Part of the Transmutation Series. The work borrows from literary and esoteric sources. From Philip K. Dick’s novel Frolix 8, with it’s alien, messianic and god-like figure Morgo Ran Vilc, to Rudolf Steiner’s esoteric work concerning the holographic projection planet reality, known as the ‘Eighth Sphere’. Ghumbaz-Ho is, in essence, a formless and shapeless energetic force (much like Morgo Ran Vilc, who is a protoplasmic […]
Tag Archives: Philip K Dick
Ghumbaz-Ho: Painting
Experiments with FilterForge – part 2
Here is another example of an existing image (3d render), modified using various 2d effects, but primarily with FilterForge 2d filters. Enjoy! Pierre D. Morgo Rahn Wilc
Rare 1979 interview with Philip K Dick
A wonderful historical and sociological gem recorded back in 1979 in Santa Ana, CA. I felt privileged to have had the opportunity to listen to P K Dick’s philosophical musings, his ideas, insights, and comments. Though the interview is rather long in duration, you will be glued to your seat and transfixed by the experience.
The Shroud of Morgo
The Shroud of Morgo. References to the controversial ‘Shroud of Turin’ religious artefact are more than obvious. However, the true meaning behind the CG portrait is not entirely meant to be religious in any way. Instead, the word ‘shroud’ in this case, pertains more to the concept of wrapping/texture mapping in 3D computer animation: ‘shroud’=’wrap’. The techniques involved in the making of this image would require […]
Quotes – Citations
“Halogenated hydrocarbons. Membrane osmosis. Lagoons, dense, carry the excretion.
C-56 (hexachlorocyclopentadiene), bloody run, run with Hooker. Pattern of the weight of deeply scanned Kokono. Hydraulic pads. Un-separated, one is reminded of the process begun not 150 years ago, but during the Triassic age. The national league of cities, born in the untimely sludge; it absorbs folly.”
-William P. Randzen: From the Industrial Walks
“A society, like the individuals who compose it, is an artifact designed for a purpose. As to what life maybe worth when the purpose is gone.”
– W. S. Burroughs: The Place of Dead Roads
“The most dangerous person is the one who listens, thinks and observes.”
-Bruce Lee
Visits -Visites
- 0
- 12
- 10
- 2,836
- 13,326
- 94
Pierre Duranleau and/et Cafargo | All rights reserved - tous droits réservés: 2021