A wild red fox regularly visits a woman’s apartment for food and affection.

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Emma Stibbon RA Collapsed Whaling Station Deception Island, Antarctica: a work in focus | The RA Schools

Emma Stibbon RA, Collapsed Whaling Station, Deception Island, Antarctica

8 October 2022 – 11 June 2023

The Collection Gallery | Burlington Gardens

Step into the Antarctic in this focused display in the Collection Gallery, and explore the artistic fascination with extreme landscapes.

Extreme conditions have fascinated artists for centuries. This small free display in the Collection Gallery Cabinet centres around the large-scale woodcut Collapsed Whaling Station, Deception Island, Antarctica by Emma Stibbon RA.

Stibbon is drawn to environments that have been shaped by both the elemental forces of nature and the impact of human endeavour, “landscapes that have a tension between the natural forces and the manmade”.

Her woodcut is accompanied by a selection of prints, drawings and photographs that resonate with this theme and highlight how ruination, extreme conditions and the fragility of place have long been a source of inspiration for artists.

Collapsed Whaling Station, Deception Island, Antarctica is Stibbon’s ‘Diploma work’, given to the Royal Academy by the artist upon becoming a Royal Academician.

Source: https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibition/emma-stibbon-whaling-station-in-focus

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Coffee art

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The Big Lie About Nuclear Waste

What if we could actually USE nuclear waste?
Check out Storyblocks and sign up here for great footage: https://storyblocks.com/cleoabram

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Watch Johnny’s explainer on nuclear power here – and subscribe to his channel!

• WTF Happened to N…

Nuclear waste is scary. Maybe you’ve seen it as glowing green goop in The Simpsons, or as a radioactive threat on the news. Either way, you likely know it has been a major block to the use and improvement of nuclear power. Over the last few decades, experts, politicians and the public have had heated debates over what to do with this radioactive material created by nuclear power plants.

But what if there were a way to not just store nuclear waste, but actually USE it?

This video is about the effort to make electricity out of nuclear waste. Really. It turns out, we developed the tools to do this decades ago. This story is about a technology we left behind and the people who want to bring it back.

For this video, I had the privilege of visiting one of the largest and oldest research centers in the US, the Argonne National Laboratory. I’m incredibly grateful to the researchers and staff I met there, and for their time in showing me their work. I also had the opportunity to speak with representatives from Oklo, a company working on new forms of nuclear power, including recycling nuclear waste as fuel. One of the best parts of making Huge If True is meeting and learning from people pushing what we can do in the hopes of improving the world for everyone else.

Chapters:
00:00 Nuclear waste isn’t what I thought
02:21 How I got obsessed
03:27 How much energy is in nuclear waste?
05:31 Thank you Storyblocks!
06:20 How do you get electricity?
06:50 What is uranium?
07:28 How does a nuclear reaction work?
08:05 Why is nuclear waste dangerous?
08:40 What do we do with nuclear waste?
09:35 How do you make electricity from nuclear waste?
11:21 Why doesn’t the US reuse nuclear fuel?
12:20 Is recycling waste feasible?
13:41 What is Huge If True?

Corrections:
07:09 The number refers to the total number of nucleons (either a proton or a neutron) in the atom, not the neutrons alone. A U-235 atom contains 92 protons and 143 neutrons (an atomic mass of 235). The U-238 atom also has 92 protons but has 146 neutrons (an atomic mass of 238). I should have said these differ by the number of neutrons in the atom. Thanks to the commenters who pointed this out!

[…]

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Interval categories to help with sight-reading! | Nahre Sol (@nahresol)

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Liam Carpenter (@liamcarps1) • Instagram reel

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Blind & Neurodivergent Teen Pianist Plays at King’s Coronation | My Modern Met

The way this girl feels the music as she plays gives us goosebumps. She’s remarkable!

A once-in-a-lifetime musical talent deserves the biggest stage they can get, and for one teen prodigy, this meant a royal celebration. Lucy Illingworth, a 13-year-old blind and neurodivergent pianist, first marveled the world a few months ago. Her performance of a Chopin nocturne on a piano in a train station in Leeds shocked the judges of the British talent show The Piano, and moved passersby to tears. Now, Lucy has played for a much larger audience in an unbeatable setting—she performed for 20,000 people, including King Charles III and Queen Camilla, at the Coronation Concert at Windsor Castle.

