I can easily agree with, and his entire philosophy seems to be built around false premises that he refuses to see. For example, he thinks that objects exist at the deepest level of reality, but he cannot even argue for this claim. It's interesting to argue with Harman in your head, and it justifies (a bit) of reading the text, which seems smug and blind. The most interesting part was the overview of other similar thinkers, seasoned with caustic detailed descriptions of their “mistakes.” But thanks for at least this.
I'm glad that now I'll have something to talk about with Timothée Chalamet (just in case).
These are good tips, but... only for those who want to become the same boring artist as the author of this book.
The only art Austin Kleon has mastered is motivation and marketing. This can be useful, but when you see David Lynch talking about his Woody Woodpecker doll friends, you realize that Austin Kleon's advice is not about art, because Austin Kleon is not art.
The only art Austin Kleon has mastered is motivation and marketing. This can be useful, but when you see David Lynch talking about his Woody Woodpecker doll friends, you realize that Austin Kleon's advice is not about art, because Austin Kleon is not art.