Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 July 2025

STRAVA Art

 Drawing While Exercising
   Strava is an app that combines the internet and satellites to track your routes while exercising. Although I had forgotten when I started using it, Strata just sent me an email congratulating me for being with them since July 2021. I am using the free version and it provides me with all the data I need and more. I am just an ordinary octogenarian who starts up Strata when I go for a bike ride and find it interesting that I have gone X miles averaging X mph and have done so X times. Others subscribe for even more features and share and socialize with Strava users around the world. Occasionally, I get an email from them reminding me to connect with one of my sons in Vancouver if I want to compete or boast about my activities. 
  Recently I read about a woman out in that area who creates art while riding. Apparently others have been as well and you likely have seen examples, so I will keep this short for the few other people who didn't know about it.
   

  That is an example of one of my recent simple routes. The next one is slightly more complicated. If you are creative, you likely recognize that you could choose a route that might result in a picture. I can't draw, so this could be an option for me if I wasn't so tired from exercising -- and if I was more creative. 


Ms Janine Strong, out on Vancouver Island, is more creative and here is one example.

 She has also "cycled out giant bananas and long-haired women in New York, Santas in Victoria, penguins in Campbell River, strawberries in San Francisco..."  More examples can be found on her website under "GPS ART."
  Since you probably were aware of this new artistic development I will supply a few sources which may yield something you didn't know. For example, it didn't take long for people to realize that naughty pictures could also be created if one could figure out an anatomical route.

Sources:
   For the article about Ms. Strong, whose website is recommended, see: "Road is a Canvas for two-wheeled artist; Vancouver Island Athlete Merges Creative Flair with Fitness, Drawing Large Scale Images with GPS," J.J. Adams, Vancouver Province, June 17, 2025.
   For the naughty bits, if you must: ‘The Giant Penis Took Shape Easily, as I Passed Through a Village called 'Three Cocks’: Meet the Artist Athletes Drawing with GPS: From the phallus on a Welsh hillside, to a huge portrait of Chappell Roan, these Strava runners, riders and skaters have been busy …" Chris Broughton, The Guardian, May 25, 2025.
  For an early piece: "Runners and Cyclists Use GPS Mapping to Make Art: 
Fitness apps and the power of live satellite tracking have allowed runners, cyclists and others to draw hearts, animals, birthday wishes — and even homages to Vermeer — across their local landscapes," Claire Fahy, NYT, Sept. 24, 2022.
  Strava appears to be doing okay, if you want to sign up: "
Popular Fitness App Strava Clinches Valuation of More Than $2 Billion:  Strava, whose valuation includes debt, says it acquired cycling app Breakaway," Ben Glickman, Wall Street Journal, May 22, 2025.

Sunday, 1 May 2022

The FINGER


Is Nothing Sacred?  


   It is the first day of May and it is raining, so I will make my monthly attempt to do a variety of things, ranging from exercising and blogging more, to drinking less. As well, I will strive to be a better person and again promise to visit my physician, a promise I have been making monthly for about a decade. In my defence, some of these attempts and promises are weather-dependent and have nothing at all to do with my lack of resolve.

   There is some indication that I may again fail to achieve just about any of my monthly objectives since I already have spent much of the day reading just about anything which will allow me to avoid attempting anything that requires much effort. But, I just came across an article that will at least give me an opportunity to boost my blogging output, given that it shouldn’t require much effort. As well, I can dedicate this post to a loyal reader, who is ‘loyal’ only if I send him a link to it since he cannot otherwise find Mulcahy’s Miscellany. The subject of the post is the FINGER, the middle one. 

   Here is the article, portions of which I will present because they are more likely to be interesting than this post. The headline: "Three Glass Sculptures by Artist Ai Weiwei Were Snatched From an Exhibition at a Gallery in Hamburg, Germany, During a Daytime Heist."

"The artworks—red, yellow, and orange reproductions of the artist’s hand—were listed each for €9,500 (about $10,000) on the Lumas website. The trio references the Chinese dissident artist’s well-known photography series, Study of Perspective (1995–2017), in which his middle finger is raised to monuments and politically charged sites around the world."
[The image above is also from this article by Tessa Solomon found in ARTnews on April 29, 2022.]

As far as I can tell, the motives of this dastardly felon remain unclear. Perhaps one was money, or that he (they) was offended by the finger art, or that he simply wanted to give the finger to someone. 

   The link of the finger to my ‘loyal’ reader will now be made apparent. A while back he suffered a minor stroke. As a minor aside, I bet that a stroke would be classified as ‘minor’, only by those who haven’t experienced one. Prodded by his determined spouse, an aggressive rehabilitation program was undertaken and goals established. His left side was affected and he told his physiotherapist a primary motivator for him would be to be able again to raise for me his middle finger. I suppose I should be pleased that a goal related to me ranked higher even than guitar playing which is very important to him. Lest you think from all this that I am a rather bad fellow, like the finger stealing felon mentioned above, I will simply say that the gestation of this gesture by my loyal reader began and was developed on squash courts. 


Post Script:
   I realized when doing this that the middle finger has been a subject in other posts on this blog and perhaps indicates the intellectual level of it. The picture above is from "RIP - Reinhold Aman" who was an intellectual, but one who focused on the genre of things that could be said to be related to the middle finger. The post about Professor Alice Dreger ("Facts and Fingers") relates to a book she wrote which is: Galileo's Middle Finger...). The finger also figures, fittingly enough, in "The History of Everything (Revisited"), which features a book, A Cultural History of the Prostate. 

The Bonus: 
   Although I have shamelessly promoted past posts above, I doubt if you will visit them.  Even if you did, you might have missed the link which is provided in Facts and Fingers. Offered here again is a direct link to a more complete history of the middle finger which you are more likely to pay attention to since it is from the BBC: "When Did the Middle Finger Become Offensive?" Daniel Nasaw, BBC New Magazine, Feb. 6, 2012. 
   Thieves will even steal books. See, "The Great British Book Burglary.