Lucy, who has severe autism, shared the stage with contemporary singers and musical legends such as Lionel Richie, Katy Perry, Take That, and Andrea Bocelli. The teen prodigy performed Bach’s “Prelude in C Major,” a short yet uplifting melody that encapsulates the young girl’s path to that moment. In her performance, Lucy happily bobbles her head from side to side, throughly feeling and enjoying the music she is playing. She also seems to have grown comfortable with applause and the sounds of people. While the video of her Leeds train station performance in February showed her quickly covering her ears, this time she just smiles, and awaits with her hands locked in front of her body. With a little help from her companion, she even takes a bow.

This wasn’t the only massive feat Lucy has accomplished in the last couple of months. Weeks before playing the Coronation concert, Lucy joined The Piano finale at the Royal Festival Hall in London. There, she once again took the judges’ breath away with a performance of Debussy’s “Arabesque No.1” alongside her teacher, Daniel Bath. “This piece is slightly harder,” Classic FM reports judge and celebrity pianist Lang Lang commented. “Because the Chopin nocturne, it’s easier to control the speed. This piece has to be… like you’re opening a treasure. This is a challenge, this piece. But no challenge, no fun, right?”

The young pianist was not only up for the challenge, but her performance made her the winner of the competition. In regards to selecting her as the winner, judge and pop singer Mika said, “It was about just highlighting if something extraordinary was to happen. Something that no-one could forget… and that happened.” Lang Lang also seized the occasion to describe the girl as a “real genius.”

Lucy is part of the Amber Trust, a non-profit that provides musical opportunities for blind children. The organization first spotted her love for music and has supported her over the last eight years by funding her piano lessons.[…]

Source: Blind & Neurodivergent Teen Pianist Plays at King’s Coronation

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Colony

A woman scientist’s entomological work creeps into her psyche as her pregnancy progresses and she becomes more hostile towards her partner. As she increasingly becomes obsessed with the ant queen of her research colony, the lines between the ant and human experience blur.

Made with support from the Glas Animation Grant and The Hambidge Center

Awards:

TOHorror Fantastic Film Fest 2022: Best Animated Short Film
NFFTY Jury Nominee 2023

Festivals:

Short of the Week Online Premiere 2023
Animest 2022
MONSTRA – Lisbon Animation Festival 2022
Animocje 2022
Fest Anca 2022
RIIFF Roving Eye 2023
Athens ANIMFEST 2022
Animatricks 2022
Animist Tallinn 2022
Linoleum Contemporary Animation and Media Art Festival 2022
Drunken Film Fest Oakland 2022
Chaniartoon 2022
GIRAF18 2022
San Diego Underground Film Festival: Heavy Light 2023
Insomnia International Animation Film Festival 2023
NFFTY 2023
Humbolt International Film Festival 2023

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Aztec Chocolate – Blood & Spice

[…]

LINKS TO SOURCES**
The Secret Life of Chocolate by Marcos Patchett: https://amzn.to/3qoLOB1
For more information visit thesecretlifeofchocolate.com
The True History of Chocolate by Sophie & Michael Coe: https://amzn.to/3sWBl1f
Florentine Codex by Bernardino de Sahagún: https://amzn.to/2OrKiAE
Thomas Gage’s Travels in the New World: https://amzn.to/3sO3YxA

**Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies which Tasting History will earn an affiliate commission or referral bonus. Each purchase made from these links will help to support this channel with no additional cost to you. The content in this video is accurate as of the posting date. Some of the offers mentioned may no longer be available.

Subtitles: Jose Mendoza

PHOTO CREDITS
Metate et Mano: Yelkrokoyade, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/…, via Wikimedia Commons
Olmec Head No 3: By Maribel Ponce Ixba (frida27ponce) – Flickr, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index…

[…]

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Modern architecture should embrace – not ignore or repel – the nonhuman world | Aeon Videos

Why architects should take inspiration from the sustainable ways that animals build, and integrate wildlife into their work

Joyce Hwang, an architect and associate professor at the University at Buffalo, New York believes in integrating the world of nonhuman animals into human architecture. This means taking inspiration from the sustainable ways animals build. It also means considering how to accommodate nonhuman animals when planning human structures rather than ignoring or repelling them. Part of Museum of Modern Art’s Built Ecologies video series, this short film surveys some of Hwang’s most notable projects to explore how a recognition of and respect for wildlife is at the centre of her work.
Video by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)

Director: Michael Cukr

Producer: Sarah Cowan
1 May 2023

Source: Modern architecture should embrace – not ignore or repel – the nonhuman world | Aeon Videos

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