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<lastBuildDate>Thu, 01 Oct 2009 19:22:41 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Review: Autodesk Mudbox 2010</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/41559552.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> Mudbox 2010 will have enhanced integration with Adobe Photoshop, Autodesk Maya, Autodesk 3DS Max and Autodesk Softimage. It will also feature a range of new creative tools and workflows, and a software development kit that means it can be customized by teams and used in specific pipelines. <p> It will be bundled as part of the Autodesk Entertainment Creation Suites, which comprise a choice of Maya 2010 or 3DS Max 2010, together with Mudbox 2010 and Autodesk MotionBuilder 2010. <p> Christoph Schädl, character artist at RABCAT Computer Graphics, was a beta tester for Mudbox 2010. “I love to work with Mudbox because the intuitive user interface lets me focus entirely on my creative vision,” said Schädl. “My favorite feature in the 2010 release is the ability to paint across multiple texture maps, in different paint channels without any seams. That means you can pa...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_mudbox_2010/2009-10-01-123</link>
<category>Tools &amp; devices reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Eagle</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_mudbox_2010/2009-10-01-123</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Oct 2009 19:22:41 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_mudbox_2010/2009-10-01-123#comments</comments>
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<title>Review: Autodesk 3D Studio Max 2010</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/78967106.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> The world's most widely used professional 3D modeling software. <br /> Create rich and complex design visualization. Generate realistic characters for a top-selling game. Bring 3D effects to the big screen. <p> Autodesk 3ds Max supports 3D modeling, animation, and rendering software helps design visualization professionals, game developers, and visual effects artists maximize their productivity by streamlining the process of working with complex scenes. <p> Viewing and Handling of Large, Complex Scenes <p> 3ds Max software delivers new viewport technology and optimizations that result in vastly improved interactivity of even the largest, most complex scenes. Common tasks and operations-selection, material assignment, transform, grouping, cloning, and many more-are now significantly faster, making 3ds Max the most streamlined version of the software ever. Plus, ...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_3d_studio_max_2010/2009-10-01-122</link>
<category>Tools &amp; devices reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Eagle</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_3d_studio_max_2010/2009-10-01-122</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Oct 2009 19:16:24 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_3d_studio_max_2010/2009-10-01-122#comments</comments>
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<title>Review: Autodesk Maya 2009</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/11206184.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> This past August we had the chance to witness the launch of Maya 2009, the 10th major release of Maya 3D software. While it’s keeping up with the latest trends in the animation and cinematography industry, I do think that some aspects of Maya need more attention as well. <p> Right now, we’re seeing more and more feature films using stereoscopic images. In the past you could make these images using a handmade camera rig in conjunction with some trial and error. Maya 2009 not only gives a fully featured stereo camera, but also allows you to use a feature called “Stereo Preview”. Using this feature, you can preview your stereo scenes directly in your viewport, completely eliminating the need to test render your images or animations just to see that they work. <p> The stereo preview offers a variety of preview modes: anaglyph (red-cyan), horizontal interlaced, chec...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_maya_2009/2009-10-01-121</link>
<category>Tools &amp; devices reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Eagle</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_maya_2009/2009-10-01-121</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Oct 2009 19:10:15 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/review_autodesk_maya_2009/2009-10-01-121#comments</comments>
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<title>The Complete Cosmicomics, a Holy Grail for Italo Calvino Fans</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/47914.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> In the beginning, before the Big Bang, all the matter in the universe was concentrated in a single point. Qfwfq can tell you about it: He was there. "Naturally, we were all there—where else could we have been? Nobody knew then that there could be space. Or time, either: What use did we have for time, packed in there like sardines?" <p> Qfwfq has been a mammoth, a dinosaur, and a single cell. He made the first sign in space, and analyzed it, too, getting the drop on Roland Barthes by a few billion years. He remembers the Earth when it had no atmosphere, the sun when it was a cold, dark nebula. He recalls how good it felt to be a mollusk, with all of evolution still before him; and what happened to old U(h) and the first bird; and how his sister G'd(w)n got lost when the sun formed and turned up in Canberra in 1912. <p> With their avuncular narrator and their wild l...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-120</link>
<category>Books reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-120</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:20:27 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-120#comments</comments>
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<title>Inherent Vice by Thomas Pynchon</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/00067.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> Inherent Vice, Thomas Pynchon’s seventh novel, follows so quickly on the heels of his sixth, the massive Against the Day (2006), that the teams of specialists who go over the fuselage of every Pynchon text as if it were a spy plane forced down by mechanical difficulties, identifying the probable origin and function of each part, writing up the results in Pynchon Notes or on the Internet, must be gnashing their teeth with weariness. The red telephone again? Aw, sheesh. If only there were some way to persuade them not to worry! Inherent Vice is by far the least puzzling Pynchon book to enter our airspace: a goof on the Los Angeles noir, starring a chronically stoned PI with a psychedelic wardrobe and a hankering for pizza. At fewer than four hundred pages, it’s also the shortest Pynchon novel to appear since Vineland (1990); you could almost recommend it to your boo...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-119</link>
