The Apocalyptic Post – The 1st Post

Posted by on Jul 03 2009

Welcome to my corner of ‘Post Apocalyptia’ – I’ve started this blog as a way to ferret out all the great works of post apocalyptic art, news and humour that is out there.

So why my interest in Post Apocalyptic stuff? I’ve always had a strong drawing to it – not necessarily about how the apocalypse comes, but how we deal with the aftermath. Post Apocalyptians get a clean state to start over – with the reminder how both how great society was and the struggle to not repeat past mistakes.
I will try to keep this blog on track to stay true to the Post Apocalyptic topics, not Apocalyptic or Dystopian topics. A quick recap on this:
  • Apocalyptic: Of, or relating to an apocalypse; Portending future disaster, devastation and doom; Revelatory or prophetic
  • Dystopian: Polar opposite of utopia. A society in which social and/or technological trends have contributed to a corrupted or degraded state.
  • Post Apocalyptic: Depiction of life after a global disaster such as a nuclear holocaust, alien invasion, or ecological collapse.
While there is plenty of crossover between each one – I will try to represent the Post Apocalyptic world here.

Moving from WordPress to Blogger: my story

Posted by on Jul 03 2009

For those who are looking at my blog – I wanted to backup my blog from my cpanel hosted wordpress as it was giving me problems. There are heaps of sites about from moving from Blogger to WordPress, a scant few from moving from WordPress to Blogger.
Then I find this site from Zeaster, and he had a blinding tool to export blogs from WordPress using xmlrpc. http://zeaster.blogspot.com/2007/01/tool-that-import-all-posts-from_4359.html
I used this tool and it was great! However google blogger only allows for 50 posts a day, so I didn’t get the last 33 posts from 2006 in my word press blog, no fault of the script. Secondly, it doesn’t move the images you have hosted on WordPress to blogger.
However, a couple of days later when I went to check on my wordpress blog it was hacked through a word press exploit (I am lazy as I didn’t upgrade my wordpess for a couple of years). Luckily it was only the homepage and password that got exploited, i could still access the old database (which is still there) and move them here manually.
However, I have heaps of photos to move from wordpress here.
Overall its a great script, and it was a timely move everything to blogger.

Know Thyself and Do What Thou Wilt

Posted by on Jul 03 2009

originally from here: http://zegarkus.com/2007/02/07/know-thyself-and-do-what-thou-wilt/


Recently there was a popular post in blogosphere about popular philosophical quotations. This made me ponder a bit about what quotations had the most effect on my on life. The two most important important quotes I can think of are “Know Thyself” and “Do What Thy Wilt”.

Know Thyself – This originates from the Greeks. How well do you really know yourself, are your thoughts based on your own ideals – or are they based on what others have dictated. Until you know yourself, you will not know what is best for yourself.

Do What Thou Wilt – This quote originates from the oft maligned Aleister Crowley. The premise is do whatever you want to! This may sound anarchic at first, but it stirs the spirit of individual. Don’t do what your parents feel is right, what the church dictates is right, what your politicians say is right – do what you want to.

Do what thou wilt is entangled deeply with Know Thyself. If you do not know know yourself, you can not do what you want to do. You will merely be imitating what society wants you to do. You have to know yourself deeply in order to do what you want to do. Know thyself is passive, it is the kernal of truth that is actively implemented by ‘Do what thy wilt’.

Thoughts – A blueprint for success.

Posted by on Jul 03 2009

original post from here http://zegarkus.com/2006/12/08/thoughts-a-blueprint-for-success/


Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone elses opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.

Oscar Wilde Irish dramatist, novelist, & poet (1854 – 1900)

This short little post is basically a reflection of the past year for me, which has been stunningly successful in nearly all aspects of my life. Here are three reasons for my success this year.

  1. The Law of Attraction. As Descartes said, “I think therefore I am”. But more importantly its how you think. Learn about the Law of Attraction and how it can change your life (usually dramically!)
  2. Don’t think passively. Think passionately! The quote above from Oscar Wilde is one of my favourite quotes precisely because most people take what they hear and accept it. Challenge your thoughts, research and find your own truth instead of living by someone else’s! Question everything sacred or mundane to find your own Veritas.
  3. Change your environment to suite your truth. When I was lad in school, I remember reading a haiku that said something like “Water takes the shape of the gourd that it is in” – simply meaning water has no shape, so it takes the shape of the its container (in this case a gourd). What this means is that our environment has a great deal of influence in transforming who we are. Instead of passively allowing this to happen, change your environment to fit your own goals and dreams.

