a i – m u l t i m e d i a
Dark Arts: The Witches Of Salem
The Healers – Mary Eastey, Sarah Cloyce, and Martha Corey

Mary Eastey, gentle and methodical, carried a bundle of dried herbs tied with blue thread — mugwort, feverfew, wild carrot. Her sister Sarah Cloyce learned from her: boiling, binding, whispering prayers while the steam rose.
Martha Corey, sharper of tongue and mind, recorded the ailments of her neighbors in a tiny ledger. To the Puritan eye, these were women trespassing in the domain of divine providence.
The historian reads between depositions and inventories — ointments, tinctures, linens — and sees an early form of community medicine. Their “witchcraft” was empiricism: trial, error, observation. Each poultice was data, each birth or fever another page in a silent, collective notebook.
The village called it sorcery; the record calls it science by a woman’s hand.
Of This Men Shall Know Nothing
A serendipitous visual project made with the help of Walter Holland’s musical interpretation of Max Ernst’s famous painting. This one born of chance, with no interpretation other than your own.
Thanks to Walter Holland for his kind permission.
Op-tarts!
The Useless Machines of Dr. Malphus
Back From The Future
Art Brut – Outsider Art
The term Art Brut — literally “raw art” — was coined by French painter Jean Dubuffet in the 1940s. He wanted to separate spontaneous, untutored creation from the refined and self-conscious world of galleries and academies. For Dubuffet, true vitality came from outsiders: the mentally ill, prisoners, children, or self-taught makers who created without chasing art world approval.

The Catwalk II

TRIUMPH
Our Favorite Robot
season 2
Dick Ripley (played by Sargent York) accidentally put 10w40 motor oil into Fleep Doot’s digestive tract port and there has been no output in over a week!
Poor Fleep Doot! “[canned laughter]”


“Ahhhh”, he finally oscillated. “Sure was an awful lot of clanging around in there. “I was thinking about calling a wrecker.” “[canned laughter]”