<category>Books reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-119</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:19:07 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-119#comments</comments>
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<title>The Lost Years: On Haiti</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/26498.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> The large segment of the Haitian population that is unable to read or write inhabits an oral history culture, which produces, when looking into the past, a curious foreshortening. First comes the Haitian Revolution of 1791-1804, the only successful slave revolution in history and an event with whose fundamentals practically all Haitians are reasonably conversant. Then there's a compressed, indeterminate period of confused and repetitious instability, ending with President Woodrow Wilson's decision in 1915 to use the collection of outstanding American and French loans as a pretext for installing Marines in Haiti to prevent the election of an anti-American president. Following the close of the US occupation in 1934 is another indeterminate period of confusion, ending with the erection of the Duvalier dictatorship, a père et fils monolith that, in its iron duration f...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-118</link>
<category>Books reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-118</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:17:09 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-118#comments</comments>
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<title>Lucky Hans and Other Merz Fairy Tales by Kurt Schwitters, translated and edited by Jack Zipes, illustrated by Irvine Peacock</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/42605.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> When I was a little girl, my mom—consummate feminist and literary mother par excellence—gave me Tatterhood and Other Tales, an anthology of feminist folk tales whose cover sported a soot-cheeked minx gamely beating back a gang of trolls with a wooden spoon. Published by the Feminist Press in 1978, Tatterhood was one of a slew of anthologies that emerged in the wake of the women’s rights movement to combat the patriarchal Brothers Grimm and Disney party line. But employing fairy tales for activist means was nothing new. In Weimer Germany, fairy-tale collections like the pungently titled Proletarischer Kindergarten (1921) were published by communists to critique the country’s turbulent capitalist ethos (and to recruit little comrades, no doubt). Such prominent Weimer artists as George Grosz often illustrated the books, but some, like Kurt Schwitters, also took to wr...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-117</link>
<category>Books reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-117</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:15:05 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-117#comments</comments>
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<title>Claes Oldenburg/Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/30842.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> The hard gone soft, the raw cooked: This is the Claes Oldenburg we know and love, the Oldenburg of Soft Toilet, 1966, and Giant BLT (Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato Sandwich), 1963—shiny and tasty American wares fallen victim to gravity and deﬂation. But beginning in 1976, the artist’s collaborations with the late Coosje van Bruggen seemed to reverse course, stiffening into polished monumentality. While the Guggenheim and the National Gallery’s shared 1995 Oldenburg retrospective struggled to tie together these bodies of work, this survey leaves things largely bifurcated. Its ﬁrst half, which includes rarely seen ﬁlms, focuses on Oldenburg’s protean investigations of production, from The Store to soft sculptures to mid-’60s Happenings. Its second features his and van Bruggen’s little-known group of Brobdingnagian musical instruments, quite another take on collaboration ...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-116</link>
<category>Art reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-116</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:05:38 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-116#comments</comments>
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<title>James Ensor MOMA - THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/80963.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> James Ensor (1860–1949), the Belgian Symbolist and proto-Expressionist, is a perennial favorite among people with the right taste. One of the very tippy-top paintings in any American collection is his—Christ’s Entry into Brussels in 1889, 1888, at the Getty. Sadly, that work will not travel here, although the show does feature the Museum of Modern Art’s no less iconic Masks Mocking Death, made the same year. Skeletons, masks, and puppets are mainstays of Ensorworld iconography, and yet for all his trafﬁcking in lurid mayhem and morbidity, Ensor nevertheless suspires an air of transcendence. So we can thank MoMA for mounting this large-scale, thematically organized exhibition of approximately ninety paintings, drawings, and prints and for publishing a hefty, scholarly catalogue. At last, the heart sings, something worth looking at.]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-115</link>
<category>Art reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-115</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:03:57 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-115#comments</comments>
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<title>Dan Graham WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART</title>
<description><![CDATA[<!--IMG1--><img style="margin:0;padding:0;border:0;" src="http://free-art.at.ua/_bl/1/60241.jpg" align="" /><!--IMG1--> <p> Since 1965, when he began producing the diagrams and photo-text magazine pieces that would become landmarks of Conceptual art, Dan Graham has made a series of swerves in his practice through video and film and performance to the architectural pavilions of the 1980s and beyond. This body of work—along with his early stint as a gallerist showing art by friends such as Carl Andre and Robert Smithson, and his energetic activities as a critic and speaker—has earned him near-legendary status. Artists today find a potent model in Graham’s integration of the conditions of exhibition and media reception into his own work; in his shape-shifting modus operandi; in his omnivorous cultural appetites. (His long-standing obsession with rock ’n’ roll, for instance, has given rise to extensive writings and the videos Minor Threat, 1983, and Rock My Religion, 1984.) And yet, due to...]]></description>
<link>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-114</link>
<category>Art reviews</category>
<dc:creator>Liberman</dc:creator>
<guid>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-114</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2009 12:02:26 GMT</pubDate>
<comments>http://art-liberty.com/blog/2009-08-08-114#comments</comments>
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