The 9/11 Falling Man – Another Look

Posted by on Jul 03 2009

originally post was located here http://zegarkus.com/2006/12/07/the-911-falling-man-another-look/


This my reflection one of the most powerful photographs of this century – ‘The Falling Man’ by Richard Drew. If you want know the background of this photo – please see the movie 9/11 The Falling Man. It is gripping story of the power of a single photograph. While most will talk about personal story about the photograph, I will attempt to discuss some of the elements that make this photo especially powerful.

The Crop:

This photograph – was published in a completely different crop from the originally version: here are both versions:

Vertical Crop as released by the press:
Photobucket

Horizontal Crop as originally taken:
Photobucket

Note that horizontal crop – is not available yet doing google searches. I took this screenshot from the DVD.

As you can see, just buy changing the crop dramatically change scope the picture. The vertical crop zooms in the subject – it at once becomes more personal. Here are few thoughts about the vertical crop that come into mind.

  • Its personal – we can almost make out who the person is
  • Centered- the man is nearly centered in the focus (off by a few pixels) – making the man an obvious focal point.
  • Divided: The dark left panel and lighter right panel vertically split the image in half -giving it more impact and something that follows the more traditional rule of thirds (though the man is in the upper third). The two opposing colours come to head close to where the man is falling.
  • Action – the black and white lines denote a strong sense of vertical movement.
  • The vertical shot – from printing point of view, vertical shots can fit into traditional magazine, newspapers and books better. Though I don’t think was the issue for cropping the photo this way, its certainly a fact to be considered.

The horizontal crop conveys a completely feeling:

  • It is more removed and abstract – here the elements of the photograph lead to the falling man – it doesn’t have the ‘gut impact’ of the vertical crop, but its impact is much more subtle. I’ll go as far as saying that this photo would have dramatically less reaction if it was released instead. But do not mistake less reaction with less powerful here. In many respects, I think this portrayal is more power as discussed further below.
  • Uncentered – Though the man is central – it is not as centered as the vertically crop. Here the focus is on the entire scene – not just the falling man.
  • Suspension – where the above crop had strong vertical lines denoting movement, notice the semi-circle lighting to the right. There is more ’space’ around the falling man in horizontal shot to give it a sense of floating.

By cropping the image vertically – you increase the impact of the photograph. You bring immediacy to the subject matter. You punch the viewer in the proverbial gut. The original shot in a certain sense is more holistic. Here you have man who was probably around 180cm tall pitted against the backdrop of a massive tower which was approximately 415 metres high. What lose in immediacy you gain in perspective.

Lines

The ‘lines’ of the two crops are completely different and each powerful in their own way. The vertical lines give a sense of falling, but an even stronger aspect are the vertical lines. Notice in both crops there diagonal line that points directly to the head of the falling man.

The horizontal version has something the vertical crop doesn’t – curved lines. In the shot, there is almost half a spot light on the falling man. You can visualise this as a semi circle. These contrast to the straight vertical lines. This ’spot light’ softens the falling effect in my view and gives it more a floating, surreal feeling. It allows the eyes to meander over the entire photograph – taking in not just the falling man, but the entire building and the entire event that took place.

Final thoughts…

This is photograph by no means is easy subject matter. Like Eddie Adams or Frank Capra (in)famous war time images it provokes a multitude of different feelings. What struck me is how something as simple cropping the image elicited different emotions for me. Regardless of the crop – it is a timeless harrowing photo that is not easily forgotten.

The Posture

The posture of the man is at once graceful. In actuality a series of the shots indicate that he had a twisted and contorted fall – yet in the photograph it looks almost blissful. The Photo was taken, as the famous French Henri Cartier-Bresson would have said, at the ‘Decisive Moment‘.

Personally, two archetypes come to mind when I look at the posture – the idea of superman diving from building and also the more obscure ‘hanged man’ tarot. Each of these images has powerful and possibly subliminal meanings.