Showing posts with label Graphics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graphics. Show all posts

Friday, 3 February 2012

How to play hide and seek


Materials

  • What you'll need for this game is a space that is big enough for all players but offers plenty of places to hide. Two great examples are a large backyard with a lot of trees and shrubbery, or inside designated rooms of a house (i.e., the basement and the den only). This game requires at least two players but can also be more fun with a big group.

Rules

  • Gather the group together and choose one person to be "it." This person is the seeker and must look for everyone else. The rest of the group must hide in the designated area.
    First, decide and agree upon a spot to be home base. The person who is "it" stands on the home base, covers his eyes and counts to a previously agreed upon number. Usually about 30 seconds will give hiders opportunity to choose a spot and stow away.
    When through counting, the "it" person says loudly, "Ready or not, here I come!" and runs to find the other players.
    The hiders must remain very quiet, and the last person to remain hiding without being found is the winner, and chooses the next person to be "it."

Variations

  • There are several variations of this classic game, including Sardines. In this game, "it" hides and, after counting, the rest of the group goes separate ways in order to find him. When one of the players finds "it," instead of calling him out, they hide in the same spot. Soon, there should be several players hiding in the same spot, smashed together like sardines in a can. The player who is last to find everyone winds up in last place.
    There is also Hide, Seek and Tag, an active variation of the game that is played almost exactly like the original. However, instead of the players being "out" when the seeker finds them, the hiders can run for the "home base," and "it" must tag them before they reach the safe landmark. Whoever hides the longest and makes it to the base before being tagged is the winner.



    Just looked into hide and seek for one of the pages in my manifesto. my idea is that the text to a viewer is totally irrelevant to the person reading but has a lot of meaning behind it to me , to someone else t may look odd and confusing, but it all makes perfect sense once explained. 

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Monday, 28 November 2011

Digital

Banksy


http://www.banksy.co.uk/newoutdoors/outdoors.html




Banksy's work can range from any subject, he takes the surroundings and works around them, creating the artwork around it , or using the feature as part of his own.
His work is so unique , and well known everywhere

Monday, 7 November 2011

The Manifestos

First Surrealist Manifesto 1924
Le Manifeste du Surréalisme
 - http://www.tcf.ua.edu/Classes/Jbutler/T340/F98/SurrealistManifesto.htm
Dada Manifesto -
http://www.freemedialibrary.com/index.php/Dada_Manifesto_(1918,_Tristan_Tzara)
Flexus Manifesto -  I love how this is the original image ( Not Typed )
http://www.artnotart.com/fluxus/gmaciunas-manifesto.html
Futurist Manifesto-
http://cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/T4PM/futurist-manifesto.html
Interpritation of Furturist Manifesto
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HY8kVa0qB9Q

What is a Manifesto ?

This is a Manifesto :
A Manifesto is a document which puts forward princibles , rules and goals of a certain organisation, this is usually political and typically distrabuted to the public and puts forth an official declaration.
A Manifesto can also be used my artists and other groups as a form of communication, it can be used so the reader progresses to find out more about the certain group that the Manifesto is reffering to.